flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

29 Great Solutions

29 Great Solutions

AEC firms are hotbeds of invention and innovation to meet client needs in today's highly competitive environment. The editors of Building Design+Construction are pleased to present 29 "Great Solutions" to some of the most complex problems and issues facing Building Teams today.


By By Robert Cassidy, Editor-in-Chief; Jay W. Schneider, Senior Editor; Dave Barista, Managing Editor; and Jeff Yoders, Senior Associate Editor | August 11, 2010
This article first appeared in the 200908 issue of BD+C.

               

The Riverwalk runs along the south bank of the Chicago River, giving the Windy City a 1.3-mile-long pedestrian promenade.


1. Riverwalk Transforms Chicago's Second Waterfront

Chicago has long enjoyed a beautiful waterfront along Lake Michigan, but the Windy City's second waterfront along the Chicago River was often ignored and mostly neglected. Thanks to a $22 million rehab by local architect Carol Ross Barney and her associate John Fried, a 1.3-mile stretch of land morphed into an urban park with a 17-foot-wide promenade that meanders along the river's south bank through the heart of downtown Chicago. Parts of the Riverwalk existed prior to the overhaul, but the usable spaces existed as self-contained islands

with no relation to one another, forcing pedestrians to climb steps and cross busy streets to get from one to the other. Connecting these previously unconnected spaces and creating an uninterrupted path (gaps were built atop steel piles and concrete landfill) that can be used by people strolling, jogging, or biking along the water was critical. The improvements also brought cafés, retail, tour boat docks, extensive landscaping and hardscaping, and abundant seating. The city's new Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fountain is also installed along the Riverwalk.
          
Canopies offer high style below bridges
At several points along the riverwalk, the path runs beneath bridges where passing vehicles can shower pedestrians below with dirt and debris and where the covered, shadowy space can instill a sense of trepidation in those walking underneath. The architects' solution to these problems was the installation of canopies that act as barriers between the bridges and the pathway. Bright lighting is integrated into the canopies, which are covered with stainless steel shingles that act as mirrors to reflect the water's shimmering elegance. One Chicago architecture critic blogging about the canopies wrote: "instead of under-bridge fear, you get under-bridge delight."
                              
Built on the 75-year-old ruins of New York City’s elevated freight train tracks, the High Line is a 1.45-mile urban park that winds around buildings and above streets on the city’s West Side. The $152 million rehab is inspiring similar projects throughout the world.


2. High Line Elevates the Typical Urban Park

R

econstruction of the High Line turned 1.45 miles of elevated and abandoned railroad track into a public park that offers unprecedented views of New York City and the Hudson River as it winds around buildings and over streets 30 feet above the West Side (from Gansevoort St. to 34th St., between 10th & 11th Avenues). The original 13-mile High Line opened in 1934 as a way to combat numerous accidents by elevating freight train tracks above street-level traffic (10th Avenue was dubbed Death Avenue around this time), a public-private project that cost $150 million, the equivalent of $2 billion today. The newest High Line project, the first phase of which opened June 8, cost $152 million and was championed by Friends of the High Line and planned by the architects Diller Scofidio & Renfro and landscape architect James Corner Field Operations. As part of the adaptive reuse project, the High Line is being fully rehabilitated (concrete repair, repainting, and drainage improvements) and pathways, lush plantings, seating (fixed and mobile) and lighting are being added. Access points occur every two to three blocks.

The High Line, which took inspiration from the Promenade Plantée in Paris, is serving as inspiration for urban renewal projects in Chicago, Jersey City, Rotterdam, Philadelphia, and St. Louis.

The main circulation path in BeachBody’s Santa Monica, Calif., office is also a 1/4 - mile walking track, complete with rubber flooring.


3. Walking Track Fits Firm's Wellness Focus

When Wolcott Architecture¦Interiors of Culver City, Calif., was asked to design BeachBody's new Santa Monica, Calif., offices, the fitness and weight loss solutions company challenged them to create a workspace that reflected its mission to promote healthy lifestyles. One of the 55,000-sf office's standout features is a ¼-mile walking track that runs around the perimeter of the office's third floor. Workspaces were pulled away from outside

walls allowing daylight to filter throughout the space—sustainability aligned with the company's wellness goals and the office earned LEED CI Gold—and by doing so a six-foot-wide walkway was created. Architects turned it into a real walking track—down to the rubber sports flooring—that also functions as a main circulation path. Employees now have a convenient way to incorporate walking into their exercise regimen—or a way to work off a really big lunch.
     

Related Stories

| Jun 18, 2013

Report: HVAC occupancy sensors could slash building energy demand by 18%

Researchers at the DOE's Pacific Northwest National Laboratory conclude that significant energy savings can be achieved by varying ventilation levels based on the number of people in a given space.

| Jun 17, 2013

DOE launches database on energy performance of 60,000 buildings

The Energy Department today launched a new Buildings Performance Database, the largest free, publicly available database of residential and commercial building energy performance information.

| Jun 5, 2013

USGBC: Free LEED certification for projects in new markets

In an effort to accelerate sustainable development around the world, the U.S. Green Building Council is offering free LEED certification to the first projects to certify in the 112 countries where LEED has yet to take root.

| Jun 3, 2013

Construction spending inches upward in April

The U.S. Census Bureau of the Department of Commerce announced today that construction spending during April 2013 was estimated at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of $860.8 billion, 0.4 percent above the revised March estimate of $857.7 billion.

| May 23, 2013

Are design-build contracts killing small architecture firms?

Are federal design-build contract laws unfair to small firms? AIA thinks so, citing an interesting fact: an architecture firm spends a median of $260,000 to compete for a design-build project.

| May 21, 2013

7 tile trends for 2013: Touch-sensitive glazes, metallic tones among top styles

Tile of Spain consultant and ceramic tile expert Ryan Fasan presented his "What's Trending in Tile" roundup at the Coverings 2013 show in Atlanta earlier this month. Here's an overview of Fasan's emerging tile trends for 2013.

| May 16, 2013

Chicago unveils $1.1 billion plan for DePaul arena, Navy Pier upgrades

Hoping to send a loud message that Chicago is serious about luring tourism and entertainment spending, Mayor Rahm Emanuel has released details of two initiatives that have been developing for more than a year and that it says will mean $1.1 billion in investment in the McCormick Place and Navy Pier areas.

| May 3, 2013

'LEED for all GSA buildings,' says GSA Green Building Advisory Committee

The Green Building Advisory Committee established by the General Services Administration, officially recommended to GSA that the LEED green building certification system be used for all GSA buildings as the best measure of building efficiency.

| May 1, 2013

Groups urge Congress: Keep energy conservation requirements for government buildings

More than 350 companies urge rejection of special interest efforts to gut key parts of Energy Independence and Security Act

| Apr 30, 2013

Tips for designing with fire rated glass - AIA/CES course

Kate Steel of Steel Consulting Services offers tips and advice for choosing the correct code-compliant glazing product for every fire-rated application. This BD+C University class is worth 1.0 AIA LU/HSW.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category



Laboratories

The Department of Energy breaks ground on the Princeton Plasma Innovation Center

In Princeton, N.J., the U.S. Department of Energy’s Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory (PPPL) has broken ground on the Princeton Plasma Innovation Center (PPIC), a state-of-the-art office and laboratory building. Designed and constructed by SmithGroup, the $109.7 million facility will provide space for research supporting PPPL’s expanded mission into microelectronics, quantum sensors and devices, and sustainability sciences. 


halfpage1

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021