William Kenworthey, Matthew Comfort, Russ Crader, Emily Kuchenrither

 

 

Title: "How to Float a Park"

 

CONCEPT
Where the nature and structure of space changes frequently, one will make much more intensive use of global space. The volume of social space and of social activity in space has two consequences: the space available for individual use is greater than in a society with a sedentary population; yet there is no more empty space, space unused even for a brief time, and, as one makes creative use of it, its aspect changes so much and so often that a relatively small surface offers as many variations as a trip around the world. Distance covered, speed, are no longer the yardsticks of movement; and space, lived more intensely, seem to dilate. But this intensification of space is only possible due to the creative use of technical means -- a use that we, who live in a society where use has a finality, can hardly imagine.
-Constant. New Babylon. The Intensification of Space. 1974

Every node in the power network of the future will be awake, responsive, adaptive, price-smart, eco-sensitive, real-time, flexible, humming and interconnected with everything else.
-Steve Silberman. Wired Magazine. The Energy Web. July 2001

Inspired by the Thorium contamination of the "3 Acres on the Lake's" site, this proposal critiques the modernist city planning principles that created this urban void. "How to Float a Park" is an investigation into the potential for sustainable development within an urban environment that challenges the conception of park as a composed picturesque object. The goal is to generate a mixed-use urban landscape that acts as a piece of city, reacting to political, cultural, and economic conditions and guided by ecologically sensitive attitudes towards utilities, transportation, and 3-dimensional zoning regulations. The park will be a place of research, retail and entertainment that intertwines habitation, production, and recreation while supporting itself by generating it's own power, water, and jobs. This is a place for work, play, study, and residence that embraces the complexities and informality of public space and challenges the traditional notion of private space. The park will be "controlled sprawl" having the openness and porosity that are required for outdoor uses while possessing the programmatic density to provide 24-hour activity. In addition, …most of this intervention floats on the lake.

SETTING THE URBAN FRAMEWORK

DECONTAMINATION
After the removal of all the contaminated soil from the site the process of developing the "park" begins by building the "catalysts for development and direction.

GUIDELINES FOR URBAN FABRIC
These consist of building a pier/anchoring system on a 50' module grid that follows the profile of the previous contaminated earthen landscape both in plan and in section. A vertical setback of 20' will be enforced from any constructed spaces as a way of providing porosity to the development. Structure can be built above or below the waterline.

ANCHORAGE SYSTEM DETAILS
The stainless steel piers will allow for bolt in structures to be connected and removed based on development trends.

Some of these piers will contain the utility lines and the vertical circulation "streets" that will connect different pieces of the development and anchor the floating ground that will consist of 5' spheres made of carbon nanotube technology that connect and disconnect as needed.

TRANSPORTATION AND UTILITIES INFRASTRUCTURE
After this basic structure is laid the platforms for the sustainable utility systems can be installed including the extension of the existing access road over the site for vehicular access.

In addition, a three-dimensional boardwalk system will be constructed around the site with eventual inward growth as development occurs. This walk will connect to both the access road and to Lakeshore Drive increasing site accessibility for pedestrians, roller bladers, and bikers.

PROJECT CATALYST
The primary architectural intervention will be a mixed use building that contains the initial stage of the institute, a ferry terminal for the new ferry line connecting all of the parks, a fuel cell bus stop and charging station to as a stop along a new bus line running from Washington Park and making stops along the lakefront to the site, and a Pavilion for the Institute of Sustainable systems in Urban Environments. The new bus route will connect the park to existing transit systems while the ferry will act as a link to the entire lakefront, creating a new accessible connection between all of Chicago's lakefront parks, which will facilitate a more even distribution of park visitors and enable interaction between the city's diverse population.

The Institute will serve as a connection to the rest of the city by attracting visitors and providing a mouthpiece for park events, exhibits, and the research conducted on site regarding sustainable systems. The pavilion will contain the administrative and informational components of the Institute.

Over time, pieces of the "Institute" will scatter throughout the park space and engage the public not only through structured events, but also with day-to-day informal interaction that will be facilitated by the proximity of the institute within the development.

THRESHOLD
AA similar land based development will be created underneath Lakeshore Drive as a threshold to the city to provide local services and housing that will act as the embryo of the future neighborhood to come. This threshold will be programmed as a kind of Dionysia. Not only will it as a place that people go to at night after downtown closes but where people can live close to their jobs and establish a neighborhood adjacent to the Central Business District that adds 24-hour life to what is primarily an existing daytime urban program.

INTENT
"How to Float a Park" is an argument against modernist planning's love for the automobile and distaste for the old downtown that offers alternatives to the privatization of public space by festival marketplaces and the stylistic amber of historic preservation. This proposal offers a model for urban transformation that relates directly to a specific set of local conditions. The goal is to produce an urban landscape that can address the needs and complexity of the contemporary metropolis through balancing the local, metropolitan, and regional, which will offer possibilities that benefit all constituents from big developers to small businesses while staying aware and sensitive to the condition of the environment.

William Kenworthey, Matthew Comfort, Russ Crader, Emily Kuchenrither
New York, NY
contact:
William Kenworthey
Kenworthey@chameleon-au.com


 

 

 

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