PARK(ing) Day 2017 – Mirror Mylar Forest-Field
PARK(ing) Day 2017 – Mirror Mylar Forest-Field: Pedestrian Safety Along the Polk Corridor
For Park(ing) day 2017, INTERSTICE Architects created an interactive Park(ing) Day installation on Polk Street at Hemlock Alley. Visitors experienced the wind-activated Mirrored Mylar Forest to explore questions of pedestrian safety and share their experiences of being a San Francisco pedestrian. Which spaces are prioritized for pedestrians? Where is there room for improvement?
Recording individual experiences as a pedestrian, cyclist or driver, the public was asked to register their information directly onto the installation surface. An enlarged a map of the Polk Street Corridor [built from data collected from the California Highway Patrol & highlighting pedestrian-related traffic incidents] created the “ground” for discussion. This interactive pedestrian Park(ing) map evolved throughout the day as a palimpsest that visitors could walk through – orienting themselves within the parking space, the neighborhood, and the city streets.
The installation was inspired by the Polk Streetscape Improvements recently underway and INTERSTICE’s collaboration as part of an initiative to enrich The Lower Polk Alleyways District. The new Lower Polk Alleyways Vision Plan (LPADVP) recently adopted by the Lower Polk Neighbors, proposes a future vision for the 12 blocks of alleyways located within the boundaries of the Lower Polk Neighborhood. INTERSTICE Architects guided this community-driven process which has resulted in a unique community-initiated set of strategies and guidelines designed to understand these alleyways, not as singular back-streets or isolated funding opportunities, but instead to consider them as a whole – as a District.
Park-a-licious: The Ultimate Public Bubble! PARK(ING) DAY 2013
YOU’RE INVITED!!!
Please come and join
INTERSTICE Architects for PARK(ING) Day 2013 this Friday, September 20th in front of Tacolicious, 11a – 5p
at our installation: “Park-a-licious: The Ultimate Public Bubble!”
We’re going bubblicious, inflating inhabitable bubbles!
…for our PARK(ING) Day installation at 741 Valencia Street.
Come share a tasty taco with the IA team in the bubbles!
INTERSTICE Architects Installs the SF SFF / La Cocina Night Market
INTERSTICE Architects is thrilled to support La Cocina and participate in our 4th annual Street Food Festival!
This year we designed and installed a 300-foot-long sinuous bench, called the INTERSTICE banqu(ette), which meanders down the center of the San Francisco Street Food Festival’s second annual Night Market.
Over 500 pallets were zip-tied together to form an interlocking, modular lounge furnishing and bar-table kiosks with heat-lamps for people to gather, eat and celebrate the Market.
With 6 different global regions of foods represented, the Night Market is an opportunity for San Franciscans to taste the best the world has to offer, all prepared and sold by local vendors. The benches are color coded by global region and display way-finding signage also by INTERSTICE. Local artists painted the coverings for the seats.
This is the launch party for the San Francisco Street Food Festival, which spans 6 blocks along Folsom Street between 20th and 26th Streets.
Check out the team at work!
IA wins 3 Merit Awards at 2013 ASLA NCC Awards
We’re pleased to share that IA received 3 awards in this year’s ASLA Northern California Chapter Design Awards! We were awarded 3 Merit Awards for our work on the 555 Bartlett Courtyard, Bay Area Remediation Site: 1, and the San Francisco Botanical Garden Pathway Improvements. You can see our award winning projects on the ASLA NCC website.
INTERSTICE Architects in arcCA
INTERSTICE Architects’ project ‘Bay Remediation Site: 1″ has been published in arcCA’s Winter 2012 Design Awards Issue! BRS:1 won an AIACC Urban Design Merit Award earlier last year, and the issue features our project as well as all the other AIACC award winners. This is BRS:1’s fourth award in the last 3 years, having previously received awards from the California Architectural Foundation, AIA San Francisco, and an international Green Dot Award for sustainability. You can check out the project on page 46.
Parking Day 2012 – Lighter than Air
Parking Day 2012 – Lighter than Air, a set on Flickr.
We’d like to thank everyone that joined us this past Friday for Parking Day 2012! We had a great time meeting all of you, and we hope you enjoyed our “Lighter than Air” installation and the tasty Malaysian food courtesy of mamakSF! If you have any photos that you’d like to share (maybe you and your friends riding Public Bike’s Whimcycle, or lounging on our yoga ball furniture?) please post them here!
Also, be sure to check out our Flickr photo album!
Bay Remediation Site: 1 Published in Landscape Architecture Magazine
We’re pleased to share that our project “Bay Remediation Site: 1” has been published in on page 38 of this month’s issue of Landscape Architecture Magazine! The article features an interview with IA’s Andrew Dunbar and Zoee Astrakhan, and illustrates how the project investigates our office’s critical interest in blurring the lines between landscape, architecture, and infrastructure in order to create smarter systems that both rehabilitate our environment and create positive public spaces.
As discussed in the article, we believe there could be potential for projects such as BRS:1 to transition from the realm of theory to reality by gaining traction with local and state governments After the introduction of New York’s High Line, the collective interest of cities across the country to invest in green, urban, public spaces has been piqued. San Francisco is no stranger to this phenomenon – with the renovation of the SF/Oakland Bay Bridge being the city’s primary focus of a plethora of design proposals. As interesting as many of these ideas are, we believe that the project of “Green-Space-as-Destination-Infrastructure” could move beyond purely reclaiming derelict infrastructure for the purposes of tourism and urban revitalization.
Spanning hundreds of miles of coast line, “The Bay” is easily San Francisco’s most significant geographical characteristic – one that is deteriorating due to factors such as water pollution, environmental loss, and global climate change. We hope that BRS:1 can function as an in-road to discussing the potential benefit landscape infrastructure can have to creating destination green spaces that not only draw people and prestige to the city, but rebuild our coastal environment and foster community involvement and educational opportunities as well.
Parking Day 2011 Photos
Parking Day 2011, a set on Flickr.
We’re happy to share photos from our successful Park(ing) Day 2011 Parklet, which was installed in front of 826 Valencia. This year’s installation, titled the “paARRRrk-let!” was a temporary tree nursery and social space, which illustrated how the volume of one parking space (800 cubic feet) is the necessary volume for one urban tree to establish its roots and thrive. We had many visitors to the parklet throughout the day, and for those of you that stopped by, we thoroughly enjoyed sharing our installation and the great weather with you! For those that weren’t able to join us, there is a link above to our Flickr photostream, so you can see the process behind the paARRRrk-let and some images of its install.
For more information on 826 Valencia, be sure to visit their website.
Park(ing) Day 2011: paARRRRrk-let!
Come join Interstice Architects in front of 826 Valencia in the Mission for Park(ing) Day San Francisco 2011!
The volume of just one parking space is 800 cubic feet – which is equivalent to the minimum soil required for an urban tree to thrive. Using recycled wood palettes, we are installing a temporary story space/nursery, and in deference to the corsair spirit of our friends at 826 Valencia, our paarrrrk-let prototype will proclaim our proclivity for parking-space piracy in proper privateer practice. The parklet re-uses a waste stream material to create a multi-tiered space for people to lounge ‘on deck’ in the shade of an urban tree. The space defined by the outer edge of the pallets represents the soil the tree needs to develop a healthy and stable root system.
Our parklet illustrates not only how a parking spot can be transformed into an urban nursery, but how a temporary nursery space for a tree can also become a community social space. Tapping into our interest discussed in former posts regarding our research into Public Green Networks, we envision a system of both permanent and temporary urban nursery spaces that add a new dimension of verdant social space to the evolving ‘green’ urban fabric of the city. More on this idea in posts to come.
So please, make sure to stop by our paarrrrk-let and check out our park(ing) day page on the Parking Day DIY Network, where you can find mapped locations for parking day installations across the city, and take a look at all the different people and organizations participating in Park(in) Day this year! We would like to extend a special thanks to Rebar for their excellent organization of the worldwide event, and for starting this great tradition 6 years ago!
Public Networks of Urban Access
This past September, San Francisco held it’s annual “Architecture and the City Festival”. This year’s theme, “Investigating Urban Metabolisms,” asked participants to “… take an in-depth look at hidden and emergent systems that generate form, movement, growth and entropy in the city.” Taking part in the event, our office organized an exhibit titled “Public Networks of Urban Access,” which presented a variety of pedestrian open spaces developed in the city within the past 20 years, and analyzed the various emergent relationships that exist between them.
The exhibit interprets the festival’s theme of “Urban Metabolisms” by comparing the networks formed by these spaces to the various systems of the body and the roles they serve as parts of a unified whole. The aim of this process is to find creative ways to de-familiarize these sites so new interpretive value can be found – value which may guide future design strategies affecting the public space of the city. The detailed conditions, specific to each site, provide a broad basis for investigation, linking the various open spaces geographically, ecologically, socially, and historically.
Pedestrian Networks function in the body of the City in a multiplicity of ways. They are designed to accommodate the human body, but also function environmentally and experientially. As a CIRCULATORY system, they get us from here to there; as a RENAL system, they filter water and air, improving our health and sustaining us; and as a NEURAL network they communicate the mutable natures of the urban environment – the haptic, visual, auditory and olfactory. This analogy provides us with the impetuous to explore the “comparative anatomy” of several recently improved San Francisco pedestrian networks and is meant to stimulate further exploration through estranging the familiar – revealing new perspective so that we can discover (experience) them anew.
The projects presented, all of which provide access to wild landscapes, sensitive areas and waterfront, are intentionally diverse, and are categorized into one or more of the following: Topographic Access, Pedestrian Streets, Water Access, and Access to Sensitive Habitats. With each of the twelve projects represented we provided a field of comparative data, an abstract, communicating a brief history, the scope of the contemporary improvement, plan and sectional graphics, and an example of the designer’s vision or other experiential material – all meant to educate, awaken and inspire further exploration through self-guided visits to the individual projects.
The projects are mapped onto various aspects of San Francisco to contextualize them in relation – to water, sound, neighborhoods, and other urban metabolisms and emergent systems- all play a role in how we know and understand these places.
The projects selected and showcased are a small selection of the emerging network of pedestrian access and pedestrian-centered environments that have been designed, built and improved upon in the last two decades in San Francisco. The emerging pedestrian network is one that highlights the changing priorities of urbanites nation-wide, newly oriented toward more ecologically diverse experience in the urban environment. The newly designed and built artifacts and architectural elements are bringing us into closer contact with lost ecological systems, habitats and wilderness, and are sheltering us from the effects of the automobile. Through their re-design, sidewalks, streets and parking areas are being reclaimed as places for water, plants, birds, insects and simultaneously, as places for people.
To make matters even more complex, the lack or presence of humans on a site becomes a variable to wildlife as well, thus developing reflexive relationships between humans and wildlife.
The city’s open spaces have been developed organically – often shaped by circumstances unique to the era in which they were built. The histories of these sites then record, in part, the history of the city’s development. But a new impetus in public space design which has prioritized returning sites to their states before the settlement of San Francisco inverts the relationship of history and site by using the space of the public site to explore the natural history of the Bay. Since the city was settled so rapidly, it is uncertain what exactly the San Francisco landscape looked like ages ago, or how biotic communities functioned prior to human settlement. Public efforts are returning most of the ecologies studied to their “native” states.
These sites become forensic in nature. They tap into the growing interest in researching the ecological past of what are now dense urban centers. New open space projects that leverage the findings of this research establish connections between the pedestrian and the natural history of the city and provide a new context within which to situate proposed projects that link the various open natural spaces within to city creating new systems or supplementing existing ones. Sites which excavate the natural past for present populations have substantial projective value, and concerted efforts on the part of ecological historians and designers to work together could pay high dividends in enriching urban public spaces and creating more sites where nature may re-establish itself within the confines of the city. This is a theme we have investigated in past projects such as our investigation, “Agri-Structure | Eco-Structure,” and is one that we firmly believe carries great potential.
Another dimension relating to the pattern of development of San Francisco’s urban spaces is the organic, piecemeal process in which this network has taken shape. While San Francisco boasts a wide range of scale and size in its public open spaces, these parks, alleys, and pockets of green are most often discrete objects – relationships with other open spaces are either non-existent or have evolved through creative temporary programming often organized in grassroots fashion by city dwellers (take for example, the many small farmers markets that transform otherwise quiet streets between neighborhoods into temporary pedestrian public spaces). This pattern stands in stark contrast to cities such as Boston, which have historical precedents for large public space meta-projects (ie, Olmstead’s Emerald Necklace, and the recently completed Central Artery Project). This is an example of a process that is the polar opposite of the pattern of open space development in San Francisco. However, while these meta-projects laudably attempt to create defined connections between multiple public spaces, the very nature of their planning and construction is disruptive, costly, and time consuming. Despite these inherent drawbacks, their scale also carries visionary portent and suggests a greater city that could leverage its emergent possibility when perceived on the macro scale. We would like to propose such a project.
Given these precedents, our study’s proposal is for a project has not yet taken shape. This project would combine the discrete nature of San Francisco’s public spaces, the grassroots community involvement of the city’s population, and the vision and foresight of larger infrastructural projects. Could a planned network of temporary and permanent small scale urban spaces that collectively assist in filling the gaps between the city’s existing public urban spaces combine these three strategies successfully? Such a project could breathe new life to under-utilized spaces, find new uses for unnecessary program, and bridge successful sites with each other, creating a new layer of experience within the city. The discrete and small scale nature of each individual project would encourage community involvement and private investment into collective urban spaces. The large-scale vision of the project would ensure that these sites form relationships with existing public spaces, and create a new pedestrian experience within the city – encouraging further investment and community involvement.
We believe that the San Francisco’s goal should be nothing short of being the premiere pedestrian city in the country. A pedestrian open-space network such as we propose would form the basis for a new sense of what a “landmark” project entails – monumental in ambition but without the need for monumental form. To achieve this, we believe that a new metabolism or systemic project that is connected and incremental is necessary, finally evolving into a fulfilled promise for a better pedestrian city.