查看完整案例

收藏

下载
How “Peak Experience” is Inspired by The San Fransisco Hills
Erik Schofield
Peak Experience, by Atlas Lab, Market Street, San Francisco.
What does a main street in your city or town look like? A streetscape is typically a stretched linear entity that encourages circulation and has common elements such as street lighting; lanes paved in an orderly fashion for cars, bicycles and pedestrians; landscape planting; and some street furniture. One finds great diversity in a streetscape, and every street has a separate identity. However, we don’t always find streets that encourage us to partake in any activity besides fast-paced walking. As part of the Market Street Prototyping Festival, the unique streetscape prototype installation of the Peak Experience is driven by a desire to integrate play into traditional street models and provide opportunities for connection with others.
Peak Experience. Photo credit: Atlas Lab, tenBrink Garza
Peak Experience
For the people of San Francisco, Market Street has always been a passageway, not a destination. The city itself is built on rolling waves of hills. Besides the Golden Gate Bridge and the stunning views across San Francisco’s bay, the city is famous for the hilly topography of its peninsula, making it distinctive among American cities. The city’s iconic terrain has curated and framed its diverse neighborhoods. Market Street has been a different story. Built on a rare flat land, the area lacks the iconic views of San Francisco’s landscape. Although the main thoroughfare provides links to the vibrant surrounding neighborhoods, it lacks the character other spaces in the city provide and does not support a platform for community engagement.
Peak Experience. Photo credit: Atlas Lab, tenBrink Garza
Inspired by the ExistingTopography
Peak Experience. Image credit: Atlas Lab
What are the hills made out of?
The streetscape prototype for the festival involves the installation that occupies a 15-foot-by-15-foot site. The surface of the pedestrian route is transformed into an expressive display of the topography of three of San Francisco’s hills: Nob Hill, Russian Hill, and Telegraph Hill. The hills are made out of milled foam coated in the flexible play surface. The interesting addition to the design is that the mini-mounds also correspond to the primary street grid overlaid on the surface of each hill.
Peak Experience. Image credit: Atlas Lab
Looks Can Be Deceiving…
Don’t let the simplistic appearance fool you. The design process for Peak Experience consisted of extensive research of the hills of San Francisco. Through the collection of topographic data and mapping, each hill was assigned a vertical elevation on AutoCad to recreate the city’s hills accurately. The computerized models were then used to vertically exaggerate the surfaces to represent the true forms of these hills, stripped off from the urban fabric.
Why not have this everywhere?
The true benefit of the project stems from the engagement of the community with the public art installation. You can take a look at Atlas Lab’s Instagram page that shows children performing parkour like movements to see the vision of the project come true, while the adults snap pictures on their phones and the braver adults have a go at testing out the middle peak as a seating structure. The children’s interactions present a valid question of why our journeys down long streets have to consist of plain walking when we can spice it up with some kicks and flips in between?
Peak Experience. Photo credit: Atlas Lab, tenBrink Garza
Peak Experience. Photo credit: Atlas Lab, tenBrink Garza
“100 percent unique to San Francisco”
Peak Experience is simple, context-sensitive, and interactive for all ages. What is great about this project is that it is 100 percent unique to San Francisco, turning the city’s natural landmarks into rubberized mounds. The soft and flexible pedestrian zone within the street responds to the often static streetscape elements with a malleable street typology that ultimately breaks up the linear form of the thoroughfare.
Peak Experience. Photo credit: Atlas Lab, tenBrink Garza
A Shift in Focus
The recreational corridor introduces play into people’s daily lives, allowing passers-by to shift their focus from getting from point a to point b and realize that the journey can be quite an exhilarating experience.
That being said, can you think of ways to recreate the streetscapes in your towns and cities to benefit community engagement and change perception?
Peak Experience. Photo credit: Atlas Lab, tenBrink Garza
Full Project Credits for Peak Experience
Project: PEAK EXPERIENCE – Deploying San Francisco’s iconic terrain as an agent for interactive discovery, play, and community engagement
Project Type: Juried Competition – Temporary Installation
Competition Name: Market Street Prototyping Festival
Designers: Atlas Lab
Location: Market Street, San Francisco
Area: Around 20m2
Client: The public engaging in the 2015 San Francisco Market Street Prototyping Festival
Year: 2015
Team Information: Andrew tenBrink and Kimberly Garza (ATLAS Lab)
客服
消息
收藏
下载
最近











