Booth-Kelly Mixed-Use District
Loading...
Date
2012
Authors
Pecenka, Jennifer
Muller, Brook
Asnis, Marc
Beamer, Mike
Biniaris, Aliki
Bonnett, Erik
Bryant, Hannah
Cavin, Laura
Cohen, Daniele
Day, Emi
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
University of Oregon
Abstract
Graduate and undergraduate architecture students in Professor Brook Muller’s
terminal studio during winter and spring terms of 2012 examined potential
redevelopment scenarios for the Booth-Kelly site, located in downtown
Springfield. The city anticipated
redevelopment concepts and guidelines developed as part of the studio could
potentially be adopted into the Downtown Refinement Plan and implemented in
the future.
Students identified several programmatic schemes that describe how the site
could become a destination location with a pedestrian-friendly appeal. Seen as
a collision of industry and nature, sharing multiple habitats and crossing paths,
the site’s industrial beauty and rich history are ideal for unique design solutions
that exemplify these characteristics. An in-depth focus on its ecology led many
students to incorporate much of the surrounding context in a systems thinking
approach. Many of the designs seek to interconnect various processes, from
both onsite and offsite byproducts and resources, and to bridge natural and
urban resource flows.
Common themes emerged with different programmatic emphases, including:
adaptive reuse, agricultural production and distribution, community education,
linking downtown to industry, and adaptable piecemeal development. While each
project holds a different focus, the studio collectively promoted many of the same
design values.
Description
51 pages
Keywords
Springfield (Or.), Land Use