Showing posts with label Latent Design. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Latent Design. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 30, 2015

Can a Boombox Activate Chicago's Orphaned Public Plazas?

click images for larger view
Two years ago, the administration of Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel issued a Request for Proposals for the adoption of 49 underused public places owned by the city.  The parcels are all across the city, and range in size from 41,000 down to 436 square feet, with an average of 8,600.  Some, like the Nelson Algren Memorial at Polish Triangle, are long-established public squares.  Others are little more than space underneath the concrete pillars of a raised expressway.

The response was underwhelming. According to a January, 2014 update by Trib reporter John Byrne, there were only four RFP filings - two major billboard companies, Lamar Advertising and CBS Outdoor, and boutique architecture firms Latent Design and architect Carmen Vidal-Hallet's EcoVidal Design.   City officials indicated a decision on whether any of the entrants would be selected would be made within the year.
Katherine Darnstadt (left)
Instead, it wasn't until this past April that Emanuel introduced an ordinance to create the Make Way for People public plaza program, a public/private partnership to be managed by Latent Design, the firm founded by architect Katherine Darnstadt that already has a long history of public space interventions, from a Mini golf course installed in parking spots along Milwaukee Avenue, to 2013's Blah Blah Blob!, an inhabitable, brilliantly colored fabric tent that set up shop both at Union Station and a later Activate! event next to the Chicago Theater.

Under Activate! Chicago, ten locations are to be activated during the first year, which ends next summer, including at least one for each of five geographic regions into which the city was divided. Another twenty are to be activated in the final two years of the contract.  The initial budget is a measly $50,000.  To put that into perspective, the newly redeveloped Northerly Island came in at about $2.40 a square foot. Divided among the 12.4 acres of the 49 Peoples Plaza sites, that $5,000 comes out to about 9 cents a square foot.  The cost of the new Riverwalk calculates out to $1,163 per square foot.
Last Friday, Chicago First Lady Amy Rule assisted in the ribbon cutting for Boombox, the first major public plaza program installation. ("First Friday" Activate! events also took place at Jackson and Homan and at Englewood Plaza at 63rd Street.) 
The location was Wicker Park's Mautene Court.  According to a report by DNAInfo/Chicago's Alisa Hauser the plaza at 1260 North Milwaukee was created in the 1970's in what was formerly a staging area for the garment manufacturing industry that dominated the district earlier in the 20th century.  The 175 square-foot kiosk, heated and permitted for retail and food service, was constructed out of a stripped-down shipping container.


Boombox / Between Startup and Storefront from LATENT DESIGN on Vimeo.

Darnstadt said the container . . . 
. . . came from the south side of Chicago. The company we purchased it from cut down a standard 8x20 for us and removed all four sides and then shipped it to our warehouse for construction. We constructed the Boombox about 75% in a warehouse, then disassembled it to flatbed truck [it] to the site for final install. We cleared underpasses by only an inch. Literally. The Boombox weighs about 5,000 pounds and the exterior panels are the backside of good old cheap Hardie board [a cement board siding]. The pattern is the result of the dying process. 
Opening night featured a performance by dancers from the Joffrey Ballet.  Hauser reports Darnstadt herself made use of the kiosk for her own office, with the first tenant is scheduled to be a pop-up library.  Negotiations are ongoing for a retail tenant during the holiday shopping season.
Described as a "new platform for Nomadic retail", Boombox rents for $500 a week, with lease periods of two weeks to three months.  Mautene Court should prove an attractive location, nestled next to Tocco restaurant along the trendy Milwaukee retail strip that mixes empty storefronts with hip retailers, restaurants and theaters.

Read More:

McPlazas? Privatizing Chicago's Orphan Public Spaces


Enter the Blob: Activate! Union Station

Wednesday, August 14, 2013

Blah Blah Blob on the Plaza, trainYARD in the Great Hall: Activate Union Station winners announced

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Late yesterday, the Metropolitan Planning Council announced the two winners of its 2013 Activate Union Station placemaking contest, which had solicited ideas for enlivening Chicago's grand railroad terminal.

Blah Blah Blob!, by Katherine Darnstadt's firm Latent Design, a nylon sculpture that will actually be constructed not in the Grand Hall, as shown on the rendering, but outside, along atop an artificial lawn on the riverside esplanade of the Fifth Third Center, the new name for 222 South Riverside, the mediocre skyscraper for which Union Station's great concourse was demolished.
Commuters, people watchers, newspaper readers, snack eaters, conductors, and picture takers are invited to wander inside the multi-colored blob or view it from a distance as it moves in time with those navigating its passage ways.
.  . . Under the blob will be an astro turf lawn that will invite commuters to stop and enjoy the space within a space. Lectures and special events will be hosted under the blob during the installation in partnership with the Spontaneous Intervention exhibit and other arts organizations.
The second winner, trainYARD, by a unnamed “team of Chicago-based architects” will transform the station's Great Hall into a recycled summer landscape., with synthetic grass, tetherball, picnic tables and lawn games like bocce.

We know that summer in Chicago can get hot and humid, which makes it hard to get out and enjoy the lovely parks around the city.  We are bringing the park to the people and putting it right in the middle of their daily routine.
Both winners will get $5,000 to make their visions a reality  The installations are scheduled to be on view from Saturday, August 24th through Monday, September 2nd.  During that week, Fitness Formula Clubs will also be offering free body fat testing and classes on the Fifth Third Center plaza.

The content runner-up is I Searched High and Low for You, from a “Chicago-born, Boston-base architect duo” - also unnamed - envisioned enlivening Union Station's massive Canal Street colonnade with colorful red fabric.
Read more:

Skate/Pinball/Astroturf/Text/Balloon/Blob/High Five Union Station - Activate Union Station entries
Behind the Black Curtain:  Union Station's Elegant and Forgotten Dining Hall.