Awards: 2005 Institute Honor Award for Interior Architecture
Recipient: Voorsanger Architects PC: Jorge Prado; James MacDonald, AIA; Bartholomew Voorsanger, FAIA (left to right)
Project: Elie Tahari Fashion Design Office & Warehouse; Millburn, N.J.
Client: Elie Tahari; New York City
Photo: Thomas Loof
 

   
 
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  Report Identifies Keys to Successful Transportation Projects

AIA and University of Minnesota study examines economic, environmental and public health benefits of well-designed transportation projects
 
For Immediate Release
  
Contact: Scott Frank
 202-626-7467
 sfrank@aia.org
Washington, D.C., January 14, 2008 — There are six key design strategies that can be crucial in determining whether or not a transportation project will benefit its community, according to a new federal study conducted by the American Institute of Architects (AIA) and University of Minnesota’s Center for Transportation Studies (CTS).

The report, Moving Communities Forward, analyzes over thirty different transportation projects from every corner of the country, exploring how they impact their communities’ economic progress, environmental health, public safety, level of citizen participation and overall aesthetics and livability. The study was authorized by Congress in the 2005 transportation bill and funded by the U.S. Department of Transportation.

David T. Downey, Assoc. AIA, managing director of the AIA Center for Communities by Design said, “The findings show that small decisions have major effects on how a transportation project impacts its community. In particular, it was striking to see how involving the public in a design process that incorporates all applicable disciplines – architects, engineers, planners, landscape architects, contractors, and government officials – can achieve a solution that has multiple benefits for a community.”

Click here for the full report

Bob Johns, University of Minnesota CTS Director, added, “The benefits of involving multiple disciplines were evident in this research as well as in design practice. This truly was an interdisciplinary academic study, with each researcher's findings enriched by his or her interactions with the full research team.”

The report identifies six “keys” to ensuring a successful project that benefits communities economically, environmentally and other ways:

• Employing an integrated design process where planners, designers, transportation officials and builders develop a unified plan
• Including all community stakeholders from the outset
• Using three and four-dimensional images and graphics to increase citizen involvement, understanding, and buy-in
• Creating human-scaled structures and spaces that make busy transportation hubs more manageable
• Utilizing easily legible signs and directions that make complicated multimodal systems easier and safer to navigate
• Designing projects to be both durable and adaptable to new transportation modes and community needs

About The American Institute of Architects
For over 150 years, members of The American Institute of Architects have worked with each other and their communities to create more valuable, healthy, secure, and sustainable buildings and cityscapes. AIA members have access to the right people, knowledge, and tools to create better design, and through such resources and access, they help clients and communities make their visions real. www.aia.org

About the University of Minnesota Center for Transportation Studies
Founded in 1987, CTS is a nationally prominent center that attracts more than $22 million annually for research, education, and outreach programs. The Center works with more than 75 faculty from 25 different departments in seven colleges. Funding sources include numerous federal, state, local, and private-sector sponsors. Throughout its history, the Center has served as a resource and facilitator in helping talented University researchers develop new knowledge about transportation and then helping share that knowledge with professionals and policymakers. Ultimately, this knowledge improves transportation decision making—meaning better and safer transportation systems, smarter investments, and a higher quality of life for Minnesota and the nation. www.cts.umn.edu