Inside 43215. Downtown Lifestyles
CITY CENTER TRILOGY, PART TWO: FUTURE COMMONS GROUNDS
The “Phoenix from the Ashes” story is a little too familiar, but it’s eminently appropriate for Columbus Commons… from out of the rubble of a faded local hotspot arises a new star with the same spirit of a community gathering place.
The plans have been drawn, circulated and discussed. It’s a six-acre park in the very heart of our city. While it’s not unusual for a thriving city to host a park at its core, it is unusual to have a park sitting on top of a place-to-park.
Yes, the underground 950-space parking garage will remain in full operation during and after construction beneath the greenery. Retaining convenient downtown parking is a priority – and it’s actually simplified the rest of the Columbus Commons design process.
What goes with a park that sits on underground parking? The turf can’t support multi-level high-rise structure. So, the grand lawn must then be designed for people and human activities. An amphitheater is in the works and an event staging area too.
Welcoming walkways, trees, benches, chairs and tables will greet guests and the Commons grounds will eventually be lined with retail, office space and housing that supports those activities to create a true downtown neighborhood.
And in the spring of 2011, there’s the Phoenix from the ashes again. Out of the wreckage of a deserted mall, a gathering place at the city’s center.
http://www.downtowncolumbus.com/progress/columbus-commons
Tags: City Center, columbus, Columbus Commons, Downtown, Downtown Columbus, Housing, Office space, Retail
September 5th, 2009 at 9:11 am
Like I mentioned to the CDDC, for safety and vibrancy the new builds on High *must* have restaurant/bar/cafe space all facing the park and, if possible, reconfigure existing buildings to include such space facing the park. That ensures that more eyes will be on the park and that people have reasons to go at different hours. That, and it’d be the closest thing to the wonderful plazas I frequented in Spain. Right now, we have nothing at all like them, nor do other American cities in general.