retrofitting trees in an urban corridor: perspectives from a designer, a forester and a planner

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Retrofitting Trees in an Urban Corridor: Perspectives from a Designer, a Forester and a Planner November 19, 2015

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Page 1: Retrofitting Trees in an Urban Corridor: Perspectives from a Designer, a Forester and a Planner

Retrofitting Trees in an Urban Corridor: Perspectives from a

Designer, a Forester and a PlannerNovember 19, 2015

Page 2: Retrofitting Trees in an Urban Corridor: Perspectives from a Designer, a Forester and a Planner

AGENDA

Who are we & what are we talking about ?

• Matt Shawaker, Associate Principle, RNL• Rob Davis, Denver City Forester• Karen Good, Denver Public Works Within Mayor

Michael B. Hancock’s Corridor of Opportunity ─ which stretches 23 miles from DIA to Downtown Denver ─ Brighton Boulevard would serve as a gateway to the city.

Page 3: Retrofitting Trees in an Urban Corridor: Perspectives from a Designer, a Forester and a Planner

PURPOSE AND NEED

Why are we working on Brighton Boulevard?Transform Brighton Blvd into a vibrant place and enhanced travel corridor for all users:• Improve safety for all• Basic infrastructure (e.g. curb, gutter, sidewalk, street

trees and planting areas)• New bike and pedestrian facilities• Burying power lines underground• Design that respects the area’s rich history and new

development

Page 4: Retrofitting Trees in an Urban Corridor: Perspectives from a Designer, a Forester and a Planner

HEAT ISLAND EFFECT

Why is increasing the tree canopy important?Improve aesthetics, water quality and air quality:• One of the highest heat island index areas in the city• Limited drainage improvements and water treatment• Immediately adjacent to the South Platte River• Main corridor to/from downtown and the airport• Integrate larger sustainability goals for the City• Pilot new techniques and begin branding of innovative

treatments and design

Page 5: Retrofitting Trees in an Urban Corridor: Perspectives from a Designer, a Forester and a Planner

PROJECT HISTORY AND BACKGROUND

Page 6: Retrofitting Trees in an Urban Corridor: Perspectives from a Designer, a Forester and a Planner

HOW DID WE GET TO THIS POINT?

Page 7: Retrofitting Trees in an Urban Corridor: Perspectives from a Designer, a Forester and a Planner

MAIN STREET AREAPrioritizes sidewalk activity pedestrian connectivity, multi-modal transportation, safety and on street parking that celebrates the character of River North

EDUCATION, INDUSTRY & DEVELOPMENT AREABalances a diversity of mixed-use activities, multi-modal transportation, pedestrian connectivity and safety that celebrates the character of River North

NATIONAL WESTERN CENTER AREAPrioritizes access to the National Western Center with safe multi-modal connectivity that stimulates street activity and creates an entertainment destination

NORTHERN AREAEncourages a welcoming frontage for existing uses, multi-modal transportation and safety that respects the Riverside Cemetery

CHARACTER AREAS

Page 8: Retrofitting Trees in an Urban Corridor: Perspectives from a Designer, a Forester and a Planner

DESIGN TRADEOFFS

• Main Street Character Area: Design Tradeoffs29th St. to 38th St.

Page 9: Retrofitting Trees in an Urban Corridor: Perspectives from a Designer, a Forester and a Planner

VISION AND DESIGN PROCESS

Photo compliments of Kimberly Wolff

Page 10: Retrofitting Trees in an Urban Corridor: Perspectives from a Designer, a Forester and a Planner

INDUSTRIAL AREA LACKING INFRASTRUCTURE

What does Brighton Boulevard look like now?

Page 11: Retrofitting Trees in an Urban Corridor: Perspectives from a Designer, a Forester and a Planner

How is Brighton Boulevard starting to transform?

RECENT DEVELOPMENT AND ADAPTIVE REUSE

Page 12: Retrofitting Trees in an Urban Corridor: Perspectives from a Designer, a Forester and a Planner

DESIGN DETAIL

HOW DID WE GET HERE - VISION

Page 13: Retrofitting Trees in an Urban Corridor: Perspectives from a Designer, a Forester and a Planner

SUSTAINABILITY STRATEGIES

HOW DID WE GET HERE - VISION

Page 14: Retrofitting Trees in an Urban Corridor: Perspectives from a Designer, a Forester and a Planner

DESIGN DETAIL

What will Brighton Boulevard look like?

Page 15: Retrofitting Trees in an Urban Corridor: Perspectives from a Designer, a Forester and a Planner

DESIGN DETAIL

HOW DID WE GET HERE - COORDINATION

At installation tree canopy – note density

Mature tree canopy – maintained to emulate riparian character of adjacent Platte River corridor

Page 16: Retrofitting Trees in an Urban Corridor: Perspectives from a Designer, a Forester and a Planner

DESIGN DETAIL

HOW DID WE GET HERE - COORDINATION

At installation tree canopy – note density

Added diversity to tree planting palette and created gaps in PLD for placement of larger shade trees

Page 17: Retrofitting Trees in an Urban Corridor: Perspectives from a Designer, a Forester and a Planner

SPECIES OPTIONS

HOW DID WE GET HERE - COORDINATION

Page 18: Retrofitting Trees in an Urban Corridor: Perspectives from a Designer, a Forester and a Planner

FINAL DESIGN

• Maintenance guidelines

• Annual inspections• Continued study &

potential to refine design/species

• Coordination with GID

What still needs to be done and how will maintenance be addressed?

Page 19: Retrofitting Trees in an Urban Corridor: Perspectives from a Designer, a Forester and a Planner

DESIGN STUDY GOALS

What are the overarching goals for the design effort?

• Define the elements to be constructed within the City Right of Way (sidewalks, bike facility, parking, street lights, drainage, etc.) – ~$26M budget

• Integrate RiNo GID funded enhancements (trees/landscaping, pedestrian/accent lighting, enhanced paving) into a cohesive streetscape– ~$3M budget

Page 20: Retrofitting Trees in an Urban Corridor: Perspectives from a Designer, a Forester and a Planner

WHERE DO WE GO FROM HERE?

What are the next steps for the project?Aka – the challenges ahead

Action TimingPreliminary design Completed May 2015Stakeholder engagement OngoingBID/GID vote November 2015 – SUCCESS!Pre-construction public meeting Late 2015Final design Late 2015Construction begins Early 2016Construction completed 2017

Page 21: Retrofitting Trees in an Urban Corridor: Perspectives from a Designer, a Forester and a Planner

QUESTIONS AND DISCUSSION