Buckhead reporter. (Sandy Springs, GA) 2007-current, December 02, 2019, Image 6
BH 6 | Community Facebook.com/TheReporterNewspapers ■ twitter.com/Reporter_News BeltLine creator holds contest for reimagining 1-285’s uses BYJOHNRUCH The urban planning guru who dreamed up the Atlanta BeltLine is stag ing a contest for rethink ing the car-centric uses of 1-285 and turning the entire Perimeter high way into “A Bigger Better Loop.” Ryan Gravel launched the contest for the con cepts Nov. 15 at Generator, his downtown nonprof it that serves as a brain storming club. He was expected to announce winners and display their ideas Dec. 6. He circulat ed the contest on social media, using a graphic showing 1-285 as a huge ring and the BeltLine as a smaller loop within it. In an interview, Grav el said the contest is just for playful, casual fun and he’s aiming for far- out concepts, while at the same time ac SPECIAL The “Bigger Better Loop” design competition entry form includes a graphic showing 1-285 and the Atlanta BeltLine. knowledging that one never knows where brainstorming might lead. After all, that’s HAVE YOU NOTICED AN ABNORMAL PINK OR BROWN SPOT, PATCH, OR MOLE? IGNORING THE SIGNS COULD BE FATAL. TOTAL SKIN HEALTH CONTACT US TO SCHEDULE YOUR APPOINTMENT <B> Georgia Dermatology Partners Georgia Dermatology Partners 3925 Peachtree Road, Suite 200 Brookhaven, CA 30319 Tel: (770)736-5206 how the BeltLine came about 20 years ago, an anniversary that is the occasion for the 1-285 contest. This year also hap pens to be the 50th anniversary of 1-285. “I do like the idea of rethinking 1-285. It could do more than just carry cars,” said Gravel. “...So I like the idea of 285 be coming something that people love. And I don’t know what it would take to do that. I definitely think that it’s possible and I don’t think that it comes, necessarily, at the expense of cars.” “The thesis of the Atlan ta BeltLine was that adapta tion of underutilized infra structure could make a new way of life possible in Atlan ta,” says Gravel’s contest an nouncement. “Inspired by the success of that proposition, Generator is asking you to pitch your ideas for transformation of Atlanta’s larger loop: Interstate 285.” “Early advocates for the Atlanta Belt- Line were proposing a wildly ambitious idea for a loop of land they didn’t own, to be transformed by money they didn’t have, in a political climate that - at the time - was hostile to everything they were proposing,” the announcement says. “Giv en that, Generator’s hope for this compe tition is that you not burden your idea with today’s politics, budgets or other constraints. It could be anything - think big and be creative.” 1-285 gets prominent discussion in Gravel’s acclaimed 2016 book “Where We Want to Live: Reclaiming Infrastruc ture for a New Generation of American Cities.” Gravel is a Chamblee native who says his family moved there because of the suburban development the Perimeter made possible. “I grew up 285... We drove to Perimeter Mall when there were cows across the street,” he said. The latest solid plan for the future of 1-285 is the Georgia Department of Trans portation is embarking on a massive and controversial plan to add toll lanes to the top end of the Perimeter. Brookhaven, Dunwoody, Sandy Springs and other area cities are advocating that transit buses use the lanes as well. Gravel said the toll lanes were not an inspiration for the con test and made it clear he’s not a fan. “The toll lanes are fine. But to me, we should be jumping ahead to transit and being real about transit,” he said. “I just don’t get that. I don’t get those [toll lanes].” Like officials in the top end Perime ter cities, Gravel suggest bus rapid transit on western 1-285 in his work on the city of Atlanta’s urban planning vision book. He said such projects as a rail line ringing the Perimeter could be a transformative connection between metro Atlanta com munities. “You could do it,” he says. “You don’t have to build anything new. You could take the middle lanes.” Regarding GDOT’s current plan, he said he understands the benefits of charg ing for driving and that cars will persist in American culture, but that toll lanes raise questions about equity, lifestyle and the future of transportation. “I’d rather start in a more aspirational place and just sort of go design something for ev erybody,” he said. “At the end of the day, toll lanes are still for cars, right? I just don’t think that or dinary cars are the fu ture.” “The magic of the BeltLine is that it is ab solutely a transportation project,” he said, “but it starts with [the question of] what kind of life we’d like to lead.” Gravel’s contest calls for clear, concise concepts that Generator can publicize and adapt. Winners will get unspecific awards “in a range of categories.” He said that won’t be taken too seriously. His idea is that all submissions will be hung on the wall and some judges he’ll gather will choose winners in catego ries that may be whimsical. He reeled off such ideas as, “Best for People,” “Best for the Planet,” “Best Utopia” and “Best Dys topia.” The prize part is playful, too. What will the winners get? Perhaps a driving tour of the Perimeter? “Honestly, it just occurred to me today, what will people be expect ing? I might craft something... But it’s go ing to be handmade for sure,” he said, adding with a laugh, “But I do like the idea of a personal tour of 285.” Gravel apparently was introduced to the idea of rethinking 1-285 in 2017, when he made a keynote speech to the San dy Springs Conservancy, a parks advo cacy group, on the night that part of 1-85 burned in a notorious fire. During the event, conservancy Executive Director Melody Harclerode asked about the fu ture of 1-285 and its possible alternative uses. However, in the recent interview, he said he doesn’t recall the exchange. “Y’all are so lucky to have Melody here because I’ve never heard that question.... But I love it,” Gravel said at the time. “I love the idea of rethinking 285.” “It’s a public space,” he continued, sug gesting that some of its many lanes be used for something other than cars. “In stead of thinking of it as a barrier be tween ITP and OTP [inside and outside the Perimeter], think of it as a place that people come to somehow.” Generator is based at 828 Ralph McGill Boulevard in Atlanta. For more informa tion about Generator, see generatorcity. org. Ryan Gravel.