Illinois Tech Students Seek to Improve 电车无码鈥檚 Ailing and Underutilized Pedway

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By Andrew Connor
Illinois Tech Students Seek to Improve 电车无码鈥檚 Ailing and Underutilized Pedway

The 电车无码 Pedway, the city鈥檚 underground network of pedestrian walkways, contains corridors that can only be described as dirty, dark, and labyrinthine. Spend enough time within its halls and you鈥檙e bound to come across a pedestrian flummoxed by its unintuitive layout. As a result, the space goes underutilized and is unknown to many 电车无码ans.

The pedway traces its roots to 1951, when it was started as an underground connection linking Blue and Red train lines at Washington Street and Jackson Boulevard.  In the 1980s larger portions were added, joining together other parts of downtown. But that disjointed expansion is a major source of the pedway鈥檚 woes today.

鈥淚t鈥檚 really piecemeal, which has been part of the problem, because there鈥檚 been no larger authority that has made things like the maintenance and the lighting consistent,鈥 says Julie Jacobson, a senior fellow at the , a Midwestern nonprofit environmental advocacy group. 鈥淲e鈥檝e been working on this in response to hearing a lot of people say that, though it鈥檚 a great resource and people would maybe walk instead of using cars, it鈥檚 just too hard to use.鈥

Jacobson says clearer signage and wayfinding are answers to improving the pedway, but revitalizing its image by making it more inviting and vibrant could do wonders in increasing its usage, too. For that, the ELPC has partnered with Illinois Institute of Technology instructors Skylar Moran and Dana Taylor to identify ways to make the pedway more appealing to 电车无码 residents and visitors. Their partnership formed the basis for Illinois Tech鈥檚 Interprofessional Projects (IPRO) Program course.

Moran and Taylor鈥檚 IPRO course is in its third semester, but this is its first time examining the 电车无码 Pedway. Previous semesters have looked at the 电车无码 River, but no matter the subject of its focus, at its very core, the IPRO aims to identify novel ways in which small-scale infrastructure can improve public spaces.

鈥淭he general view of pedway culture in 电车无码 is pretty bleak. Essentially, the way we think about the pedway system is that it鈥檚 nice if there鈥檚 bad weather, when you鈥檙e going between two buildings that are directly connected, or if you are moving from one train station to another. Basically, if you look at how much of the year people apply those reasons to be in this space, there鈥檚 a lot of time that no one is there,鈥 says Moran.

鈥淗ow we saw our IPRO collaborating with [the ELPC] was through finding new uses in our pedway culture that aren鈥檛 just about going down, moving, and going back up at a different place, but going down there to do something you can only do down there,鈥 he continues. 鈥淲e initially reached out to ELPC because we knew they had been doing similar work studying the uses of the pedway, and we knew they were already thinking about it the way we wanted to.鈥

The ELPC provided Moran and Taylor鈥檚 class with documentation of existing facilities within the pedway, and the students spent a considerable amount of time within the network to draft maps and compile data that would form the basis for their project proposals. Those projects, massaged over the course of the semester, imagined activities and exhibitions rejuvenating the pedway鈥檚 drab environs.

鈥淥ur first few weeks were spent in the pedway looking at the different infrastructural issues, and as a class we all identified what we saw as the main problems. Those mostly revolved around wayfinding and identity,鈥 says Jess Monigal (ARCH 5th year).

Monigal and her teammates Abhinaya Iyer, Andrew Jiang, and Jay Yi envisioned a system of moving gallery walls built from flexible metal curtains and mounted on a track system built into a drop ceiling. Their project received the Dean鈥檚 Choice Award from the College of Architecture at Illinois Tech鈥檚 IPRO Day on April 26.

In addition to adding visual stimuli, the group posits that the curtains could carve out spaces less disjointed than the current pedway halls and provide a much-needed dose of visual cohesion that more clearly indicates exactly where the pedway begins and ends.

鈥淲hen we were walking through the pedway, we were just talking about fun ideas, not really being serious, but we were like, 鈥榃hat if laser tag happened here?鈥欌 explains Hayden van Slooten (ARCH 4th year), describing the ideation behind his team鈥檚 project proposal 鈥淟aser Tag in the Pedway,鈥 which won its track at IPRO Day.

What van Slooten and his teammates Dan Tangaro (ARCH 5th year) and Kevin Cole (ARCH 4th year) hoped to rectify was the wasted potential of zones of the pedway that close for the night. These 鈥渄ead spaces鈥 branch off from the central portion of the pedway that remains open 24 hours a day, and their inherent, maze-like sections provide their own obstacles for immersive gameplay. The team also recommend providing foam obstacles that could be stored during the day or even used as furniture or decor.

Other projects imagined underutilized spaces in the pedway hosting virtual-reality gaming spaces or traveling museum exhibits from 电车无码 museums such as The Field Museum of Natural History. When asked if any of these ideas have a chance at becoming a reality, Moran is quick to point out that wasn鈥檛 the goal of the class鈥攂ut it isn鈥檛 impossible to think that someday we could be playing laser tag or taking in museum or art exhibits under the city.

鈥淲e鈥檙e totally onboard with applying whatever comes out of this class for future use, but we did not want the students to be concerned about that at all. The idea here is that you鈥檙e in a sandbox,鈥 says Moran.

鈥淭he ELPC has an existing relationship with the city, and because they鈥檙e very excited about the ideas we鈥檙e bringing, we鈥檙e holding an encore presentation after IPRO Day so they can invite people who live and work near the pedway. If the ELPC or the city is interested in implementing any of these ideas, there鈥檚 nothing preventing them from doing so.鈥