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canal park, washington,
d.c.
The Washington Canal Park
will be the first public park built in Washington D.C.
in over 20 years and marks the first public project of the Anacostia Waterfront Initiative,
whose aim is to restore and revitalize the Anacostia's waterfront.
In the fall of 2004, GGN and Atelier Dreiseitl (along
with Hood Design and Sasaki Associates) participated
an invited design competition that yielded the two park designs discussed
below. The competition was funded through the National Endowment for the
Arts and the park itself will be paid for by contributions from the
surrounding landowners and a grant from the Environmental
Protection Agency dedicated to demonstration projects for decentralized
wastewater infrastructure. Therefore, the park's design and program
criteria include distinctive water features, innovative stormwater management,
public safety, and opportunities for public art and education.
The 1.8 acre Canal Park site runs along three narrow
blocks in the Near Southeast neighborhood
of Washington D.C., at the center of an area
considered to be largest waterfront transformation in the country. Adjacent
to the site are new office buildings, including a new headquarters for the
U.S. Department of Transportation, the emerging M Street commercial
corridor and a 1,500 unit mixed-income Hope VI redevelopment. The Canal Park
is central to the waterfront's open space network as it can provide a
gathering place for the Near Southeast and can establish a connection
between the Anacostia
River to the south
and the Capitol Hill neighborhood to the north.
The Canal Blocks site is named after the Washington Canal that ran through the area in
the 19th century. Part of the L'Enfant Plan, it was intended to connect the
Anacostia River
across the city through the National Mall to the Potomac
River. Because of the tidal nature of the Anacostia River,
however, the Washington
Canal did not
function effectively, became an open sewer and was eventually covered up.
But the form of the original canal remains in the three narrow blocks.
Comparing GGN and Atelier Dreiseitl's approach to the
same site can provide us with different interpretations of how to engage
water and the hydrologic cycle in urban spaces.
collective
waters
Gustafson, Guthrie, Nichol proposal
stepping stones
Atelier Dreiseitl proposal
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detail from the L'Enfant plan for Washington of 1791 shows the Washington
Canal originating on the Anacostia River (here labeled Eastern Branch) and
moving north towards the Mall and west to the Potomac River. The site of
the current Canal Blocks is just south of where the middle canal turns
west. From the Library of Congress.
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