Downtown Cary Park
Cary, North Carolina
by Landscape Forms
Photo Credit: Tzu Chen Photography
x
1 / 12
2 / 12
3 / 12
4 / 12
5 / 12
6 / 12
7 / 12
8 / 12
9 / 12
10 / 12
11 / 12
12 / 12
The Parks Issue of Landscape Architect & Specifier News saw many firms submit their projects for feature consideration. This project was not chosen for a Feature in the issue, but we at LandscapeArchitect.com thought the project deserved to be showcased online . . .
Cary, North Carolina is a town on the rise. Since 1990, its population has nearly tripled, and since it's situated at the heart of North Carolina's Research Triangle - currently the third-fastest growing region in the country - those numbers are only set to grow.
Welcoming a new wave of young professionals and families seeking opportunity and a high standard of living set against the immense natural beauty of the Piedmont region, the Town of Cary is seizing the opportunity to transform and revitalize. A cornerstone of this revitalization is the new Downtown Cary Park, one of the region's first truly modern urban parks that takes accessibility, sustainability, connection to native landscape, and grassroots community involvement into full account.
Behind such a transformative public infrastructure project was the Boston office of OJB Landscape Architecture, whose biophilic design plan artfully marries diverse and engaging programming with an authentic connection to the rich Piedmont landscape. Shade gardens, perennial gardens, wetland and aquatic plantings, pollinator gardens, and native meadows all intertwine with opportunities for play and community activity at Downtown Cary Park. A network of serpentine paths and elevated walkways stitch together a series of outdoor "rooms" that include a pavilion with a marketplace, an interactive water feature, an experiential and inclusive play environment, a great lawn, a flexible event space, and the dog-friendly Bark Bar.
The team at OJB tasked Landscape Forms' Studio 431 custom team with crafting Downtown Cary Park's custom seating, including a collection of curvilinear benches designed specifically to harmonize with the site's unique geometry. OBJ said, "We brought in Studio 431 after we had a good idea of what we wanted to accomplish." Studio 431 worked closely with OJB to ensure the custom seating precisely met the project's design goals. Over a series of calls and reviews of shop drawings, the teams honed the design details--concealing structural components, highlighting the character of the wood, even dialing in the exact powder-coat color of the hardware--to guarantee the finished product matched the firm's exact creative vision.
The sinuous, flowing, and organic basis for the park's design was both a stylistic and practical choice, reinforcing a connection to nature while navigating existing features like century-old pecan trees, stormwater channels, and 30 feet of grade change from west to east across the park. "With all of these aspects combined, we knew we had to be flexible and customizable in just about every built element on this project," continues Beer.
To have your project featured in LASN or on LandscapeArchitect.com please email
editorial@landscapearchitect.comFor more information about submitting a project, go to:
https://landscapearchitect.com/research/editorial/editorial-submissions.php