COMMUNITY ARTS PROJECT

 


     

   Public Art Frequently     Asked Questions 


   Public Art Main

   Return to POAC Main

   

  

     

 

 

 

   

 

 


Phoenix Office of Arts and Culture
Civic Space Project

 

PROJECT UPDATE

Beginning on March 9, 2009, construction crews will complete installation of a major outdoor work of public art by Janet Echelman at the new Downtown Civic Space, located north of Van Buren Street between Central and First Avenues. This will be the final phase of the sculpture’s installation. The first phase occurred in late June 2008, when construction crews erected the sculpture’s structural steel armature. The award-winning structure consists of two tubular steel rings suspended above the park on a framework of cables attached to three tapered poles. During March, crews will install the sculpture’s multi-colored flexible net. The work is expected to take three days. Crews will also install lighting to give the work a landmark presence at night. The lighting will be completed in March. This iconic public sculpture and surrounding park add to the growing list of public and private initiatives revitalizing downtown Phoenix.

AWARDS

The sculpture received the 2008 Excellence in Structural Engineering Award from the Arizona Structural Engineers Association (ASEA). The award was given to Tucson-based M3 Engineering and Technology, a member of the sculpture’s design and fabrication team, which is headed by CAID Industries, also of Tucson.

The firm earned the prize for designing the sculpture’s unique support system of steel cables and poles. The project received the award even before the sculpture’s structural system was erected.

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS


Q: What is the Downtown Civic Space Park and how is it funded?
A: The new park is the result of a collaborative effort between the city of Phoenix and Arizona State University. The goal is to have a special place that would benefit residents, students and downtown visitors.

Q: Why will the park include public art?
A: When planning for the park, the city conducted extensive public outreach among hundreds of central city residents, the arts community, downtown businesses, ASU students, seniors and other stakeholders. An overwhelming majority of the participants embraced art as an important element of the Downtown Civic Space Park.

Q: How much will the sculpture cost?
A: In December 2007 the Phoenix City Council approved $1.9 million to proceed with the design, engineering, fabrication and installation of the sculpture. The total design and construction cost of the sculpture is estimated to be $2.5 million.

Q: In light of the city's budget crunch, why is the city using taxpayer funds to proceed with the art project?
A: The Civic Space art project DOES NOT include funding from the city's general purpose budget. Monies from the general purpose fund are used for such city services as police and fire, parks, libraries and senior centers. The art project is being paid for with one percent for art funds from the city's capital improvement budget. Capital funds must be spent on brick and mortar projects, such as the Civic Space.

Q: What has this project contributed to the economy?
A. The sculpture’s design and fabrication supported about 150 jobs, 110 of them in Arizona. CAID industries, in Tucson, was contracted for $1.9 million to coordinate the final design, fabrication and installation of the sculpture’s structural steel and net components. Another $600,000 was contracted for additional design and fabrication services. Of the $2.5 million total, approximately $1,610,000 (64%) went to Arizona suppliers, contractors and workers. The professions involved in building the sculpture ranged from engineers, surveyors, architects, cement workers, landscape architects and truckers to electricians, steelworkers, caisson drillers, welders, painters and crane operators.

Q: How was the artwork selected?
A: The city conducted an international competitive process in 2007 that drew 178 submittals from artists in Arizona and around the world to create the park's artwork. As with all other city public art projects, a diverse selection panel of community members, artists, public art specialists, stakeholders and city staff reviewed the submittals and recommended the artist for this project.

Q: Who is the selected artist?
A. Janet Echelman is an eminent international artist known for sculpting exciting public spaces. Her work has been installed in a dozen nations throughout Asia, Europe, and North America. She draws much of the inspiration for her works from the history, culture and built and natural environments of each site. She was part of a team that designed the 9/11 memorial for Hoboken, NJ, across the Hudson River from where the World Trade Towers stood. She has designed a major outdoor work for the 2010 Vancouver Winter Olympics. In 2005, she completed She Changes, a monumental wind sculpture made of steel and netting in Porto, Portugal. The artist and her team of architects are coordinating the design and location of her Downtown Civic Space sculpture with numerous city departments and EDAW, the landscape architecture firm designing the park.

Q: What did Echelman design for the park?
A: The Civic Space piece Echelman designed is similar to the wind sculpture she created in Porto, Portugal. The Phoenix sculpture is suspended approximately 40 feet above the ground on a structural steel armature. It rises to a height of about 100 feet and will be about 100 feet in diameter across the top.

Q: What other special features or aspects does the sculpture include?
A: The artist was inspired by Arizona’s distinctive monsoon cloud formations and Saguaro cactus blossoms, the state flower, to create a vortex-like form which hangs from the two rings. In addition to the rings, the sculpture features light-weight netting that billows and moves with the wind, capturing the dynamic beauty of desert light and the movement of gusts and breezes. Specialized lighting will give the work and the park a landmark presence at night. The net will be made of durable polyester twine with integral colors in blue and violet. The stamen-like core of the sculpture will be yellow.

Q: How will the artwork withstand the area's harsh summer climates and monsoon seasons?
A: The sculpture is built with structural steel tubing and flexible netting made from woven polyester fiber with extruded color. Polyester, a recyclable material, has the strength to withstand the net’s constant motion. The material is used for large ocean fishing nets, which are subjected to enormous forces and abuse. Polyester will fade over time, but will be far less costly than other materials to maintain and replace.

ARTWORK DESIGN AND FABRICATION TEAM

Design/Engineering
Janet Echelman, artist (Boston)
Speranza Architecture, architect (Barcelona)
CAID Industries, project design/engineering coordination (Tucson)
M3 Engineers, steel structural engineer (Tucson)
Buro Happold Consulting Engineers, P.C. (New York), net design/engineering
Peter Heppel Associates (Paris), net design consultant
EDAW, landscape architects (Phoenix)
Paul Deeb, lighting design

Fabrication - Installation
CAID Industries, structural steel fabrication (Tucson)
Foresite Design and Construction, sculptural foundations and park (Tempe)
Nexus Steel, structural steel installation/erection (Tempe)
Diamond Nets, net fabrication (Washington)
Net Services, net installation (Washington)


CIVIC SPACE SCULPTURE QUICK FACTS

Poles 105 feet, 125 feet and 145 feet tall

Rings Outer: 100 feet wide
Inner: 30 feet wide

Cable 1 ¾ -inch cable
1-inch cable

Net Material Integral color polyester fiber twine and rope

Net Dimensions 100 feet wide at the top – 15 feet wide at the bottom
The lowest part of the net hangs 38 feet above the ground.
The highest rises to about 100 feet.

Project Budget $2.5 million for artwork contractual services plus
$164,000 for project administrative costs

Contractual Arizona - $1,610,000 (64%)
Services Non-Arizona - $890,000 (36%)

 




 

Last Modified on 03/09/2009 09:49:16