The First Steps Into Imagination Developing My Drafting Techniques The Industrialist Architecture Site Visits Tequesta Burial Mound Pavilion Melody Park The Frontiersman Applying My Computer Skills Ratatouille Spice Rack Museum Of Endless Experiences
The Aquarius Recycling Plant Trinity Towers Ekata Peace Center
Nebula Trail
Wednesday, April 5, 2017
Nebula Trail Project
Our developed concept to improve this public space in the possibility of adding certain entities such as: concrete seating with LED lighting situated in specific areas beside the existing pathways, a banyan tree whose aerial roots are directed to certain areas which would give on goers walking below it a sense of shelter, and sculptural masts imitating those on a sail boat. The banyan tree would be a philosophical feature, with a meaning as the tree of life. The LED lit seating’s would imitate those of the interstellar nebula, and the masts to represent Miami moving itself with the flow of time towards the right direction. With the help of fellow friends and professors, I intend to move forward with this design: Professor Amar Sawhney, Anthony Racz, Hieu Lee, Andy Izquierdo, and Rafael Concepcion.
http://ideas.ourmiami.org/place/496084
http://ideas.ourmiami.org/place/496084
History
From the early 1900s to the mid-1960s, Bicentennial Park was the location of the Port of Miami, until it eventually moved to neighboring Dodge Island in the mid-1960s. The port at what is today Bicentennial Park was then a bustling cargo, trade and passenger port, with the offices of Clyde Mallory Lines at the park. Once the port moved out to Dodge Island, the land was cleaned up of industrial residue from decades of port trade, and the park was designed, finally opening up in 1976, as Downtown's second large park after Bayfront Park. The name "Bicentennial Park" signifies the bicentenary of the independence of the United States in that same year.
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