Rebuilding Place in the Urban Space

"A community’s physical form, rather than its land uses, is its most intrinsic and enduring characteristic." [Katz, EPA] This blog focuses on place and placemaking and all that makes it work--historic preservation, urban design, transportation, asset-based community development, arts & cultural development, commercial district revitalization, tourism & destination development, and quality of life advocacy--along with doses of civic engagement and good governance watchdogging.

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

Another way to think about wayfinding in DC

I am going to write a longer piece on this subject sometime within the next few weeks but this comes out of a conversation on Sunday (we had people over).
The Wayfinding Handbook by David Gibson
We were talking about street signs and wayfinding signage because I showed off the book by Daniel Gibson to Christopher, who is the designer of "my" proof of concept signs for "intra-district" directory wayfinding signage.

I said hmm, maybe the street signs for each quadrant in DC (NW, NE, SW, SE) could be a different color.
Street sign mosaic, Indianapolis, signs honoring automobile and motorcycle racers
Mosaic created with fd's" Flickr Toys. Original images are street signs honoring automobile and motorcycle racers, in Indianapolis, home of the Indianapolis Speedway race track. Images from motogp.com

But then yesterday I thought about this a bit more deeply. There are four things we could try to communicate through street signs in DC:

1. Quadrant;
2. Direction;
3. Neighborhood;
4. Historic District.

Direction. Numbered streets are north-south and lettered streets are east-west. Why not make north-south street signs one color and east-west signs another color? Avenue streets could remain green.

Neighborhoods. I have always liked how Pittsburgh indicates the neighborhood on street signs at major intersections.
Street signs on the border of the Bloomfield and Lawrenceville neighborhoods, Pittsburgh
Street signs on the border of the Bloomfield and Lawrenceville neighborhoods, Pittsburgh.

Other cities, such as Bloomington, Indiana or Beaverton, Oregon, allow for sign toppers, on street signs within neighborhoods, not just for major intersections.
Vose Neighborhood street sign topper, Beaverton, Oregon
Vose neighborhood sign, Beaverton, Oregon. (City of Beaverton image.)

Historic Districts. I think this is important. It happens that I think the DC street signs signifying historic districts are hideous. And I think they should be on every street corner anyway.
Capitol Hill Historic District street sign marker
I think sign toppers are more elegant than the current system.
Green Acres Neighborhood street sign topper, Bloomington, Indiana
Green Acres neighborhood, Bloomington, Indiana. (City website image.)

If I had to choose between signifying quadrants through specific colors or north-south and east-west directional signs, I would choose the latter.

And yes, 5-8% of men and 1% of women are color blind. So by putting N and W indicators on the street signs, you can provide information for people who are color blind.
Color coded street sign, Old Towne Historic District, Petersburg, VA
Petersburg, Virginia color codes street signs according to historic district. So street signs in Old Towne are brown, in Courthouse are blue, etc.

Labels:

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home