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Rotary Gateways Partnership
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Rotary Selects Five Teams to Develop Proposals

The Request for Qualifications – found elsewhere on this website - was sent out electronically and mailed to a broad range of potential applicants in early January 2006, Responders to the RFQ were asked to pull together teams of architects, landscape architects, engineering firms and/or artists to propose a design for a landmark, iconic gateway to be created in the I-65/West Street area. This area is adjacent to the West Street Rotary Greenway created in 1998 for Rotary's International Convention held here in Indianapolis.
Fifteen teams submitted their qualifications, philosophies and statements at the end of February. March deliberations by two panels of experts and stakeholders resulted in selection of the following five teams each of which will receive $7500 stipends to create conceptual design proposals by late June.

  • Kevin K. Parsons & Associates
    Project Leader: Kevin Parsons
    Woolpert, Inc.: Infrastructure, Engineering
    Edwards and Kelsey, Inc.: Traffic Engineering Gateway Consulting
    Greg Hull: Conceptualization  Design Consulting
  • Browning Day Mullins Dierdorf
    Team Leader: Barth Henrickson
    Boody Fine Arts and Public Art and Practice: Arts Consulting, Project Leadership
    George Neubert: Museum Director, Art Consultant
    Fishers Marantz Stone: Lighting
    Schneider Engineering - 3-D Animation • Engineering
  • Ratio
    Team Leaders: Bill Brown, John Jackson
    2nd Globe Studios: Art, Design, Fabrication
    Fink Roberts Petrie, Inc: Structural and Civil Engineering
  • CBA, Inc.
    Project Leader: Joann Green
    Brownstone Design:  Environmental Graphics
    Burgess & Nipple: Civil/Site, Transportation Engineering
    Blackburn Architects:  Architect of Record, Public Art,  Administration
    Denton Coker Marshall: Architects, Monument/Icon Design
    Schuler Shook: Lighting Design
    Lord: Cultural Asset Management
    Newlands: 3D Visualization,  Animation
  • NiNebark, Inc.
    Team Leader: Eric Fulford
    Electroland: Public Space, Interactive technologies
    Parsons: Transportation Engineering, Life Cycle Costs
    Five2Five Design: Community Outreach Advocacy Architecture
    ACS Sign Systems: Custom Lighting Installations
    William Marquez Innovative 3-D Construction Technology
    Rodney Reid: Historical Awareness, Design
    Klika-Stinson Group: structural design, environmental strategies, engineering services

Visual renderings and materials will then be displayed at several public places for comment by everyone interested. Panels will also reconvene, with attention to public comments, to select a final monumental gateway design by mid-to-late July.

Gateway Committee Rotarians who have worked long and hard in this phase include Jim Kienle, Jennifer Hobbs, Michael Conly, Jeff Mader, Mark Winzenread, Lenore Tedesco, Linda Brimmer, Kevin Markey, and Joe Gaafar. The entire Rotary Environment and Beautification Committee serves as main advisor and facilitator the effort.

The committee, as a part of the Rotary Club of Indianapolis Downtown, works in close conjunction with the City of Indianapolis, BOS Community Development Corporation, Indianapolis Downtown Inc., Clarian Health Partners, IUPUI, IPS, INDOT, Crispus Attucks School and African Heritage Center, Indiana Avenue Cultural District, the Canal District Plan, BioCrossroads, JMK Development, Veolia, and Citizen’s Gas, the Ransom Place and Fayette Street Neighborhood Associations and MEDIC Community Organization.

The Partnership is constantly aware of other projects on line in the community, such as The Cultural Trail and the Indiana Avenue Master Plan, both of which we hope to inform and connect with the effort to create a cohesive, vibrant and new face for our city.
Partners are added continuously as the process grows.

Fundraising activity is gearing up as the final conceptual designs are created. Anyone interested in more information is welcome to call the Rotary Gateways Partnership at 317-849-0133 or e-mail: carolearts@mac.com.
 

PROJECT GOALS as set out in the Request for Qualifications
  • The gateway will be developed to serve as an identifiable icon defining a major entry to the City of Indianapolis, Downtown, and surrounding neighborhoods.
  • As such, it should be designed in a way to serve as an icon for motorists traveling on the adjacent interstate, to garner attention of the local street traffic, and to inform and educate pedestrians to the diverse cultural surroundings of the adjacent business centers and residential neighborhoods.
  • The “Gateway” should consist of a monumental element within the specified site, and possibly include smaller contextual elements both on site and within the surrounding community to reach out and reflect the surroundings.
  • The design should foster an attractive environment to incubate creativity, living and working together. It should reflect the history, culture, vision, and future of the City of Indianapolis and the immediate area in which it is located. The design approach of this initial Gateway may be used as s paradigm example in the design of future Gateways in and around the city.