Boston- and Los Angeles-based firm Stoss drafts a proposal for a long-awaited urban greenway in the City of St. Louis. True to its name, the envisioned structure takes cues from loops and stitches -- a strategical format which allows it to be highly flexible and easily adaptable to the existing architectural infrastructure of St. Louis.
The proposed urban greenway spans from the Gateway Arch on the East end to the downtown core of the city. The structure extends to offer a physical connection to Foster Park and Washington University, which are situated on the Western side.
With its meticulously designed urban greenway, Stoss is able to build a structure that allows the city to fluidly communicate, while offering a place for recreational activities -- jogging and biking, for example.
Strategic Urban Greenways
Stoss's Award-Winning 'The Loop + The Stitch' is Community-Enhancing
Trend Themes
1. Flexible Urban Greenways - Opportunity for architects to adopt loops and stitches concepts for highly adaptable urban greenways.
2. Physical Connectivity Structures - Growing demand for urban structures that provide physical connectivity to other parts of cities.
3. Recreation-focused Urban Spaces - Need for more urban greenways and parks that cater to recreational activities.
Industry Implications
1. Architecture - Opportunity for architects to design flexible, adaptable and community-enhancing urban greenways.
2. Urban Planning - Demand for urban planners to design more innovative and functional physical connectivity structures.
3. Recreation and Fitness - Opportunity for recreation and fitness businesses to invest in creating outdoor spaces for jogging, biking, and other recreational activities.