What Are Those Grids of Glass in the Sidewalk — And Why Are They Purple?

article link:

https://www.kqed.org/news/11791667/what-are-those-grids-of-glass-in-the-sidewalk-and-why-are-they-purple

All over the city you can see glass squares and circles in big grid patterns covering a few feet of sidewalk. Sometimes the glass is clear, but often it’s a purple hue.

What are they?

They're vault lights, which are essentially skylights for below ground. The little glass pieces are projecting sunlight down into subterranean spaces.

While the top of the glass is flat, so it doesn't trip anyone, underneath the glass can take a variety of shapes. Some are shaped into prism forms that diffuse and bend the light so it reaches the inner areas of underground spaces.

SidewalkLights.jpg
8666275137_af6449709a_k-800x600.jpg

CHICO STATE MAKES PROGRESS ON NEW PHYSICAL SCIENCE BUILDING

Quick update on the construction progress for the new Chico State Sciences Building

https://www.actionnewsnow.com/content/news/New-physical-building-at-Chico-State-509724031.html

CHICO, Calif. - Chico State recently completed its master plan for the next 10 years, which will include many big improvements for the campus.

Construction has been underway for a new physical science building since last May. 

Just three weeks ago, they started putting in steel beams and that phase will be completed by next Wednesday.

"It's really going to be the hub for science in the north state really its an opportunity to take our science learning and objective into the next level," Guzzi said.

Associated VP for capital projects at Chico state, Michael Guzzi, said this project will help give students that 21st-century education that they're looking for.

"I was talking with some students and I heard some walking by and I even heard some kids saying hey I can't wait to come back here in a couple of years and see what it's going to look like when it's done, some students were saying too bad its not done I'm already out of here but I'm excited to see what the students of the future get to do," Guzzi said.

The building will house the natural science classes from physics to chemistry and general education to geology.

It will hold 35 classrooms and labs and stretch 110,000 square feet.

The total cost of construction is $101.7 million.

The whole project will be completed and open for students in the fall of 2020.

Get a virtual tour of the building by CLICKING HERE

Fast Company: Can San Francisco’s new UFO toilets fix its hygiene problem?

By Jesus Diaz1 minute Read

New public toilets are coming to San Francisco. The city’s Department of Public Works announced Monday that it has selected a new design by architectural firm SmithGroupJJR to replace the city’s old Parisian-style green public toilets. The new kiosks look like spaceship pods made of liquid metal. Hopefully, these UFOs will abduct the city’s terrible hygiene problem.

The new pods are called AmeniTrees. SmithGroupJJR designed them to be modular. Each pod will be built from a set of panels that can be rotated and repeated to create different shapes and sizes. There’s a smaller pod that acts as an information kiosk, and a the larger one that’s a toilet. We can only hope that people don’t confuse them.

The pod’s aesthetic is futuristic–fitting for the city’s rampant technophilia–with a shiny glass and metal skin that can contain static or digital displays to use for in advertising and city information. According to SF Weekly, the new design closely matches the look of other new public infrastructure–the canopies for the stops of the Bay Area Rapid Transport system that connects San Francisco and Oakland with areas in Alameda, Contra Costa, and San Mateo counties.

Each pod also comes with a water recycling system, which collects rain for different uses, like cleaning the interior, flushing the toilets, or watering the plants and trees that come with each pod. Native Californian plants are an integral part of each pod design, serving to beautify and shade the areas. “The design blends sculpture with technology in a way that conceptually, and literally, reflects San Francisco’s unique neighborhoods,” SmithGroupJJR’s design principal Bill Katz tells me in an email. “Together, the varied kiosks and public toilets design will also tell a sustainability story through water reuse and native landscapes.”

It’s a good narrative. Better than the one I imagined of launching pods paid by Silicon Valley bros to get rid of all the homeless people they hate. It’s yet to be seen if the new AmeniTrees are going to have any effect on the city’s hygiene problem. I can already imagine people using all that foliage as another public restroom (although perhaps seeing their own reflection on the pod’s mirror surface will shame them enough to instead do it inside?).

SF Public Works PRESS RELEASE - Winner Selected for Redesign of SF’s JCDecaux Public Toilets and Service Kiosks

For immediate release: June 11, 2018

Contact: Rachel Gordon, 415-554-6045 

Winner Selected for Redesign of San Francisco’s JCDecaux Public Toilets and Public Service Kiosks

San Francisco, CA – Public Works, in partnership with the JCDecaux street furniture company, has chosen the SmithGroupJJR architectural firm as the winner of an invitation-only competition to redesign San Francisco’s on-street public toilets and multi-function kiosks.

“SmithGroupJJR’s design is forward-thinking, combining natural elements and environmental sustainability with modern technology and materials. This 21st-century street furniture reflects our San Francisco values, as we invest in a public realm designed with dignity, inclusivity and beauty,” said Public Works Director Mohammed Nuru.  

With three strong conceptual design proposals from local firms SmithGroupJJR, Min Design and Branch Creative making the final cut, Public Works solicited community input on this once-in-a-generation opportunity to reimagine and upgrade the public toilets and public service kiosks. 

More than 200 individual responses were received through an online survey and in person when the proposed conceptual designs were on display in April at the Main Library in Civic Center and the Heart of the City Farmers Market at UN Plaza. The vast majority of responses prioritized the SmithGroupJJR proposal, describing the look as “clean, safe and inviting,” “iconic and unique,” “sculptural,’’ “classic” and one that “wraps fluid beauty around function.”

The public input helped inform the final decision of the design competition jury members, who included City staff from Public Works, the San Francisco Arts Commission, the Historic Preservation Commission and the Port of San Francisco, and the following outside experts: Yakuh Askew, Y.A. Studio; Laura Crescimano, SiteLab Urban Studio; Joshua Aidlin, Aidlin Darling Design; Jon McNeal, Snøhetta; Maryam Rostami, TEF Design; and Nataly Gattegno, Future Cities Lab. 

SmithGroupJJR design principal Bill Katz summed up his team’s vision, noting, “The design blends sculpture with technology in a way that conceptually and literally reflects San Francisco’s unique neighborhoods. Together, the varied kiosks and public toilets will tell a sustainability story through water re-use and native landscapes.”  

The design of the new toilets and multi-function kiosks complements the contemporary and elegant designs of the soon-to-be completed BART portals on Market Street and the café kiosk at Civic Center Plaza at Larkin and Grove Streets. 

During the next few months, JCDecaux’s engineers will work closely with the project team from SmithGroupJJR to develop and refine the proposed design to meet operational needs and accessibility. The attached drawing is the preliminary concept, which will transform and develop through this process. As the toilets and kiosks are intended to be used for the next 20 years, they need to be not only timeless in their design but detailed, fabricated and maintained to withstand a generation of public use. 

“We are excited to be working collaboratively with both San Francisco Public Works and the project team from SmithGroupJJR,” said J. Francois Nion, chief operating officer of JCDecaux San Francisco. “We are confident that this innovative design process will lead to developing a new generation of street amenities that will better serve San Franciscans and visitors alike.”

Once the construction documents are close to completion – most likely mid-summer – the project will be presented at the San Francisco Arts Commission and Historic Preservation Commission hearings for consideration.

Since 1995, San Francisco has benefited from a collaboration with JCDecaux in providing 25 accessible public toilets and 114 kiosks. These compact structures are spread throughout the City, though concentrated along Market Street, downtown and in popular tourist destinations. Like its predecessors now on San Francisco streets, the new model will be self-cleaning, accessible to people with disabilities and connected directly to City sewer, water and electrical lines. 

JCDecaux will cover the cost of the construction, installation and daily maintenance. The company also will fund staffing of the toilets at select locations under the City’s successful Pit Stop program. The advertising displayed on the public service kiosks, which in some locations will house such micro-retail establishments as newspaper stands and coffee vendors, also can display public messaging from City agencies about upcoming events, ongoing programs and other topical issues. The kiosks will offset JCDecaux’s costs for the toilets and the operating costs for the program. 

After putting the new public toilet contract out to bid, Public Works entered into exclusive contract negotiations with JCDecaux last year. The Board of Supervisors is expected to consider the proposed agreement in September. The current contract expires in October 2018.

About San Francisco Public Works (http://www.sfpublicworks.org):

The 24/7 City agency cleans and resurfaces streets; plants and nurtures City-maintained street trees; designs, constructs and maintains City-owned facilities; inspects streets and sidewalks; builds curb ramps; eradicates graffiti; partners with neighborhoods; trains people for jobs; greens the right of way; and educates our communities. 

About SmithGroupJJR (www.smithgroupjjr.com): 

The company is one of the world’s preeminent integrated design firms. Working across a network of 12 offices in the U.S. and China, a team of 1,300 experts is committed to excellence in strategy, design and delivery. The firm’s San Francisco office has been in operation since 1927, helping to influence the City’s design aesthetic, including four recent building projects in Mission Bay. The new JCDecaux toilet and kiosk design is an opportunity to build on the firm’s deep understanding of San Francisco’s rich history and progressive future across the urban landscape.

About JCDecaux (www.jcdecaux.com): JCDecaux, the number one outdoor advertising company worldwide, is present in more than 80 countries and 4,033 cities. For more than 50 years, JCDecaux products and services have been the benchmark in urban innovation, quality, aesthetics and functionality. A longstanding member of the San Francisco community, JCDecaux has operated street furniture programs at the service of the City since 1994.  

ArchitectsNewspaper: San Francisco’s public toilets get a futuristic redesign

San Francisco is one step closer to finalizing the redesign of its public, self-cleaning toilets. 

On Monday, the city selected a futuristic design concept created by SmithGroupJJR from a trio proposals that included bids by Min Design and Branch Creative. The three finalists were unveiled in April, with SmithGroupJJR ultimately selected in an effort to boost the contemporary stylings of the city’s public facilities, according to the San Francisco Department of Public Works. Initially, 12 teams were in the running for the design competition. 

The public toilets will operated by bus stop advertising agency JCDecaux and will be funded via income generated from informational and retail kiosks that will be deployed in conjunction with the toilets

Bill Katz, design principal at SmithGroupJJR, told The San Francisco Chronicle, “The big idea is to combine sculpture and technology. We want an object that literally reflects the surroundings and the neighborhoods that it is in, but also will be forward-looking.”

The changes come more than 20 years after San Francisco debuted an initial, Art Nouveaux-inspired public toilet concept in 1996 that has been loved and hated alike by the public. The forest green-colored, pill-shaped facilities are currently dispersed throughout San Francisco’s urban core and are also used in Los Angeles, among other localities. In all, the city aims to install or replace 28 public toilets and 114 kiosks in conjunction with the redesign. 

The proposed bathroom facilities will make use of recycled water and are wrapped in reflective metal panels. Current plans call for topping the structures with a rooftop garden. Renderings for the concept include an integrated bench assembly and a ground-level planter, as well. 

The new proposals, however, are not uniformly loved, either. Darcy Brown, executive director of the San Francisco Beautiful group, told The Chronicle, [It’s a] “pity we lean toward ‘modern,’ which has a shelf life, as opposed to classic, which is timeless.” San Francisco Beautiful opposed all three of the redesign concepts. 

Next, SmithGroupJJR’s proposal will next head to the San Francisco Arts Commission and the Historic Preservation Commission for joint approval. Approval is expected in the fall.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Antonio Pacheco

West Editor, The Architect's Newspaper

SFWEEKLY: New Spaceship-Like Toilets Win Contest For S.F. Streets

Bid adieu to the old, green JC Decaux public toilets, because our city infrastructure is finally catching up to our sleek, tech-centric aesthetic. Public Works announced Monday that it has chosen a winner for its invitation-only competition to redesign the city’s toilets and kiosks. More than 200 responses from the community were submitted through an online survey, and a slew of city organizations reviewed the entries. 

In the end, SmithGroupJJR is the winner. A rendering of a structure (that may be a kiosk or a toilet, it’s unclear) shows a multipurpose facility, with planters and benches lining the edges, and a living garden on the roof. 

“The design blends sculpture with technology in a way that conceptually and literally reflects San Francisco’s unique neighborhoods,” stated SmithGroupJJR design Principal Bill Katz. “Together, the varied kiosks and public toilets will tell a sustainability story through water re-use and native landscapes.” 

 

It’s not a bad choice – the design closely matches the aesthetic of the new BART canopies, some of which are already under construction. And, the new toilet designs are way better than some of the other proposed options, which embraced an old-fashioned Brutalist aesthetic

Public Works Director Mohammed Nuru praised the design.“SmithGroupJJR’s design is forward-thinking, combining natural elements and environmental sustainability with modern technology and materials. This 21st-century street furniture reflects our San Francisco values, as we invest in a public realm designed with dignity, inclusivity, and beauty,” he said.

As for when they’ll be released? Don’t hold your breath. JCDecaux engineers will work closely with SmithGroupJJR over the next few months to refine the design to better accommodate operations and accessibility – which does imply that the aesthetic may still change a little. Once that process is complete, the project will be presented to the San Francisco Arts Commission and Historic Preservation Committee for their review.

Hopefully, that extra care and attention mean we’ll get something long-lasting, as the expectation from the city is that these new facilities will be used for the next 20 years. In a city that can barely keep its escalators running, expecting toilets to remain visually attractive and functional is a lofty aspiration, but we wish them luck. 

"New design for SF’s public toilets is sleek, shiny and modern" -John King, San Francisco Chronicle

New design for SF’s public toilets is sleek, shiny and modern 

By John King

 Updated 6:07 pm, Monday, June 11, 2018

It’s take two for San Francisco’s public toilets 2.0, with a proposed design that would replace the current mock-Parisian models with bulbous metallic orbs that could be topped by plants or shrubs.

The concept is a sleek, shiny counterpart to the forest-green art nouveaux toilets that have been on city streets since the mid-1980s. But the conceptual design announced Monday by the Department of Public Works also is a change from the boxy, gray modern look that went through several rounds of public review last year.

“We went back to the drawing board” after the proposed update got ran into criticism, said Mohammed Nuru, director of Public Works. This included a tepid reaction from the Historic Preservation Commission — not because the modern makeover was too modern, but because it had all the finesse of a utility box.

The department responded by holding a private competition where 12 local architecture firms were asked to submit design schemes. A jury that included bureaucrats and practitioners whittled down the entries to three finalists. After another round of design submissions, the jury selected the San Francisco office of SmithGroupJJR.

The winning concept consists of a simple but adaptable tube with curved walls of reflective metal and a flat top that could hold plants, shrubs — theoretically even a tree. Ideally, the concept also “tells a story of sustainability and conservation” by recycling the water used to wash your hands — perhaps by irrigating the plants up high.

“The big idea is to combine sculpture and technology,” said Bill Katz, a design principal at SmithGroupJJR. “We want an object that literally reflects the surroundings and the neighborhoods that it is in, but also will be forward-looking.”

While the emphasis on clean 21st century design captured the imagination of the design jury, the makeover ultimately must be approved by the Board of Supervisors. Along the way there’s sure to be scrutiny from design watchdogs who are happy with the traditional-looking kiosks and loos installed back in the 1980s, when contemporary architecture was out of vogue.

“Pity we lean toward ‘modern,’ which has a shelf life, as opposed to classic, which is timeless,” Darcy Brown, executive director of San Francisco Beautiful, said yesterday. Her group was an opponent of last fall’s design.

The most important gauges of a public toilet’s success, of course, are whether they are used by the public and whether they work from one day to the next. SmithGroupJJR will now work with the company that installs the toilets, JCDecaux, to adapt the winning scheme to the realities of construction and maintenance.

The goal is to do this fairly rapidly, so that a full set of designs and renderings can be presented this summer to a joint hearing of the San Francisco Arts Commission and the Historic Preservation Commission.

This will also include designs for the advertising kiosks that Decaux is allowed to operate in order to raise money to install and maintain the toilets. At present there are 28 public toilets and 114 kiosks in the program, most of them in downtown neighborhoods.

John King is The San Francisco Chronicle’s urban design critic. 

In urban planning, new UC Davis study recommends looking to the edges not the core

UC DAVIS-COURTESYTraditional urban planning favors “concentric” layouts with a downtown core surrounded by suburbs and farmland (right). But Catherine Brinkley argues instead that cities should plan for “rugosity” (left) with more interfaces between…

UC DAVIS-COURTESYTraditional urban planning favors “concentric” layouts with a downtown core surrounded by suburbs and farmland (right). But Catherine Brinkley argues instead that cities should plan for “rugosity” (left) with more interfaces between functions.