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Tagged: georgia institute of technology

Georgia Tech team wins 2024 ULI Hines Student Competition with redevelopment plan for Seattle

By Josh Niland|

Wednesday, Apr 24, 2024

The winning entry 'Meander' from students at Georgia Tech. Image: courtesy Urban Land Institute

The winners of this year’s Urban Land Institute (ULI) Hines Student Competition have been announced as a team from the Georgia Institute of Technology. Their vision for the redevelopment of a land parcel in downtown Seattle addressed concerns about equity, housing affordability, access to neighborhood services, sustainability, and connectivity to surrounding communities as related by planning officials from King County.

Their project titled ‘Meander’ was selected as the $50,000 winner and joined by three other $10,000 prize winners from Georgia Tech, the University of Texas at Austin, and the University of Maryland, College Park. 

The winning entry 'Meander' from students at Georgia Tech. Image: courtesy Urban Land Institute

"Meander was selected due to their unique circulation concept, mid-rise building massing and all-in approach to mass timber construction. While mass timber is still in its early stages, the team was well-versed and researched on the subject matter, presenting an aspirational, yet achievable, project," jury chair Jeff Baxter stated.

Georgia Tech students Brooke Blankenship, Noah Stogner, Grace Kunst, Arthur Miranda Santos, and Vivian Lin. Image credit: Urban Land Institute

"The jury also agreed with Meander’s choices regarding buildings to adaptively reuse or demolish and their residential unit mix of 1, 2, and 3 bedrooms. Integrated into the switchback circulation path were pocket parks designed to capture stormwater. The project proposed a 99-year land lease with King County, a reasonable phasing plan, and a strong financial case for implementation."

A further look at the winners and finalists can be found here.

RELATED COMPETITION ULI Hines Student Competition
RELATED NEWS Harvard University team wins the 2023 ULI Gerald Hines Student Competition with their redevelopment scheme for Charleston

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urban land institute ● student compentition ● georgia institute of technology ● competition ● seattle ● gerald d. hines ● academia
Georgia Institute of Technology (Georgia Tech)
Georgia Institute of Technology (Georgia Tech)
The University of Texas at Austin
The University of Texas at Austin
University of Maryland
University of Maryland
Urban Land Institute
Urban Land Institute

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    2 Comments

  • Jim Blake ·  Apr 25, 24 8:32 PM

    Jeffersonian orthogonal street grid in this winning design signals more Enlightenment patriarchy, colonialism, white supremacy totally ignoring the past 40 years of Postmodern, Critical Theory, Woke ideology, DEI cultural zeit.  What gives ?  Interesting that the winning team is from Georgia, a state noted for its un-wokeness and intersting that Seattle's own University of Washington Architecture students (waaay woke) can't prevail in a competition for ideas for their own city

  • The_Crow
    The_Crow

    The_Crow ·  May 01, 24 3:59 PM

    ^Lol this comment is trash

  • Comment as :

Georgia Tech team wins 2024 ULI Hines Student Competition with redevelopment plan for Seattle

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Georgia Tech team wins 2024 ULI Hines Student Competition with redevelopment plan for Seattle

By Josh Niland|

Wednesday, Apr 24, 2024

Share

The winning entry 'Meander' from students at Georgia Tech. Image: courtesy Urban Land Institute

Related

urban land institute ● student compentition ● georgia institute of technology ● competition ● seattle ● gerald d. hines ● academia
Georgia Institute of Technology (Georgia Tech)
Georgia Institute of Technology (Georgia Tech)
The University of Texas at Austin
The University of Texas at Austin
University of Maryland
University of Maryland
Urban Land Institute
Urban Land Institute

The winners of this year’s Urban Land Institute (ULI) Hines Student Competition have been announced as a team from the Georgia Institute of Technology. Their vision for the redevelopment of a land parcel in downtown Seattle addressed concerns about equity, housing affordability, access to neighborhood services, sustainability, and connectivity to surrounding communities as related by planning officials from King County.

Their project titled ‘Meander’ was selected as the $50,000 winner and joined by three other $10,000 prize winners from Georgia Tech, the University of Texas at Austin, and the University of Maryland, College Park. 

The winning entry 'Meander' from students at Georgia Tech. Image: courtesy Urban Land Institute

"Meander was selected due to their unique circulation concept, mid-rise building massing and all-in approach to mass timber construction. While mass timber is still in its early stages, the team was well-versed and researched on the subject matter, presenting an aspirational, yet achievable, project," jury chair Jeff Baxter stated.

Georgia Tech students Brooke Blankenship, Noah Stogner, Grace Kunst, Arthur Miranda Santos, and Vivian Lin. Image credit: Urban Land Institute

"The jury also agreed with Meander’s choices regarding buildings to adaptively reuse or demolish and their residential unit mix of 1, 2, and 3 bedrooms. Integrated into the switchback circulation path were pocket parks designed to capture stormwater. The project proposed a 99-year land lease with King County, a reasonable phasing plan, and a strong financial case for implementation."

A further look at the winners and finalists can be found here.

RELATED COMPETITION ULI Hines Student Competition
RELATED NEWS Harvard University team wins the 2023 ULI Gerald Hines Student Competition with their redevelopment scheme for Charleston

Share

  • Follow

    2 Comments

  • Jim Blake ·  Apr 25, 24 8:32 PM

    Jeffersonian orthogonal street grid in this winning design signals more Enlightenment patriarchy, colonialism, white supremacy totally ignoring the past 40 years of Postmodern, Critical Theory, Woke ideology, DEI cultural zeit.  What gives ?  Interesting that the winning team is from Georgia, a state noted for its un-wokeness and intersting that Seattle's own University of Washington Architecture students (waaay woke) can't prevail in a competition for ideas for their own city

  • The_Crow

    The_Crow ·  May 01, 24 3:59 PM

    ^Lol this comment is trash

  • Comment as :

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