flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

Seattle looks to become America’s most walkable city with a new citywide wayfinding system

Great Solutions

Seattle looks to become America’s most walkable city with a new citywide wayfinding system

Seamless Seattle will support the Seattle Department of Transportation’s commitment to increase the percentage of trips made by walking to 35% by 2035.


By David Malone, Managing Editor | September 23, 2021
Seamless Seattle signage
Photos: David Ryder

The Seattle Department of Transportation (SDOT), in its attempt to make Seattle the most walkable and accessible city in America, has recently appointed Applied Information Group to create a citywide wayfinding system to encourage and enable more walking and rolling.

The system, dubbed Seamless Seattle, is based on the successful Legible London model, which is now lauded as the benchmark for complex city wayfinding. It will make America’s second-fastest growing city more legible and accessible for local residents, commuters, and the more than 40 million visitors that travel to Seattle each year.

 

Seamless Seattle wayfinding system

 

Seamless Seattle will feature heads up mapping on street signs to help the user quickly orient themselves in reference to their immediate surroundings. Illustrations, slope information, accessible entrances to transit, and publicly accessible through building Hillclimb assists will all be integrated to meet the needs of the widest range of users. Braille and tactile panels provide orientation information on all signs and non-English languages in specific areas will be integrated as well.

In order to make the system as accessible as possible it will use proper contrast for legibility, optimization for color blindness, large type sizes, a careful balance of content, and simplification of complex topography.

 

Seamless Seattle signs

 

Additionally, Seamless Seattle will adapt its design to respond to historic landmarked areas without reducing the overall legibility. Applied partnered with local businesses Alta Planning + Design and 3 Square Blocks to involve community and business leaders in the planning and design of the information system. Applied also worked closely with the major transit agencies Sound Transit and King County Metro to make sure a system of information for city streets is linked seamlessly to transit services.

 

Seamless Seattle close up of The Spheres sign

 

“Our way finding project became much more than designing signs and directions,” said Adrian Bell, Applied’s Project Director for Seattle, in a release. “ The input of community leaders, stakeholders, and ambitious city staff encouraged us to create a project that is inclusive and demonstrates that walking, in particular, is the glue that holds the city together.”

Applied’s work with SDOT has so far produced an initial scoping study, a detailed planning strategy and guidelines, full design standards, and plans for two large pilot projects that will be implemented throughout the remainder of 2021.

Related Stories

Great Solutions | Feb 7, 2019

An apiary for the sanctuary

A Seattle events venue, The Sanctuary, has a roof that is literally a hive of sustainability.

Great Solutions | Jan 2, 2019

Net zero construction trailer brings health and wellness to the jobsite

As AEC firms scramble to upgrade their offices to maximize occupant wellness and productivity, Pepper Construction asks, What about the jobsite office?

Great Solutions | Dec 12, 2018

A modular, scalable mobile hospital can quickly respond to natural disasters and crises

CallisonRTKL’s design combines artificial intelligence, electric vehicle technology, and the latest in medical equipment.

Great Solutions | Nov 8, 2018

Public canopy system can be reconfigured by drones on the fly

The installation combines cyber-physical building materials constructed from lightweight carbon fiber filament with a collection of autonomous drones.

Great Solutions | Sep 28, 2018

When pigs fly? How about when cows float?

Merwehaven Harbor in Rotterdam will be home to the world’s first floating farm.

Great Solutions | Sep 17, 2018

Curtain walls go circadian

Catering to our natural circadian rhythm is a task designers are taking to heart.

Great Solutions | Aug 8, 2018

Warehouses rise up to serve downtown

Multistory industrial buildings provide the best chance at keeping up with the rapid growth of e-commerce in North America.

Great Solutions | Jul 13, 2018

Fungus may be the key to colonizing mars

A Cleveland-based architect and a NASA Ames researcher have a novel idea for building on Mars.

Great Solutions | May 14, 2018

It’s not Ripley’s loader, but this industrial exoskeleton makes physical labor a breeze

SuitX modules can be used separately or combined to form a full-body exoskeleton.

Great Solutions | Apr 5, 2018

IAQ monitoring for all

San Francisco startup Bitfinder debuts a commercial-grade version of its air quality monitoring system.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category



Great Solutions

41 Great Solutions for architects, engineers, and contractors

AI ChatBots, ambient computing, floating MRIs, low-carbon cement, sunshine on demand, next-generation top-down construction. These and 35 other innovations make up our 2024 Great Solutions Report, which highlights fresh ideas and innovations from leading architecture, engineering, and construction firms.


halfpage1

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021