The new 105,000-sf U District Station in Seattle has opened. The LMN Architects-designed project creates a unified transportation solution and offers a new gateway to the University of Washington campus.
The U District Station is a highly functional, easy-to-use, and appropriately scaled transit hub that is conveniently located for the diverse activities of daily commenting students, workers, and visitors. It is the first stop on the Northgate Link, a 4.3-mile light rail extension from the University of Washington Station on its way north.
The station’s train platform is located 85 feet below street level, with the bulk of the entire 105,000-sf area below grade. Each of the station’s two entrances provides elevators, escalators, and stairs to the trains below. The north entrance lobby serves riders heading to and from the adjacent Neptune Theater and mixed-use neighborhood, as well as a major Metro bus transfer hub on NE 45th Street. The south lobby gives pedestrians a direct link to the UW campus a few blocks east. The sidewalks and streets facing the entrances meet Green Street standards and feature ample landscaping, pedestrian lighting, seat walls, and a bike lane. Both entrance lobbies offer bicycle storage and racks.
From the north and south lobbies, commuters descend through the escalator and stair tubes to a mid-level open landing that is placed within a tall voluminous central space. From here, they can continue to the train platform below via open escalators and an open stair. The landing appears to float above the angled cross-bracing elements and is offset to the east. This offset, along with artwork and video installation on the west wall, create a design asymmetry that helps to define north-south way finding and directionality on the platform.
The large central volume is defined by a white corrugated metal ceiling and canted walls that conceal essential back-of-house functions. Wayfinding is enhanced by overhead aluminum tubes containing lighting, speakers, and other systems. Two different colors aid passengers in orienting north and south: orange for north and blue for south.
The completed project anticipates record numbers of riders as Seattle’s urban evolution continues.
Related Stories
Transit Facilities | Jun 12, 2019
Gensler, Corgan reveal their design concepts for Uber Air Skyports
Eight firms in total revealed concepts for the first fully considered and technically feasible Skyports.
Transit Facilities | May 15, 2019
Damen Avenue at Lake Street transportation facility returns train access to neighborhood
A public art piece created by artist Folayemi Wilson will be just one of the eye-catching features of the new Damen Green Line Station in Chicago.
Transit Facilities | Sep 26, 2018
Port Canaveral’s new Cruise Terminal 3 will be the largest project in its history
Once completed, Carnival’s new 180,000-ton ship will homeport in the new Cruise Terminal 3.
Office Buildings | Jul 17, 2018
Transwestern report: Office buildings near transit earn 65% higher lease rates
Analysis of 15 major metros shows the average rent in central business districts was $43.48/sf for transit-accessible buildings versus $26.01/sf for car-dependent buildings.
Transit Facilities | Jun 8, 2018
High-speed rail service now connects Miami, Fort Lauderdale, and West Palm Beach
The privately owned and managed system could create new business districts for these cities.
Transit Facilities | May 3, 2018
Completed Raleigh Union Station will serve as a catalyst for the city’s Warehouse District
Clearscapes and STV designed the adaptive reuse project.
Transit Facilities | Apr 12, 2018
Approaching the transit conversation with local perspectives
In every city with transit, there are some success stories, some challenges and plenty of lessons learned.
Transit Facilities | Mar 30, 2018
Zaha Hadid’s King Abdullah Financial District Metro Station incorporates futuristic façade
The façade required the creation of new algorithms by Newtecnic.
Giants 400 | Nov 7, 2017
Top 25 transit construction firms
Skanska USA, Webcor Builders, and AECOM top BD+C’s ranking of the nation’s largest transit sector contractors and construction management firms, as reported in the 2017 Giants 300 Report.
Giants 400 | Nov 6, 2017
Top 15 transit engineering firms
AECOM, STV, and Arup top BD+C’s ranking of the nation’s largest transit sector engineering and EA firms, as reported in the 2017 Giants 300 Report.