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 Project Statement:  The St. Paul Ford Assembly Plant in Minnesota 
                          has been in operation for the past 80 years. As the 
                          Plant shutdown looms in the near future, this studio 
                          was created to provoke the city of St. Paul to address 
                          the economic, cultural, and environmental issues of 
                          brownfield redevelopment. Remediation as Catalyst, 
                          a collaborative approach between one landscape architecture 
                          and two architecture students, proposes an innovative 
                          strategy for reintroducing a highly contaminated industrial 
                          site into the existing urban fabric using remediation 
                          strategies as catalysts for design. Project motivation and approachThe 
                          term superfund, according the Environmental 
                          Protection Agency, is the name given to the environmental 
                          program established to address abandoned hazardous waste 
                          sites. This term is important to understand and analyze, 
                          as the latest list of superfund sites in the United 
                          States reaches 1,500 in number. As superfund sites become 
                          part of everyday redevelopment plans, we must begin 
                          to question the role of contamination cleanup within 
                          the process of planning and design. Remediation as Catalyst 
                          was motivated by the potential for connecting research 
                          to innovative processes of landscape and architectural 
                          design; processes that capitalizes on the complexity 
                          of contamination cleanup, traditional barriers between 
                          industry and neighborhood, and the value of time sensitive 
                          design strategies. Our research and design serves to 
                          provoke neighborhoods and cities to question traditional 
                          methods of re-introducing superfund sites back into 
                          our everyday urban and rural fabrics.
 Environmental, cultural and historical 
                          data and analysis methodsThe analysis and collection of data was essential to 
                          our design process and planning strategies. The Ford 
                          Assembly Plant was originally named an EPA superfund 
                          site in the 1980’s, but taken off the list approximately 
                          five years later [for purposes unexplained]. Therefore, 
                          at the beginning of our research and design process, 
                          the severity of this sites contamination was not fully 
                          known by government or community members. It was only 
                          through an intense process of collecting data from local 
                          environmental agencies, newspaper articles, and government 
                          mandated soil tests that our group, along with twenty-four 
                          other landscape and architecture graduate students, 
                          began to unfold the severity of contamination within 
                          this 124 acre industrial site. The data collected by 
                          each student was then analyzed through a series of diagramming 
                          techniques that connect and interpret complicated scientific 
                          data. After analyzing each data set, the collective 
                          studio designed a template and method of organization 
                          for the research to be put into a 138 page book. This 
                          book served as the foundation for our design and planning 
                          strategies and as assistance to city officials and neighbors 
                          investigating the future of St. Paul’s Ford Assembly 
                          Plant. Specifically, the book was organized into city, 
                          region, nation and world and within each topic contained 
                          environmental data on contamination and clean up methods 
                          (chemical, natural, and mechanical), historical data 
                          on the development of the Ford Assembly Plant and surrounding 
                          neighborhood, and cultural data on the influence of 
                          the automobile industry and the St. Paul site specifically. 
                          Remediation as Catalyst focuses specifically on data, 
                          such as bioremediation and phydoremediation techniques 
                          for cleanup, as inspiration of a design and planning 
                          strategy that is dynamic in its organization and form. 
                          Imagine a place that slowly reveals itself to the surrounding 
                          neighborhood and where everyday learning meets scientific 
                          inquiry. This is where our project begins to grow and 
                          expand our collective professions of landscape and architectural 
                          into a world of creative systems analysis and network 
                          integration.
 Planning strategy/Design Process 
                          After the final analysis presentation, the two studios 
                          were asked to create three to four member groups that 
                          had at least one person from a landscape studio and 
                          one from an architecture studio. The three of us pared 
                          together for this initial charrette. We were charged 
                          with creating design strategies for the redevelopment 
                          of the St. Paul Ford Assembly Plant, using the research 
                          that had been accrued through both the landscape and 
                          the architecture studios.
 Our group started with the levels and 
                          types of contamination and different ways it could be 
                          remediated. This led to plans that focused on the progress 
                          of time, and how stages of development could be phased 
                          according to economic, social, and environmental factors. 
                          For our initial presentation we set up a strategy around 
                          the idea of touching the ground lightly versus permanent 
                          fixture. We worked to integrate various temporary and 
                          permanent infrastructures into closed loop cycles of 
                          remediation. By researching various remediation strategies, 
                          we created plans that incorporated phytoremediation 
                          with biomass energy recovery and heavy metal extraction 
                          from the plants. We studied the use of living machines 
                          to treat area stormwater runoff and sewage waste along 
                          with contaminated groundwater before it was allowed 
                          to reach the Mississippi River. We also researched using 
                          bioremediation to treat soil deep underground using 
                          microbes and a mixture of oxygen to clean soil that 
                          plant roots simply can not reach. With all of this remediation 
                          we worked to create a viable pedestrian circulation 
                          [and later road infrastructure] plan that included existing 
                          rail lines, continuations of existing neighborhood grid 
                          lines, and new pedestrian facilities to create a multi-layered 
                          plan that would slowly integrate neighborhood amenities 
                          over the course of time. These were the ideas that we 
                          took to the initial charette review. Each group presented their plans that 
                          they had created and then the studios were given the 
                          opportunity to switch groups, so that people could work 
                          on plans that suited their individual interests. There 
                          was no longer a requirement that a landscape student 
                          had to work with an architecture student. However, our 
                          group was so excited about our plans by the end of the 
                          charette we didn’t even consider splitting up. 
                          We were the only group that did stay the same throughout 
                          the semester and only one of two groups that maintained 
                          a mixture of both landscape architecture and architecture 
                          students. We took the focus of time, and how systems 
                          thinking [connectivity between phasing contamination 
                          and design implementation] could be integrated into 
                          our overall planning strategies. From the charette forward 
                          our main goal was to create a plan that fully integrated 
                          our systems into as much of a closed loop as possible. 
                          This meant changing some things that were initially 
                          part of the charette plan, while at the same time adding 
                          new concepts and research. The language of time morphed 
                          into a series of planning sequences that we titled dig, 
                          fill, seed, grow, and cultivate. This sequence helped 
                          form the matrix for how we applied everything from circulation 
                          to water treatment to the development of buildings. It quickly became apparent that if our 
                          strategy of time was to be effective we would have little 
                          to no control over a series of ‘fixed’ or 
                          ‘final’ images. Through discussions and 
                          research it was becoming clear to us that so often when 
                          faced with contaminated land, the answer is often to 
                          cap or to simply remove the contamination off site as 
                          a ‘final’ answer. Our question to this was 
                          why? Why can’t a more thoughtful and fluid development 
                          take place? One that takes into account the industry 
                          that has occurred for the past 80 years and the unknown 
                          futures. We did not want this history hidden, but rather 
                          we wanted a project that started to heal the wounds 
                          that had been inflicted on the site, while re-introducing 
                          the land to the surrounding neighborhood. Project designOur research in remediation techniques became catalysts 
                          for our design. These in turn informed decisions we 
                          made in terms of development phasing. Our final design 
                          strategy focused around a research center that we placed 
                          in the zone of highest contamination. When the Ford 
                          Site was cleaned, the research facility would shift 
                          its focus to a consulting climate lab that would facilitate 
                          remediatation research for brownfield sites around the 
                          world. The information gleaned from the research facility 
                          would be disseminated to the public through a series 
                          of kiosks that would be placed on the circulation system 
                          that runs through the site. These would explain everything 
                          from strategies for treating groundwater to biomass 
                          collection, to the phytoremediation of creosote.
 Along with the research component of our 
                          plan was the phasing of infrastructure and building 
                          development. We felt strongly that integrating people 
                          in the site, as soon as contamination levels were safe, 
                          was important to the success of the project. Therefore, 
                          a typology of infrastructure [transformative infrastructures] 
                          was designed based on projected needs for building and 
                          circulation systems; which would transform in use and 
                          form throughout the process of remediation and development. 
                          We also explored higher density, sustainable development 
                          that would allow for experimentation in orientation 
                          and form. With this in mind, blocks of development were 
                          planned around key planting sites that were initially 
                          phytoremediation zones, and then, as they became clean 
                          they shifted to community gardens and central catalysts 
                          for future development and growth. The final product was presented as a strategic 
                          diagram for implementing remediation, building, research, 
                          circulation, and water distribution. Discussions during 
                          the review focused on the idea that perhaps the fields 
                          of landscape architecture and architecture should not 
                          be as different as they are currently perceived. Why 
                          should architecture be presented as a final product 
                          at the beginning, and then go into a state of decay 
                          while landscape architecture is presented as a piece 
                          of torn up earth that slowly grows into magnificence? 
                          This project was our way of trying to address these 
                          questions. It is perhaps only the first step, but one 
                          that all three of us will continue to pursue for the 
                          rest of our careers. ImplementationIs this way of thinking, remediatation as catalyst for 
                          physical and intellectual development, possible in today’s 
                          fast paced economic and cultural market? To be honest 
                          our group was not sure…until we got a chance to 
                          present our project in front of the mayor of St. Paul, 
                          Minnesota. He acknowledged the viability of a project 
                          that not only looked at planning for today’s contaminated 
                          sites, but also for tomorrow’s state of unknown 
                          changes. And what better way to begin strategizing the 
                          economics and development of a site but to use the problem 
                          itself as a potential catalyst for redevelopment – 
                          contamination. It is the energy and complexity within 
                          existing strategies for contamination cleanup which 
                          we saw in the research phase of the design and brought 
                          forward into a collaboration between landscape and architecture. 
                          Our group was not afraid to embrace the challenges of 
                          contamination cleanup; rather, we used those challenges 
                          to create a site that maintained economic viability 
                          through phased development plans, researched initiatives 
                          stretching beyond St. Paul, addressed the curiosity 
                          of neighbors by reintroducing the site in safe and thoughtful 
                          moves, and utilized existing methods of clean-up to 
                          catalyze innovative typolologies of courtyard housing 
                          and city infrastructure. Therefore, the implementation 
                          of Remediation as Catalyst, although just an 
                          idea on paper right now, has the potential to expand 
                          the future of how we think, live, and play today within 
                          the industrial landscapes of yesterday.
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