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Olympic Sculpture Park
Facts
- Name: Olympic Sculpture Park
- Purpose: to develop a vibrant, 8.5-acre downtown green space for people to experience art outdoors and connect with Elliott Bay
- Year Built: 2007
- Address: between Elliott and Western Ave. and Broad and Eagle St.
- Client: Seattle Art Museum and Seattle Department of Parks and Recreation
- Designer: Weiss/Manfredi Architects
- Cost: $30,000,000
- Design Commission Reviews:
-
- briefing (October 19, 2000)
- concept design (June 20, 2002)
- design development (November 6, 2003)
- street and right of way vacations (January 15, 2004)
- street and right of way vacations (April 15, 2004)
Design Commission's Influence
The Design Commission believed the development of the Olympic Sculpture Park afforded the City a great opportunity to add much-needed downtown green space and reclaim part of Seattle's waterfront and return it to a natural setting.
The Design Commission made several recommendations for improvement to the Seattle Parks and Recreation Department, the Seattle Art Museum and their design team:
Overall Concept and Direction
- bring the park down to the water's edge to provide user's access to Elliott Bay, otherwise the park could be anywhere
- select a designer who can develop a new concept for a sculpture park, and who can recognize the many creative opportunities of the site
- ensure that the park, with its multiple levels and waterfront gardens at the shoreline, be seen as a single, unified space
- think innovatively about art within the landscape and the city, especially at this large scale

Water's edge. (Photo by Kadie Bell.)
Urban Design and Neighborhood Fit
- integrate the park with the urban context and make it easily accessible
- create a visible, welcoming threshold at the intersection of Broad Street and Alaskan Way
- better address the pedestrian experience along Elliott Avenue, which now functions as a highway
- integrate the urban design intentions of the nearby Potlatch Trail and Growing Vine Street projects

Site Planning
- design the canted planes to minimize the need for handrails and to mitigate the noise from Elliott Avenue and surrounding streets
- keep the proposed differentiated places and gardens
- define appropriate scales for the four different garden concepts
- develop secondary paths and social spaces in the park
- create multiple pedestrian connections to the waterfront
- create clear distinctions between the valley, grove, and shore
- make the shore area large enough to work as planned
- keep the proposed placement of the utilities and lighting
- leave some areas of the park left undefined to allow for experimentation by future artists
- develop a salmon-friendly experimental tidal garden

Design Refinements
- clearly articulate the differences between the major entrances to the park
- reexamine the concrete walls along Elliott Avenue and to find ways to make them not as large and oppressive
- redesign the fence along Western so that it is wrought iron and that people may see through it into the park


See other projects in the Visual Resume.


