Talk About It Tuesday: Art on the Underline

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This March we want to take some time to focus on concepts of mobility here in Miami. Below you will find a recent article from New Times Miami talking about the proposed “Underline.” The question that we want to pose to everyone is how much community input will be involved in the planning and building process. Also, how much the local artist community will be involved in the build out.

Designer of New York’s High Line Park to Design Miami’s Underline

 

When New York City opened the first phase of its High Line park in 2010, Miamians naturally said, “Oh, we want something like that.” The High Line is 1.45-mile linear park built atop an abandoned elevated railway.

Miami’s answer was to propose a 10-mile linear park underneath an active railway, the Metrorail, and dub it “the Underline.”

Naturally, when the designer of the High Line was one of 19 firms to bid to design the Underline, he was the one who won out.

James Corner Field Operations, a New York-based landscape architecture firm, was officially announced as the winner of the contract by Miami-Dade County. Corner is also working on the new Lincoln Road masterplan and also did work for the PAMM and Frost museums. It beat out four other finalists, none of which were local firms. Preliminary plans for the park had been designed by University of Miami architecture students with assistance from Arquitectonica’s Raymond Fort.

The Underline will follow underneath the Metrorail, from the Miami River to Dadeland South, creating an uninterrupted 10-mile path to be enjoyed by joggers, pedestrians, and bicyclists.

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Courtesy of Anna Baez/Underline
The proposed 10-mile Underline park

A timeline for competition has not yet been set. The park’s website notes that similar parks have taken more than a decade to complete. Funding comes from the cities of Miami, Coral Gables, and South Miami and the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, the Miami Foundation, the Health Foundation of South Florida, and the Mitchell Wolfson Foundation. However, the park is also soliciting private donors with hopes of speeding up the process.

Now, before you complain too much about Miami ripping off New York wholesale, know at least two things:

One of the first big artistic exhibitions on the High Line was an installation of then Miami-based artists FriendsWithYou’s Rainbow City project. That project had previously been exhibited in the Design District during Art Basel.

The High Line itself wasn’t even its own original vision either. It was in turn inspired by the Promenade plantée, a 2.9-mile elevated park in Paris. Nothing is truly original anymore.


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