By Leon Stafford
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
The urban designer whose graduate thesis is the basis of Atlanta's BeltLine is part of the group that will design the project.
Ryan Gravel works for Perkins+Will, a Chicago-based architectural firm that was chosen Wednesday by the board of directors of Atlanta Beltline Inc. to lay out the vision for the 22-mile loop of transit, parks and mixed-use development.
Perkins+Will will partner with James Corner Field Operations, a New York-based architectural firm, to lead work on the design, which will show what the BeltLine will look like and establish the basis for all future BeltLine design and construction, the group said.
Perkins+Will has its second largest office in Atlanta. James Corner does not have an office in the city.
The pricetag: up to $9.5 million.
“A public space like that envisioned by the BeltLine, with pedestrian-friendly rail transit, trails, greenspace and abutting development in one corridor does not exist today in Atlanta or any other city in the United States,” Brian Leary, president & chief executive officer of the Beltline, said in a press release.
The overall work will include 19 firms, whose responsibilities will include civil and structural engineering, surveys, landscape design, historic preservation, public art locations and signage. Fourteen of the 19 firms are either based in Atlanta or offices here.
The design will also define the physical boundaries of the corridor and identify engineering constraints and solutions for all elements of the BeltLine, the group said.