Retail centers for community : addressing both pedestrian and car traffic Thesis

(2004). Retail centers for community : addressing both pedestrian and car traffic . 10.25148/etd.FI14032364

thesis or dissertation chair

authors

  • Asturias, Luis

abstract

  • The purpose of this thesis was to redesign a commercial center in Miami, Florida in a manner that incorporates the needs of pedestrians as well as the automobile.

    In my research, I studied projects that had been successful at integrating cars in retail design. I applied the strategies learned from this research to the design of a center that creates a positive interaction of pedestrian and car traffic, addressing the needs of the surrounding community.

    I designed a master plan that includes a mix of residential, retail, commercial and parking space. The parking is designed so that the retail center is not dominated by surface parking. Rather, the automobile is introduced into the different layers of the proposed buildings. The design focused on connecting pedestrian plazas and parking areas beneath them through the introduction of light and greenery. The findings show how a shopping center might transform the area around it by including spaces for residential, civic, cultural and social functions, as well as for the automotive infrastructure that make those functions possible.

publication date

  • March 30, 2004

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)