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Ascent MKE – ULI Americas Awards for Excellence Finalist
Learn more about 2023 ULI Americas Awards for Excellence Finalist, Ascent MKE (Milwaukee, Wisconsin).
April 26, 2023
Olivia Richardson
Photo By Built Work Photography
Phase Three, sited closer to Lake Union, and situated on the very busy Burke-Gilman Trail, has transformed a little-used patch of land into a destination with public art and rest stops to take in the views
Photo By Built Work Photography
Phase Three increased the volume of filtered bridge water to two million gallons, effectively treating the north half of the above bridge deck
Location: Seattle, Washington
Developers: Phase 1: CoU, LLC / HessCallahanGrey Group; HAL Real Estate; Clean Lake Union LLC
Phase 2: CoU, LLC / HessCallahanGrey Group; Spear Street Capital; Clean Lake Union LLC
Phase 3: Clean Lake Union LLC, The Boeing Group; The State of Washington
Designers: Weber Thompson; kpff
Site Size: 0.5 acres
Photo By Built Work Photography
The bridge structure above, with arching concrete and crisscrossed steel girders, takes on the feeling of a forest canopy as the bridge pillars land within the swales, much like the scale of old-growth cedars once did on this site
Located directly adjacent to Seattle’s urban core, Lake Union has served as a hub for the industry since settlement began in the early 1900s, where log mills processed the region’s old-growth timber, creating the building materials that dominated local commerce. The Project Team was designing a commercial building on the north side of the Aurora Bridge when the developer learned about the lethal effects of roadway runoff on the region’s salmon. Studies performed on a nearby bridge, consistent with national databases for high-traffic roadways, showed that soil could filter and eliminate the lethal effect. Similar tests on stormwater runoff from the Aurora Bridge proved to be five times greater than the levels measured in the study. The especially toxic effluent had been flowing untreated into Lake Union for almost a century, presumably impacting human health, spawning salmon, and subsequently, the local Orca population, which is headed towards extinction due to a shortage of salmon prey and high levels of toxic stormwater.
Photo By Built Work Photography
Native shrubs and rushes, along with Vine Maples serve as understory plantings to provide a robust forest floor below the contrived overhead canopy that the bridge structure and columns simulate
Armed with this knowledge, the team looked beyond their property boundary and worked with State and City municipalities to install rain gardens to treat the runoff as part of their projects’ frontage improvements. After the successful construction of the first series of swales on the bridge’s north side, the team expanded the effort to the south side as they developed a second commercial building there. A third phase, located closer to the lake, captures an additional million gallons of runoff annually. It was constructed concurrently with phase two.
Photo By Built Work Photography
Testing of the water entering and leaving the swales confirmed measurable filtration of a large range of contaminants. The three phases of the Aurora Bridge Bioswales collectively clean almost 2 million gallons of runoff annually
The swales step down every two feet of grade, with Corten steel weirs holding water as it filters sediment and contaminants, allowing clear surface water to outfall into the adjoining cell. Phase Two adds staggered concrete walls slowing building runoff flow to promote evaporation. Their geometry echoes that of the log booms and logging industry present at the site. Cut into each concrete wall, bronze spillways create a flat area for bees to drink from during the summer months. The swales come alive with each storm, as water pours over the weirs, mixing the sound of water with the sound of cars overhead. A block downhill, Phase Three features a spillway to settle incoming water before meditatively overflowing. Five low-standing steel walls punctuate the planting, channeling the water. Native shrubs and rushes are consistent within all phases, along with Vine Maples that serve as a deciduous understory canopy, speaking to PNW’s regional forests. Flowering plants were prioritized to support native and non-native pollinator species in the area.
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