Since 2002, the Charlotte Area Transit System (CATS) has incorporated public art in various capital improvement projects. Encouraged by the Federal Transit Administration policy circular 9400.1A, the Art in Transit program is to add visual quality with a profound impact on transit patrons and the community at large. CATS commits 1% of design and construction costs for the integration of art, which includes stations and surrounding areas, park and ride lots, transportation centers, maintenance facilities, and passenger amenities.[1]
The following list are artists that have contributed to the Art in Transit program.
Artist | Work | Location | Year | Summary | Image |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Alice Adams | Landscape and hardscape | Lynx Blue Line | 2007 | Responsible for the design of the scoring patterns marking stations called Evergreen Encyclopedia and Celtic Calendar. Additionally, she is responsible for the relief images placed on walls along the route.[2] | |
Maria Artemis | Tectonic Suite | Parkwood | 2018 | Station artwork includes boulders, granite benches, and laminated windscreen glass.[3] | |
Nancy Blum | Dogwood | Lynx Blue Line | 2007 | 24 bronze drinking fountain basins, located in 13 stations.[4] | |
Carolyn Braaksma | Walls & Bridges | Lynx Blue Line | 2018 | Responsible for all walls, bridges and piers along the Blue Line extension. Creating 17 different designs, including the Calico Kudzu on various walls, the leaf railing and color on the Old Concord Road bridge and the Pitcher Plant Bridge Piers.[5] | |
Susan Brenner | Red Tree | JW Clay Blvd/UNC Charlotte | 2018 | Elevator tower.[6] | |
Susan Brenner | Waterfall | University City Blvd | 2018 | Elevator tower.[6] | |
Shaun Cassidy | Ebb & Flow | McCullough | 2018 | Etched windscreen glass, passenger shelter columns, art benches and fencing.[7] | |
Shaun Cassidy | Mosaics and windscreens | 7th Street | 2007 | Gingko leaf design and mosaic columns cladding features a four-color overlapping leaf pattern.[8] | |
Shaun Cassidy | Seating fabric and ceiling art | Lynx Blue Line | 2007 | Design of both the seat fabric and ceiling graphics in each Siemens S70.[9] | |
Shaun Cassidy | Track fencing | Lynx Blue Line | 2007 | Design and fabrication of 40 sections of fencing to be utilized at 10 station platforms. Each section will resemble a leaf from a tree species native to the neighborhood where the station is located. Additionally, the tree veins on each leaf will be designed to replicate the street layout of the neighborhood where the station is located.[10] | |
Jackie Chang | (T)HERE | JW Clay Blvd/UNC Charlotte | 2018 | Stainless steel inlays, laminated windscreen glass, passenger shelter columns.[11] | |
Chandra Cox | Locomotion | Sugar Creek | 2018 | Kinetic finials, orb sculpture, laminated windscreen glass, passenger shelter columns.[12] | |
Sharon Dowell | Halcyon Idyll I, Halcyon Idyll II, Coexist |
11th St & Brookshire Fwy Underpasses | 2018 | Murals and signal house wrapping.[13] | |
Sharon Dowell | A City of Optimists | 25th Street | 2018 | Mosaics, painted railing and benches, laminated windscreen glass, passenger shelter columns.[14] | |
Richard C. Elliott | Tower of Light | Archdale | 2007 | Acrylic reflectors on elevator tower.[15] | |
Darren Goins | The Sun Guided the Road Bike Shelter, The Geometric Abstract Bicycle (on the horizon) Rack |
Lynx Blue Line | 2018 | Bicycle parking at nine stations, eight of which include shelter.[16] | |
Hoss Haley | River Rock | Lynx Blue Line | 2007 | Hand-polished steel and concrete benches located at five stations.[17][18] | |
Doug Hollis | UMBRA | 9th Street | 2018 | Tensile fabric canopies, curved glass windscreens, benches, and blue glass aggregate platform.[19] | |
Leticia Huerta | Pavers, mosaics, windscreens | Lynx Blue Line | 2007 | Design of the platform pavers, mosaic tiles, and the glass etching designs at all 11 stations between the I-485/South Boulevard and Carson stations.[20][21] | |
Mikyoung Kim | The Nexus Project | UNC Charlotte–Main | 2018 | Stainless steel, programmed lighting, paving, and landscape.[22] | |
Andrew Leicester | Bobbins | Charlotte Transportation Center | 2007 | Brick bridge columns and pavers.[23] | |
Ruth Lyons | Welcome to Nodaland | 36th Street | 2018 | Station color, smalti glass mosaic, granite bench, laminated windscreen glass, and passenger canopy columns.[24] | |
Anna Murch | UMBRA | 9th Street | 2018 | Tensile fabric canopies, curved glass windscreens, benches, and blue glass aggregate platform.[19] | |
Nancy O’Neil | Windscreens | CityLynx Gold Line | 2015 | Current and historical maps, photos, and manuscripts on glass, on 11 passenger shelters.[25] | |
Dennis Oppenheim | Reconstructed Dwelling | Tyvola | 2007 | Steel, aluminum, wood, vinyl, and lettering.[26] | |
Jody Pinto | Light Station | 3rd Street/Convention Center | 2008 | Green and red fiberglass canopies and benches, steel, fluorescent lighting, and paving pattern.[27] | |
Susan Page | Coming Home To Cherry | Midtown | 2008 | A series of portraits, on five passenger shelters, of Cherry residents representing family, community, and education.[28] | |
Marek Ranis | Walls and bridge enhancements | Lynx Blue Line | 2007 | Design and color of Retaining walls and bridge columns in the south corridor.[29] | |
Thomas Sayre | Furrow | Scaleybark | 2007 | Six large concrete and steel sculptures cast from Carolina earth, pays tribute to Scaleybark's agricultural past.[30] | |
Paul Sires | Welcome to Nodaland | 36th Street | 2018 | Station color, smalti glass mosaic, granite bench, laminated windscreen glass, and passenger canopy columns.[24] | |
Tom Stanley | A Place Called Home | Tom Hunter | 2018 | Laminated windscreen glass, passenger shelter columns, art benches and fencing.[31] | |
Thomas Thoune | Camden Wall | East/West Boulevard | 2007 | 33 mosaic cogs on a 360-foot (110 m) wall.[32] | |
Michele Turner | On the Move | Sprinter | 2010 | Etched glass at passenger shelters along the Sprinter (express bus) route between Uptown Charlotte and Charlotte Douglas International Airport.[33] | |
David Wilson | Along the Way | Beatties Ford Road | 2013 | Collage on glass at six passenger shelters along Beatties Ford Road, between Interstate 485 and LaSalle Street. | |
Yuriko Yamaguchi | Dream Keepers | Bland Street | 2007 | Four small bronze sculptures symbolizing the growth and mystery of our lives.[34] |
References
edit- ^ "Art in Transit". Charlotte Area Transit System. Retrieved February 20, 2021.
- ^ "Alice Adams". Charlotte Area Transit System. Retrieved October 12, 2021.
- ^ "BLE Parkwood Station". Charlotte Area Transit System. Retrieved February 20, 2021.
- ^ "BLE Artist Blum". Charlotte Area Transit System. Retrieved February 20, 2021.
- ^ "BLE Walls, Bridges, and Piers". Charlotte Area Transit System. Retrieved February 20, 2021.
- ^ a b "BLE Elevators". Charlotte Area Transit System. Retrieved February 20, 2021.
- ^ "BLE McCullough Station". Charlotte Area Transit System. Retrieved February 20, 2021.
- ^ "BLE Artist Cassidy". Charlotte Area Transit System. Retrieved February 20, 2021.
- ^ "LYNX Blue Line Public Art". Charlotte Area Transit System. Archived from the original on May 10, 2008. Retrieved June 17, 2008.
- ^ "BLE Artist Cassidy". Charlotte Area Transit System. Retrieved October 12, 2021.
- ^ "BLE JW Clay Station". Charlotte Area Transit System. Retrieved February 20, 2021.
- ^ "BLE Sugar Creek Station". Charlotte Area Transit System. Retrieved February 20, 2021.
- ^ "11th St. & I-277 Underpasses". Charlotte Area Transit System. Retrieved February 20, 2021.
- ^ "25th Street Station". Charlotte Area Transit System. Retrieved February 20, 2021.
- ^ "BLE Artist Elliott". Charlotte Area Transit System. Retrieved February 20, 2021.
- ^ "BLE Bike Parking". Charlotte Area Transit System. Retrieved February 20, 2021.
- ^ "BLE Artist Haley". Charlotte Area Transit System. Retrieved February 20, 2021.
- ^ "Hoss Haley". Art Makers. Retrieved October 13, 2021.
- ^ a b "BLE 9th Street Station". Charlotte Area Transit System. Retrieved February 20, 2021.
- ^ "BLE Artist Huerta". Charlotte Area Transit System. Retrieved October 12, 2021.
- ^ "Images". Leticia Huerta Studio. Retrieved October 13, 2021.
- ^ "BLE UNCC Station". Charlotte Area Transit System. Retrieved February 20, 2021.
- ^ "BLE Artist Leicester". Charlotte Area Transit System. Retrieved February 20, 2021.
- ^ a b "36th Street Station". Charlotte Area Transit System. Retrieved February 20, 2021.
- ^ "CityLYNX Gold Line Public Art". Charlotte Area Transit System. Retrieved February 20, 2021.
- ^ "BLE Artist Oppenheim". Charlotte Area Transit System. Retrieved February 20, 2021.
- ^ "BLE Artist Pinto". Charlotte Area Transit System. Retrieved February 20, 2021.
- ^ "Midtown Passenger Shelters". Charlotte Area Transit System. Retrieved February 20, 2021.
- ^ "Marek Ranis". Charlotte Area Transit System. Retrieved February 20, 2021.
- ^ "BLE Artist Sayre". Charlotte Area Transit System. Retrieved February 20, 2021.
- ^ "BLE Tom Hunter Station". Charlotte Area Transit System. Retrieved February 20, 2021.
- ^ "BLE Artist Thoune". Charlotte Area Transit System. Retrieved February 20, 2021.
- ^ "Sprinter Enhanced Bus Service". Charlotte Area Transit System. Retrieved February 20, 2021.
- ^ "BLE Artist Yamaguchi". Charlotte Area Transit System. Retrieved February 20, 2021.
External links
edit- Media related to CATS Art in Transit at Wikimedia Commons
- CATS Rapid Transit Planning