Home Competitions Open Competitions ARC: International Wildlife Crossing Infrastructure Design Competition

Sponsor: Montana State University, US Department of Transportation, Woodcock Foundation

 

Type: Two Phase, EOI

 

Location: West Vail Pass, Colorado

 

Language: English

 

Fee: None

Eligibility: Design teams must include registered, professionally licensed landscape architects, and structural engineers, and they may opt to include professional architects as well as other specializations. In Phase Two, design teams must include at least one firm licensed to practice in the State of Colorado.

Timetable:

30 July 2010 – Phase One Expressions of interest are due via hard copy

 

Awards:

$15,000 awarded to each finalist selected in Phase One

$40,000 awarded to winner of Phase Two

 

Jury:

Jury Chair - Chris Waldheim, Professor and Chair of Landscape Architecture at Harvard

 

Design Challenge:

ARC will engage the best and most innovative international, interdisciplinary design teams—comprised of landscape architects, architects, engineers, ecologists, and other experts—to create the next generation of wildlife crossing structures for North America’s roadways. This competition seeks specifically from its entries, innovation in feasible, buildable context-sensitive and compelling design solutions for safe, efficient, cost-effective, and ecologically responsive wildlife crossings. In doing so, it hopes to raise international awareness of a need to better reconcile the construction and maintenance of road networks with wildlife movement.

An emerging critical priority for both transportation and natural resource agencies is to make North American highways safer for both drivers and wildlife. The fact that wildlife-vehicle collisions have doubled in the past fifteen years has concentrated transportation agencies’ attention on engineering solutions that prevent wildlife-vehicle collisions on the continent’s roadways.  At the same time, roads have been acknowledged as a major obstacle to landscape connectivity and ecological vitality—a matter of growing concern as climate change, in the form of rising temperatures and hydrological shifts, portends increasing wildlife migrations. In this context, the continents’ road systems pose a significant threat to the long-term health and viability of North American wildlife populations. The four inter-related objectives for this competition are to:

  • Provide an avenue for international teams of design professionals to address new design challenges in the coalescent issues of road transportation safety, structural engineering, wildlife conservation and landscape ecology;
  • Explore creative new approaches, materials, and designs that address the fundamentals of transportation engineering and ecology;
  • Increase the number of potential solutions for cost efficient, innovative crossing designs that can be adapted for widespread use in other locations; and,
  • Engage design professionals and students in the interdisciplinary nature of road ecology with a real-time, in-situ application.

Submission Requirements:

ARC is a two-phased competition: Phase One is the Call for Expressions of Interest, emphasizing qualifications and design approach; Phase Two is the intensive design exercise undertaken by the finalist teams selected from Phase One. The Call for Expressions of Interest can be downloaded from www.arc-competition.com, the hub for all official information about the ARC competition. Expressions of Interest must be received by 4pm (Mountain Daylight Time) on July 30, 2010 in order to be considered.

For more information, go to: http://www.arc-competition.com/

 

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