Location

Fort Lauderdale, Florida

Description

DC Alexander Park is over 1-acre, prominently located on Fort Lauderdale Beach and across from the Fort Lauderdale Aquatic Center and International Swimming Hall of Fame. The proposed improvements are meant to establish the park as an iconic memorable place. The award-winning project includes a signature, family-oriented, artistic and interactive element, restroom facility with attached concession stand, shaded seating areas, inviting greenspace and landscape areas, turtle-compliant lighting, security cameras, and the removal of the existing parking lot. Additionally, SE 5th Street is envisioned as becoming a closed two-way street. KEITH, as prime consultant, is managing a multi-disciplinary team. In-house services include planning, landscape architecture, civil engineering, surveying, and traffic engineering services.

More about DC Alexander Park

As an extreme coastal beach environment, the park site must solve for flooding and constant salt spray. The park had to solve for multiple issues related to permitting and flooding. As part of ongoing resilient infrastructure and public realm improvements in Fort Lauderdale, DC Alexander Park repurposes a former parking lot into a vibrant and resilient public space for tourists and residents. The park serves to reinvest in green and resilient infrastructure along the vulnerable shoreline of coastal South Florida. The project “botanizes” the previous asphalt parking lot through the reintegration and interpretation of coastal dune and tropical maritime hardwood hammock ecosystems. The upland coastal ecosystem includes both vegetated “root” dunes and rubberized surfaces to protect landward investments from storm surge as well as serve as “boundless” playscape. At the perimeter of the park, a re-established hammock serves as a sponge for rainfall and saltwater flooding while providing for passive park recreation and critical habitat development for native fauna. A ramping dune provides park-goers to experience the elevation changes while moving up to a twenty-five foot cantilevered overlook of the beach and ocean. This cantilevered overlook becomes part of the resilient infrastructure, as well as provides a public art and experiential landscape element. The overlook and corresponding ramp have been designed to create universal accessibility of the site for all users. A coastal plaza to the north creates a shared space to calm traffic and provide a “shade hammock”. The dappled light through the shade hammock creates a dramatic effect using native and indigenous plant species like; Green Buttonwood, Gumbo Limbo, and Seagrape. The elements through the park are intended to provide critical infrastructure related to coastal flooding and future sea-level rise resilience, but also be seen as a public art form. Currently throughout Fort Lauderdale, hardened infrastructure, like seawalls and revetments, become unsightly and the main goal of DC Alexander Park is to serve as a transformational model to showcase designs roll to provide aesthetic, functional, and fiscally responsible design.