FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
May 21, 2009
SEGD Helps Guide the City of Charlotte through Successful Wayfinding Program
WASHINGTON, DC — In the latest of its advocacy initiatives around urban
wayfinding, SEGD has helped the City of Charlotte, North Carolina, navigate the
approval process for an integrated vehicular, pedestrian, and parking signage system
that will direct visitors from the interstate system to the city’s Uptown core.
The City of Charlotte (under the leadership of the Charlotte Department of
Transportation), Charlotte Center City Partners, and the North Carolina Department of
Transportation are partnering on an integrated, and possibly unique, system that routes
visitors as efficiently as possible from the I-77/I-277 interstate loop to Uptown
destinations.
“A hodgepodge of freeway signs installed ad hoc over the past three decades aren’t
legible and don’t direct visitors to take the most efficient routes,” says Jim Kimbler,
Uptown transportation planner. The approved new system will save 1.7 million miles
per year. “Besides saving fuel and reducing the number of vehicles on the street, air
quality is expected to improve significantly.”
A typical hurdle for local municipalities adopting new signage programs is clearing
their concepts with the state department of transportation. SEGD assisted Charlotte by
presenting best practices adopted by other cities linking interstate systems with their
urban centers. SEGD also helped Charlotte gain approval to use unique colors and a
distinct crown emblem on its new signage, updating NCDOT on changes to federal
Manual of Uniform Traffic Control Devices (MUTCD) guidelines that now allow use
of colors and symbols.
“Basically, SEGD helped us do our homework so we could effectively present our
concepts to NCDOT,” says Kimbler. “The process went smoothly because we had the
advantage of showing what had been done elsewhere.”
The I-77/I-277 system and an Uptown City Street vehicular and parking wayfinding
system is currently in final design review and will be installed in the first quarter of
2010. A pedestrian wayfinding system, which has been installed in two phases since
2007, will also be updated by April 2010. This comprehensive “freeway-to-
pedestrian” system is aimed at providing people with easy orientation and identifying
amenities, destinations, and transit choices in the growing Uptown area.
The multiple components of the system were planned and designed by a team
including two SEGD member firms. Two Twelve/Harakawa Inc. (New York) led the
design team in development of the vehicular and pedestrian programs. DAWA Inc.
(Charlotte) was responsible for planning, analysis, and sign message scheduling and
routing for the integrated system. Another local design firm, Brinkley Design, has
contributed to map development and local coordination. Engineering firms HNTB
Corp. and Kimley-Horn Associates are also on the team, while Howard M. Landers
Consulting (Charlotte) is providing overall project management assistance.
SEGD is a long-time advocate for effective urban wayfinding systems. “SEGD has
worked extensively with the USDOT’s Federal Highway Administration on
modifications to the federal MUTCD, which defines the standard for installing and
maintaining signs and traffic control devices on streets and highways,” says Craig
Berger, SEGD’s director of education. In 2007 and 2008, SEGD and the Pennsylvania
Transportation Institute successfully advocated for changes that would make MUTCD
guidelines more sensitive to the complexities of urban sign systems.
At the state level, SEGD has advocated for changes making it easier to develop sign
systems for urban environments. SEGD advocated for the national MUTCD
guidelines to be integrated into state DOT practices, first in Florida, then in North
Carolina.
About SEGD
SEGD, founded in 1973, is the global community of people working at the
intersection of communication design and the built environment. Through educational
programs, research, and publications, SEGD’s mission is to increase awareness of the
environmental graphic design community, promote the importance of the discipline in
establishing place, and continue to refine standards of practice for the field.
SEGD
1000 Vermont Ave NW, Suite 400
Washington, DC 20005
Phone: 202 638-5555
E-Mail: ann@segd.org
Website URL: www.segd.org