Sasaki’s multidisciplinary team of local and national landscape architects, architects, engineers, and ecologists have closely collaborated to create a master plan. Through on-site visits, in-depth conversations, analysis of community feedback, and technical due diligence, the design team has envisioned a lake edge that amplifies all voices.
Sasaki’s vision for Lake Monona’s waterfront comes from the following themes that emerged from conversations with community members about the city’s and lake’s future:
- Water Dialogue: Creating a Living Edge Along Lake Monona’s Shoreline
- Nature Dialogue: Inspiring Generational Stewards
- City Dialogue: A Place for All to Connect & Be Connected
- Community Dialogue: Enhancing Equitable Access to Parks
- Culture Dialogue: Starting with the Sacred Voices
- Architecture Dialogue: A Balanced Perspective
The design plans for pedestrian infrastructure that creates a stronger connection to the core of downtown and south neighborhoods such as Bay View, Bay Creek, and Alliant Energy Center. Improved intersections, widened walking paths, and separated bike lanes will create a new waterfront that is accessible for all people. Destinations at Law Park, South Hamilton Street, the John Nolen Causeway, and Olin Park bring new programming, which will activate Lake Monona’s waterfront throughout the whole year.
Voices of the Lake is woven together by the Story Walk, a wayfinding element and physical representation of each of the guiding principles and dialogues. It shifts in scale across the site, manifesting as a graphic on a sidewalk, as ephemeral carvings in ice, or as quotes on a wall that connect the past, present, and future of Lake Monona’s waterfront.
Your local Gomaco dealer |
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Hayden-Murphy Equipment Co |
Swanston Equipment Co |
The 1.7-mile-long plan will be divided into four distinct zones and potential phases: Law Park Ledge will include a new park over the John Nolen Drive, an outdoor amphitheater, a community boat house, a restaurant, and a restored lake edge; the Lake Lounge showcases the living lake edge, new areas for food trucks, and a connection back to the Capitol; Community Causeway grants bikers, walkers, and runners safe access along the lake while using green infrastructure to clean stormwater runoff from John Nolen Causeway; finally, Olin Overlook creates a park that includes a new nature center, which will provide opportunities to learn about the successional forest within the park and offer views back to the city.
The Sasaki team considered current and future construction projects, available funds, and funding opportunities in the proposed phasing strategy. Phase 1, Lake Lounge, meets the top priorities of the community and creates a pedestrian connection from downtown Madison to Lake Monona’s shoreline. The phase’s emphasis on green infrastructure allows for the wetland strategies to be tested while its wide range of open space programming allows the community to explore all Lake Monona has to offer.