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PUBLICATIONS
Inside
Illinois
Vol.
24, No. 14, Feb. 3, 2005

Trustees review proposed
revisions to campus Master Plan
By
Sabryna Cornish, UIC News Bureau
Members of the UI
Board of Trustees caught a glimpse of what the Urbana-Champaign campus
might look like in the future when they viewed a presentation on proposed
revisions to the campus Master Plan at their meeting on Jan. 20 in Chicago.
The plan revisions address land use in the area from University Avenue
to Airport Road and show how the campus could change during the next
decade. The plan examines issues related to campus development and is
reviewed every few years to determine if changes are warranted, according
to Lyle Wachtel, associate vice president for Facilities Planning and
Programming.
Wachtel said that master planning is a process that provides the framework
for the university’s vision, and “we’re at a real
watershed moment.”
The preliminary plan revisions called for adopting the precepts of the
Campus Area Transportation Study, such as establishing uniform speed
limits and signage within the University District.
The preliminary revisions recommended congregating the state surveys
in
one area and establishing a grid street system for efficient land use.
An expansion east of the UI Research Park would include a hotel/conference
center and retail businesses as well as additional research facilities.
The plan revisions included a new ice arena on Florida Avenue east of
the
softball stadium, an Olympic performance venue south of Assembly Hall
and an indoor golf facility south of St. Mary’s Road that is being
funded by a private gift and for which ground has already been broken.
Commercial areas on campus would be overhauled under the plan, and an
increase in regional and national businesses would enhance quality of
life and add variety, said Joe Hibbard of Sasaki Associates, a Massachusetts-based
consulting company that did the campus’s first contemporary plan
in the mid-1980s and was hired to help with the update.
“Our goal is to understand how businesses work together,”
Hibbard said.
One of the areas also under scrutiny is a three-quarter-acre site at
the corner of Lincoln and University avenues, which is outside the master
plan’s boundaries. While university officials would like to use
the lot to establish a gateway to the campus, city of Urbana officials
want commercial development there.
“It’s important that we protect the visual approach of the
university as people come into campus,” Hibbard said. “If
the university sells the land, restrictions should be imposed as to
what can go there.”
Campus landscaping guidelines also would be reworked under the
proposed master plan, grouping similar types of landscaping areas together
to promote visual uniformity and promote biodiversity. Another goal
of the revised landscaping guidelines is to develop the courtyards on
campus to create informal gathering places. However, the Quad’s
landscaping would be preserved to protect its historical integrity.
Trustee Kenneth Schmidt said that in developing a final master plan
he hopes to “maintain the focus on our academic needs.”
Interim Chancellor Richard Herman said he sees the master plan review
as “an opportunity that comes along once in a generation.”
The final updated master plan will be presented to the trustees at a
future meeting.
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