Potential designs for Aberdeen city centre streetscaping unveiled
Potential designs for how Aberdeen city centre streets could look as part of the City Centre and Beach Masterplan have been revealed for the first time alongside the launch of an online public consultation.
The designs include play areas, public art, events spaces, and greening the area with trees, planters and rain gardens and would all contribute to the aim of creating a world-class city centre which respects and enhances Aberdeen’s unique qualities and characteristics while putting people at its heart.
For the consultation, the city centre has been split into eight areas with detailed plans for each. The areas are Union Street West, Belmont Quarter, Schoolhill and Upperkirkgate, Union Street East, West End, Union Street Central, Aberdeen Market, and Castlegate.
As well as the online consultation, the designs will be available to view in an exhibition at the ground floor of the Bon Accord Shopping Centre, and there will also be sessions where design officers will be available to answer questions.
The detailed plans have been shaped by the results of a public consultation held last year as well as extensive stakeholder engagement sessions over the last few months.
Councillor Miranda Radley, operational delivery convener for Aberdeen City Council, said: “We want to ensure the city centre is a thriving place to visit, work and live in by investing wisely and ensuring people have an opportunity to contribute to the proposed designs for the area.
“The proposals would also encourage more people to make the shift to walking, cycling, or public transport as well as providing more opportunities to hold events, more green areas, more public art, and play areas for the city centre.”
For the proposed designs for play areas, two specific places of focus are suggested in Castlegate and Union Terrace Gardens, and secondary and incidental play elements would also be introduced in other locations. Play would focus on non-prescriptive elements and spaces that allow for imaginative, adventurous, and creative play while also promoting social interaction and learning.
The consultation also includes proposals for development of the public realm and artwork designs would include endeavouring to work with local artists to weave in meaningful, place-based art, both temporary and permanent. The artworks would celebrate the beauty and history of Aberdeen’s built environment as well as the success of events such as Spectra and NuArt festivals.
For the events spaces, the proposals include the opportunity to expand the city’s existing events capacity and be ambitious with the type, number, and scale of events the city can hold.
Within the extent of the planned public realm upgrades, the proposals also include significant opportunity to ‘green’ the city through integration of trees, planters, and rain gardens. This will play a key role in climate proofing the city, supporting the health and well-being of residents and visitors while also generally making the city more attractive and colourful.
The consultation also has information about traffic movement around the city centre including proposed changes to some roads. The proposed changes are designed to avoid unnecessary traffic going through the city centre and improve connections between the city centre and the waterfront.
Within the city centre, the proposed changes would make it easier and safer for people to move around by walking, wheeling, cycling, and using public transport, and would result in a less polluted city centre environment. Access will still be possible to all properties, car parks and other destinations, however in some cases the routes that cars can take to get to these destinations would change.
The proposed designs are available to view in the lower mall at the Bon Accord Shopping Centre until Monday 17 October, and the sessions with design team are being held on Thursday, Friday, and Saturday (6, 7 and 8 October). The sessions on Thursday and Friday are from 2pm to 6pm, and on Saturday is from 12 noon to 6pm.
The online consultation is available here. There is also a live online event on Wednesday 12 October from 6pm to 7pm and people can register to take part via the same link.