Castro Street Pedestrian Plaza - Mountain View, CA, USA

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Gehl partnered with the City of Mountain View to study existing public life and public space, pilot solutions, facilitate community engagement, and develop a concept street design for the heart of Downtown. During Covid-19, the resulting plan for the pedestrianizion of one block of Castro Street was piloted and accelerated for approval.

Castro Street Pedestrian Plaza

Street’s

pedestrian Plaza design will build on it’s status as “the heartbeat of the city” and create an essential destination in the region, unique in its authenticity and character -a physical representation of the diverse cultures that make up the city of Mountain View.

VisionAs the heart of Downtown Mountain View, Castro Street is the social center of the city and hosts a unique mix of restaurants, retail stores, and office spaces. Yet, the street design is in need of an upgrade to match the city’s ambitious vision for the future of downtown. The City of Mountain View partnered with Gehl to study existing public life and public space, facilitate community engagement, and develop a concept street design for the 100 block of Castro Street. These efforts followed parallel city-led projects like the Grade Separation and Access project that would close off the northern edge of Castro Street to vehicles and create a safe underpass for pedestrians and bicyclists to cross the Caltrain rail corridor.

Buy-in from the community and business ownders

During the COVID-19 pandemic, the City of Mountain View pivoted its focus to creating public life within county-sanctioned public health guidelines. Gehl designed and implemented a pilot–Summer StrEATs–that closed off the 100 to 400 blocks to vehicles while maintaining cross-street traffic. The pilot provided valuable insight into the latent demand for more walkable public space in downtown Mountain View.

The team conducted stakeholder engagement and gathered feedback on the temporary street closure to inform long-term design alternatives that would improve pedestrian and bicycle access and connectivity while

Facts
Location Mountain View, CA Client City of Mountain View Gehl team John Bela (Project Director), Sofie Kvist (Project Manager), Andrew Kremers, Donna Mena Project size 1 block, 500 x 80 ft Year 2020-2021
Pedestrianize
Castro 100-block
Framework Plan & Pilot Strategy to
Downtown

balancing public transit, service loading and access, and private vehicle access.

To understand the impact these designs would have on traffic and transit service in downtown Mountain View, Gehl worked with Kimley-Horn to alleviate potential conflicts, refine thedesign alternatives, and craft a successful, pedestrian-focused 100-block. The designs were further informed by findings from a Public Life Public Space study, economic analysis, and drawing comparisons between Castro Streetand other successful main streets in North America.

These design alternatives were shared with the local businesses in an outreach workshop hosted by the team, in order to identify the best options, and ensure that business owners felt confident in the future of their businesses within the city’s plans for a more pedestrian-friendly Castro Street.

Impact Analysis

As a result of these efforts, the Mountain View City Council is expected to recommend moving forward with a redesign of Castro Street’s 100 block, building on the best design alternatives proposed by Gehl in this phase. This project is currently under development and is expected to be completed in late 2021.

1. Downtown Mountain View has an authentic, human-scaled urban fabric full of potential waiting to be activated.
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2. Design alternatives include adjustments to the street, such as removing curbs, increase accessibility and make navigating downtown more enjoyable for pedestrians.

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