I hesitate to post this because I don't want what I think is a decent idea tainted by my inability to master Google Sketchup, but this is an idea I had, taking from the 1000 foot oil derrick tower that has been suggested in the past, with something that is (hopefully) a little more artistic. The idea is the Crosstown Tipi, an expressionistic, skeletal, curved/spiraled tipi that straddles the Oklahoma river and I-35. The height may be 750 feet, 1000 feet, 1250 feet, but have an obvious pronounced impact on the skyline, acting as our Space Needle/Gateway Arch/Calgary Tower. Build a modern technologically marvel based on a traditional habitat associated with our native heritage, playing off "Don't you all live in tipis?!?" stereotypes, while being a new tourist attraction.
However it is meant to be functional as well, as the poles will have escalators to lead to a platform for people to walk across both the river and I35 from the Boathouse District (and by extension, Bricktown) to the AICCM once completed. And any hopeful significant development on the southside of the OK River opposite the Boathouses. The lower platform could provide another place to watch regattas and other river activities. There would also be an additional observation deck 700 feet or so where the poles meet. Probably would be difficult to have stores or even a restaurant, but maybe a bar at the lower platform and travel advertisements for everything OK has to offer.
Someone with better art skills will be able to translate the concept better than I can and beautify it, making it more palatable to the skeptical. The five poles should curve more and pull into each other more, tightening in the center while still creating enough "gap" for the visual skeletal effect. The lower platform is too high. And the placement is imperfect, obviously, with one pole right in the middle of the southbound I35 (when its meant to take the space between the north and southbound paths) and another in the river itself. It's feasibility to build in reality would be a big challenge, obviously, construction over the busiest bridge in OKC, but really if that first platform can be built construction equipment can use it to build the elevation. I really don't think something like this would work in a field or park somewhere--it's functionality to provide a walking path from one destination to another is the justification for its existence.


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