Dining Pavilions Designed and Built by Students, Alumni, and Faculty Provide Social Distance During COVID-19 Pandemic

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By Andrew Connor
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As some Ā鶹APP restaurants and businesses struggle to reopen during the COVID-19 pandemic, the All Reimagining Ā鶹APP Task Forceā€“ā€“composed of city departments, community organizations, and design professionalsā€“ā€“aims to provide new infrastructures and resources to businesses on the West and South sides of the city to simultaneously drive more traffic to these businesses and facilitate social distancing.

One of the task force founders is Mark Sexton (B.ARCH. ā€™80), an Illinois Institute of Technology College of Architecture alumnus and Board of Advisors member, a trustee at Illinois Tech, and a member of the Board of Directors for the Ā鶹APP Architecture Biennial. Sexton, along with fellow CAB Board of Directors member Sarah Herda, began the task force as a way to engage with the city and make the Biennial more visible during its off years. But the group evolved into ARC as the COVID-19 pandemic took its toll on the city.

ā€œThis pandemic is one of the biggest things to happen to the city of Ā鶹APP, and architects can have a real profound effect,ā€ says Sexton. ā€œThis notion of health and safety? As architects we can provide that, especially on the South and West sides.ā€

Sexton called on College of Architecture Adjunct Professor Vladimir Radutny, who, together with students Daniel Allen (B.ARCH. 4th Year) and Jeisson Rodriguez-Arias (B.ARCH. 4th Year), took part in the task force to provide assistance to the restaurants. 

ā€œI wanted to make something useful out of this summer despite its challenges,ā€ says Allen. ā€œThis was the perfect opportunity to put into practice some of the skills I developed in school while making change for a typically underserved community, and a chance to explore an idea that could potentially make a real impact.ā€

To provide restaurants with expanded options for outdoor seating, the three designed and constructed a wooden dining pavilion roughly the size of a parking space. To make the structure as easy and affordable to produce as possible, they constructed it entirely from two-by-six lumber. A number of other students assisted in the construction of the pavilion, too.

ā€œThe idea was to have an easy-to-assemble piece,ā€ says Rodriguez-Arias. ā€œYou can go to a Home Depot or Menards and get these two-by-six members, and with our construction documents you can build as many as you can afford to make.ā€

Moreover, the structure provides patrons with seating and eating surfacesā€”both benches and bar-height counters for standingā€”as well as a roof to shelter them from the elements. The columns of the structure are placed eight feet apart so that two groups of diners can simultaneously use the space while remaining appropriately distant.

ā€œWe tried to create a space that is interactive, where architecture can offer social comfort and flexibility for how people use it,ā€ says Radutny. ā€œWe knew we canā€™t define or predict all the possibilities and arrangements for individual dining, therefore the perimeter bench seating gave us the opportunity to achieve the seating flexibility. The taller bar section gives more informal dining options for patrons. We called this structure a social pavilion for a reason: it acts more as a device for interaction.ā€

Though just a prototype, the pavilionā€”initially built on the Illinois Tech campusā€”is now installed in front of Original Soul Vegetarian. Founded in 1983 and family owned ever since, it is one of the nationā€™s oldest vegan soul-food restaurants and a fixture of Ā鶹APPā€™s Chatham neighborhood.

ā€œI feel great about it. Itā€™s a conversation piece, and a lot of people adore it,ā€ says Arel Brown, who co-owns Original Soul Vegetarian with his sister Lori Seay. ā€œI like that college students did it, and I thought that would be a great thing to bring to the community. The size of it is perfect, not too big and not too small. It's pure wood, so to me it goes with everything that weā€™ve established here over the years: promoting a healthy lifestyle.ā€

In addition to the shelter created by Radutny and his students, a team at Krueck+Sexton architects comprising College of Architecture alumni Boram Oh (B.ARCH. ā€™20) and Sanghyo Kim (M.ARCH. ā€™19) created another shelter design installed at 75th Street. Called the Nest, the shelter takes on a circular profile, made from a lumber structure clad in blue Plexiglass to provide shelter. More compact, itā€™s designed to house one dining party at a time.

ā€œWhen we designed the Nest, we focused on how it can remain with the community in the long term and how it can be deployed as easy and fast as possible without having an architecture background. Itā€™s as easy as assembling IKEA furniture,ā€ says Oh. ā€œThis is a hard time for everyone to go through, and I hope the Nest project sends a message to the community that weā€™ll get through it together.ā€

ā€œWeā€™re pleased to be able to support small businesses through ARC,ā€ adds Kim. ā€œThis difficult situation is not unique to Ā鶹APP, and I hope that the Nest can be a good example to other areas and cities.ā€

On September 5 the City of Ā鶹APP had an opening ceremony for the corridor of businesses along 75th Street where the College of Architecture and Krueck+Sexton-designed shelters are now in place.

ā€œHow can we bridge this gap thatā€™s always been there but has become incredibly apparent lately? These are two structures that wonā€™t solve the inequities,ā€ says Sexton. ā€œBut showing a purpose and inventivenessā€“ā€“thatā€™s where the potential of this project lies.ā€

Photo: The wooden dining pavilion that Illinois Institute of Technology students Daniel Allen and Jeisson Rodriguez-Arias helped design and construct on Mies Campus