+us: Turning Calgary's Elevated Walkways into Ground-Level Public Life+us: Turning Calgary's Elevated Walkways into Ground-Level Public Life

+us: Turning Calgary's Elevated Walkways into Ground-Level Public Life

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Calgary's downtown empties out every evening. The towers stay lit, but the streets go quiet. A 14-kilometer elevated walkway system called the Plus-15 Network, once lauded as a climate-responsive pedestrian solution, has inadvertently drained the ground plane of foot traffic and street life. The infrastructure that was supposed to connect buildings has disconnected people from the city itself. With a 26.5% downtown office vacancy rate, the problem is not a shortage of built space. It is a shortage of reasons to be there.

+us, a People's Choice Award entry in the Urbanscape: Symbiosis competition, takes aim at exactly this condition. Designed by Alea Reid and Isabelle Jackson, the project reframes the dim, overlooked spaces beneath 83 Plus-15 bridges as sites for community activation. Rather than proposing new construction, the designers deploy modular, lightweight installations that attach to existing infrastructure without permanently altering it. The result is an urban strategy that is scalable, reversible, and deeply social.

A Downtown That Disappears After Five

Panoramic skyline view with colored graphic overlays highlighting clusters of towers above residential foreground
Panoramic skyline view with colored graphic overlays highlighting clusters of towers above residential foreground
Street view down urban corridor with bare winter trees and colored overlay pattern across the pavement
Street view down urban corridor with bare winter trees and colored overlay pattern across the pavement

The panoramic skyline view reveals Calgary's corporate core in its full vertical ambition: tower clusters rising above a low-slung residential foreground, the colored graphic overlays mapping the density and distribution of the Plus-15 system across the downtown grid. At street level, the picture shifts. A winter corridor stretches ahead, lined with bare trees and vacant pavement, the colored overlay patterns tracing the pathways where pedestrian life should be but rarely is. Together, these images establish the core tension of the project: a city with enormous built infrastructure and almost no ground-level vitality outside business hours.

Reid and Jackson use this analysis to argue that the problem is one of activation, not absence. The downtown has sidewalks, plazas, and covered passages. What it lacks are reasons for people to linger, sit, or interact. The Plus-15 system, by routing foot traffic above grade, has turned the street into little more than a car channel. +us proposes to reverse this equation by making the underside of each bridge a destination rather than a dead zone.

Parasitic Installations on Elevated Infrastructure

Upward view of glass curtain wall facade and elevated pedestrian bridge with colored overlay accents
Upward view of glass curtain wall facade and elevated pedestrian bridge with colored overlay accents
Ground-level entrance canopy with angled supports and cyclists passing on the sidewalk below
Ground-level entrance canopy with angled supports and cyclists passing on the sidewalk below

Looking upward at a glass curtain wall facade and the underside of a Plus-15 bridge, you can see the architectural opportunity that most pedestrians walk past without noticing. The bridge creates a canopy, a sheltered zone between buildings that currently serves no programmatic purpose. The colored overlay accents in the rendering hint at where modular elements could attach: hanging chairs that double as tables, kinetic installations for children, and sculptural bike racks, all suspended from or affixed to the existing structural frame.

At ground level, the entrance canopy with its angled supports already frames a covered passage where cyclists pass on the sidewalk. The designers read this as readymade infrastructure for intervention. The material palette reinforces the parasitic logic: acrylic panels refract color onto concrete surfaces, dyed rope and macramé knots provide a unified visual and structural language, and all components are locally sourced and recyclable. Nothing is permanent. Every element can be removed, relocated, or reconfigured, making the system viable across all 83 bridges in the network.

Micro-Spaces for Sitting, Swinging, and Planting

Public plaza with suspended circular planter elements and pedestrians walking beneath the glazed overhang
Public plaza with suspended circular planter elements and pedestrians walking beneath the glazed overhang

The public plaza rendering shows the most developed scenario: suspended circular planter elements hang beneath a glazed overhang while pedestrians move through the space below. Plant walls for community gardening, vibrant seating, and interactive surfaces transform what was a pass-through corridor into a place people choose to occupy. The interventions are deliberately tactile. You can sit, swing, rest, or plant a flower. Each action is small, but the cumulative effect is a reactivated streetscape where shared experience replaces disconnection.

The scalability here is the real architectural proposition. A single installation beneath one bridge is a pleasant surprise. The same system deployed across a city-wide network of 83 bridges becomes a new layer of urban infrastructure, one that operates at human scale rather than vehicular or corporate scale. The modularity of the components means that individual neighborhoods can customize their installations, turning a standardized system into a collection of distinct micro-identities along the Plus-15 corridor.

Why This Project Matters

+us makes a compelling case that the most effective urban interventions do not require new buildings. Calgary already has the infrastructure; it just needs someone to look at it differently. By treating the Plus-15 Network as a structural host rather than a pedestrian highway, Reid and Jackson propose a form of adaptive reuse that is lighter, faster, and more socially responsive than conventional redevelopment. The 26.5% vacancy rate is a statistic about offices, but the real vacancy is on the streets below them.

What distinguishes this entry is its refusal to treat public space as a design object. The hanging chairs, plant walls, and kinetic elements are not decorative additions. They are social catalysts, each one engineered to provoke a specific form of engagement: sitting, swinging, gardening, locking up a bike. In a city where the elevated walkway system has trained people to avoid the ground plane entirely, +us offers a persuasive counter-argument: that the space beneath our feet, and beneath our infrastructure, is worth inhabiting.



View the Full Project

About the Designers

Designers: Alea Reid, Isabelle Jackson

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Project credits: +us by Alea Reid, Isabelle Jackson Urbanscape: Symbiosis (uni.xyz).

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