UDRF

Joseph Altshuler and Zack Morrison

A Carousel for Columbus

Presented by Columbus Area Visitors Center

UDRF ● Joseph Altshuler and Zack Morrison ● A Carousel for Columbus ● Presented by Columbus Area Visitors Center ●

A Carousel for Columbus is a locomotive love letter in-the-round. Shapely silhouettes sampled from the city’s iconic architecture huddle together to form a curious carousel, a backdrop for public life in the city. Supergraphics, also sampled from the city’s architecture, animate the walls and ground surfaces of the plaza. The graphics sync into and out of optical alignment with the carousel as it spins in place or as visitors circulate around it.

When programmed as a stage, the rotating platform offers the flexibility for performers to reorient themselves outwards toward a festival crowd along Fourth Street or inwards toward a more intimate audience within the plaza. During un-programmed times, the carousel provides an active platform for physical engagement and visual play. Taken together, the carousel, supergraphics, and performances offer a locomotive landscape that celebrates the power of shape, color, character, and sound to generate a public platform by design.

Accessibility

The general exhibit space is accessible and located off of the sidewalk. An interactive carousel can be accessed by stepping up onto the platform or sitting on an external bench.

Where do you find joy in the city?

A Carousel for Columbus Installation Credits

University Design Research Fellowship

Presented by

Columbus Area Visitors Center

Site Collaborator

Ovation Technology Group

University

School of Architecture at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign

Design Team

Joseph Altshuler and Zack Morrison, with Amir Zarei (Could Be Design)

Fabrication Team

Ignition Arts (carousel installation)
Andrea Jablonski (lead muralist)
Driftwood Builders (benches and planters)

Materials

Steel, Cedar, Plywood, Mirrors, Paint, Carpet

Fabrication Supporters

University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign College of Fine and Applied Arts
Illinois School of Architecture
Columbus Museum of Art and Design
Columbus Area Arts Council
Driftwood Builders
Office of Downtown Development

Additional Credits

Ovation Technology Group: Chris Chandler and Jill Hoeltke 
Community Painting Volunteers

Site: Ovation Plaza, in collaboration with Ovation Technology Group

Curatorial Question

Where do you find joy in the city?

“From storytime to bathroom breaks and everything in between, they always look for new ways to make friends with their architecture.”

Joseph Altshuler (left) and Zack Morrison (right) are both parents of young children who keep them on their toes when they’re not working on design projects -- and even when they are. Joseph has an 8-year-old named Rafi and a 4-year-old named Sonia, and Zack has a 4-year-old named Evelyn. Their kids are also their best design critics, often invading Zoom meetings and backseat driving during collaborative 3-D modeling sessions. As Sonia would say, “Make that architecture more fuchsia, please!”

The team takes pleasure in being generalists, working on various design projects ranging in scale from furniture to installations to interiors to buildings and even festival landscapes.

For their first commissioned client project, they designed new public restrooms inside an existing synagogue facility, noting that sitting on the toilet is the most intimate architectural experience a person can have.

While strolling around downtown Columbus in October 2022, they stumbled upon the Ovation Plaza space and were immediately smitten. The diagrid pavement! they said. The stepped, cascading parapets! The walls with rounded corners! The triangular soffit! The existing surfaces of pavement and walls were abounding with tasty shapes. And yet the whole space was washed in beige paint as if to disappear into the background. It was like this corner of the city was challenging them to celebrate its existing quirks, to animate its edifices in full color, and to awaken it to live its best life.

A Carousel for Columbus is a proof-of-concept for a broader design research project called “Supergraphic Landscapes.” They’re interested in building a body of work that playfully combines 2D graphics and 3D forms in dynamic and animated ways that might be considered graphic design at the scale of the city or architecture that flickers between flatness and deeper space. Whatever it is, they hope to make a lot more inhabitable public art in the future that doesn’t just decorate or beautify the city, but reorganizes the city’s operation and that expands the ways city-dwellers find companionship and love for their city and its architecture as much as each other.

One word that is conspicuously absent from most conversations about architecture in the profession and the academy, they said, is “love.” Exhibit Columbus is a profound exception to this tendency. From Paola Aguirre’s Love Letter to The Crump (2019) to Joyce Hwang's To Middle Species, With Love (2021), for example, they hope that A Carousel for Columbus, their locomotive love letter in-the-round, continues a multiyear collective conversation about the intersection of love and civic space and of affection and architecture.

This excerpt is from the 2023 Field Guide. Download it here.

Activity Guide for kids and families to explore the Exhibition.

Download the activity for the installation A Carousel for Columbus. Print at home, or stop by any Infohub to pick up a free guide.

Creating A Carousel for Columbus

2023 Design Presentations

A Carousel for Columbus installation design concept by 2022–23 University Design Research Fellows Joseph Altshuler and Zack Morrison from Urbana Champaign and Chicago, Illinois.

“For us, Public By Design suggests working toward collective spaces that welcome diverse audiences—spaces to encounter and interact with people different from yourself. Our work positions friendly shapes, vibrant colors, and bold graphics that translate ideas of identity and belonging into architectural forms that invite broad communities to develop new relationships with the built world.” — Joseph Altshuler (left) and Zack Morrison

2022 Symposium

Joseph Altshuler (right) and Zack Morrison in discussion with other UDRFellows and the Curatorial Team at the 2022 Symposium in October. Take a look back at the 2022 Symposium here.

University Design Research Fellows

Joseph Altshuler and Zack Morrison

School of Architecture at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign

Urbana-Champaign and Chicago

Joseph Altshuler is Assistant Professor of Architecture at the School of Architecture at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and Co-Founder of Could Be Architecture, a Chicago and Urbana-based design practice. He is the Director of the Architectural Companionship Laboratory, a design research lab that works at the intersection of architecture, public art, environmental graphics, adaptive reuse, and tactical urbanism. His teaching, practice, and scholarship explore architecture and public art’s capacities to build lively audiences, initiate serious play, and amplify participation in civic life. His first book Creatures Are Stirring: A Guide to Architectural Companionship was published in 2022.

Zack Morrison is Co-Founder of Could Be Architecture, a Chicago- and Urbana-based design practice that designs seriously playful spaces that build solidarity among multiple communities. Zack is also a design educator who leads participatory architecture workshops around the nation, including the educational video series “Animate Architecture” commissioned by the 2021 Chicago Architecture Biennial. Zack is the Co-Founder of the Chicago Sukkah Design Festival, a public art exhibition that includes multiple pavilion installations, designed and built in partnership with community organizations; it celebrates the cultural heritage of the neighborhood and builds new community connections.

Existing work by Joseph Altshuler and Zack Morrison

Pomegranate Sukkah welcomes visitors to pop their head under its outstretched walls, inviting playful engagement and immersion inside its light-infused perforated enclosure along the shores of Lake Michigan. Credit: Could Be Architecture.

McCormick AfterParti positions pink curtains that reenact the original floor plan and vibrant mint furnishings that re-stage the original domestic activities of Mies van der Rohe’s historic McCormick House, inviting visitors to experience the building’s history through participation and interaction. Credit: Steven Koch

Billboard Buddies is a family of versatile exhibit display units that pop-up in Indiana parking lots to host cultural programming during pandemic times. Photo by Art + Action Lab.