South Miami

Experiments: 3D Printing for Urbanism

The DK&P studio has integrated 3D printing into our practice. In this Q&A with our communications intern Hannah Kosoff, Roland Stafford shares his experience crafting a giant study model of the neighborhood surrounding our office. Roland is an architecture student at the University of Miami and an intern at Dover, Kohl & Partners. He sheds light on the 3D printer’s implications when applied at the urban scale. 

The South Miami model is a combination of projects, plans, and urban design ideas for downtown that have been curated since 1992. Leading the effort that resulted in the Hometown Plan and an innovative form-based code. That plan led to the narrowing of roadways Dorn Avenue and Sunset Drive, to reclaim space for walking and dining; these were among the first such “road diets” in Florida.

The 3D buildings are separately movable, so they can be rearranged on the metal blueprint base.  This provides a quick way to understand the public spaces and the private developments that give form to those spaces.

The Hometown Plan for South Miami, Florida

 

In this new film, Victor Dover, Joe Kohl, Mayor Philip Stoddard and several DKP designers explain the key steps to downtown and main street revitalization based on their own success story. The Hometown Plan for the City of South Miami was initiated over 16 years ago and the plan continues to be actively implemented today. New streetscape improvements and infill buildings have created a walkable, urban downtown.

Click here to watch the video and learn more about The Hometown Plan