The gateway to the Golden Gate Bridge since 1936, the ageing Doyle Drive was no longer capable of serving its 100,000 daily users. In designing a replacement, careful consideration was needed to minimise disruption for commuters and create a long-term transport solution in harmony with the landscape with minimal impacts on the Presidio National Park.
With 100,000 vehicles daily users, Doyle Drive was one of the most active stretches of road on Route 101. However, at nearly 75 years old, it was deteriorating and not up to current seismic code standards. Changes in city traffic flow patterns over decades had also made the existing roadway inefficient at matching traffic demand to and from the streets of San Francisco.
A long and winding road
The project came with significant challenges: our team would have to remove and replace the existing infrastructure, maintain commuter traffic during construction, preserve a national park, provide extensive public outreach and coordinate a large group of stakeholders. How could a single, purposeful design satisfy the landowner, environmental stewardship and historic preservation agencies, the local transportation agency, the state highways agency and local residents?
Every project is an opportunity to improve
The simple design idea that united everyone was to create not a highway, but a parkway. To create something capable of improving everyone’s experience, we worked closely with sponsors and stakeholders to develop the design concept for Presidio Parkway. We also developed a robust financial and project delivery plan that was affordable and minimised short- and long-term risks.