Tram design wins OCC students award
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Danette Goulet
ORANGE COAST COLLEGE -- Imagine being able to just hop on a nice new
tram and be whisked out to the front gates of Disneyland -- or perhaps
down to the Wedge.
The design of this vision won four OCC students $5,000 and an Award of
Excellence in an international architectural design competition this
week.
The four second-year students -- Jack Kato, 20, Dave Esparza, 23,
Nicholas Holmes, 21 and Jen Semans, 19 -- captured first place Wednesday
night in one of six categories of competition, beating out a team of
professional architects from Hong Kong.
“This is what we’ve been doing in class. Now our work has been
accepted in society,” Kato said of the honor.
The “Changing the Face of Orange County” ideas and design competition,
sponsored by the Southern California Assn. of Governments and the Orange
County Council of Governments, was created to generate ideas, designs and
discussion about ways to handle the growth in Orange County.
The competition brought in 40 entries from three countries and six
states throughout the nation.
The ecstatic students designed a light-rail transit system that would
run all the way from Anaheim to the end of the Balboa Peninsula in
Newport Beach.
The rail would run the length of Harbor Boulevard, making 29 stops and
linking six cities. Passengers could expect the aesthetically pleasing
trams to come by every 10 minutes, Holmes said.
It would travel through some areas where there is still room for
development, making new areas of attraction possible, the students said.
On the peninsula they would remove the center divider and the parking
meters along the length of it.
“The idea is to get people out of their cars,” Esparza said. “If you
work in Anaheim and you want to go out to lunch, you don’t even have to
get in your car. For tourists, you can go to Disneyland or down to the
beach and not worry about traffic or getting lost.”
The students’ instructor, Rose Anne King, assigned the contest as a
class project, hoping that students would come up with and complete
“tolerable entries” in time for the deadline.
“I was blown away by how tenacious they were,” she said.
King also gave glowing reports of the end products produced by the
foursome’s classmates.
Competition organizers kept the students’ design to use as a model for
government officials, policymakers, developers, property owners and to
allow the public to see the opportunities to improve life in Orange
County.
“I know, for myself, I would love it if this really existed,” Holmes
said.
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