News.
Making Space: Environmental Graphic Design Outdoors
Environmental graphics, wayfinding signage, and public art programs give outdoor spaces a voice and make guests feel comfortable, invited, and welcomed. They let guests know that they've arrived at the right place, leading them to different destinations and activities. They tell people where trailheads are located and they can also add a sense of whimsy or delight. Differing forms of architectural graphics define a space and create exciting visual opportunities along the way.
The work at RSM Design thoughtfully integrates placemaking and environmental graphic design into spaces giving the visitor a sense of place and providing a moment of respite and delight.
Everyone needs parks and outdoor spaces now more than ever.
Environmental graphics, wayfinding signage, and public art programs give outdoor spaces a voice and make guests feel comfortable, invited, and welcomed. They let guests know that they've arrived at the right place, leading them to different destinations and activities. They tell people where trailheads are located and they can also add a sense of whimsy or delight. Differing forms of architectural graphics define a space and create exciting visual opportunities along the way.
When you have an unexpected piece of art in an open space or poetry written in the pavement, or it could just be a simple trailhead with a directory map, it provides you with all the information you need at the right time and place.
We’re working on new residential communities such as Rancho Mission Viejo and Terramor, for example, where residents want open space with natural walking surfaces, along with the sense of security knowing that they won’t get lost. It's really a sense of certainty.
If the paths are clear and the signage is located at the intersections of those paths, you feel more comfortable. At our design studio, we also work to place specific signs such as to look for native birds or to watch out for rattlesnakes that can provide warnings, but also ensure that people are looking for things that are beautiful.
View RSM Design's parks and outdoor spaces work
Outdoor Graphics Welcome Visitors
Great Park Neighborhoods (a housing development in Irvine, California by FivePoint) is called a “Great Park” which is visionary in thinking. The premise is that there is one great park, and then each individual park, such as Cadence Park or Pavilion Park, where the neighborhoods are built around, are also great.
Each time they build a new neighborhood they put a park in the middle. They build the model homes right on the edge so the park becomes the hub and spokes. They have cooking and painting classes, kite making, pumpkin carving and all kinds of events in these community parks.
RSM Design has completed the signage and wayfinding for all of these events as well as the permanent signage and several placemaking elements that define what different areas of the space are to be used for. It definitely connects the community in a classic, almost town square kind of way.
Defining the Outdoor Experience
Each park has a different monument and wayfinding signage system along with a unique play structure that pays careful attention to the curated park design. Whether it's the community pool area and the graphics and signage related to pools, or perhaps a garden theme park or an art walk, the environmental graphics and park signage design speak to different elements that serve the community’s particular needs.
These opportunities for experiential graphic design and public art programs relate to the essence of each parks' individual personality and bring out that character in a form that people can see and read. It gives the place a spirit that it might not have otherwise.
Connecting to a Living Brand
Great Park Neighborhoods is the Anti-Brand, meaning they don't really say “Great Park Neighborhoods” anywhere. They just do great parks and neighborhoods. The living brand has a breath of its own. For each of the parks, it’s a unique master signage system all across the area that is creating the identity.
What people are engaging with in those spaces is due to the different narratives that belong to each park. The signage and wayfinding design provide aesthetic cues. Each park is identified uniquely by creating fun ways to make them different from the other parks. The signage and identifiers play a unique part in that.
In contrast, there is a different approach for the Summit at Bechtel Reserve for the Boy Scouts of America. It's definitely a branded experience. Everything feels like a kit of parts that work together. Whether it's a stop sign waiting for the shuttle or a map, each piece has a related look and feel. Everything is a branded destination or experience, whether it's the skateboard park or the biking or archery area.
Engaging Elements of the Human Experience: Connect, Activate, Think, Inspire
You're on a corner in Chicago and your friend says to meet you at that big red sculpture. You're waiting, looking up at this big red sculpture and someone comes up to you. One person says, “Do you know the artist?”, and the other person says, “Yes, it's Calder.”
What’s great about these places and moments is they can be appreciated by both one or many, inviting strangers to have a conversation and connect. The art invites a place for conversations to spark, because two people that don't know each other are both looking up at this red sculpture.
It also activates the space, like a poem in the pavement. It makes you think about what the poem says. Or maybe it's an educational plaque about trees, or it might be the history of the place. You might have an educational moment or an inspirational moment to connect to one another or to connect to nature.
An example for Inspire is when you hike to the top of a mountain or hilltop. At the top, there's a graphic that shows all of the mountains nearby and you learn the elevation of not only the one you're standing on, but the ones that you can see in the distance. You become inspired to hike a different mountain and then maybe that inspires you to climb Mount Whitney or the tallest peak in your area. You start small, and maybe you're inspired to keep going.
Activate is about the sense of discovery people get when exploring a new place. It's also about being intrigued by a place and wanting to see more of it.
When people find things that are educational or inspirational in the space, they are motivated to think more deeply or experience the place differently. Whether it's to learn more about their community, to explore or they’re activated to go somewhere new, which is pretty powerful to give to a community.
Environmental Graphics in the context of 2021…
If you can't go to a restaurant, you can't go to a cinema, you can't go to a sporting event, you can still go outside. Homes are being sold before they're built because the homes are connected to so much… acres and acres of trails and open space. And everyone wants trails and open space and land to get outside now. It allows for ease in social distancing with more space between one family group to another.
People are stressed out and frenzied, and we need to do things that not only simply inspire joy, but just allow people to breathe and exhale and feel OK wherever they are. I think this whole idea of breathing in the outdoors is important and healthy. But you're asked to wear a mask and it feels counter to what you're wanting to do. So we need to provide visual ways to let people just exhale. I don't know how we're going to do that, but we'll figure it out. Or maybe that's just me holding my breath.
Suzanne Redmond Schwartz is a founding partner and principal at RSM Design. Her world class experience has transformed projects from Saudi Arabia to Southern California, earning accolades and positioning RSM Design as a global leader in architectural graphic design. Suzanne manages and inspires the RSM Design team with her infectious enthusiasm for connecting people to place.
Read more about Suzanne and connect with her here
Images used in article by Tsutsumida Pictures, Jonnu Singleton, Allison Richter and Boy Scouts of America
Mule Alley and Hotel Drover at the Historic Fort Worth Stockyards
After over two years of planning and design, the new signs are getting installed! Layered into the Historic Fort Worth Stockyards, new signage is taking shape along the renovated Mule Alley and soon to open Hotel Drover. Extensive research went into the historic context inspiring these newly iconic signs. The signs are being crafted by neon artisans and the referential materials of cold-rolled steel and Corten complement both the historic brick of the repurposed mule barns and the newly constructed boutique hotel.
The Farm in Allen
Collaborating with Omniplan Architects and landscape architects TBG, RSM Design has joined the team to transform the 135 acre Johnson family farm into a unique world-class mixed-use destination that juxtaposes the agrarian small-town roots of the site with a modern urban center. RSM Design will be layering signage and placemaking features into the outdoor spaces and streetscape to enhance the guest experience and carry the brand narrative through to the details.
El Paso Children's Museum
RSM Design is excited to be collaborating with Snøhetta, El Paso architects Exigo, and exhibit designers Gyroscope to design building signage for the city’s first children’s museum. Located in the heart of El Paso’s Downtown Arts district, this new 70,000 sf museum will have strong links to the nearby children’s museum in Juarez, Mexico. The bi-lingual signage designs are sensitively woven into the interiors to relate to the strong building geometries, playful qualities, and interactive exhibits.
RSM Design is excited to be collaborating with Snøhetta, El Paso architects Exigo, and exhibit designers Gyroscope to design building signage for the city’s first children’s museum.
Located in the heart of El Paso’s Downtown Arts district, this new 70,000 sf museum will have strong links to the nearby children’s museum in Juarez, Mexico. The bi-lingual signage designs are sensitively woven into the interiors to relate to the strong building geometries, playful qualities, and interactive exhibits.
Kate Gilman Named Newest Member of the AIGA OC Board 2020!
RSM Design is proud to have on our team the newest member of the American Institute of Graphic Arts (AIGA) Orange County Board of Directors. Kate has been an active member of AIGA Orange County, attending events and volunteering for the past two years. Last summer she attended the AIGA board member conference as an honorary member and transitioned to the new position this year. Kate brings her infectious enthusiasm to RSM Design and to AIGA OC. We congratulate Kate on all of her accomplishments.
Branding & Wayfinding Used to Create a Strong Community
As the RSM Design team approaches residential development, in both the multi-family and master planned sectors, some interesting trends stand out. Residential brands must work strongly as an on-line introduction to a community that goes far beyond the built environment, and seamlessly bridges the gap between digital and built spaces with clarity and consistency. As RSM Design works with communities, we often start with the vision of the project…what inspires the site, the landscape design, and the architecture. This holistic approach puts listening first. The goal is to craft a logo that reflects and projects a consistent voice. The logo often is the user’s first impression and it must condense layers of meaning with the tools of type, color, negative space, and icons. When it comes to logo design, RSM Design has a long history of strong brands for our residential clients, each expressing the unique voice of that place, translating abstract ideas into a visual narrative.
The quarantine is profoundly changing the way people think about home. As the RSM Design team approaches residential development, in both the multi-family and master planned sectors, some interesting trends stand out.
Consistent Brand Narratives that Build Trust
Residential brands must work strongly as an on-line introduction to a community that goes far beyond the built environment, and seamlessly bridges the gap between digital and built spaces with clarity and consistency. As RSM Design works with communities, we often start with the vision of the project…what inspires the site, the landscape design, and the architecture. This holistic approach puts listening first.
The goal is to craft a logo that reflects and projects a consistent voice. The logo often is the user’s first impression and it must condense layers of meaning with the tools of type, color, negative space, and icons. When it comes to logo design, RSM Design has a long history of strong brands for our residential clients, each expressing the unique voice of that place, translating abstract ideas into a visual narrative.
RSM Design’s role within the branding realm does not stop with the initial logo and brand vocabulary...we translate the same brand narrative from the logo to the built environment. In a competitive environment, this level of detail helps set the highest quality brand apart from the competition. We stay true to this principle of the brand narrative by placing it at the center of all that is designed and building on principles of trust, integrity, and consistency.
This consistent brand experience builds trust with the resident. Each interaction of a brand promise made and kept works to gradually solidify the relationship.Strong brands will foster the valuable assets of loyalty and trust in a project.
Connections to Outdoor Recreation
Outside your front door, a home is a connection to the world. Easy access to trails, waterfronts and other amenities are a strong motivator for many buyers and renters. The link from home to park and trails is made visible and more accessible through creative wayfinding and placemaking.
The strongest example of this pattern can be found in the work on the Great Park Neighborhoods in Irvine, with a network of private parks and bike trails as a central element of the value proposition for a master planned housing development. Each neighborhood needed personality and a distinct aesthetic. FivePoint came to RSM Design to extend the brand into the built environment. Locals expected parks and amenities and what differentiated the Great Park was a friendly character and the high quality of these spaces.
At Terramor, RSM Design worked with Foremost homes to integrate a rich trail network, public parks and private recreation uses into a community for age-qualified buyers. By including wayfinding and mile markers along the trail, the signage fosters strong on-site pedestrian connections. Living at Terramor combines the feeling of a foothill desert resort with a park lodge while the trails and wildlife enrich the community.
Each project and its location has a unique set of local conditions. The use of site circulation and sight line analysis helps to define and communicate the best use of signage to support links to the outdoors.
Within the footprint of each use at Santa Clara Square, the wayfinding signage shows users the most direct routes, making the connections more vibrant. In addition to private outdoor links, the sign program helped the client team bridge the gap with signs for on-site public parks and links to the regional trail system, including the San Mateo Creek Trail that connects the project to the Levi’s Stadium.
On-Site Amenities with Pow!
RSM Design’s approach to architectural and environmental graphics is rooted in the idea of the human need for Certainty, Variety and Delight. While the umbrella brand of residential projects should be consistent, we find that amenities spaces are an excellent opportunity for the brand to communicate a sense of needed variety.
Whether it’s an on-site tasting room, golf-simulator, or a pickle bar court, these amenities are key drivers in the decision making process for choosing a home.
Graphics that are vibrant, unusual, and creative encourage memories highlighting these amenities that distinguish a clients brands from other communities. They allow the core brand to be playful and more layered, broadening the ways that residents can connect.
We are living through a time of unprecedented constraints. Lifestyles are adapting, but people yearn for the same things – for connection, safety and community. More than ever, these experiences are centered at home. We are committed to finding new ways to foster meaningful connections and help communicate a project’s vision with the future homeowner.