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New Design Plan for Broad Avenue Water Tower

“The third time’s a charm” is the case for the ever-evolving design plans for the Broad Avenue Arts District’s iconic water tower.

Local artist Tylur French of Youngblood Studios began a mural painting project on the water tower this week after two previous design plans for the tower fell through. Lighting designer Jeremy Fisher will complete the project with color-changing LED lights.

“The businesses on the street wanted something that would have daytime and nighttime appeal. And Tylur and Jeremy were able to come up with options that honor the iconic shape of the water tower but also provide this great beacon for the street,” said Pat Brown, vice president of the Historic Broad Business Association.

New design plans for Broad Avenue water tower

French’s design will feature a topographic image of the Mississippi River that will wrap around the barrel of the tower. His team began building scaffolding and safety structures last week, and he said they should begin painting by the end of this week.

“The location on the river where Memphis is will be a starburst,” said French, who also designed the bike gate entrance on the East Parkway side of Overton Park. “When you look at it from the top, it will look like a map. But on its side, that water line becomes a horizon with a sunrise. It’s really indicative of the spirit of everyone on Broad.”

Fisher, a lighting designer for Theatre Memphis, will be installing colored LED lights on the tower over the next month or so.

“The lights will be controlled by a computer that will fade through the colors throughout the night,” Fisher said. “For the holidays, we may do red and green lights. Or for Griz games, we can make it all blue.”

French and Fisher’s plan replaced a more ambitious, costly plan by New York artist Suikang Zhao to install a perforated metal ribbon around the tower. Zhao was chosen for the project by popular vote during the Crosstown Arts MemFEAST event in 2014. He was allotted $65,000 from an ArtPlace America grant for the project, but Brown said the actual implementation of Zhao’s vision ballooned well beyond that.

“There was a national search for artists, so they had not seen the space,” Brown said. “And then you get into the cost of the crane [to get the sculpture onto the tower]. There were concerns about asbestos and affixing something to the water tower. The costs grew to well over $200,000.”

Back in 2010, around the time of the “New Face for an Old Broad” event that reactivated the street into an arts district, Loeb Properties had hoped to cover the tower with a digitally printed wrap mural, but they ditched those plans when they learned it might begin to lose its color after three years.

French said he wanted to make sure the tower’s shape wasn’t covered up.

“My goal was to design something that didn’t take away from the fact that it’s a really beautiful historic tower but would give it a more specific identity to the city and the community and the sprit of what’s happening on Broad,” French said.

French says the project is part of Youngblood Studio’s overall push for more public artwork in the city.

“A city with a lot of artwork is a more humane city, a more cosmopolitan city, and a more forward-thinking and liberated city,” French said. “To be a part of that is so unique and so exciting.”

Brown is just happy to see the water tower finally getting its facelift. There will be a lighting ceremony and dedication of the work at the fall Broad Avenue Arts Walk on November 6th.

“Everything works out, and it’s like the water tower knew what it wanted,” Brown said. “It’s great that it’s come back to local artists, and the third time is a charm.”

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Broad Outlook

Power Tel’s warehouse loading dock on Broad has doubled as a music stage during Broad Avenue art walks for years. But this spring, its conversion to an amphitheater will be complete, and by fall, the iconic water tower that looms over the stage will see an artistic upgrade as well.

The staircase for the Water Tower Pavilion is currently under construction.

Last year, the Historic Broad Business Association won a $350,000 grant from ArtPlace America for its Water Tower Pavilion project, which is set to open May 10th. That includes the conversion of the loading dock into a shared-space amphitheater that will host music and dance performances at night and on weekends and continue to serve as a loading dock for Power Tel by the weekdays.

That money is also funding the construction of a wide staircase that helps visitors more easily access the stage area, which is 16 feet below the street’s grade.

“There’s a large observation platform on the stairs, and [artist] Elijah Gold is doing that section out of old bicycle parts to pull in the Hampline,” said Historic Broad Business Association vice-president Pat Brown, referencing the two-way bicycle path that will connect Overton Park to the Shelby Farms Greenline via Broad Avenue. Once complete, that path will run past the Water Tower Pavilion. “He’s also doing a sculpture at the top of the stairs, also made from old bicycle parts. We are calling it the bike dancer.”

Additionally, New York artist Suikang Zhao, who last week won a public contest to redesign the Broad Avenue water tower, will use $65,000 of that grant to install his sculpture on the tower.

Zhao’s design for the water tower

Zhao was one of three finalists in a national call to artists organized by the UrbanArt Commission. He and two others presented their ideas for the tower, which ranged from murals to sculpture, at the annual Crosstown Arts MemFEAST event last week. Participants voted on their favorite design, and Zhao’s plan to install LED lighting and a perforated metal ribbon around the tower won the most votes.

Zhao said he wants to involve the Broad Avenue community by asking them to suggest words that he can perforate into the metal. Those words will cast shadows onto the tower. He also wants Memphis artists to help him physically construct the sculpture.

“By the finish, they will be able to say, ‘I did that.’ I think that is the most important thing. It becomes their work, not just my work,” Zhao said.

Brown says she hopes Zhao is done with the water tower installation in time for the fall art walk, but the rest of the depot work will be complete in time for “Dance on Broad,” seven consecutive Saturdays of dance performances and dance classes on the pavilion stage, from May 10th through June 28th.

The western end of the Hampline, which begins with the new Overton Park bike gate, is under construction now, and Brown says the on-road portion of the bike path project will likely begin in the fall. The Overton Park bike gate, which sculptor Tylur French created using old bike parts, was officially unveiled last weekend.

“Every time you come back to Broad, hopefully something new will be unveiled,” Brown said.