Cal Poly

Practice Area

Client

California State University

Project Vision

Nestled on California’s central coast, Cal Poly’s new residential community for 1,475 first-year university students consists of seven three- to five-story residence hall buildings, and an adjacent four-level parking structure. The new complex connects students both to each other and to the adjacent residential community. A deep connection to place comes from a partnership with the local Northern Chumash tribe, yak titʸu titʸu yak tiłhini, to provide direction for creating unique experiential graphics for each of the residence halls.

The design team worked closely with representatives of yak titʸu titʸu yak tiłhini in two visioning sessions to determine the direction of the artwork. They settled on telling stories, centered around the surrounding landscape of seven yak titʸu titʸu yak tiłhini villages along the Central Coast; focusing on their deep-rooted ties to the land by celebrating local flora and fauna. The group also developed landscape story identifiers to define each of the seven residence halls and also represent each village by name: elewexe, nipumuʔ, tiłhini, tsɨtqawɨ, tšɨłkukunɨtš, tsɨtpxatu, and tsɨtkawayu.

Interior wall art is painted on bare concrete walls to tell each building’s primary landscape story as well as several secondary stories that add depth. For example, for building tsɨtkawayu, the main story is “rabbit’s den,” with substories of wildflowers and California poppies, Tule elk and pronghorn antelope, red-tailed hawks and golden eagles, condors and raptors, and northern harriers.

Within each building, every floor has its own mural along the main interior circulation path. To tie together all of the wall art in a building, the design team created an abstract pattern for each residence hall, based on yak titʸu titʸu yak tiłhini basket patterns and integrated them as supporting elements within each mural. The environmental graphics for each residence rely on three colors, distinct for each building and chosen based on landscape colors that yak titʸu titʸu yak tiłhini associates with each village. Students from the university’s art department collaborated with a painter and used stencils to hand-paint the murals on the concrete.

As a result of the working relationship with the yak titʸu titʸu yak tiłhini, local plant species were also integrated into the landscape design, according to their recommendations. This was accompanied by localized signage, produced by the design team, that annotates and describes its tribal significance to incoming students. Before the work commenced, the yak titʸu titʸu yak tiłhini tribal team gathered with the design team for final review and approval of the wall art.

The goal is for students to discover and build connections, not only to their own residence hall, but also to the yak titʸu titʸu yak tiłhini people who have and will continue to live in this area for many generations, ultimately increasing students’ respect for the land and its ecosystems, for each other, and for the cultural heritage of the place they call home.

Project Details
A superb example of the blending what ethnocentric research and thoughtful design could be.
Juror 1
We applaud this collaboration with the local Northern Chumash tribes to find authentic placemaking narratives and engaging color and bold graphics.
Juror 2
Design Team

Crystal Adams (art director), Rafael Barontoni (designer)

Project Area

562,746 sq ft

Consultants

Valerio Dewalt Train (architect); KTU+A (landscape architect); Webcor Builders (general contractor); DCI Engineers (structural engineer); Watry Design (architect and structural designer, parking structure); Guttman Blaevoet (energy model, peer review); Royal Electric Company, Sacramento Engineers (electrical); Boneso Brothers, Axiom Engineering (mechanical, plumbing); Tri-Signal Integration (low voltage, security, audio-visual)

Fabricators

Eunioa Modern