Nicollet
Project Vision
Nicollet Avenue is the “Main Street” of downtown Minneapolis; it’s a cultural and commercial center and shopping and dining district that attracts people to work, shop and eat all year. The thoroughfare recently reopened after undergoing a major renovation to make it more pedestrian friendly. As part of the revitalization, Pentagram designed a brand identity and comprehensive program of signage, wayfinding and environmental graphics for Nicollet that capture the spirit of the street and its place in the city.
Running between Loring Park and the Mississippi River, Nicollet is home to flagship stores, major corporations, public transit hubs, and landmarks like IDS Center and Orchestra Hall, and fits into the city’s extensive network of skyway systems linking buildings in downtown. Eight blocks of Nicollet were closed to automobile traffic in 1967, establishing the first pedestrian and transit “mall” in the US and pioneering the concept as a national model of urban innovation that inspired pedestrian malls in other cities.
The area is known as Nicollet Mall, but the city wanted to move away from “mall” because it is too limiting and implies the street is a shopping mall. While there are stores and restaurants on Nicollet, it is much bigger than the sum of its parts, a vital thoroughfare and integral part of the city that helps define the character of downtown and offers many visitors their first impression of Minneapolis. The brand messaging captures all this in a simple tagline, “On Nicollet,” that highlights the avenue as a destination.
The identity centers on a letter “N” built from two sides of a directional arrow, one going up and one going down, conveying the movement of traffic and arterial role of Nicollet. The arrow forms can also be used to construct a letter “M,” for the Minnesota state abbreviation or “NM” for Nicollet Mall. Typography is set in the highly legible sans serif Fakt, and the traffic-oriented color palette features a bright, eye-catching yellow, along with black and white.
Coinciding with the 50th anniversary of Nicollet Mall, the new renovation improves the walking experience with clearly marked walkways, curb-free intersections, LED lights illuminating the new sidewalks and streets, native plantings with locally grown trees, comfortable seating, a curated outdoor gallery of public art and new two-block “Light Walk,” and flexible spaces to support and enhance the outdoor cafés, markets, festivals and other street activities, as well as infrastructure upgrades below ground.
The directional elements of the Nicollet branding extend to a comprehensive program of signage and environmental graphics for the street, including directories, kiosks, banners and street signs. The fold of the logo provides the form for dimensional signage affixed to poles and street lights. Other wayfinding is inset into the pavement, where the arrows provide direction, and they can also be used as a graphic pattern, as seen on heat lamps along the avenue.
Project Details
Design Team
Paula Scher (partner in charge); Courtney Gooch, Rory Simms (designers); Sarah McKeen (project manager)
Consultants
James Corner Field Operations