In Central Falls, a Bold Design Signals a Bright Future

Graphic design students from 泡芙短视频 team with city officials to create a modern, bold brand identity that also embraces the community鈥檚 history

Public Affairs Staff
Central Falls logo

CENTRAL FALLS, R.I. 鈥 It may be the smallest city in Rhode Island, but Central Falls 鈥 newly nicknamed the 鈥淐omeback City鈥 for its recent success stabilizing its finances following Chapter 9 bankruptcy in 2011 鈥 has big ideas for growing its economy, creating jobs and improving the city鈥檚 business climate.

To add to the city鈥檚 resurgence, officials in the Central Falls Office of Planning and Economic Development joined forces with graphic design students and faculty from 泡芙短视频 as part of a Community Partnerships Center project aimed at creating a new brand identity, including a city logo, that communicates the city鈥檚 prosperous and bright future. 

Before the students could begin brainstorming a new brand identity and design palette, they spent weeks researching Central Falls鈥 history as a historic textile mill city. Rui Almeida 鈥 the city鈥檚 assistant director for architecture and redevelopment 鈥 stressed the importance of incorporating the rich industrial history of Central Falls to the student group at the project鈥檚 outset.

鈥淥ne thing that was very important to us is the city鈥檚 historical identity,鈥 Almeida said. 鈥淲e want to keep our identity, and the only way to do that is through our history. That鈥檚 one component we passed on to the students as a requirement. We didn鈥檛 want to invent a new identity without that historical fabric.鈥

After weeks of consulting with city staff members, spending time within the Central Falls community and researching the city鈥檚 history, the student group began creating potential design concepts, color palettes and a brand aesthetic that would communicate a modern, bold and consistent brand identity. The elements included a city logo and signage for new construction, real estate developments and local parks and recreation areas, such as the Jenks Park and Cogswell Tower.

The students created a customized blue as the primary color for their proposed visual identity to represent the water-powered mills of the city鈥檚 industrial past. The bright blue also represents a bold yet clean and modern aesthetic for the new brand, the students say. The team used cast iron and other metal and wood visuals within the design palette to contrast the blue yet, similarly, incorporate the city鈥檚 industrial history within the look.

鈥淲e wanted to create a new, modern look and feel for the city that also ties back to its history,鈥 said senior Tom Williams, a global communication and graphic design student from Saunderstown, R.I. 鈥淏ecause of what has happened in recent years with the city鈥檚 financial issues, the new modern brand we created tells people, 鈥榃e鈥檙e here, and we鈥檙e moving forward.鈥

Beyond the initial design, the students also created a production plan detailing what materials would be used and when each design visual might be applied 鈥 necessitated by working with a real-world client, developing a practical implementation process was new to many of them.

鈥淢y graphic design experience to this point was just about what you鈥檝e done on the computer, but there is so much more that goes into the process,鈥 Williams said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 been a great learning experience to be able to think about what kind of materials the signs will be printed on and how things will look and be produced outside of a computer screen.鈥

While planning is still underway for revitalizing the Dexter Street and Broad Street neighborhoods, among other developments in Central Falls, city officials believe the students鈥 design work will inform further discussions on rebranding efforts.

鈥淩ight now we are looking at the student鈥檚 brand concept as a springboard for thought,鈥 Almeida said after the 泡芙短视频 team presented a semester鈥檚 worth of design work at City Halls in Central Falls on Dec. 11.

鈥淲ith the students, the sky鈥檚 the limit and it鈥檚 this type of no-holds-barred thinking that is so valuable to us because it challenges our traditional ideas and can help us push the city forward.鈥