The station is located in the
median of South Boulevard at Whitton Street and is accessible by
pedestrian crossing at intersection. The immediate area is currently in the midst of a redevelopment, spearheaded by Beacon Partners; which will transform the area into a
mixed-use development called LoSo Station. Nearby, several
breweries and distilleries are located in the area.
Artwork Furrow, completed in 2007, was created by
Raleigh artist Thomas Sayre, are six disks each are in height and weigh in at 11 tons each. Commissioned by the
Charlotte Area Transit System (CATS), as part of the
CATS Art in Transit program, the shapes of the sculpture resembles that of a plow's disk harrows, and are located at the ends of the median approaching the platform. The materials utilized in the creation of the disks included 72 cubic yards of dirt excavated from the site of the
I-485/South Boulevard station. The dirt was mixed with concrete tinted with
iron oxide and applied to the steel discs in the Scaleybark parking lot. Each disc measures only in width, and have been engineered to withstand hurricane-force winds. Originally, Sayre's vision called for a disk near Clanton Road and three additional disks, ranging between to in height at Scaleybark. A canceled public art project for Scaleybark called for the restoration of the neighboring Queens Park Theater tower sign. To be created by
New York City artist R.M. Fisher, the restored landmark was to have featured lighted panels at the base with backlighted paintings of
long leaf pines, the North Carolina state tree. The project was eliminated in January 2005 due to escalating overall costs for the project as a whole. ==History==