The Gainesville Solar Walk - Sun - Gainesville, FL
Posted by: lazyCachers
N 29° 39.565 W 082° 22.314
17R E 367227 N 3281833
This is one of the monuments of the Gainesville Solar Walk located on the South side of NW 8th Avenue just east of SR 121 in Gainesville, Florida.
Waymark Code: WM5WCM
Location: Florida, United States
Date Posted: 02/19/2009
Views: 14
Spanning nearly a mile, the Gainesville solar system model has returned to NW 8th Avenue, beginning at NW 34th Street with the Sun, and ending at NW 22nd Street with Pluto. The monuments, designed and constructed from recycled materials by artist Elizabeth Indianos, were installed in February and March, 2002. Already, the model has drawn a lot attention, as the press releases to the left exhibit. To learn more about the history and development of the project (a decade in the making), please visit the links on the left.
While within walking distance of Littlewood, Westwood, Glen Springs and Finley schools (see map on right), we believe that the Solar Walk will be an enduring learning tool for students (and adults!) throughout the region. A field trip to Gainesville's own solar system model will put your world in perspective.
Eighth Avenue is ideal for a solar system model. While other models exist throughout the world, most cannot be viewed from a single vantage point. They may be too long for pedestrians or classroom visitors to appreciate, or too small to provide the relative diameter of the smallest planets. There are no cross-streets, and no business signs or driveways (unusual for such a long length of roadway inside City limits) so that each planet may be accurately placed, and pedestrians need not negotiate crosswalks every block or so.
But the project is not yet complete. Future enhancement include additional benches, an asteroid rock garden, nighttime lighting, enhanced landscaping and more. Please review the information on this web site, then consider making a tax deductible contribution so that we may continue to enhance the project in future years.
Information plaques adorn each monument. These plaques are an inherent facet of the educational model. Each shows the planet's relative size compared to the Sun in this 4 billion to 1 scale, distance from the Sun, rotational and orbital period, a rubbing area for the Solar Walk "passport", and more.
Information taken from the Alachua Astronomy Club, Inc. (
visit link)