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| This is a preliminary design proposal for buildings in the new Town Center being developed near Big Sky ski resort in Montana. The buildings are to contain retail space on the first floor, office space on the second floor, and living space on the third floor. |
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The Water Tower Courtyard.
Rather than designing a building and then landscaping around it, I
started by looking at making a pedestrian area first, a corner separation
where people can move through a special place between the buildings,
a semi-protected courtyard that would be a natural meeting place -
"I'll meet you at the water tower . . . ". This courtyard
would be far enough off the street that your napkins wouldn't blow
away when cars went by but still connected enough to be part of the
ebb-and-flow action on the street. A stair would spiral up into the
"tank" and there would be a door there to let people out
onto the platform. There would be a hatch at the top of the stair
to lock it off when necessary. This area could easily be used for
plays or even have a large outdoor screen set on the tower. Up to
four good-sized venues could have direct access to the courtyard.
Much of the pedestrian traffic from the parking area heading toward
the neighborhood commercial area to the west would funnel through
this space. Pedestrian traffic along the main street would likewise
be drawn in. The tower also reacts to a tall square portion of the
building across the road. It would be very visible from both the highway
and from the intersecting road. Deteriorating stone walls encompass
the outdoor area and pull the buildings into one synergetic composition.
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The Town Center Avenue 'Buildings'.
The Town Center Design Guidelines and Standards state "New interpretations
of traditional building types are encouraged". The false front was
historically developed as a little-disguised method of making an establishment
appear more substantial than it really was. It of course ended up
creating its place in architectural lore, but recent take-offs of
this feature often seem to fall short in their allusion to the
original fabrication. In this case I went with the premise that if
we are utilizing an element that was originally false, then some fun
should be had in its present incorporation. The spandrel infill panels
permit optimal display area while also allowing light to penetrate
deep into the 2nd floor office spaces. The residential area above
is stepped further back and has openings in its more public spaces
but plenty of wall space for the more private areas. The view out
the curved glass wall on the west side of the residence would look
over the courtyard and livery directly toward the mountain views. The
building should really try to look like two separate stores, not part
of a strip with separate fronts put on. A vertical plank "barrier"
is placed between them, as if blocking off the interstitial space.
This would be an ideal location for a small lobby, stair and elevator,
either on the back side or the front. The "two" buildings want to
have individuality, but yet play off each other. One has a heavy timber
front, the other a more sexy gunslinger-like metal facade. Both use
these solid elements to emphasize the light, transparent nature of
the infill glass. The east side of the building is also given store-front
level attention, though this would be of a more solid nature with
more conventional wall openings. The breaking-up of the overall mass
produces a building that has appropriate street presence but maintains
a proportional variation, keeping it from becoming overly cumbersome
or ominous. Structure is intriguingly used as structure and not as
decoration.
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The Livery.
Typically located on the periphery of downtown, the stable
offers a wonderfully simple form to add to the courtyard experience.
Gap-sided in the fashion of a hay barn, with glass walls behind,
this building can become a light-infused interior space while preserving
the more closed-off exterior look of a traditional livery.
In essence, since we are manipulating these traditional forms for
modern purposes, there is a fair degree of something like stage
design incorporated. Rather than making a gesture toward imitating
history, we take steps to utilize these forms to create deliberate
new spaces.
"Fountain Version"
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