Alec Gardner from our office ran out to Marion Green last week to snap some sneak preview pictures. We hope to see you at the tour. Open House on Saturday Nov 1, 1-3pm. More pictures at: http://www.neimantaber.com/marion-green
Monday, October 27, 2014
Thursday, October 23, 2014
Marion Green Tour - Saturday Nov 1 - 1pm to 3pm
Marion Green, our first project as architect/developer, is just about finished up and ready for the new owners to move in. We will be holding an Open House on Saturday Nov 1, 1-3pm to share this unique project with our friends and colleagues. This project represents a major step forward in terms of providing a model of dense infill housing that facilitates community among neighbors, provides generous open space and natural light, and deals effectively with the aesthetic and logistical challenges of automobile parking.
Thank you to our partners at Paar Development and to our many collaborators:
Architect: David Neiman and Juan Vergara - Neiman Taber Architects
Structural Engineer: Jim Harriott and Benjamin Bird - Harriott Valentine Engineers
Landscape Architect: Patricia Lenssen, Philbin Landscape Architects
General Contractor: Peter Ottele and Doug Scheer - Village Builders
Strategy and Marketing: Joe Paar, Paar Development
Sales Agent: Jacob Menashe, Berkshire Hathaway
Event details and RSVP at http://www.eventbrite.com/e/marion-green-courtyard-townhomes-open-house-tickets-13891679387
Thank you to our partners at Paar Development and to our many collaborators:
Architect: David Neiman and Juan Vergara - Neiman Taber Architects
Structural Engineer: Jim Harriott and Benjamin Bird - Harriott Valentine Engineers
Landscape Architect: Patricia Lenssen, Philbin Landscape Architects
General Contractor: Peter Ottele and Doug Scheer - Village Builders
Strategy and Marketing: Joe Paar, Paar Development
Sales Agent: Jacob Menashe, Berkshire Hathaway
Event details and RSVP at http://www.eventbrite.com/e/marion-green-courtyard-townhomes-open-house-tickets-13891679387
Friday, October 3, 2014
Madison Apartments
Perspective looking east down Denny Way |
The Madison Apartments is a
mixed-use building on an existing vacant lot on the corner of East Madison
Street and 23rd Avenue East. The project hopes to successfully
develop a challenging site that is currently a missing tooth in the urban
fabric, provide housing and commercial opportunities that are scaled to the
local housing and business needs, and to develop a high quality building that
is authentic to its time and is responsive to its context.
The project has been designed to
respond to both the commercial nature of the Madison Corridor and to the
residential nature of Denny. Along the
Madison corridor the project steps down the hill, creating multiple retail
entries that can support small incubator retail businesses. The façade design features large storefronts,
projecting awnings, and a certain degree of visually dynamic asymmetrical
composition. Along Denny, the project
uses similar materials, but there is no expressed storefront base, no
continuous canopy, and the composition is more ordered and quiet.
The project has been specifically
designed to step the lower levels of the building in order to adapt to the
sloping public way. This stepping allows
for a more porous edge along the Madison commercial corridor and a minimization
of the visual impacts of the parking and utility uses along the Denny façade. Placing
the residential entrance along Denny Way creates pedestrian activity and
activates all sides of the site.
At the corner between the Madison
and Denny Facades, The project celebrates the corner with a façade that is more
transparent, features a double height retail space, and expresses the geometry
of the site by featuring a sharp prow that is typical of triangular sites in
the Madison corridor. The transition from the corner prow to the Denny façade leaves
a little space between the two masses to allow them to be visually distinct and
resolve in a more successful fashion.
View looking west down Madison Street |
The project has been designed to
accommodate narrow floorplates, multiple entries, and correspondingly small,
more affordable apartments and incubator commercial spaces. All of these
features are highly responsive to the needs of the neighborhood residents and
businesses. The project massing has been designed to express the geometry and
take advantage of the sloping nature of the site.
Parking is in an area behind the
building, partially enclosed and partially open. The portions of the parking enclosure that
are open are screened by a green screen wall and an overhead trellis.
View looking west up Madison Street |
In
commercial zones adjacent properties can be developed to the property line, so
projects have to be designed to work both in their current form, and in a
future condition with a neighbor built up against it. The NE blank wall
features unit balconies that create depth and shadow, and a composition of
colored panel siding to add visual interest.
The SE blank wall features a frame-infill pattern that echoes the Denny
facade. A portion of this wall has been
set back three feet to allow for windows in the façade to increase visual
interest.
The project
features a number of high quality materials that are selected with durability
and appropriateness to climate in mind.
Project materials include Integrally colored GFRC cement panel siding
(OKO skin), Anodized aluminum storefront, powder-coated steel canopies and decks,
vinyl windows, rainscreen installation of all sidings, exterior insulation of
all roofing.
Permits are
expected to be ready for a Spring 2015 start of construction.