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Design IN Public

Design IN Public - Winner in Class
46P

Federal Way New Elementary Schools Program - DLR Group


Project Team:

Design Team:

 

DLR Group
 
Owner:
Federal Way School District
 
Contractor:
Babbit Neuman Construction Company

 

Project Description:

The design for new elementary schools in Federal Way redefines the experience of American schools. The distillation of traditional educational programs into Universal learning spaces enables ultimate spatial flexibility. The intersections of formal learning wings with a playful interstitial network creates playfully dynamic interior experiences. Bold use of colors intermingled with natural materials and open systems enlivens spaces sustainably. Simple, colorful geometries activate student senses. And transparency not only brightens interior experiences, but creates connection with the site and greater community beyond.

Design IN Public - Honorable Mention
47P

Federal Way Regional Library - Mithun


Project Team:

Design Team:

Bill LaPatra
Christa Jansen
 
Owner:
King County Library System
 
Contractor:
Kirtley-Cole Assoc.

Project Description:

Described as the “Lantern in the Forest”, the Federal Way Regional Library is carefully situated within a stand of mature evergreens and has become a community landmark. The recent expansion and remodel responds to the needs of this growing community by balancing three primary objectives: increase library usability and functionality for patrons and staff; respect and celebrate the site attributes; and create an exciting, variety filled addition as a counter point to the exiting library. Building upon the library’s rich natural setting, the design team drew upon principles of transparency, daylighting, and connection in order to visually open the building to the outdoors while enhancing the functionality of the spaces inside.

Design IN Public
47P

Puyallup City Hall - Mithun


Project Description:

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Located in the heart of downtown Puyallup across from historic Pioneer Park, the New City Hall is the home of city departmental offices, city council chambers, council offices, and the city manager’s suite.  The main objective of the project was to reconnect numerous city departments and divisions that had been dispersed across the town, creating a civic place for people to come together and celebrate a growing commitment to environmental stewardship and civic engagement.  This project has achieved LEED® Gold certification and will provide many decades of service to the City.

Design IN Public
48P

The LIghtcatcher at Whatcom Museum - Olson Kundig Architects


Project Description:

Normal 0 false false false EN-US X-NONE X-NONE The Lightcatcher at the Whatcom Museum is a 42,000 SF regional art and children’s museum. It takes its name from its most visible feature— the lightcatcher—a multi-functional translucent wall that reflects and transmits the Northwest’s most ephemeral natural resource, sunlight.

The lightcatcher, 37 feet high and 180 feet long, is at the physical center of the project, gently curving to form a spacious exterior courtyard while bridging the museum’s interior and exterior spaces. During daylight hours, the light-porous wall floods the halls and galleries inside with a warm luminosity, serving as an energy-saving light fixture. The lightcatcher also helps ventilate the building: its double-glazed skin helps keep interior spaces cool via the stack effect; in cooler weather, vents at the top of the wall can be closed and radiant energy is captured within, insulating the building.

The first floor of the building features a lobby, three galleries (two double height), an interactive children’s learning space, and other amenities. The second floor houses an additional exhibition gallery, meeting and classroom space, and museum offices. The single-story lobby is topped by a 3,000 SF green roof which features an interpretive exhibit and low-impact development strategies. The building utilizes natural materials endemic to the region and is the first museum in Washington designed to LEED Silver specifications.

Outside, the lightcatcher reflects light into a 7,000 SF courtyard designed as a civic gathering space and a dynamic backdrop for sculpture. In the evening, the lightcatcher glows with the colors of the structure’s interior illumination. Pedestrians can view the courtyard—and the art and activities within—through large openings to the street, ensuring the Museum is as active outside as it is inside.