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Sanjay Gangal
Sanjay Gangal
Sanjay Gangal is the President of IBSystems, the parent company of AECCafe.com, MCADCafe, EDACafe.Com, GISCafe.Com, and ShareCG.Com.

303 Canyon in Boulder, Colorado by Arch11

 
February 20th, 2013 by Sanjay Gangal

Article source: Arch11

In Boulder, Colo., three households recently moved into an Arch11-designed townhouse project built on a small lot in a funky light industrial area near Boulder’s downtown area. The project– a design/build collaboration between Arch11, a commercial and residential architecture firm with offices in Boulder and Denver, and Hammer well, a Boulder construction firm – was recently featured in The New York Times Home  section.

Image Courtesy © Raul Garcia 

  • Architects: Arch11
  • Project: 303 Canyon
  • Location: Boulder, Colorado, USA
  • Photography: Raul Garcia
  • Main construction materials: Steel panels with Galvalume finish., Cedar siding on a rain screen, Stucco
  • Any sustainable features of the design: Well- built/ well insulated, Xeric landscaping, Passive solar design orientation, FSC lumber, Minimixed land use
  • Any key products you specified for the project: Wolf sub-zero appliances, Spark-fire fireplaces, Flooring—polished concrete, Handmade Heath Tiles
  • Software used: Sketchup and Revit

Image Courtesy © Raul Garcia

The New York Times article, written by Penelope Green, describes the three houses, which share a single Boulder lot in the West Pearl neighborhood, as having “a Case Study House feel about them, with their flat roofs, open-plan living areas and glassy expanses. Since the 9,800-square-foot lot was zoned for a 50 percent floor-area ratio, Mr. Sands (Hammer well) and Mr.

Image Courtesy © Raul Garcia

Meade (Arch11) had 4,900-square-feet to divvy up among the three houses. They carved out space underneath the lot to create three two-car garages and room for storage and mechanical equipment, which, since they were underground, were not included in the floor-area calculus.”

Image Courtesy © Raul Garcia

Each house has two bedrooms with two-and-a-half bathrooms―and unit sizes range from about 1,500 sf. to 1,900 sf.  The architects sited each townhouse to capture views of the surrounding landscape, but it was not an easy task.  There had to be equity of views and square footage for each household.

Image Courtesy © Raul Garcia

The modern design gracefully knits together each client’s desires within a cohesive language of form and materials while the interiors are reflective of the three client’s personalities. Ms. Green concludes in her New York Times article that the project is, “ a clever and elegant land-use solution, spatially economical, practical and lovely.”

Image Courtesy © Raul Garcia

Design strategy: In a time of rising land prices and energy costs, these three townhomes fit on what was an underutilized single family home lot in western edge of Boulder. The design ensures that each of the townhomes has equal access to the famed Flatiron views, natural ventilation and southern exposure, making them the perfect downtown idyll.

Image Courtesy © Raul Garcia

In addition to private outdoor space, the three townhomes share outdoor dining space. The entry paths to each are designed to foster casual interaction between the occupants.  The townhomes present an example of the future of sustainable land use, design and living in the New West.

Image Courtesy © Raul Garcia

Image Courtesy © Raul Garcia

Image Courtesy © Raul Garcia

Image Courtesy © Raul Garcia

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Categories: House, Residential, Revit, SketchUp




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