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Sumit Singhal
Sumit Singhal
Sumit Singhal loves modern architecture. He comes from a family of builders who have built more than 20 projects in the last ten years near Delhi in India. He has recently started writing about the architectural projects that catch his imagination.

Firestone Pavilion in Longmeadow, Massachusetts by Newick Architects

 
June 25th, 2014 by Sumit Singhal

Article source: Newick Architects

The site for this project is an existing 1960’s modern house with a 1980’s complementary addition. The Pool existed at the outset as well.

We were asked to design a new pool enclosure fence and Car Port that would be more consistent  with the architecture of the house than the English trellis and dovecotes that  existed when we began. All of this pre-dated the current owner.

Image Courtesy © Newick Architects

Image Courtesy © Newick Architects

  • Architects: Newick Architects
  • Project: Firestone Pavilion
  • Location: Longmeadow, Massachusetts
  • Construction completed: 2010
  • Structural Engineer:  Michael Horton and Associates
  • Base structure contractor:  Pearson Systems
  • Architectural Metals Fabricator: Lift Design and Fabrication
  • Glazing Contractor: Town & Country Glass

Image Courtesy © Newick Architects

Image Courtesy © Newick Architects

As the design developed, we introduced a fourteen foot wide glass and aluminum rolling door facing the pool so that the car port could be used as a pavilion for parties. The rear portion of the pavilion houses the pool equipment.

The materials are a precise array of painted steel, stainless steel woven fabric, aluminum, low iron clear and etched glass and stucco.  The garden was repaired and enhanced at the base of the woven stainless fence.  This stainless material is an intricate material detailed here as if it was a solid infill panel in its painted steel frame. It reads as if opaque or translucent or transparent depending on how the light is hitting it.

Image Courtesy © Newick Architects

Image Courtesy © Newick Architects

The construction of the pavilion was unforgiving. Every piece shows and the precision of the materials made the installation and alignment of the various parts a difficult task. The cement stucco is quite rough and was finished to match the roughness of the stucco of the main house.

Image Courtesy © Newick Architects

Image Courtesy © Newick Architects

From a distance, the Pavilion can look two dimensional but because each of its pieces is discreet and don’t quite touch, the composition “comes apart” in complex ways as you get closer and move around it.

Image Courtesy © Newick Architects

Image Courtesy © Newick Architects

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Category: Pavilion




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