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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.

Outpost in Hood River, Oregon by skylab

 
August 21st, 2020 by Sanjay Gangal

Article source: skylab

Outpost is a phased, hybrid structure merging recreation, retail and work environments to foster and reinforce a sense of community in a developing section of Hood River. As part of the city’s new Waterfront Masterplan, Outpost will eventually become a 60,000-square-foot development a neighborhood of buildings that will functionally connect the city with the Columbia River waterfront. The site, formerly home to an industrial wastewater treatment and processing facility, largely underutilized the waterfront but will now become a new paradigm for future development in the region.

Image Courtesy © Stephen Miller

  • Architects: skylab
  • Project: Outpost
  • Location: Hood River, Oregon
  • Photography: Stephen Miller
  • Project Team: Jeff Kovel, Brent Grubbk, David Suttle, Nathan Cox, Kyle Norman, Marian Jones, Joshua Jewett, Amy DeVall
  • Client / Developer: Key Development
  • Contractor: Celilo Construction
  • Civil Engineer: Vista GeoEnvironmental Services
  • Structural / Electrical Engineer: Valar Consulting Engineers

Image Courtesy © Stephen Miller

Phase One is composed of two buildings, that together, result in a 30,000-square-foot complex that reimagines traditional mixes of spaces and how they are organized. Functioning as one large structure, each of the 15,000-square-foot, three-story buildings are aligned within the exterior envelope to form what appears to be a simple bar-shaped building. The buildings, however, are separated like the hulls of a catamaran to create a central, shared open area for both buildings. The common area knits the two buildings together at each level and provides consolidated vertical circulation (elevators and stairs) and open spaces (exterior terraces) that function as gathering spaces and communal hubs. Largely open to the environment, this central area features an outside fireplace and an expansive partially covered pavilion.

Image Courtesy © Stephen Miller

Image Courtesy © Stephen Miller

The two buildings are unified through a shared exterior aesthetic with a mix of naturally finished cedar on the ground floor and charred cedar cladding on the upper two floors. The visual distinction between floors reveals the functional separations inside the building. The ground floor supports light industrial activities a brewery, distillery, and maker spaces with easy access and the opportunity for double-height spaces while the upper floors support retail, co-working, office and recreation spaces. Circulation to upper levels is carved out along the buildings’ edges, providing weather protection and enhancing the experience for the visitor. Moving traditional street-level retail to the second floor activates these spaces in a dynamic way. Elevated outdoor streets capture views of the waterfront, Mt. Adams and Mt. Hood, making the buildings a destination for visitors and locals. Tenants, co-working patrons and guests are able to share space with producers and retailers while enjoying the waterfront’s edge.

Image Courtesy © Stephen Miller

Image Courtesy © Stephen Miller

Built with efficiency in mind, the building’s structural framing is exposed to celebrate the simple means of construction. Locally sourced and sustainably harvested, laminated wood beams are complemented with infill walls and pathways made with Douglas fir decking. Outside, the oversized windows of the complex are based on traditional industrial proportions illuminating the building’s interiors with daylight. The windows are an efficient, thermally-broken commercial system with simple black aluminum clad frames. Inside, the warm wood interiors are familiar, conjuring images of early industrial buildings, barns, and mountain lodges. Daylighting and transparency within the building are also accentuated at the ground floor through glazed, double-height spaces that let visitors catch a glimpse of activity from within the building, conveying a sense of openness. Blackened steel handrails reinforce the industrial aesthetic.

Image Courtesy © Stephen Miller

Image Courtesy © Stephen Miller

Outpost is the first step in reimagining Hood River’s reconnection to its waterfront. Originally devoid of public spaces, the water’s edge is now a recreational zone coexisting with new commercial and communal spaces. Elevated walkways, beginning with those at Outpost, will ultimately establish a network of buildings that are connected via boardwalk type structures. Outpost puts the mixed in mixed-use commercial by merging traditionally exclusive industrial uses with commercial, mixed-use maker spaces that can be shared and experienced. Outpost represents a new prototype, a wood structure redefining industrial commercial buildings beyond storage and manufacturing. A venue featuring warm and sustainable spaces that are designed to engage people and to elevate the process of making.

Image Courtesy © Stephen Miller

Image Courtesy © Stephen Miller

Image Courtesy © Stephen Miller

Image Courtesy © Stephen Miller

Image Courtesy © Stephen Miller

Image Courtesy © skylab

Image Courtesy © skylab

Image Courtesy © skylab

Contact skylab

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Categories: Building, complex, Mixed use, Recreational facility, Restaurant, Retail, Retail facilities




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