8-21.1 - 1100 Blk W 6th St - presentation — original pdf
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H i s t o r i c P r e s e r v a t i o n P a c k a g e J u l y 8 , 2 0 2 2 CLARKSVILLAGEA Vertical Mixed Use Development in AustinWest 9th Street West 8th Street West 9th Street West 7th Street SITE Duncan Neighborhood park Shoal Creek W e s t A v e n u e S t . R i o G r a n d e d r a v e l u o B r a m a L h t r o N d r a v e l u o B r a m a L h t r o N West 6th Street West 6th Street West 5th Street West 5th Street W e s t A v e n u e S t . R i o G r a n d e Shoal creak Ladybird Lake-Lamar Beach Metro Park 6TH STREET LOOKING EAST - EXISTING HEIGHT TRANSITION +24’▼ +22’▼ +41’▼ +29’▼ ▼+31’ ▼+62’ +26’▼ +35’▼ +60’▼ +75’▼ +200’▼ . t S o c n a l B Site +361’▼ +300’▼ +246’▼ +120’▼ . t S r e l s s e r P . r D w o l f n W i . t S n a h t r a H . t S r o l y a B . d v l B r a m a L h t r o N . t S n o s r e d n e H . t S d o o W . e v A t s e W . t S s e c e u N . t S e d n a r G o i R . t S o i n o t n A n a S . t S e p u l a d a u G . t S a c a v a L . t S o d a r o l o C . e v A s s e r g n o C 6 T H S T R E E T ( N O R T H E L E V A T I O N ) HORIZONTALLY STACKED PROGRAM RESIDENTIAL RESIDENTIAL HOTEL OFFICE RETAIL HOTEL OFFICE RETAIL BLANCO STREET 1124 1116 WEST 6TH STREET 578_Clarksville8'016'32'1/16” = 1’-0”A300 Elevation South (West 6th Street)Concept20.01.2022VERTICALLY DECREASING DENSITY Building Mass Landscaped Areas L5 - Residential L4 - Residential L3 - Hotel L2 - Office GF - Retail ALLEY Hotel Court Hotel Lobby The Plaza Spa Court Spa Kitchen WCs Elevator Lobbies Hotel F+B East Court BOH Loading BOH Retail Retail Blanco Court Retail Retail Retail Retail Kitchen Retail Retail Bakery 6th Street- Court Restaurant Kitchen Retail Retail T E E R T S O C N A L B WEST 6TH STREET A COMPOSITION OF BUILDINGS AT THE SCALE OF THE NEIGHBORHOOD BLANCO STREET 1124 1116 WEST 6TH STREET PROPOSED 6TH STREET MASSING FORMS AT RIGHT-OF-WAY WORK IN PROGRESSDRAFTWORK IN PROGRESSDRAFT6TH STREET LOOKING EAST - PROPOSED WORK IN PROGRESS WORK IN PROGRESS DRAFT DRAFT BLANCO STREET 1124 1116 WEST 6TH STREET PROPOSED LANDSCAPE EXPERIENCE FROM 6TH STREET H O U S E S R O O M S O F F I C E S S T R E E T TYPICAL SECTION AT 6TH STREET - PROPOSED 6TH STREET LOOKING EAST - PROPOSED SITE 606 Blanco St 607 Blanco St 605 Blanco St 1114 W 6th St 1204 W 6th St 1202 W 6th St 1200 W 6th St 1128 W 6th St 1126 W 6th St 1122-24 W 6th St 1118-20 W 6th St 1116 W 6th St 1112 W 6th St 1110 W 6th St SITE Alley t e e r t S o c n a l B 1124 W 6th St 1116 W 6th St W 6th Street Preserved: As is Demolished Amended / Reconstructed SITE Alley Castle Hill Local Historic District t e e r t S o c n a l B 1124 W 6th St 1116 W 6th St W 6th Street West Line Historic District Preserved: As is Demolished Amended / Reconstructed Castle Hill Local Historic District West Line Historic District Preserved: As is 607 Blanco St 606 Blanco St 605 Blanco St 1204 W 6th St 1202 W 6th St 1200 W 6th St 1128 W 6th St 1126 W 6th St 48.1% Demolished Amended / reconstructed 1118-20 W 6th St 1114 W 6th St 1112 W 6th St 1110 W 6th St 1124 W 6th St 1116 W 6th St 39.2% 12.7% *footprint % SITE Preserved: As is 1204 W 6th St 1202 W 6th St 1200 W 6th St 1128 W 6th St 1126 W 6th St 607 Blanco St 607 Blanco St Site Map 606 Blanco St SITE Demolished 1118-20 W 6th St Side addition to 1116 W 6th St 1112 W 6th St 1110 W 6th St Outbuilding at 1112 W 6th St Rear addition to 1116 W 6th St 1114 W 6th St Site Map SITE Demolished 1118-20 W 6th St Swedish Hill Bakery SITE Demolished 1118-20 W 6th St Swedish Hill Bakery SITE Demolished Side addition to 1116 W 6th St SITE Demolished 1112 W 6th St Z Tejas SITE Demolished 1112 W 6th St Z Tejas SITE Demolished Outbuilding at 1112 W 6th St SITE Demolished 1110 W 6th St Z Tejas + Woo Woo Burger SITE Demolished 1116 W 6th St Rear Addition SITE Demolished 1114 W 6th St SITE Alley Castle Hill Local Historic District t e e r t S o c n a l B 1124 W 6th St 1116 W 6th St W 6th Street West Line Historic District Amended / Reconstructed Castle Hill Local Historic District West Line Historic District SITE Amended / Reconstructed 1124 W 6th St 1116 W 6th St SITE Amended / Reconstructed 1124 W 6th St 1122 - 1124 West 6th Street 1. Existing structure 2. Disassembly 3. Reconstruction The design team intends to preserve the composition of the front facade: including the size, proportion and rhythm of openings, as well as the awnings. Deconstructed Reconstruction 23% of original Infill 1122 - 1124 West 6th Street 1. Existing structure 2. Disassembly 3. Reconstruction The design team is further interested in duplicating the ground level facade by introducing a second level. This move should enhance the composition of the entire street front elevation. Deconstructed Reconstruction 23% of original Infill 6TH STREET LOOKING EAST - PROPOSED Elements for Reintegration 1 . T E R R A C O T TA T I L E S 2 . S I G N S U P P O R T 3 . F A C A D E O P E N I N G P R O P O R T I O N S SITE Amended / Reconstructed 1124 W 6th St 1116 West 6th Street 1. Existing structure 2. Disassembly 3. Reconstruction The design team intends to preserve the composition of the front facade: including the size, proportion and rhythm of openings, as well as the awnings. The design team also intends to mimic the composition of the front facade openings on the rear facade, creating a more complete object rather than a singular face towards 6th street. The building is to become a garden and entry into the project drawing the public off of 6th street. Deconstructed Reconstruction 35% of original Infill E G T I M A N R O F 1116 WEST 6TH STREET GARDEN VIEW FROM INSIDE LOOKING TOWARDS HOTEL LOBBY Reconstructing the Shell of the existing building and turning it into a lush Garden as an entry node into the Project. Elements for Reintegration 1 . K E Y S T O N E 2 . T E R R A C O T TA T I L E S 3 . R E TA I L S I G N 4 . B R I C K T I E S 5 . H I S T O R I C P L A Q U E 6 . D O O R F R A M E 1116 West 6th Street Brick 153_KUPPERSMUHLE Her zog & de Meuron, 1999 White Brick / Stone Concrete Wood (treated) White painted or other Charred Wood Mainting the existing facade propertions (openings, awnings, elements, etc), the design team intends to further study potential material options for the reconstruction. The various material solutions are meant to offer contemporary interpretations of the existing structure, while allowing the building to better integrate into the development as a whole. 1116 West 6th Street White Brick / Stone FLATO AND TALIAFERRO HOUSE Lake Flato, 1984 1116 West 6th Street Concrete RACHEL WHITEREAD House, 1993 1116 West 6th Street Wood: Treated / White (tbd) 402_STADTCASINO Her zog & de Meuron, 2020 1116 West 6th Street Charred Wood LONDON CROSS PAVILION OLI Architecture, 2019 REFERENCES OF HERZOG & DE MEURON’S WORK WITH BUILDINGS OF HISTORIC SIGNIFICANCE Extension of the Stadt Casino Musiksaal Basel, Switzerland The current restoration of the concert hall has been carried out in close collaboration with the Cantonal Department of Cultural Heritage. The aim of restoring the building to its original state at the time it was first renovated in 1905 went hand-in-hand with the top priority of preserving the hall’s acoustic properties. We opened up the skylight and the windows again, re-created the original seating, reduced the incline of the balcony, laid a duplicate of the original parquet flooring, and restored the color scheme of 1905. Existing Caixa Forum Madrid, Spain This new address for the arts is located in an area occupied until now by unspectacular urban structures, the Central Eléctrica Power Station, and a gas station. The only ma- terial of the old power station that we could use was the classified brick shell. In order to conceive and insert the new architectural components of the CaixaForum, we began with a surgical operation, separating and removing the base and the parts of the building no longer needed. The removal of the base of the building left a covered plaza under the brick shell, which now appears to float above the street level. This sheltered space under the CaixaForum offers shade to visitors who want to spend time or meet outside, and at the same time, it is the entrance to the Forum itself. Existing Kuppersmuhle Duisburg, Germany The Küppersmühle is an imposing brickwork building erected by Joseph Weiss and the Kiefer Brothers between 1908 and 1916. Even in today’s changed urban landscape, the building in the north of Duisburg still functions as a striking metropolitan landmark. The conversion of the industrial building into a museum for the Grothe Collection was of special interest to us because the planning was running parallel to the Tate Modern project in London, which was also accommodated in an imposing brickwork building, a former power plant. The existing windows in the area of the exhibition spaces were walled up with bricks of the same quality as the original brickwork. This heightens the monolithic effect of the building even more. Existing Kuppersmuhle Extension Duisburg, Germany A grain mill was erected in 1860 on the site of the present Museum Küppersmühle by industrialist Wilhelm Vedder, one of the founding fathers of Duisburg’s Inner Harbour. We propose to erect a building whose dimensions and materials accord with the sequence of historic brick structures lining the dockside. The new structure thus completes the existing museum complex in a visually appropriate way and forms a suitable conclusion to the row of buildings along the dock. In terms of mass, height and materials they take their cue from the existing buildings, continuing them and rounding them off to form a harmonious whole. Museum der Kulturen Basel, Switzerland The Museum der Kulturen Basel goes back to the middle of the nineteenth century. Extending the building horizontally would have meant decreasing the size of the court- yard, the Schürhof. Instead, the Vischer building of 1917 has been given a new roof. Consisting of irregular folds clad in blackish green ceramic tiles, the roof resonates with the medieval roofscape in which it is embedded, while functioning at the same time as a clear sign of renewal in the heart of the neighborhood. The hexagonal tiles, some of them three-dimensional, refract the light even when the skies are overcast, creating an effect much like that of the finely structured brick tiles on the roofs of the old town. Existing Musee Unterlinden Colmar, France The medieval convent consisting of a church, a cloister, a fountain and a garden stand to one side. On the other side of the square, the new museum building mirrors the church’s volume and, together with the former municipal baths constitutes a second, enclosed court. Between the two museum complexes, the Unterlinden Square has recovered its historical significance, recalling the times when stables and farm buildings formed across from the convent, an ensemble called “Ackerhof ”. What was before the museum’s ren- ovation a bus stop and a parking lot, has become a new public and urban space. Existing REFERENCES OF FLINTCO’S WORK WITH BUILDINGS OF HISTORIC SIGNIFICANCE Caption by Hyatt Memphis, Tennessee The integration of the historic Ellis facade into the Caption is a distinguishing • The Caption is connected to the Hyatt centric, including an underground service tunnel, and integrated into the historic architectural remains of the William C. Ellis & Sons Ironworks and Machine Shop. • feature of the design, and will help preserve an important part of Memphis history., • The historic Ellis building, which houses the Caption’s ground and second floors, was adapted to hold a beer garden courtyard and lounge space. The double-height space is enveloped by the historic building’s original heavy timber framing, decorative brick walls, archways and clerestory windows. The long-vacant Ellis Shop also houses a new ballroom and new meeting rooms. • Prior to any demolition behind the existing facade, the two-story brick façade was stabilized from the outside by using two rows of pipe braces with plates and through wall anchors. Hyatt Centric Memphis, Tennessee • New construction of Hyatt Centric Beale Street Memphis includes the adjacent renovation of the historic 1878 W.C. Ellis Building and Machine Shops, which captured 15,000 SF of meeting an event space for the new hotel. • The Flintco project team worked with the local historical preservationists in the planning of the hotel design’s connection to and preservation of the adjacent historic Ellis Building structures. • With its original stenciled building signage intact, the Ellis Building was repur- posed for the Centric hotel’s event, conference, and meeting space, and beer garden. • of these industrial details into the new Centric hotel design. • Built in 1878, this former blacksmith shop was one of the earliest, longest-running businesses in Memphis, making wrought-iron straps for carriages and shoes for horses and mules and was later used as an agricultural machinery repair shop. Designers were able to salvage much of the original structure and integrate many Texas Capital Dome Restoration Austin, Texas • Repair and painting area included approximately 1,200 gallons of an exterior paint to cover approximately 75,000 square feet from the lower roof up through and including the Goddess of Liberty statue. • • moval and repainting. • ber was repainted and repaired. The outer rotunda level required abatement with new decking installed afterward. Interior dome work included approximately 15,000 square feet of lead paint re- 17,000 square feet of the ceiling surface of the House of Representatives Cham-