The American studio Skylab Architecture has designed YARD, a building located in the geographic center of the city of Portland, Oregon. The place presented a multitude of challenges, both in terms of infrastructure and culture.

YARD is a 21-story mixed-use building combining residential, commercial, retail, office, and parking. The building is proposed as a catalyst project, to revitalize business development in the city. YARD wants to be the spark of a new neighborhood, mixing pre-established elements, such as the Burnside Skate Park, with an innovative design and a privileged riverfront location.
Skylab Architecture proposes a podium + tower design, seamlessly connecting YARD with the neighborhood, through the intersecting streets and the city skyline. On level 5, there is a podium open to the public that features spas, coworking spaces, and an eco-roof, to encourage Portlanders to take advantage of the magnificent views of the city.

On the podium, Skylab Architecture elevates a residential tower, rotated along the river, and strategically oriented to maximize connections with the urban landscape to the west and mountain views to the east.

 

Description of project by Skylab Architecture

Located across the Willamette River from downtown Portland, the YARD is a 21-story, 343,100-square-foot mixed-use apartment building that rises above the famous Burnside Bridge. The roof of the podium elevates a native planted landscape to the level of the bridge to create a shared community landscape environment, while its folded roof shape abstractly recalls the natural slope of the waterfront site. The landscape is both open to the public and tenants offering spa, fitness and co-work amenities that take advantage of the unrivaled views of Portland downtown across the river. The building’s 284 residential units—20 percent reserved for residents making 60 percent or less of the local median income—constitute a mix of studios, one- and two-bedroom apartments.

The site was not without challenges: a full 40 percent of the site was limited to construction of no more than five or six stories. To resolve the site constraints and grade change, the tower was shifted off-axis and bracketed between halves of the podium. The exterior mass of the building is defined through its chocolate-brown anodized bronze metal facade, set in contrast to the reflective glass windows. Together, the cladding and the window system embody the spirit of the project which explores how simple moves and commodity products can be elevated through simple modifications. Inside, an easy-going, Pacific Northwest aesthetic defines the building’s communal spaces. Apartment amenities include glass top ranges and granite countertops to smart-home technology (in some units) and electric car-charging stations. Communal co-working and lounge areas encourage a sociable atmosphere, especially on shared indoor and outdoor portions of its landscaped podium.

Knot Springs—a popular spa and social club focused on health, wellness, and community—is located on the 4th and 5th floors (Skylab was also responsible for the design of this space). The design for Knot Springs was inspired by the hot springs found within the Alvord Desert in southeastern Oregon. The elevated YARD landscape and concrete structure undulate throughout the baths and gym recalling the native river embankment. The spa opens to the landscape, allowing flow through an open-air hallway to respective destinations in a wellness journey. The Knot Springs palette draws inspiration from primal materials to heighten the pools of water using wood, glass, steel, and concrete in sustainably effective applications. The environmental graphics, macrame plant ceiling, and small details engage guests by embedding messaging and communication systems cast in the concrete and heat branded wood to further refine and use materials holistically.

The tower, the porosity of the podium and expansive outdoor spaces—each in their own way—combine to knit the building into the urban scape.

“It’s inviting the street and the public into the building,” “We’re in an age where buildings have become almost like gated communities, and we really set out to create the antithesis of that. I think that’s a big part of why people like to live there. They feel like it’s a social hub and connects them—to other people and to creative life in the city.”

Sky-lab founder Jeff Kovel.

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Architects
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Design team
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Creative Director / Principal Architect.- Jeff Kovel. Principal Architect.- Brent Grubb. Project Leaders.- Susan Barnes, Mark Nye. Project Architects.- Nathan Cox, Jill Asselineau, Jim Henry. Architects.- Jon DeLeonardo, Marian Jones. Designers.- Josh Ashcroft, Ben Porto, Hiroki Abe. Visualization.- Stephen Miller. Lead Interior Designer.- Katy Krider. Interior Designer.- Amy DeVall.
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Collaborators
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Civil Engineer.- Harper Houf Peterson Righellis . Inc. Structural Engineer.- KPFF Consulting Engineers. Mechanical, Electrical, Plumbing Engineering.- PAE Consulting Engineers. Geotechnical Engineer.- GeoDesign Inc. Landscape.- 2.ink Studio. Lighting.- LUMA Lighting Design. Acoustical Engineer.- SSA Acoustics, LLP. Surveyor.- Blue Dot Group. Acoustical Consultant.- SSA Acoustics, LLP. Building Envelope Consultant.- The Façade Group, LLC. Environmental Graphics.- Open Studio Collective
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Client
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Contractor
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Area
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31,875 sqm.
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Data set
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Floors.- 21. Height.- 63 m. Mixed-use building: residential, commercial, retail, office and parking. Residential Units.- 284.
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Manufacturers
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Ceilings and panels.- 9Wood. Carpets and rugs.- Lapchi. Loft/Couch.- Stephen Kenn. Curtain wall and storefront.- Arcadia. Glass.- Guardian Glass
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Location
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Portland - Oregon, USA.
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Photography
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Skylab Architecture was established two decades ago in 1999, in Portland, Oregon, USA, by Jeff Kovel and Brent Grubb. Skylab has grown to 27 employees. Both principals migrated to Portland after architecture school. Grubb spent a decade working for Skidmore, Owings & Merrill and San Francisco's Aidlin Darling Design after earning a degree from Ball State University in Indiana. Kovel, after completing his B.Arch. at Cornell University, landed a gig with a Portland-based firm called Architropolis, doing fast-paced projects for retailers and rock stars, most notably a Miami residence for musician Lenny Kravitz. He admired how Architropolis was willing to take on just about any project, of any scope or length.

The firm began developing a repeatable prefab module in 2008, during the Great Recession. From, its Hoke Residence, Skylab firm has gathered momentum with its innovative modular work and wide-ranging commissions, including hospitality work for the W Seattle hotel and the Summit Sky Lodge, an upcoming prefab ski resort in Utah or the just-completed offices of the Columbia Boulevard Wastewater Treatment Plant (CBWTP) in north Portland.
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Published on: March 2, 2021
Cite: "Revitalizing Portland's Business Development. YARD by Skylab Architecture" METALOCUS. Accessed
<https://www.metalocus.es/en/news/revitalizing-portlands-business-development-yard-skylab-architecture> ISSN 1139-6415
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