Showing posts with label Denver. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Denver. Show all posts

Thursday, November 29, 2012

Half-A-Cup of Architecture

There is a shopping center near my house that is nice enough, as shopping centers go. It has a quasi-prairie style demeanor with hip roofs and broad overhangs. It supports a useful assortment of shops: Pier One, Petsmart, a couple of banks, and the obligatory Starbucks.
A neighborhood shopping center.
The architecture softens a big box venue, Office Max, as well as can be done. But every time I visit the center I'm disappointed by a potentially good design that has dropped the ball. The hip roof motif looks great from certain angles (head on) but from other vantage points the hip roofs are severed like useless appendages. Worse: when viewed from the rear, the hips turn into aluminum-paneled gables.
Phantom hip, above.  Details, below.




















Some people view things as a cup half full and others as a cup half empty. Either way, these chopped-off hip roofs are half-a-cup of architecture. They are incomplete; fake; deceptive. Obviously, these phantom roofs are a way to simplify (cheapen) the design. The architects probably thought we would never notice. They appear to have succumbed to a common pitfall amongst architects and developers: designing a building from the front, forgetting that we live in a three-dimensional world. This shopping center sprawls over three city blocks, surrounded on four sides by busy streets. It is impossible not to see the architecture from all sides.
Main street in an old west town.
The set for Mel Brooks's Blazing Saddles.
We are constantly exposed to this type of facade-ism: buildings designed like storefronts in a western movie. A Flatland world where a building is imagined to exist only in one dimension. Then we turn the corner and realize half of it is fake. A pretentious facade designed to make us think the building is more important than it really is.

A "spec" house under construction.
We are inundated with this attitude in residential architecture. Many houses are built with brick facades facing the street and cheaper materials around the sides. This is so common we don't think much about it anymore. It has almost become a style in itself. Maligned by thinking architects over the years,  facade-ism is sometimes addressed (somewhat defensively) by taking a wee bit of brick around the corner (see, we really are three-dimensional) but then suddenly quitting the more expensive material for something cheaper. This strategy can work only if the expensive material ends in a graceful way, such as at a jog in the building or by completing a column. All too often it is an empty gesture that only emphasizes the haplessness of the architect and/or the developer. Better to leave the brick off altogether than expose the vacuity of style in a half-hearted attempt at three-dimensional thinking.

Kinda makes you thirsty for a full cup of architecture.
Reductio ad absurdum: a storage shed in facade-ism style.

Saturday, May 26, 2012

Denver Modern Architecture INTERVIEW

Next Saturday, June 2nd, is the second annual Denver Modern Home Tour. Click on this INTERVIEW link for brief comments on my entry. Contact me or the tour WEB SITE for more information and tickets.
Tour entry: 3300 South Dahlia, Denver, CO.
Patio and fireplace.

Great room.

Photos: Rob Munger

Monday, October 24, 2011

Modern Architecture Tour

The first Denver Modern Home Tour was a success! We want to thank the four-hundred-plus people who took time to visit our property on Saturday. All were friendly and generous in their appreciation for modern architecture. I am sure the perfect autumn day contributed to the good mood everybody seemed to share. I enjoyed many conversations throughout the day. It is gratifying to realize how interested people are in good design. It was also fun being interviewed on KWGN Channel 2 before the tour. 

The tour creator, Matt Swinney, was delighted with the results and intends to return to Denver next year with an even bigger event. Meanwhile, his organization, Modern Home Tours, LLC of Austin, TX, has other tours planned. The next one is November 12th in Houston. For information follow this  link: 
http://houstonmod.modernhometours.com/
Garden in Houston.

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

Denver Modern Home Tour

MICHAEL KNORR & ASSOCIATES is honored to be selected for the first-ever Denver Modern Home Tour.
1. Denver Modern Home Tour.
On Saturday, October 22, 2011 from 11:00 am - 6:00 pm, join us to tour 8 of Denver's most recent examples of contemporary residential architecture. We have previewed all of the properties and think you will find something interesting at each location. There is a broad array of design choices, sizes, and neighborhoods. 

Please come by our featured property, 4501 E. Dartmouth, during the tour. For advance TICKETS go to this link: http://denver.modernhometours.com/

For a MAP and INFORMATION on all eight homes go to this link: http://denver.modernhometours.com/tour-homes/

We look forward to visiting with you on the 22nd!

2. Denver Modern Home Tour.
Photos:
Rob Munger

Sunday, January 30, 2011

Street Architecture

The Spire condominiums on 14th.
Light rail crossing 14th Street.
Several weeks ago I wrote about Denver's 14th Street: a "New Edge for the City." This was about the new developments adjacent to Denver's theater district and convention center. New condos, hotels, restaurants. Now the city is investing millions of dollars in street improvements with pedestrian resting spots, trees, and Times Square-type signage.  This three-minute animation produced by Parsons Brinkerhoff Project Visualization Group shows what the street will look like by the end of 2011.
Credits:
Photos, M. Knorr.
Video, Parson Brinkerhoff.

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

A New Edge for the City

Fourteenth Street has added new buildings and new entertainment venues, creating a new edge for the city.
Downtown Denver is a fairly well-defined collection of tall buildings. By zoning and by geographic circumstance the edges of downtown are clear. Civic Center Park constrains downtown on its southern end. The Platte River provides a natural boundary on the north where new condo buildings add structure and order. Approached from Interstate 25 or 6th Avenue, it is a skyline that erases Denver’s cow town image. Now, almost overnight and unannounced, the city’s downtown has acquired a gleaming new edge on its western boundary. Instead of a central business district that dribbles off in unremarkable lackluster, the countenance of the city changed recently with the towering additions of the Four Seasons hotel and the Spire condominiums. At 45 and 41 stories, respectively, they have reinforced a wall of tall buildings on 14th Street: the nearby Hyatt hotel, the Executive Tower residences, the Curtis hotel. The western edge of downtown is suddenly distinctive from almost any vantage point.

Convention Center.
The hovering roof of the convention center and glass arcade of the performing arts complex act as a contemporary plinth for this assemblage of buildings. Speer Boulevard and parallel Cherry Creek provide a permanent and green foreground for this urban vista, much like Lake Michigan is an unchanging boundary for Chicago’s skyline. Okay, this is not Chicago or Manhattan or Miami Beach. Fourteenth Street will never be one of the truly great urban vistas. However, this new urban façade is more than a bunch of tall buildings. The energy and activity provided by these new buildings adds vitality that this side of downtown sorely needed. Not only did the architecture dribble off in the past; so did the feeling of connectivity to the city.

Perhaps you had occasion in previous years to walk from the 16th Street mall to a show at the Buell Theater on 14th Street. No matter which route you chose, in a few short blocks you would have walked out of bright activity into scary grey streets. The streets weren’t really scary because nothing really happened on them. That was the problem: nothing happened. No shops, no sounds, no life. Walk that area now. It has come alive.

Several things have converged to make this happen. There are new buildings, of course, but they are supported by a vortex of urban forces that make this area another focal point for our awakening city. It is as “happening” as Larimer Square and as (potentially) interesting as Lodo.

Light rail pushes through the convention center and across Fourteenth Street.
Light rail is a major contributor. It shouldered its way right through the convention center with a station that is currently Denver’s most urban. This adds people and activity. The clanging bells of light rail are a big-city soundtrack. The convention center itself has been expanded to attract world-class events as has the performing arts complex with the transformation of the old auditorium into the Ellie Caulkins Opera House. More people beget more venues to serve and entertain them. The boutique Hotel Teatro is not a newcomer -- hipsters have always appreciated this place -- but it is revealed in a new context. Award-winning chef and restaurateur Kevin Taylor operates two dining rooms in the Teatro. They are joined now by friendly competitors across the street: the Oceanaire Seafood Room and the Corner Office martini bar. Both attract young crowds.
Nightlife on Fourteenth:  Left to right: Hotel Teatro, Ellie Culkins Opera House, Oceanaire restaurant.
The aforementioned Spire is ready for occupancy with condos selling from six figures to seven. Its common spaces are among the coolest interior designs in town. The ninth floor party deck feels like a stylish nightclub in Las Vegas or Palm Springs. The Four Seasons has yet to open, but will offer another, more staid, version of high luxury. As these towers become occupied the intensity of street life will ratchet upward.
Denver is a city of neighborhoods. Urban planners are trying to position this neighborhood as the Theater District, with signage and lighting aiming for a Times Square atmosphere. It is going in the right direction, but not there yet. For one thing, vacant lots and dinge still predominate in the direction of Civic Center park. Connections to Larimer Square and Sixteenth Street are weak. More cabarets and retail are needed. But this new edge for the city is one more reason to love the city Denver is becoming. 
Left:  The Spire condos.  Right:  Four Seasons hotel and condos.
Credits:
All photos M. Knorr.