Yard | Skylab

Save
Yard | Skylab

Information

  • Project Name: Yard
  • Practice: Skylab
  • Project Location: Portland
  • Country: USA
  • Lead Architects/Designer: Jeff Kovel, Brent Grubb, Susan Barnes, Jon DeLeonardo, Marian Jone, Mark Nye
  • Design Team: Project Architect: Nathan Cox, Jill Asselineau, Jim Henry / Josh Ashcroft, Ben Porto, Hiroki Abe
  • Clients: Key Development Corporation
  • Engineering: Harper Houf Peterson Righellis - Inc.
  • Structural Consultants: KPFF Consulting Engineers
  • MEP Consultants: PAE Consulting Engineers
  • Landscape Consultants: 2.ink Studio
  • Contractors: Andersen Construction
  • Interior + Furniture: Amy DeVall, Katy Krider
  • Photo Credits: Maria Lamb, Stephen Miller, and Brian Walker Lee
  • Others: Visualization: Stephen Miller, Geotechnical Engineer: GeoDesign Inc., 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
More Info Less Info

Excerpt: The architectural project Yard by Skylab features a tower and a podium that respond to the context and create a shared community landscape environment. The roof of the podium elevates a native planted landscape to the level of the famous Burnside Bridge to create an interactive social setting, while its folded roof shape abstractly recalls the natural slope of the waterfront site.

Project Description

Yard | Skylab
© Maria Lamb, Stephen Miller, and Brian Walker Lee
Yard | Skylab
Site Location © Skylab

[Text as submitted by architect] 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.

Yard | Skylab
Site Plan © Skylab
Yard | Skylab
Section © Skylab
Yard | Skylab
© Maria Lamb, Stephen Miller, and Brian Walker Lee

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.

Yard | Skylab
Design Process © Skylab
Yard | Skylab
© Maria Lamb, Stephen Miller, and Brian Walker Lee
Yard | Skylab
© Skylab

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.

Yard | Skylab
© Maria Lamb, Stephen Miller, and Brian Walker Lee
Yard | Skylab
Plan © Skylab
Yard | Skylab
© Maria Lamb, Stephen Miller, and Brian Walker Lee

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.

Yard | Skylab
© Maria Lamb, Stephen Miller, and Brian Walker Lee
Yard | Skylab
© Maria Lamb, Stephen Miller, and Brian Walker Lee

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.

Yard | Skylab
© Maria Lamb, Stephen Miller, and Brian Walker Lee
Yard | Skylab
© Maria Lamb, Stephen Miller, and Brian Walker Lee
Yard | Skylab
© Maria Lamb, Stephen Miller, and Brian Walker Lee

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. 

Yard | Skylab
© Maria Lamb, Stephen Miller, and Brian Walker Lee
Yard | Skylab
© Maria Lamb, Stephen Miller, and Brian Walker Lee

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.

Yard | Skylab
© Maria Lamb, Stephen Miller, and Brian Walker Lee
Yard | Skylab
© Maria Lamb, Stephen Miller, and Brian Walker Lee

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, inviting the street and the public into the building. Skylab founder Jeff Kovel believes that in an age where buildings have become almost like gated communities, they really set out to create the antithesis of that. That’s a big part of the reason why people like to live there. They feel like it’s a social hub that connects them—to other people and to creative life in the city.

Leave a Reply