From Run-Down to Remarkable: A Shoe Store Is Transformed Into Office Space

Project Details

Project Name
From Run-Down to Remarkable: A Shoe Store Is Transformed Into Office Space
Location
TucsonAriz.
Project Types
Commercial
Project Status
Built
Year Completed
2011
Style
Modern
Room or Space
Exteriors

Project Description

It may seem odd for a residential remodeling publication to award its
Best of the Year designation to a commercial project, but this year’s
judges felt that this project “touched on almost all the categories in
the competition” — masterful handling of interior and exterior spaces,
inclusion of sustainable elements, and connection to the landscape all
combine to create “interesting spaces [that] make a run-down building
into a jewel.” The project also had a knockout binder with “great
elevations and floor plans and large, well-labeled photographs.”

With minimal intervention, architects Page Repp Jr. and Rick McLain
radically transformed a 1980s former Kinney Shoe store on a busy
intersection in central Tucson, Ariz., into a new office for their
growing design/build business.

 The designers wanted not only to increase their ability to do
fabrication and store materials and vehicles on site, they also wanted
to create a space indicative of the type of work the firm does and that
has a commanding street presence, which, Repp says, “will be our
marketing budget and advertising for the next 10 years.”

“The
primary focus,” McLain says, “was to create a naturally well-lit space
using simple, restrained materials to allow for the creative process and
to create a great space to work [in] each day.”

The most
dramatic part of the design is the exterior. “The building had great
bones, but it also had a 56-by-10-foot-high glass wall facing directly
west,” McLain says. “That’s the harshest solar exposure you can have.”
The design team needed to mitigate that exposure as well as decrease the
noise from the daily barrage of 20,000 cars that travel the adjacent
roads.

 The solution: 585 steel tubes. The closely spaced lengths of
2-inch-by-1-inch tubular steel painted light silver create a screen that
cuts the harsh light, lowers the temperature, and keeps down noise. The
screen defines and shades the courtyard, an important transitional
space.

Above the courtyard, solar panels are used as a shading
element. “We spaced them and angled them to allow the maximum light to
hit them, and on the space in between we used a polycarbonate panel to
filter the light, which creates a nice, naturally day-lit space,” McLain
says. The judges remarked on the “great design, which satisfies both
function and form.”

The project’s other big nod to sustainable
design is the landscaping. Tucson gets just 12 inches of rain each year,
so every drop is precious. The landscaped area is depressed by 2 feet
to passively trap excess water, and there is a 7,000-gallon rainwater
harvesting system for irrigation.

Inside the building, the
designers removed the existing linoleum floor and honed the underlying
concrete to give it a durable, polished finish. They built the desks and
furniture from raw steel and MDF. “We feel like we strengthened the
building in most cases simply by subtracting things — like the linoleum,
exposing insulation, a tile grid ceiling, and associated ductwork — and
saving what was good, like the concrete floor and the simple, natural
wood trusses above the grid ceiling,” Repp says.

The
transformation “is nicely detailed and has a nice connection to the
flat, scrubby landscape,” the judges said. “Overall, it’s a very
uplifting building.”

Repp and McLain report that employee morale
has never been higher and that their contemporaries and colleagues in
Tucson now feel that they should keep raising the bar. Repp and McLain
have set a standard, inspiring others to invest in the area.


Spec List

Bathroom plumbing fittings: Kohler

Bathroom plumbing fixtures: Toto

Bathroom cabinets: Ikea

Countertops: Richlite

Garage doors: Clopay

Hardware: Schlage

HVAC: Trane

Insulation: Bonded Logic

Interior doors: Masonite

Kitchen cabinets: Kitchen plumbing fittings:

Paints/stains: Dunn Edwards

Siding: Galvalume

Windows: International Windows

Upcoming Events