Project Details
- Project Name
- Oregon Zoo Education Center
- Architect
- Opsis Architecture
- Client/Owner
- Metro
- Project Types
- Other
- Project Scope
- New Construction
- Size
- 20,000 sq. feet
- Year Completed
- 2016
- Shared by
- Opsis Architecture
- Team
-
Alec Holser, Principal-in-Charge
Paul Kinley, Project Manager
Jennifer Cambier, Project Architect
Steven Nelsen, Project Architect
Heather DeGrella, Sustainability Design Lead
Angela Alexander, Interior Designer
- Consultants
-
Consulting Architect: Jones & Jones,General Contractor: Fortis Construction, Inc. ,Structural Engineer: Catena Consulting Engineers,Civil Engineer: KPFF Consulting Engineers,Other: PAE Consulting Engineers, Inc. ,Lighting Designer: Luma Lighting Design,Geotechnical Engineer: Geotechnical Resources, Inc. ,Other: ACC Cost Consultants,Audio-visual and Information Technology: Listen Acoustics,Other: Code Unlimited,Other: Westlake Consultants,Other: Work as Play,Other: IQ Magic,Other: Halliday Associates,Other: JLC Architectural Consulting,Other: Bureau of Department Services
- Certifications & Designations
- LEED Platinum
- Project Status
- Built
- Cost
- $14,223,427
Project Description
The Oregon Zoo Education Center creates a regional hub of environmental learning to excite and inspire the inner conservationist in visitors to create a diverse and resilient world. The central theme of “Small Things Matter” guides the zoo’s 1.6 million annual visitors through interactive exhibits that demonstrate how an individual’s daily actions can make a difference in sustaining a healthy planet. The facility contains an interactive exhibit space, insect zoo, café, multi-purpose meeting space, classrooms, environmental science lab and a new zoo railway station.
Situated to define a major orientation plaza at the west end of the zoo, radiating curved forms of the paired exhibition and classroom buildings are an outgrowth of the constricted site’s geometry defined by an entry drive drop off area, zoo railway, main pedestrian pathway, and the steep adjoining hillside. Inspired by the circular woven nature of a bird’s nest, the resulting organic architecture creates an intertwined relationship between indoor and outdoor spaces that blends into the Zoo landscape and animal exhibits. The sweeping cantilevered entry roof draws visitors into the lobby’s interactive displays, insect exhibit, and events space.
The NESt (Nature Exploration Station) interpretive space comprised of woven wood and steel members is inspired by the nests of small animals to create shelter and order in the environment. Design for the interpretive exhibit was an integrated process between the client, architects, and interpretive design teams where content became a foundation for the architectural forms and expression. The interpretive exhibit features the stories of local conservationists and access to the Insect Zoo – the smallest of animals with some of the largest eco-system impacts. The Conservation Hall provides a major meeting space for zoo community partners and is divisible into classrooms with direct access to the zoo exhibits.
The Education Center’s organic architecture creates an interwoven relationship between indoor and outdoor spaces that blends the built and natural environment. Exterior and interior spaces are entwined with a corresponding visible and connected outside space for learning, interaction, imagination, and play.
Honored with an AIA COTE Top Ten award, the LEED Platinum Education Center is a building that teaches, displaying innovative net-zero energy and sustainable design strategies such as the expansive rooftop photovoltaic array, raingardens that clean stormwater before reuse in restrooms, and bird-friendly lighting and fritted glass windows. As a crossroads for sustainable learning and exploration, the Education Center exemplifies the Zoo’s mission of advancing animal welfare, environmental literacy and conservation science within the community.