Project Details
- Project Name
- Pikes Peak Visitor Center
- Location
- CO
- Architect
- GWWO Architects
- Client/Owner
- Pikes Peak - America’s Mountain; City of Colorado Springs; United States Forest Service; Colorado Springs Utilities; US Army Research Institute of Environmental Medicine; and Broadmoor Pikes Peak Cog Railway
- Project Types
- Cultural
- Project Scope
- New Construction
- Size
- 38,000 sq. feet
- Shared by
- GWWO Inc./Architects
- Team
- GWWO Architects, Design Architect
- Consultants
-
Architect of Record: RTA Architects,Landscape Architect: DHM Design,Electrical Engineer: BranchPattern,Structural Engineer: HCDA Engineering, Inc.,Civil Engineer: Kiowa Engineering,Other: Bachman PR,Other: Gallagher and Associates,Other: AECOM,Other: Webb Food Service Design,Other: NASH Architectural Solutions,Other: The Preservation Studio
- Certifications & Designations
- Living Building Challenge
- Project Status
- On the Boards/In Progress
Project Description
Pikes Peak, the most visited of Colorado’s great mountains, has long claimed a powerful hold on the public imagination. More than half a million people each year ascend to the summit, where they are rewarded with the view that inspired Katharine Lee Bates to write the lyrics of “America the Beautiful.” For visitors today, the perspective from 14,115 feet still evokes the awe and optimism of a seemingly limitless vista across the continent.
This is the breathtaking setting for the Pikes Peak Summit Visitor Center, a new building designed to enhance the experience of reaching the top. The facility’s careful placement and sensitive design puts the focus on the stunning landscape, allowing boundless sky and views to take center stage.
Embedded into the mountainside, the low-rise structure is seemingly carved from the southeast side of the peak. Its form and materials, with stone inspired by Pikes Peak granite, evoke the crags and rock formations found above the tree line. Seen from below, the building appears as a building of the mountain rather than one on the mountain, yet as visitors arrive at the summit it emerges into view as a clear destination.
Entering the pavilion lobby from the peak, visitors are taken aback by the perfectly framed view of Mount Rosa, the summit that Zebulon Pike climbed on his 1806 expedition to survey the territory that had been recently acquired as part of the Louisiana Purchase. While the explorer never reached the higher summit that bears his name (in fact, he considered it unclimbable), reports of Pike’s journey first brought Colorado’s majestic landscapes into the broader American consciousness.
The architecture of the pavilion highlights the relationship between the two landforms; the lobby walls descend at the 3.5-degree angle from Pikes Peak to Mount Rosa, with the same angle echoed by the upward slope of the roof. Stairs to the main level appear to fold down out of the mountain, as visitors descend to the main floor to access exhibits, dining, a gift shop, and restrooms. Warm, rustic colors and natural materials, such as locally sourced timber, further connect the interior to the landscape. With its terraced design, the building itself serves as an ideal platform from which to survey the views. It features two accessible roof decks: one poised above an outdoor dining terrace, the other an overhang that shelters the lower-level entrance. Together with a third elevated viewing platform, the North Overlook, and a network of protected walkways, the new visitor center stages a series of opportunities to experience the drama of the landscape.
The visitor center is designed to achieve LEED Silver certification, and also to meet the Living Building Challenge; the first in Colorado, to meet this goal. Passive design strategies significantly reduce the building’s energy needs, starting with the building’s southern orientation on the site to take advantage of daylight. A highly insulated concrete shell and in-floor radiant heating, together with the thermal mass of the stone cladding, help to retain heat. These strategies equip the building for an extreme climate, where winter temperatures can reach as low as negative 40 degrees. Moreover, the building is designed to achieve net-zero energy, with remote solar arrays that can supply the building’s operational energy needs. Local building materials, free of toxic and Red List chemicals, further reinforce the commitment to healthy and sustainable building practices.
The visitor center is also designed to significantly reduce water use, a crucial consideration given its remote location. Fresh water is trucked up the mountain and wastewater trucked down every day to serve the existing facility. The new building, with a vacuum system for toilets and blackwater to greywater conversion, will reduce these vehicle trips by more than half, by saving more than 350,000 gallons of water per year over the current system. And it is designed to achieve net-zero water by utilizing rainwater and snow harvest and reuse.
Because Pikes Peak attracts far more visitors than the typical fourteener, the new visitor center, as the highest altitude construction site in North America, is a project almost without precedent. To allow the building to be constructed more easily at altitude, it was designed primarily with a system of prefabricated modules, thereby reducing the amount of time that work crews would need to spend on site. Durable materials, such as high-performance glass, were rigorously tested and chosen to withstand harsh environmental conditions, including winds that can reach up to 230 miles per hour.
Creating a comfortable environment for visitors informed every decision, inside and out. Dining terraces on the south side of the facility, ideally situated for taking in the views, are sheltered from the winds by the building itself. Visitors who wish to wander the summit can follow a series of fully accessible walkways, which are designed with gradual elevation changes and resting areas to mitigate the fatigue that can occur at high altitude. The elevated walkways offer the chance to explore the tundra landscape, all while protecting this fragile ecosystem. With modern amenities and expanded opportunities to engage with the history, ecology, and natural beauty of the summit, the new, sustainable visitor center allows Pikes Peak—once considered impossible to climb, now an iconic American destination—to continue to inspire for generations to come.