Flatworks Building (TVA Architects)
Robert Thompson is one of the lions in Portland’s
contemporary architecture world. As a
founding partner and principal of TVA Architects, he leads a large firm with a
long history of designing sleek, modern buildings with lots of glass and metal
finishes.
In Portland, his firm did the Fox Tower (27n stories), Park Avenue West (30 stories) and the John Ross condominium (32 stories). In
Beaverton, TVA designed the Nike World Headquarters.
In Eugene, the Matthew Knight Arena.
You get the idea. Big, new, fancy stuff.
An outsider never knows who all contributes to a large
firm’s designs, but when it comes to dealing with public agencies, Thompson is
the firm's speaker. His presentations are
direct, focused, professional, polite and delivered with consistent modulated enthusiasm.
A bystander was curious to see how Thompson and TVA would
react to an unusual project for the firm as it went about preparing plans for
an eight-story, half-block building that will replace a parking lot in the East
Portland-Grand Avenue National Historic District. It is a little-known, narrow district running
along the Grand Avenue spine where contributing buildings date from 1883 to
1930.
TVA’s assignment was to design a building that would fit
into the context of its historic neighbors without giving the impression of mimicking something "old." The developer-client is a
firm headed by Vanessa Sturgeon, who was involved in the Fox Tower and Park
Avenue West projects designed by TVA. Sturgeon's presence suggests new investment
interest in what has been a sleepy neighborhood for many years.
We may begin seeing the results soon. Sturgeon told the Portland Historic Landmarks
Commission that the project is “fully funded and ready to break ground.” The Flatworks Building will sit on the east
side of Grand Avenue between S.E. Ash and Pine Streets at the northern edge of
the district.
The simplest part of the building’s design is its
structure. Structural elements and
floors will be composed of cross-laminated timber, a relatively recent
engineered wood product fabricated by laminating wood layers at 90-degree
angles. At eight stories, Flatworks
would rank among the tallest to use the new structural technique in Portland.
Developing the building’s exterior envelope was not so
simple. To their credit, Thompson and
his team studied almost all of the nearby historic buildings to look for design
cues. In a series of meetings with the
Landmarks Commission, Thompson showed seven or eight potential versions for the new building. “We are not trying to design a building that
leaps out at you,” he said. “We want it
to blend into the district.”
The biggest design choice was to take the full-block façade facing
Grand Avenue and make it look like two buildings rather than one. A recessed main entry to the office building
separates the two “sections.” The
distinction is important because only one other historic building in the
district had a a 200-foot frontage.
Dotted line shows district boundaries. Contributing buildings in red. (TVA Architects)
The norther portion of Flatworks at eight stories will be
faced in a dark grey brick while bricks on the six story side will be cream-colored. Two
recessed stories on the six-story side will give the appearances of being a
penthouse. Recessed bays at the ground level will be available for retail uses.
Thompson said the cross-laminated timbers will be visible at
night when the building is lit. Recessed
spandrels accentuate windows in the darker portion of the building, while
metallic shrouds around the windows of the lighter building portion will extend
several inches beyond the brick columns. The shrouds “will create a lot of
texture and shadows when you come up Grand Avenue,” Thompson said.
Flatworks at night. (TVA Architects)
Thompson’s presentations were professional and direct, as
usual. Perhaps the only glitches occurred
when he referred to the district’s high-rise Weatherly Building a couple times
as the Waverly (as in Waverly County Club). A minor slip, if you will.
Members of the landmarks commission thanked him for his flexibility. "We asked for some real changes and we've seen some real changes," said Kristen Minor, commission chair. Anne
Mahoney, an architect who sits on the commission, said the result “strikes the
right balance between respecting the historic district and a restrained
contemporary attitude.”
If Thompson was fatigued by the sequence of commission
meetings, he didn’t show it. “Thank you
so much for the process,” he told the commission and the city staff. “It has been a delight. I'm looking forward to construction."