Friday, March 2, 2012

HOPWORKS BIKE BAR LANDS TRAVEL CHANNEL SEGMENT

Portland Business Journal by Suzanne Stevens, Web editor
Wednesday, February 22, 2012

The Travel Channelis back in Portland, this time to feature the city's love of beer, bikes and sustainability.
The show's producers certainly knew where to look to find all three: Hopworks BikeBar on North Williams Avenue.

"Because of our unique position as a place that embodies bike culture, sustainability and craft beer, we're used to travel media coming through," said Bruce Kehe, Hopworks marketing director.
That's not to say having the Travel Channel in the house Tuesday wasn't a big deal. With popular shows like Anthony Bourdain's No Reservations and Adam Richman's Man v Food — both of which have shot segments in Portland — attracting huge audiences, landing a coveted segment can have visitors lining up outside your door.
Just ask the folks at Voodoo Doughnuts. Bourdain's visit back in 2010 helped cement the purveyor of all manner of doughy concoctions as a top stop for Portland tourists.
Hopworks will be featured on a new program called Unpacked, set to debut in April. The Portland segment is slated to air in mid-May.
The show's crew spent about two hours at BikeBar interviewing Brew Master and owner Christian Ettinger. "Of all the spots we've done, this one was one of the best. They had great questions and it went really well. I love being challenged to come up with a good spontaneous reply."
After Hopworks, the crew packed up and headed to Alberta Park to film a game of bike polo — in the pouring rain.
A little rain rarely stops much in Portland. And it apparently hasn't dampened the Travel Channel's taste for the city either.

Tuesday, January 31, 2012

SITEWORKS CREATES OLUKAI'S TRADE SHOW BOOTH AT OUTDOOR RETAILER

Siteworks worked with Greenspace to create OluKai's trade show booth at this years Outdoor Retailer Winter Market event in Salt Lake City. 


JP doing some R&D in Maui




The booth became a secret gateway to real Hawaii, creating OluKai's new hale (Hawaiian home), and  referencing hawaii's rich Paniolo (Hawaiian cowboy) and Upcountry history.
















HOPWORKS RECEIVES INCENTIVE CHECK FOR ENERGY EFFICIENCY UPGRADES

Christian Ettinger of Hopworks Urban Brewery receives an incentive check from Energy Trust of Oregon for energy efficiency upgrades to their brewery operations. Siteworks replaced an out of date chiller, installed a heat recovery system, and added new fermentation tanks which will allow Hopworks to triple their brewing capacity. We are proud to be a part of the Hopworks story.

Thursday, January 26, 2012

ISITE SHOWCASED IN SUSTAINABLE BUSINESS OREGON


Gallery: A look inside ISITE's sustainable space

The build out of the office, completed by Portland-based design-build firm Siteworks, also features some futuristic sustainability features worthy of note.
ISITE, which has just over 40 employees in Portland, purchased the 18,000-square-foot building near Northwest Pettygrove and 20th and overhauled it with financing help from the Portland Development Commission.
Jean-Pierre Veillet, the principal of Siteworks and the brains behind EcoFlats, a net-zero apartment complex that opened last year, took photographer Cathy Cheney and I on a tour of ISITE's new digs. 
Reclaimed shipping containers house an airy conference room. ISITE Creative Director Patrick Craig said the rusty finish was inspired by the patina of a fire-damaged shipping container.


ISITE Design worked with Siteworks to create an office space that is homey and conducive to collaboration. Reclaimed wood from Viridian Wood Products provides accents throughout the space.


Daylight and ventilation is a key attribute of the office. Cubicle walls are covered with natural felt — "That's what goes under saddles," says Siteworks' Jean-Pierre Viellet — a sound absorber. The soft floor was installed by the gym that used the space before ISITE moved in.


The fireplace is especially attractive on a chilly January afternoon.


Interior offices feature their own skylights to let in more natural light. The custom-built LED light fixtures above each desk are wired so that the light level can be adjusted with the click of a mouse. 

A bright hallway leads from ISITE's offices to a cafe space and additional office space on the south side of the building.

Siteworks' Jean-Pierre Viellet shows off the doors from the shipping container which lead into the Brainstorm Room where 14-foot ceilings and a magnetized white board facilitate big ideas.

Tuesday, January 24, 2012

RESIDENTIAL ARCHITECT MAGAZINE FEATURES ECOFLATS

    wheelhouse

    a green mixed-use building serves cycle commuters.

    by: bruce D. snyder
    bencgray.com
    Located on a major bicycle thoroughfare in Portland, Ore., the ecoFLATS project taps a rental market that was hiding in plain sight. “Three thousand bikes are going by every day,” says Jean-Pierre Veillet, design principal at Portland-based Siteworks Design | Build, who aimed the project at bicycle commuters—the “20-to-40 demographic of hip Portland people dedicated to a live-simple lifestyle.” Working backward from market-rate rents, Veillet’s firm produced what he refers to as “a resourceful building, a highly efficient infill building that’s transportation oriented.”
    A cycling-oriented brew pub occupies one of two commercial spaces at street level, where the residents’ entry vestibule provides secure bike storage. The building’s 18 units open onto a three-story loggia, promoting natural ventilation and daylighting. Passive cooling freed budget dollars for roof-mounted photovoltaic and solar thermal panels, which, along with LED lighting, reflective roofing, and an efficient hydronic heating system, put net-zero energy use within reach. (A monitor in the vestibule delivers a real-time readout of how much energy each unit is consuming.) And while there’s no off-street parking, Veillet points out that there are “two Zipcars out front for weekends or going to the mountains.”
    Good green vibes notwithstanding, securing bank financing also required solid income projections, Veillet explains. “If we wanted to do a solar array, we had to save elsewhere. It had to make business sense; that’s how we sold it to the bank.” Selling the concept to the public, however, was easy. “Pro cyclists, bike builders, bike commuters—they just dove on it,” Veillet notes. And with Nike and other outdoors-oriented employers located nearby, “the people are here,” he says. “We could do this again and again and again.”

Thursday, December 22, 2011

ISITE DESIGN COMPLETED

Design and Construction has wrapped up for ISITE Design's new headquarters in NW Portland. Here are some wonderful shots taken by Scott Gerke of the finished space.







Scott Gerke has been a lifelong photographer, currently focusing his career on architectural portraiture. His clean yet striking style brings spaces alive, and Scott works hard to document the spirit and intent of architects, builders, and interior designers.  Scott also spends a great deal of time running the visual marketing department for his family's publishing business called the Moira Press. In his role, Scott takes photographs, provides visual images for business cards and web developement, and manages design jobs.  In his spare time, Scott spends time with his family at their houseboat on the Columbia River, works on his 1974 Dodge Dart, and teaches photography classes at Oregon College of Art and Craft. Scott and JP both attended Pacific NW College of Arts in the late 90s, and it was there that they developed a mutual respect for each other's artistic strengths.  Throughout the years, as JP has developed SiteWorks, Scott has been instrumental in documenting his visionary creations.  Scott has enjoyed the satisfying experience of creating beautiful shots, borne from such glorious architectural models as these.


SCOTTGERKE
Photographer
Location Scout
PO Box 17613
Portland, OR 97217
503.222.7222



Sunday, December 18, 2011

ECOFLATS SHOWCASED ON PORTLAND ARCHITECTURE

EcoFlats: bike-friendly and ultra efficient on Williams Avenue

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EcoFlats (photo by Ben C. Gray)

BY BRIAN LIBBY
Recently I toured the EcoFlats mixed-use apartment building, along North Williams Avenue in Portland with its co-developer, Jean-Pierre Veillet of Siteworks Design Build.
Williams Avenue, once the heart of a thriving African American community, is today well known as a popular bike route as well as a burgeoning retail area of restaurants, cafes and shops. The building deliberately aspires to cater to the cycling community and demographic. On the ground floor of the building, for example, is Hopworks Bike Bar. “Some 3,000 riders a day pass by Mr. Ettinger’s new brewpub,” the New York Times’ Linda Baker writes of Hopworks in a recent feature about the neighborhood and catering to cyclists. “It has racks for 75 bicycles and free locks, to-go entrees that fit in bicycle water-bottle cages, and dozens of handmade bicycle frames suspended over the bar areas.”
There are no automobile parking spaces for tenants, but the 18-unit building has storage for 30 bikes. “Cyclists are a great potential market for businesses that want people traveling at human-scale speed and will stop and buy something,” Roger Geller, the city’s bicycle coordinator, also told Baker.
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Hopworks Bike Bar on the EcoFlats ground floor (photo by Scott Gerke)
Eco Flats is one of 15 building projects aiming toward net-zero operations through a pilot program launched in 2009 by Energy Trust of Oregon. Co developed by Doug Shapiro, it was designed to use approximately 60 percent less energy than a building constructed to code stipulations. Veillet says actual savings have been higher, approaching 80 percent. In the ground-floor entry to the apartments via elevator, a flat-screen TV affixed to the upper wall conveys in real time the amount of energy being used by each unit as well as how much energy is being generated by a rooftop array of solar panels.
“It took two years to convince the bank, but it was filled with tenants in 30 days,” Jean-Pierre Veillet says. “This isn’t a political statement. It’s something easy we can do now that saves 80 percent of the energy.”
The building’s architect is Works Partnership, the Portland firm that has won a slough of design awards and acclaim over the past decade for both new buildings like bSide6 and renovations like the Eastbank Commerce Center. (Rick Potestio, another of the city's top architects, also contributed early in the project.) Curiously, though, you won’t find the EcoFlats in Works Partnership’s website portfolio. This doesn’t seem to be because Works has washed its hands with its client or that there was friction. It’s a successful project economically, and I would argue aesthetically as well. But Veillet (whose work includes the expansion of Portland restaurant Genoa as well as a pop-up store in Manhattan for clothier Nau, also featured in the Times), is a  blend of builder and designer, more so than just the contractor-led method the name Siteworks Design-Build would indicate.
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Ecoflats (photos by Brian Libby)






















“I respect Bill and Carrie as a architects. Bill is very dynamic with his design sensibility and capturing a building in the larger built environment. Carrie is brilliance in a bottle,” Veillet says of the relationship. “But EcoFlats is not a project that was fully under their control. I had the role of main contributor of funds, was heavily involved in design, ultimately responsible to the construction, and the promoter to the banks and PDC to gather their support. They are not a stamp-providing architecture firm and this one is a tweener. I provided the seed, they all helped it grow, then I trimmed the bush.”
From a visual, aesthetic point of view, EcoFlats looks just like what it is: a handsome although maybe not outright beautiful building that resembles Works projects like bSide 6 in the three dimensional quality of its façade, yet perhaps lacks the detail and rigor of a full-fledged Works Partnership piece of architecture. Yet this wasn’t something Veillet and Works fell into; at least from Veillet’s point of view, it was an intentional, pragmatic move that has resulted in exceptional efficiency yet reasonable rental rates.
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EcoFlats (photos by Ben C. Gray)
What’s more, although the EcoFlats look is not a rigidly pristine one, it has a slightly rough-and-tumble quality that is not unsuccessful. The more I got to know the building, the more I came to like it.  That’s in part because of materials such as reclaimed timber used in the upstairs walkway, or ceramic-coated siding, a Japanese import that modulates the building’s temperature swings by absorbing heat or cold and ventilating it before the building core absorbs it.
I also particularly enjoyed the metal-mesh screens on the front facade and how they appear almost like drapery only more industrial. The facade here seems reminiscent to my eyes not only of Works' bSide6 but also Holst Architecture's celebrated Belmont Lofts.
And you can’t talk about the building of the EcoFlats without considering the timing: a so-called Great Recession in which government and nonprofit incentives exist for green projects but banks have been extraordinarily reluctant to lend. That Veillet was able to line up support and collaboration from the Portland Development Commission, the Energy Trust of Oregon to make his project both pencil out and receive funding is no small feat.
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EcoFlats interior and back courtyard (photos by Ben C. Gray)
In the end, there are buildings that win awards for their sculptural quality, and others which find their prestige being certified by LEED or other green building rating systems, but both are a small minority of what gets built. I think of the EcoFlats as an efficient building like those with green certifications, and more than hinting at the kind of design presence on the street that turns heads, be they of passers by or design juries. If it’s more of a DIY version that wears its pragmatism on its sleeve, the EcoFlats also delivers ample helpings of both function and form, all at a time when the wheels of the building machine have been grinding at their slowest time in a generation. It’s hard not to hoist a mug of beer or pipe a bike wheelie in response.

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