Immagini per progetti
| Nome | Immagine | descrizione | in Progetto |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bullitt Center location |
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The Bullitt Center is a commercial office building at the intersection of the Central District neighborhood, and Capitol Hill, Seattle, Washington. It was officially opened on Earth Day, April 22, 2013 and was designed to be the greenest commercial building in the world, being certified as a "Living Building" by the International Living Future Institute in April 2015. Construction costs for the six-story, 52,000-square-foot (4,800 m2) building were $18.5 million, or $355 per square foot. Including land and soft costs, the cost is $32.5 million. For this price the building provided "tenant ready" space (as opposed to the typical "cold dark shell" that most commercial spaces deliver). |
Bullitt Center |
| Bullitt Center and McGilvra Place Park |
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McGilvra Place Park is a .5 acre public space on the edge of Seattle’s Central District adjacent to the Bullitt Center. It also has the distinction of being the first project to pursue the Living Building Challenge for the Infrastructure + Landscape Typology. Once a forgotten traffic median on a major city arterial, the project is now an activated and enlivened pocket park in an area that specifically calls for more green space in its neighborhood plans. During the redevelopment of McGilvra Place, great care was taken to protect and celebrate eleven century-old London Plane trees on the site. Other improvements include transforming an adjacent street to a public plaza, replacing turf with native vegetation, installing park furniture made of reclaimed timber, and providing improved accessibility to the site. Construction began in February 2013 and was completed in April 2013. The project was undertaken through a public / private collaboration between Seattle Department of Parks and Recreation, Seattle Department of Transportation, Seattle Parks Foundation and the Bullitt Foundation. In conjunction with the development of the Bullitt Center, a neighborhood group was formed to submit an application to the Seattle Parks and Green Spaces Levy Opportunity Fund. Due in large part to the innovative sustainability objectives of the project, it was awarded funding in late 2010. The Bullitt Foundation and the Seattle Parks Foundation led a capital campaign to collect the remaining funds needed to transform this deltoid-shaped urban traffic median into a community park. The Berger Partnership worked with Seattle Department of Parks and Recreation on the project design, with Springline Design providing civil engineering services. WS Contractors completed the work. Environmentally friendly features of the project include the following:
Community benefits of the project include the following:
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Bullitt Center |
| Aerial View of GWL Terrein Neighborhood |
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| Enghave Park in Copenhagen_before/after |
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Enghave Park in Copenhagen | |
| Enghave Park in Copenhagen_before/after |
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Enghave Park in Copenhagen | |
| Enghave Park in Copenhagen_7 |
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