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FORT 137 NVU18229
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NVU182292
The Fort is located along the fringe at the western most point of the Las Vegas Valley, at the crossing into natural untouched Bureau of Land Management (BLM) land. The site benefi ts from unobstructed views of the Red Rock Canyon Conservation Area to its northwest and low-lying hills with trails leading up to Spring Mountain along the southwest. The clients, a family of scientists, professional athletes, and avid nature enthusiasts, requested full-service design for a house with a direct relationship to its site, functioning as a base camp for family gatherings and their active lifestyle. Concerned with the environmental impact, the clients requested an environmentally-conscious design, with as much locally-sourced materials as possible. In response, the house is an open structure, organized into three layers, which radiate from a communal nucleus of indoor and outdoor areas, to a periphery of more intimate and private zones. The layout is designed to be both compact and spread out over multiple single-story volumes, making the program readable as a series of connected rock masses emerging from the earth. Each volume was carefully placed to maximize views of the surrounding untouched land, while controlling the harsh eff ects of the sun, wind, and light. The building pays homage to the old fort structures found on the fringe in the early settlement days of Las Vegas, which relied upon site-sourced materials and tried-and-true techniques of building in an arid climate. The overall design limits its environmental impact through design strategies, such as, passive cooling, day-lighting, thermal mass, living roofs, photovoltaic panels, radiant heating, rain water harvesting, and local and site sourced no maintenance materials. These strategies off set the home’s carbon footprint, reducing its dependence on the grid, all while providing good stewardship for the land. As a result, the building is robust and anchored in the landscape, but stands alone; a fort along the fringe immersed in its tranquil landscape.
FORT 137
PROJECT NARRATIVE
LOCATION
CHALLENGE
DESIGN RESPONSE
NVU182293
PASSIVE COOLING Operable North and South facing windows for cross-ventilation, passive cooling, and daylighting.SOLAR SHADING Roof overhangs to minimize solar heat gain. Providing shade during summer months, while allowing penetration during winter months.PHOTOVOLTAICS + SOLAR HOT WATER Reduce dependency on the grid, domestic hot water and radiant heating.THERMAL MASS Concrete slab with fl y ash and radiant heating.LIVING ROOF Indigenous plants and thermal mass + high effi ciency rigid insulation at roof to minimize solar heat gain and surface runoff eff ect.SOLAR ORIENTATION Minimal glazing at west and east facing exposures.SITE SOURCED MATERIALS Stone from the site, a no maintenance materials, will be used for exterior/interior walls, pavers, concrete, foundation fi ll, and erosion control.RAINWATER HARVESTING Reduce dependency on local reservoirs, for irrigation and other non-potable applications.INDIGENOUS LANDSCAPING Drought tolerant landscaping with previous ground cover, increasing on-site infi ltration.ZERO VOC All materials, including interior paint and wood fi nishes.LOW-E GLAZING High performance windows and doors reduce solar heat gain.
SUSTAINABLE DESIGN INTENT AND INNOVATION
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*Not all numbers appear on image, refer to page 4 (Section View)
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N6
NVU182294
SUSTAINABLE DESIGN INTENT AND INNOVATION
PASSIVE COOLING Operable North and South facing windows for cross-ventilation, passive cooling, and daylighting.SOLAR SHADING Roof overhangs to minimize solar heat gain. Providing shade during summer months, while allowing penetration during winter months.PHOTOVOLTAICS + SOLAR HOT WATER Reduce dependency on the grid, domestic hot water and radiant heating.THERMAL MASS Concrete slab with fl y ash and radiant heating.LIVING ROOF Indigenous plants and thermal mass + high effi ciency rigid insulation at roof to minimize solar heat gain and surface runoff eff ect.SOLAR ORIENTATION Minimal glazing at west and east facing exposures.SITE SOURCED MATERIALS Stone from the site, a no maintenance materials, will be used for exterior/interior walls, pavers, concrete, foundation fi ll, and erosion control.RAINWATER HARVESTING Reduce dependency on local reservoirs, for irrigation and other non-potable applications.INDIGENOUS LANDSCAPING Drought tolerant landscaping with previous ground cover, increasing on-site infi ltration.ZERO VOC All materials, including interior paint and wood fi nishes.LOW-E GLAZING High performance windows and doors reduce solar heat gain.
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*Not all numbers appear on image, refer to page 3 (Axon View)
NVU182295
MATERIALITY
The project uses carefully chosen native and regionally sourced, robust, no maintenance, and long life-cycle building materials that will compliment and evolve with the site as they age and patina over time.
Weathered COR-TEN steel, hot rolled steel, white oak, limestone, and site sourced rocks.
Rather than excavating and discarding the sites deeply layered rocks as a waste product, the sites rock will be sorted and/or crushed down on the job site into the sizes required for their use as the buildings facade cladding, structural concrete, foundation fi ll material, landscape erosion control, site pavers, and access/driveways. The reuse of rocks at all levels, seeks to partners with the environment so that the building not only blends into the ecology of the surrounding landscape, but that it is defi ned by it rather than controlling it.
NVU182296
SITE
CALICO BASIN
SPRING MOUNTAIN
RED ROCK CANYON CONSERVATION AREA SUMMERLIN
N
CALICO BASIN
RED ROCK CANYON CONSERVATION AREASPRING MOUNTAIN
PROJECT LOCATION + CONTEXT
DOWNTOWN
MCCARRAN AIRPORT
THE STRIP
NVU182297
N
WATER TOWER + ENTRY ROTUNDADESERT PASSAGE COURTYARDENTRYLIVING ROOMDININGKITCHENPOWDEROFFICEROCK GARDENENTERTAINMENT ROOMLAUNDRYBEDROOMCASITABBQPOOL + SPAFIRE PITSITE SCULPTUREVIEW FRAME + LOUNGESTAIRS TO OBSERVATION LOUNGEGARAGEGUEST PARKINGPRIVATE ACCESS ROAD
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SITE + FLOOR PLAN OVERLAY HOUSE: 7,300 S.F. LIVABLE SITE: 1 ACRE
21
22
PRIVATE
PRIVATEPUBLIC
PARTI DIAGRAM
PRIVATE
VIEW
VIEW
VIEW VIEW VIEWN
NVU182298
NORTH elevation
WEST elevation
SOUTH elevation
EAST elevation
NVU182299
WEST FACADE
NVU1822910
SOUTH-WEST FACADE
NVU1822911
SOUTH-EAST FACADE
NVU1822912
EAST FACADE
NVU1822913
NORTH FACADE - ARRIVAL APPROACH
NVU1822914
ENTRY ROTUNDA + WATER TOWER
NVU1822915
DESERT PASSAGE COURTYARD
NVU1822916
OUTDOOR LOUNGE AT PASSAGE COURTYARD
NVU1822917
OFFICE + PASSAGE COURTYARD
NVU1822918
CIRCULATION HALL AND ROCK GARDEN AT OFFICE
NVU1822919
OFFICE VIEWING PASSAGE COURTYARD + LOUNGE
NVU1822920
VIEW FRAME LOUNGE + PASSAGE COURTYARD
NVU1822921
LIVING ROOM + DINING ROOM
NVU1822922
LIVING ROOM + DINING ROOM + PASSAGE COURTYARD
NVU1822923
PASSAGE COURTYARD LOUNGE + WATER TOWER
NVU1822924
OBSERVATION LOUNGE AT WATER TOWER
NVU1822925
The building pays homage to the old fort structures in the early settlement days of Las Vegas, which relied upon site sourced materials and tried-and-true techniques of building in an arid climate. As a result, the building is robust and anchored in the landscape, but stands alone; a fort along the fringe immersed in its tranquil landscape.
NVU1822926