Tuesday, May 22, 2012

Speaking Architecture

Speaking Architecture
Imagine that every house is a poem, and every skyscraper is a novel. Imagine that each component of a building is a word: beams and columns are nouns; kitchens, stairs and showers are verbs while the windows and furnishings are adverbs; the flooring materials and light fixtures are adjectives.
It’s helpful for me to think of architecture as language, and of each style as a dialect. An architect can be fluent in Colorado Mountain Contemporary. A client likes to speak Bauhaus Modernism. A student learns the grammar of Spanish Mission and French Country. It’s not surprising that designers refer to the stylistic elements of a building (trim details, window types, finish materials, ceiling treatment, etc.) as the “vocabulary” of the architecture.

Christopher Alexander (Emeritus Professor of Architecture at the University of California, Berkeley) suggests the idea of “pattern languages” by which we “speak” our built environments into existence.
Many architectural creeds constrain design by rejecting such-and-such traditions or prescribing this-and-only-this strategy regardless of context. Alexander’s idea of pattern language hinges on the freedom of being able to create an infinite variety of solutions to design problems, responding specifically to each unique situation. A design strategy that might be unacceptable in one context might be the perfect solution in another.
But this doesn’t mean that anything goes. Bad writing is still bad writing, and the rules of grammar exist for a reason. Most likely everyone can relate to the experience of being in a house and thinking “I would not have designed it this way.”
Over time, I’ve begun to suspect that what makes a design successful is the way that its composition responds to the needs and desires of its owners and users. I think about how I feel in a space. That porch makes me feel peaceful. This entryway feels grand and impressive. In the nook I feel secure and snug. I think simple intuition can be a useful judge of the quality of a design.

I think that learning how to “speak architecture” (how to design well) is an ongoing process that I’ll never be truly finished with. I’m slowly but steadily gaining insight and inspiration; I love every minute of it. Working at TKP Architects I get to collaborate with people who have “written” countless beautiful houses, whose experience has taught them what it is to speak architecture that is meaningful, appropriate, and satisfying to those who inhabit it.  



Thursday, May 10, 2012

Betts Lake at Colorado Golf Club


For more than 25 years, TKP Architects has been designing award-winning, custom homes for the West’s most discriminating clients.  Now TKP has brought its skills in working with custom home clients to bear on the design of a new luxury home neighborhood.  Betts Lake at Colorado Golf Club combines architectural style, quality craftsmanship and personal expression with the ease and comfort of main floor living and a low-maintenance lifestyle.  

TKP’s design process for the Betts Lake project, incorporated comprehensive input from targeted focus groups, and meticulous research and study on the lifestyle requirements and desires of today’s luxury home buyer.  We found that our buyers see today's luxury home as smaller, more efficient and more environmentally responsible.  Luxury homebuyers are increasingly casual, so the homes at Betts Lake feature flowing, flexible, open floorplans ideal for casual living and entertaining.

Outdoor spaces are fully integrated living areas, covered, and furnished with fireplaces, built-in barbeques, and even televisions.  Each TKP-designed home offers interior finish and exterior style options that can be selected to showcase the
unique personality of the buyer, and, each design evokes a sense of place, style, and comfort that makes them highly livable and timeless.

TKP Architects’ experience working with contemporary, mountain, and historical styles makes them one of the West’s most sought-after architectural firms.  Their skill, along with the spectacular beauty and quality of the Colorado Golf Club, and the Betts Lake site, has created a one-of-a-kind opportunity for today’s luxury resort home buyer. 

Tuesday, April 10, 2012

Have you ever wondered what Architects do in their free time?

Sitting on the Tipping Point
Hesitation between Rest and Reckless Abandon
Shifting of weight forward, Gravity taking You
To that place where your Kidneys fly into your Lungs
That first BUMP that shortens your spinal column
But you don't care
YOU want MORE!
                                                                                               
The sound of Snow
Shifting from slushy sun softened
to icy crusty crunch of that,
still, in the shade
Finding that BURST of fresh Snow
Full on Powder Facial.

Cruising through the trees
Do I bank left? Do I bank right?
Brake. Lap full of Snow, Sopping Wet.
Cheeks sore from Laughter.
Please, screaming knees; carry me back up the hill.
Just One More, my mantra.

Again and Again
for that one thing
that will make YOU laugh uncontrollably
despite what life has thrown at you
that day,
week,
month.
In that moment,
everything melts away
leaving PURE unbridled JOY.
Happiness in its simplest form.



 
Why do I do this you ask?

I do this so when you invite me to help create a home for parents, children, and grandchildren alike: we capture the perfect views; designate space for keys as well as Christmas trees; AND if so desired, find that perfect combination of slope, speed, and trajectory for those memories of pure joy.

Author's Note: Best results occur when shared with friends and family; and spf is applied under the nose and chin ;).






Wednesday, March 28, 2012

"Any darn fool can make 'em bigger ....."


.........written by Steve Sall:

That was a saying a successful small homebuilder shared with me when I was starting my career and something I will never forget. He is right in many ways. I learned to design homes that were very efficient and compact. I worked in the field building houses and I used what I learned in construction when designing and drawing those small homes. I had always loved to use my Dad’s and Grandfather’s tools to build things growing up but I had no idea until taking a few architecture and structural design classes in college that I would ever love residential architecture as much as I do now.

Designing homes is actually one of my life’s greatest passions. I cannot think of anything else I would rather do than what I am doing now. I find that architectural work does not really feel like work at all! During my career I had been a homebuilder’s “in-house” designer for 8 years then owned my own architectural design firm for almost 30 years before joining TKP Architects. Time flies when you are having fun and doing something you love!  There have been many personal rewards for me doing this kind of work. Although I love winning awards for homes I have designed, I really love hearing from someone living in a home I designed when they tell me how much they enjoy their home. It’s really rewarding to hear from a family that has lived in their home for 5, 10 or more years and have them share with me how much they still enjoy living in the home I had designed for them. I have also had the pleasure of designing two beautiful homes for the former Denver Bronco’s football coach as well as for other athletes and business leaders. I have to admit that it is often very exciting working with celebrities. 

 
Recently, I have found that working with TKP Architects over the last year has been very personally rewarding. Although I have worked with other Architects in my career, I have never worked with a group of Architects that are quite as talented and supportive.  

Another factor that helps make my profession stimulating is that my career has been focused almost entirely on residential architecture. When I work with different families, individuals or builders, it seems like everyone has something “custom” they want incorporated into their design. This makes most of the homes I have designed quite unique with its own special characteristics and style.


I wish everyone could be as fortunate as I have been and have a profession that does not feel like work. Architecture has brought a lot of happiness to my life. To be honest, the only other thing that’s brought this much happiness is the birth of my 2 kids and being able to watch both of them grow up to be such outstanding people.

So, that old saying, “any darn fool can make ‘em (houses) bigger”, has meant a lot to me. I’ve also discovered it takes personal characteristics like creativity, being a good listener, enthusiasm and flexibility to be successful in this business, and that the size or style of a home is not important; as long as it is designed well and it meets the needs and desires of our clients and their families.


Friday, February 3, 2012

Renovation for Several Generations


With a first grandchild on the way, the owners of this timeless contemporary home in the mountains made a bold choice.  They decided to renovate and to add on to their home, with the goals of being able to age in place and to host multi-generational gatherings for a growing family.

The house had three levels, and the addition was designed to step down the hillside to connect the home to a swimming pool at a lower level.  To provide for anyone, of any age or ability, to enjoy all levels of the home, an elevator became a necessity.



The stunning mountain site called for spaces for entertaining that allowed one to experience the scenery while enjoying the fire, the television, or the pool table.  The same spectacular views are seen from the raised bar with glass-enclosed wine room, and a tasting table, which overlooks the adjacent recreation room.  Backlit red art glass and wine bottles in the custom stainless steel rack, along with sophisticated lighting design, enliven the bar in the evening.

Rather than discrete rooms for various activities, our clients wanted spaces to be more flexible, and for families and functions to overlap.  Areas are minimally designated, usually by a few steps or a differing ceiling treatment.  The billiard area overlooks an exercise room with large skylights and beamed ceiling, a level below the family room and close to the pool.  This level also incorporated a pool bath/changing room, steam shower, sauna and massage room, all easily accessed from the swimming pool.



A detached garage with a guest suite above allowed the owners to move their collection of classic cars to their home.  Now a quick autumn aspen-viewing trip can be taken in a vintage Corvette convertible.  The guest suite allows family members to stay for short or long-term visits, while maintaining a sense of privacy.  The forms of the original house are reinterpreted on the detached garage, and the same exterior stone and stucco created a cohesive family compound.

The original home was award-winning when it was built, and the addition and remodel were recently honored as the Best Addition at the 2011 CARE (Colorado Awards for Remodeling Excellence) Awards.  Our clients now have the fun, casual home for family gatherings they wanted, and we hope they will enjoy it for many years!