Charles Cunniffe Architects

Rio Grande Park Restrooms

Charles Cunniffe Architects
6. August 2014
West elevation. Photo: Ross Kribbs

The available site required that the building be threaded between a pedestrian pathway and amongst an old stand of Cottonwood trees. The small footprint of the building along with its clean simple gabled form is harmonious in scale to the adjacent buildings and landforms in this area of the park. The building’s design incorporates familiar forms, low maintenance native materials and a color palette intended to blend with the environment. The building’s exterior skin is a Gabion wire crib filled with river rock obtained on-site from the ongoing stormwater pond redevelopment, while the simple gable & shed roofs are of rusted steel reminiscent of Aspen’s mining heritage. Hot rolled steel plate surrounds case the windows and doors allowing deep recessed openings. In response to the city's “Canary Initiative” against climate change, numerous sustainable design features have been integrated into the building’s design, including a greywater garden, composting toilets, daylight & occupancy sensors and a BIPV skylight, which will provide ample day lighting for the majority of the year. Interpretive panels on the building’s exterior will highlight the sustainable attributes and provide educational material about the surrounding area’s history and current redevelopment.

*For more on the Theatre Aspen project, also by Charles Cunniffe Architects, see the American-Architects Building of the Week feature from 2013.

South Elevation. Photo: Ross Kribbs
Site Plan
View through dogtrot. Photo: Ross Kribbs
Entry Level Plan
Southeast corner. Photo: Ross Kribbs
East & West elevations
Interior. Photo: Ross Kribbs
Sustainable attributes
Gabion detail. Photo: Ross Kribbs

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