flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

A new lease on life for The Gin at the Co-Op District

Sponsored Content Metals

A new lease on life for The Gin at the Co-Op District

The city specified the modern era’s leading sustainability features, but also requested a façade that harkened back to its agricultural roots.


By CENTRIA | September 26, 2017
The Cotton Gin at night

CENTRIA’s EcoScreen perforated screen wall system gives The Gin at the Co-Op District its lantern-like glow effect

Residing on Farley Street in downtown Hutto, Texas, the Hutto Cotton and Grain Co-Op served its namesake community for close to a century. Then, at the turn of the 21st century, Hutto’s population exploded, urging major urban expansion. When the expansion encroached on neighboring farmland, the collection of cotton gins was abandoned for nearly a decade.

In 2012, Hutto city officials asked Austin-based Antenora Architects, LLP to give the facility new life by transforming it into a public event space. The city specified the modern era’s leading sustainability features, but also requested a façade that harkened back to its agricultural roots. The 2008 economic recession severely minimized the project’s scope, but the efficient use of recycled materials and an absence of complex mechanical systems allowed the firm to complete the project with a relatively meager budget of $1 million.

“Their new plan was to use the gins in their current location, with the idea of a pavilion or event hall,” says Michael Antenora, principal of Antenora Architects. “Our design concept tried to preserve the original character of the buildings and make them as eye-catching as possible to be the centerpiece of a new civic block.”

The Cotton Gin during the dayDuring the day, the Cotton Gin at the Co-Op District’s interior remains cool in spite of the harsh Texas sun

 

The final product needed to be visually impressive and functional in Texas’s climate. Just as one would apply sunscreen to shield the skin from the scorching sun, Texas buildings must be built with a façade that can withstand the heat.

With this in mind, Antenora Architects specified CENTRIA EcoScreen® perforated screenwalls with a stainless steel finish.  EcoScreen panels offer a 10–40 percent open area to control light and air movement while elegantly blending industrial and other applications with their surroundings. Designers relied on interior fans and four rooftop turbines to facilitate air movement throughout the facility.

“Despite the hot Texas sun, it’s actually quite cool inside,” Antenora says.

The stainless steel’s durability and corrosion resistance was an important factor in maintaining functionality and preserving long-term investment.

The team from Antenora Architects was attracted to the dual nature of the stainless steel perforated EcoScreen panels, which serve as both a transparent and reflective surface. The building’s luminous aesthetic is created through a combination of natural and artificial lighting. The complex design creates the appearance of a solid, corrugated wall during daylight hours. In the evening, the light filters through the perforated panels to reveal the interior against a solid backdrop.

Meeting its design, performance and budgetary requirements earned The Gin at the Co-Op District design and construction awards from AIA Austin, the Texas Society of Architects the Association of Builders and Contractors. In addition, the sustainability features of the metal earned the building LEED Silver certification.

Tags

Related Stories

Sponsored | Coatings | Aug 16, 2017

Architectural details offer endless inspiration

Railings, screens, canopies, and shading devices punctuate projects and are important aspects of the built environment.

Sponsored | Roofing | Jun 29, 2017

Metal roofs are soaring in popularity in the residential market

The Metal Roofing Alliance estimates that 750,000 metal roofs were installed on U.S. homes in 2015.

Sponsored | Metals | Jun 15, 2017

Inside-out cheese-making: 12,000-sf metal building features an unusual exoskeleton design

In order to maintain hygienic cleanliness inside the facility, smooth, continuous wall surfaces with a minimum number of joints, indents or protrusions is desirable.

| Jun 13, 2017

Accelerate Live! talk: Driving value through process innovation, Jonathan O'Leary, NCI Building Systems (sponsored)

NCI Building Systems’ Jonathan O'Leary discusses why AEC firms must rely on their partners to simplify the business process and minimize risk.

Sponsored | Roofing | May 24, 2017

Duro-Last Duro-Bond Roofing System installed on New England warehouse

Breault Roofing created a way to make the installation process more efficient by requesting mostly tabless sheets and fastening the membrane with induction welding to the purlins instead of a regular mechanically fastened system onto the pan.

Sponsored | Metals | May 22, 2017

Tapered columns can slim down costs

In many metal building applications, straight columns may have more steel than they need.

Sponsored | Coatings | May 5, 2017

Butler Tech Bioscience Center features hands-on learning in bold new building

Butler Tech students can now study and work in neighboring buildings that feature ALPOLIC metal panels coated in Valspar’s Valflon®. 

Sponsored | Metals | May 3, 2017

Steel protection methods

There are robust, well-proven ways to protect steel so it can perform up to its potential virtually indefinitely.

Sponsored | Metals | Apr 28, 2017

Colorful corrugated wall panels provide bright new look for community library

Approximately 2,600 sq. ft. of PAC-CLAD 7/8” Corrugated Panels in five different colors was just what the design team was looking for.

Sponsored | Coatings | Apr 27, 2017

Community center makes a statement in West Sacramento

It takes a team to find the perfect color combination, and this time we accomplished it with the help of CENTRIA.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category




halfpage1

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021