flexiblefullpage -
billboard - default
interstitial1 - interstitial
catfish1 - bottom
Currently Reading

The Wolf Creek Library: ALPOLIC® Materials welcomes a community to its new “living room"

Sponsored Content Cladding and Facade Systems

The Wolf Creek Library: ALPOLIC® Materials welcomes a community to its new “living room"

In this natural setting, material and color selections were crucial to achieving the right balance between attracting attention and blending in


By ALPOLIC | December 7, 2015
The Wolf Creek Library: ALPOLIC® Materials welcomes a community to its new “living room.”

Red and copper tones in prismatic “magma” finish

The new Wolf Creek Library provides something this historical neighborhood southwest of Atlanta never had before. A gathering place for all to share. A communal porch and garden. A living room.

Designed by Leo A Daly architects, this 25,000 square-foot LEED Silver-certified building dominates the summit of a wooded ridgetop – a dramatic setting and form that has come to define the neighborhood. The imposing front façade seems to extend the ridgeline to the sky in a dramatic upward gesture from right to left. The colors appear to shift from deep red to a coppery orange depending on the time, the season, and even where you’re standing.

Through the entryway, the interior space opens up to an expansive meeting room, administrative offices, digital learning facilities, rehearsal and performance spaces, classrooms, a café, and reading areas for adults, teens and children. The flowing plan encourages patrons to explore their own interests while meeting and engaging with their neighbors.

An expansive glass curtain wall frames the forest and lake behind the building, bringing the outside in. Just beyond, a porch-like reading area with terraced seating allows patrons to literally take the library experience outdoors. From this perspective, the building makes a second upward gesture toward the sky in colors of bronze and anodized aluminum. Tying all these elements together are walls of stacked stone suggesting a rocky ridgeline outcropping.

Curtain wall framed in bronze and aluminum finishes

In this natural setting, material and color selections were crucial to achieving the right balance between attracting attention and blending in. For the front façade, the architects originally considered natural copper, but they didn’t want the green patina that develops as copper ages. So they turned to other materials – and found a perfect choice in the exceptional workability and finish selection of ALPOLIC® ACM.

Compared to copper, ALPOLIC® materials provided a more affordable alternative that’s lighter, more stable and easier to fabricate. The finish chosen for the iconic front facade and entryway was a prismatic “magma” using Valspar’s Valflon® paint, based on the incredibly durable and shade-stable Lumiflon® FEVE fluoropolymer resin. This finish evokes the original copper intent, but offers a more vibrant experience.

Avery Sarden, vice president and director of operations at Leo A Daly, explains, “We wanted the shimmer, we wanted the reflectivity, we wanted the shifting colors. Copper has its patina, and in the long view would not have provided that for us.”

Sarden describes how, with changing daylight and seasons, the prismatic “magma” finish “morphs from an arresting red that boldly contrasts with the building’s natural setting to an autumnal orange that complements it. The secondary color of satin-anodized aluminum completes the connection with nature, transitioning to natural stone that seems to anchor the building to the earth.

“As we worked through everything we wanted to do,” Sarden says, “it became obvious. This is the right product for the application.”

See more photos of The Wolf Creek Library and other projects 

Related Stories

| Oct 12, 2010

Full Steam Ahead for Sustainable Power Plant

An innovative restoration turns a historic but inoperable coal-burning steam plant into a modern, energy-efficient marvel at Duke University.

| Sep 13, 2010

Second Time Around

A Building Team preserves the historic facade of a Broadway theater en route to creating the first green playhouse on the Great White Way.

| Sep 13, 2010

Committed to the Core

How a forward-looking city government, a growth-minded university, a developer with vision, and a determined Building Team are breathing life into downtown Phoenix.

| Aug 11, 2010

New data shows low construction prices may soon be coming to an end

New federal data released recently shows sharp increases in the prices of key construction materials like diesel, copper and brass mill shapes likely foreshadow future increases in construction costs, the Associated General Contractors of America said. The new November producer price index (PPI) report from the Bureau of Labor Statistics provide the strongest indication yet that construction prices are heading up, the association noted.

| Aug 11, 2010

Kingspan insulated panels showcase net-zero energy modeling

Kingspan Insulated Panels, Inc. is demonstrating energy modeling programs to illustrate how far Envelope First Strategies could advance beyond Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED), Energy Code and the Department of Energy (DOE) Net-Zero Energy goal of 2025. Kingspan will showcase the models in their exhibit (#954) during the Greenbuild 2009 International Conference and Expo, November 11-13 in Phoenix.

| Aug 11, 2010

Using physical mockups to identify curtain wall design flaws

Part two of a five-part series on diagnosing and avoiding cladding, glazing, and roofing failures from building forensics expert IBA Consultants.

boombox1 - default
boombox2 -
native1 -

More In Category

Codes and Standards

Updated document details methods of testing fenestration for exterior walls

The Fenestration and Glazing Industry Alliance (FGIA) updated a document serving a recommended practice for determining test methodology for laboratory and field testing of exterior wall systems. The document pertains to products covered by an AAMA standard such as curtain walls, storefronts, window walls, and sloped glazing. AAMA 501-24, Methods of Test for Exterior Walls was last updated in 2015. 




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