CAP Architecture Projects Featured by Dezeen
Aug 10, 2020University of Colorado Denver students share architecture projects in the Rocky Mountains
Cottonwood Cabins
A high-altitude lavatory with gabion walls and a reimagined motel feature in this VDF school show of work from University of Colorado Denver's College of Architecture and Planning.
The projects range from built to conceptual and were created by students as part of their graduate and undergraduate degrees in architecture.
While some designed interventions to improve the experience of tourists and trekkers in the Rocky Mountains, others imagined electric vehicle charging stations for Tesla, which are capable of responding to the context in which they are placed.
Name: ColoradoBuildingWorkshop Students, M.Arch, Year 2.
Project: Cottonwood Cabins
Course: Studio 4: Design-Build
Professors: Rick Sommerfeld, Will Koning, JD Signom
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Longs Peak Privies
Long’s Peak, the tallest and most iconic mountain in Rocky Mountain National Park, has become one of the most frequented 14ers in the State of Colorado. To deal with human waste on the trail, the National Park Service (NPS) installed their first backcountry toilets in 1983. Since their installation 35 years ago the technology has deteriorated in the harsh climate to the point that waste is now required to be removed by shovel full, placed into five-gallon buckets, and carried down the mountain using llamas.
Determined to find a better privy design, and a more humane solution of collecting waste, NPS collaborated with ColoradoBuildingWorkshop to re-design and constructed new backcountry privies. The new Long’s Peak Privies explore lightweight prefabricated construction and emerging methods of waste collection to minimize the human footprint in Colorado’s backcountry. The final design solution is a series of prefabricated structural gabion walls. Within the gabions, a series of thin steel plate moment frames triangulate the lateral loads within the structure while stones, collected on-site, are used as ballast. This innovative construction assembly allows for rapid on-site construction (the project was erected in eight days) and an architecture that disappears into the surrounding landscape.
Name: ColoradoBuildingWorkshop Students, M.Arch, Year 2.
Project: Longs Peak Privies
Course: Studio 4: Design-Build