Holt Watters Field Camp Phase I | 2022

Phase I of the Holt Watters Field Camp (formerly referred to as the Cape Shirreff Field Camp) design build project was completed in February of 2023. Plans for Phase II are currently underway and are scheduled to be completed in February of 2024.

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), National Marine Fisheries Service (NOAA Fisheries), Antarctic Ecosystem Research Division (AERD), located at the Southwest Fisheries Science Center (SWFSC), has conducted integrated ecosystem assessments around the Antarctic Peninsula and South Shetland Islands since 1986. AERD manages and implements the U.S. Antarctic Marine Living Resources Program (U.S. AMLR Program). The principal objective of the U.S. AMLR Program is to collect data and perform analyses that form the basis of scientific advice relevant to management of all fisheries in the Southern Ocean, with a particular emphasis on the Antarctic krill fishery.

For over 20 years, four to eight NOAA staff have occupied the field camp during Antarctica’s austral summer (approximately October to March), conducting scientific research on the population dynamics, behavior, diet, and survival of Antarctic seabirds (e.g., skuas, gulls, and penguins) and pinnipeds (fur seals and seals). Because of the COVID-19 pandemic, 2020 was the first year the camp was not occupied since it was built. The camp was reopened for an abbreviated field season in December 2021. Each year, researchers have made repairs to extend the life of the structures; however, the camp has now degraded beyond the point of repair, and thus requires replacement.

In 2021, NOAA Fisheries awarded a contract for the replacement of the facilities at Cape Shirreff, now called Holt Watters Field Camp, to a partnership of three entities, including a new, woman-owned small business, Bespoke Project Solutions, an award-winning architecture firm, OZ Architecture, and the Colorado Building Workshop's design build certificate program for students pursuing a Master of Architecture degree within the Department of Architecture at CU Denver. The scope and design of the rebuild project include flat-packable prefabricated structures, weather-resistant construction, an off-grid power system, and housing and laboratory space for 8 scientists. The new buildings will enable the continuation of NOAA Fisheries’ long-term science-based, ecosystem-based approaches to management in the Southern Ocean.

Leo Borasio

Robert Cleary

Charles de Pottère

Jennifer Dear

Ciara DeBusk

Adam Dergosits

Casie Hilyard

Benjamin Jaworski

Jasmine Jones

Caitlin Kennedy

Taylor Kortas

Kathryn Landers

Paola Larios

Sean McBride

Carson McKee

Peter Myller

Evan Norkosky

Adam Sangiolo

Katherine Tardif

Jacob Taswell

Antonio Valencia

Erin Walrath


 

Faculty:

Rick Sommerfeld

Will Koning 

 

Principal Investigators:

Bespoke Project Solutions

 

Engineers:

AE Designs

Dake Collaborative

KL&A

 

Electrician:

Mick Cheshire

 

Client:

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)
National Marine Fisheries Service (NOAA Fisheries)
Antarctic Ecosystem Research Division (AERD)


Staff:

Kate Hartung

Connor Rumsey

Austin Hardwoods

Big Sky Insulation

Fibergrate Composite Structures

Fjäll Räven

Glass Systems

Hunter Douglas

Kohler

Legrand

Manko Window Systems, Inc.

Marx|Okubo

The MH Companies

MillerKnoll

Odie’s Oil

Raw Creative

Schafer & Company

SFS Fasteners

Simpson Strong-tie

Snavely Forest Products

VaproShield

Wolf

 


 

College of Architecture and Planning

CU Denver

CU Denver Building

1250 14th Street

2000

Denver, CO 80202


303-315-1000

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