Located in Portland, Oregon, The NM Bodecker Foundation was established in 2017 by Sandy Bodecker, is situated in a collection of repurposed warehouses from the 1950s and a former parking lot in Northwest Portland. Bodecker was inspired by the sense of discovery that comes from traveling and seeing things in new ways.

In essence, the building's design, projected by Skylab Architecture, aims to inspire action and activity. The unique environment seeks to create meaningful engagement, both in person and virtual. It is a kind of labyrinth and the building is an embodiment of that idea.
In developing the program, Skylab Architecture establishes the new multi-story central structure as the functional core of the foundation. The primary spaces open up to each other on the ground floor with places to make art, record music, perform, and skate. Living spaces for the artist-in-residence program are stacked upstairs on the second and third floors, with a view but still connected to the activity below.

Building materials range from salvaged reused items from demolitions to striking contemporary finishes. Interior finishes encompass color and texture: exposed wood beams, mixed carpet designs, unfinished plywood and steel wall cladding, and custom lighting, further enhancing the spatial dynamism.
 

Description of project by Skylab Architecture

The NM Bodecker Foundation was established in 2017 by Sandy Bodecker to provide creative communities with a dynamic mix of in-person spaces for workshops, gathering, and collaboration.

Housed in a collection of repurposed 1950s-era warehouses and a former parking lot in northwest Portland, the Foundation occupies what was originally conceived as Bodecker’s creative home. Bodecker was inspired by the sense of discovery that comes from the journey and of seeing things in new ways; his analog was that of a labyrinth and the building is an embodiment of that idea.

The warehouses were combined, integrated, and reworked into a shifting mix of exterior and interior environments. Taking a cue from Gordon Matta Clark’s “Building Cuts,” the warehouses were cut into and modified while retaining the memory of their historic boundaries. Peeling back the roof of one and slicing the other, the warehouses were remixed and fused together with a new central core building.

The 7,769-square-foot multi-story solution blends the past with the future through the interplay of interior spaces including living areas, as well as a series of informal performance spaces, a state-of-the-art recording studio, and an indoor skate park.

The build-out includes living roofs and nearly 2,000-square-feet of outdoor yards—a third of the site kept as green space to manage stormwater and connect the complex with the natural world. From the street, the rectangular warehouse forms are balanced with complex prismatic forms to create a rich visual composition.

Following Bodecker’s passing in 2018, the Foundation fully occupied the building, embracing the unique mix of spaces and making them available to emerging artists and performers, like-minded organizations, and the collaborative creative community.

One of Bodecker’s goal was to create an environment that inspires openness to explore, learn and find the unlimited curiosity you once had when you were a kid. The collage of activities intersect and overlap to inspire a passion for collection, making, and playing.

By developing the program around these ideas, the new multi-story central structure emerged as the functional core of the foundation. The primary spaces open to each other at the ground floor with places to make art, record music, perform, and skate. The living spaces for the artist-in-residence program are stacked above on the second and third floors, overlooking but still connected to the activity below.

Building materials range from repurposed elements preserved from demolition to surprising contemporary finishes. New-built areas within the complex are contemporary in aesthetic, providing a yin-yang vibe when viewed against the time-worn patina of the vintage elements.
Interior finishes throughout embrace color and texture—exposed wood trusses, mixed carpet patterns, steel and unfinished plywood wall cladding, and custom lighting—further enhancing the spatial dynamism. Materials were selected for their internal integrity, their ability to age naturally, and convey the craft of those who made them.

At its core, the building design aims to inspire action and activity. The unique environment seeks to create meaningful engagement (both in-person and virtual). Open and creative dialogue is at the heart of why the Bodecker Foundation was established.

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Project team
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Design Director.- Jeff Kovel. Project Manager.- Brent Grubb. Project Architect.- Jamin AAsum. Project Architect.- Kyle Norman. Project Architect.- Dustin Furseth. Interior Designer.- Amy DeVall. Design & Visualization.- Stephen Miller.
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Collaborators
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Architecture.- Skylab Architecture. Interior designer.- Skylab Architecture. Contractor.- Skylab Construction Co. Civil Engineer.- Harper Houf Peterson Righellis Inc. Structural Engineer.- Structural Engineering (SCE). Mechanical / Electrical / Plumbing Engineers.- Interface Engineering. Geotechnical Engineer.- Geo Design. Landscape.- 2.ink Studio. Lighting.- Lighting Workshop. Acoustical Engineer.- Coral Sound Inc. AV.- Ambient Automation. Code.- Code Unlimited. Low Voltage.- Ambient Automation. Soils Engineer.- GeoDesign Inc. Building Envelope & Waterproofing.- The Facade Group. Recording Room Consultant.- Michael Cronin Acoustic. Skatepark Consultant.- Dream Land Skateparks. Video.- Stephen Miller.
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Location
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Portland, Oregon, USA.
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Skylab Architecture was established two decades ago in 1999, in Portland, Oregon, USA, by Jeff Kovel and Brent Grubb. Skylab has grown to 27 employees. Both principals migrated to Portland after architecture school. Grubb spent a decade working for Skidmore, Owings & Merrill and San Francisco's Aidlin Darling Design after earning a degree from Ball State University in Indiana. Kovel, after completing his B.Arch. at Cornell University, landed a gig with a Portland-based firm called Architropolis, doing fast-paced projects for retailers and rock stars, most notably a Miami residence for musician Lenny Kravitz. He admired how Architropolis was willing to take on just about any project, of any scope or length.

The firm began developing a repeatable prefab module in 2008, during the Great Recession. From, its Hoke Residence, Skylab firm has gathered momentum with its innovative modular work and wide-ranging commissions, including hospitality work for the W Seattle hotel and the Summit Sky Lodge, an upcoming prefab ski resort in Utah or the just-completed offices of the Columbia Boulevard Wastewater Treatment Plant (CBWTP) in north Portland.
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Published on: December 8, 2021
Cite: "Collage of activities that inspire a passion. The NM Bodecker Foundation by Skylab Architecture" METALOCUS. Accessed
<http://www.metalocus.es/en/news/collage-activities-inspire-a-passion-nm-bodecker-foundation-skylab-architecture> ISSN 1139-6415
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