Swiss architecture studio Herzog & de Meuron has unveiled the first ideas for the Sixth & Blanco project encompassing an entire city block of mixed-use infill development in the Sixth & Blanco Street district, located at the intersection of West Sixth Street near its intersection with Blanco Street in Austin. It will be Herzog de Meuron's first project in the state of Texas, USA.

Adjacent to downtown and the Colorado River, the project's location, combined with existing local storefronts, fine restaurants, shops, galleries, generous tree-lined streets, and the walkability of the surrounding Clarksville neighbourhood, have made it one of the most desirable districts in Austin.
The complex designed by Herzog & de Meuron will have restaurants, shops, a hotel and a residential area, which will be incorporating existing stores and houses, on the site that date back to 1920, according to a presentation earlier this week by local developers Riverside Resources to the Architectural Review Committee of the city’s Historic Landmark Commission.

Built from timber, beyond the street front, the development's entire ground floor will be dedicated to shops and restaurants. Offices will be located on the floor above with a 60-room hotel on the second floor and two storeys of private residences at the top of the building. According to the architecture studio, the materials chosen will use a "materials palette aligned with the historic fabric".
 
"From a pedestrian vantage point, the building is perceived as a series of two-story structures organized around planted courtyards ...instead of a singular uniform gesture, the project is a complex sum of its many individual parts."
Herzog & de Meuron.

Herzog and de Meuron's other US projects include 56 Leonard tower in New York City and an in-progress renovation of Station A of the Former San Francisco Power Plant into an office complex.
 

Project description by Herzog & de Meuron

The Sixth & Blanco project in Austin, Texas encompasses a full city block of mixed-use, infill development in the Sixth & Blanco Street district. Adjacent to downtown and the Colorado River, the project’s location - combined with the existing vernacular storefronts, notable restaurants, stores, galleries, generous tree-lined streets, and the walkable character of the surrounding Clarksville neighbourhood - has made it one of Austin’s most desirable districts.

The challenge and potential of the project are to propose an architecture that takes key ingredients from its surrounding context and distributes them throughout a dense yet permeable program: generous greenery, passively-cooled indoor/outdoor spaces, an active neighbourhood storefront and the use of a materials palette aligned with the historic fabric.

The project fills the site with a continuous horizontal wooden structure. An urban carpet of shops and restaurants occupies the full ground floor, offices on the second floor, a hotel on the third floor and residences on the fourth and fifth floors. From a pedestrian vantage point, the building is perceived as a series of two-story structures organized around planted courtyards. The project steps back from the street and decreases in density as it grows taller, allowing for a network of exterior circulation spaces with gardens, courtyards and porches on all levels. The project brings a human scale and a sense of domestic comfort to all - instead of a singular uniform gesture, the project is a complex sum of its many individual parts.

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Architects
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Herzog & de Meuron. Partners in charge.- Jacques Herzog, Pierre de Meuron, Christine Binswanger, Simon Demeuse.
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Design team
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Lukasz Szlachcic (Associate, Project Director). Bruno de Almeida Martins, Marta Benedetti, Javier de Cárdenas Canomanuel, Massimo Corradi, Catarina Croft, Casper Dam, Giulio Delle Sedie, Sahng O Lee, Veronika Mayr, Benjamin Muller, Maximilian Musiol, Richard Nelson-Chow, Alessandro Racca, Enrico Ricci, Martina Rotilio, Roel Schiffers, Philip Schmerbeck (Associate), Hugh Taylor, Pablo Toubes-Rieger.
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Collaborators
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Planning: Design Consultant.- Herzog & de Meuron, Basel, Switzerland.
Executive Architect. Page Southerland Page Inc, Austin, USA.
Structural Engineering.- Fast & Epp, Vancouver, Canada.
MEP Engineering.- Bay & Associates, Austin, USA.
Landscape Architect.- Ten Eyck Landscape Architect, Austin, USA.

Consulting: Civil Engineering.- WGI Austin, Austin, USA.
Sustainability Consulting.- Atelier Ten USA LLC, New York, USA.
Facade Consulting.- Front Inc, New York, USA.
Facade Consulting.- CDC Consulting Inc, Dallas, USA.
Geotechnic Consulting.- Henley Johnston & Associates Inc., Dallas, USA.
Acoustic Consulting.- SLR Consulting, Houston, USA.
Parking Consulting.- HWA Parking, Austin, USA.
Traffic Consulting.- BOE Consulting, Austin, USA.
Fire Protection Consulting.- Coffman Engineers, Austin, USA.
Vertical Circulation Consulting.- Persohn Hahn Associates Inc., Tomball, USA.
Building Code Consulting.- LCCP LLC, Austin, USA.
Accessibility and Fair Housing Consultant.- Contour Collective, Austin, USA.
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Client
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Area
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0.8 Ha.
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Dates
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August 2022.
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Location
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In the Sixth & Blanco Street district, located at the intersection of West Sixth Street near its intersection with Blanco Street, Austin, Texas, USA.
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Herzog & de Meuron Architekten is a Swiss architecture firm, founded and headquartered in Basel, Switzerland in 1978. The careers of founders and senior partners Jacques Herzog (born 1950), and Pierre de Meuron (born 1950), closely paralleled one another, with both attending the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH) in Zürich. They are perhaps best known for their conversion of the giant Bankside Power Station in London to the new home of the Tate Museum of Modern Art (2000). Jacques Herzog and Pierre de Meuron have been visiting professors at the Harvard University Graduate School of Design since 1994 (and in 1989) and professors at ETH Zürich since 1999. They are co-founders of the ETH Studio Basel – Contemporary City Institute, which started a research programme on processes of transformation in the urban domain.

Herzog & de Meuron is a partnership led by five Senior Partners – Jacques Herzog, Pierre de Meuron, Christine Binswanger, Ascan Mergenthaler and Stefan Marbach. An international team of 38 Associates and about 362 collaborators.

Herzog & de Meuron received international attention very early in their career with the Blue House in Oberwil, Switzerland (1980); the Stone House in Tavole, Italy (1988); and the Apartment Building along a Party Wall in Basel (1988).  The firm’s breakthrough project was the Ricola Storage Building in Laufen, Switzerland (1987).  Renown in the United States came with Dominus Winery in Yountville, California (1998). The Goetz Collection, a Gallery for a Private Collection of Modern Art in Munich (1992), stands at the beginning of a series of internationally acclaimed museum buildings such as the Küppersmühle Museum for the Grothe Collection in Duisburg, Germany (1999). Their most recognized buildings include Prada Aoyama in Tokyo, Japan (2003); Allianz Arena in Munich, Germany (2005); the new Cottbus Library for the BTU Cottbus, Germany (2005); the National Stadium Beijing, the Main Stadium for the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing, China; VitraHaus, a building to present Vitra’s “Home Collection“, Weil am Rhein, Germany (2010); and 1111 Lincoln Road, a multi-storey mixed-use structure for parking, retail, a restaurant and a private residence in Miami Beach, Florida, USA (2010), the Actelion Business Center in Allschwil/Basel, Switzerland (2010). In recent years, Herzog & de Meuron have also completed projects such as the New Hall for Messe Basel Switzerland (2013), the Ricola Kräuterzentrum in Laufen (2014), which is the seventh building in a series of collaborations with Ricola, with whom Herzog & de Meuron began to work in the 1980s; and the Naturbad Riehen (2014), a public natural swimming pool. In April 2014, the practice completed its first project in Brazil: the Arena do Morro in the neighbourhood of Mãe Luiza, Natal, is the pioneering project within the wider urban proposal “A Vision for Mãe Luiza”.

Herzog & de Meuron have completed 6 projects since the beginning of 2015: a new mountain station including a restaurant on top of the Chäserrugg (2262 metres above sea level) in Toggenburg, Switzerland; Helsinki Dreispitz, a residential development and archive in Münchenstein/Basel, Switzerland; Asklepios 8 – an office building on the Novartis Campus in Basel, Switzerland; the Slow Food Pavilion for Expo 2015 in Milan, Italy; the new Bordeaux stadium, a 42’000 seat multifunctional stadium for Bordeaux, France; Miu Miu Aoyama, a 720 m² boutique for the Prada-owned brand located on Miyuki Street, across the road from Prada Aoyama, Tokyo, Japan.

In many projects the architects have worked together with artists, an eminent example of that practice being the collaboration with Rémy Zaugg, Thomas Ruff and with Michael Craig-Martin.

Professionally, the Herzog & de Meuron partnership has grown to become an office with over 120 people worldwide. In addition to their headquarters in Basel, they have offices in London, Munich and San Francisco. Herzog has explained, “We work in teams, but the teams are not permanent. We rearrange them as new projects begin. All of the work results from discussions between Pierre and me, as well as our other partners, Harry Gugger and Christine Binswanger. The work by various teams may involve many different talents to achieve the best results which is a final product called architecture by Herzog & de Meuron.”

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Published on: August 6, 2022
Cite: "Herzog & de Meuron reveals Sixth & Blanco, a new all-timber building in Texas" METALOCUS. Accessed
<http://www.metalocus.es/en/news/herzog-de-meuron-reveals-sixth-blanco-a-new-all-timber-building-texas> ISSN 1139-6415
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