recent news

-Battlement Mesa Park

PARACHUTE BATTLEMENT MESA COMMUNITY PARK

Client: Town of Parachute Recreation Department
Location: Battlement Mesa, Colorado
Project Status: First phase completed in 2017


Located in the heart of Battlement Mesa, this seven acre park will be the first purpose-built Community Park for this development of 5,000 people. Besides providing residents with a place to relax, exercise, and gather; the larger vision for the park is to establish a recreation experience unparalleled in the region.

The Battlement Mesa Company teamed with the Town of Parachute to enlist the professional services of Connect One Design to create a program, vision, and master plan for the park. The process involved numerous Committees, a Master Board, and community-wide design meetings and presentations.

The concept design of the park is evocative of the dramatic surroundings, with landforms at the north end of the park reminiscent of the geologic bluffs that formed the mesa and housing a bouldering wall. Situated at the foot of the wall is the ‘Old West’ play area which encompasses covered wagons, a town main street, old railroad monkey bars, and the thief’s hideout. The park’s landform then cascades down into shallowly sloped plains that house a fitness circuit and mountain bike course. Finally, an alluvial fan-like area that will showcase a small botanical garden serves as the entrance from the adjacent parking area.

This project won a 2019 CCASLA Merit Award.

Design Elements

· Design Anchored in Regional Environment
· “Old West” Play Area
· “Colorado Water Use” Themed Spray Park
· Covered BBQ/Gathering Areas
· Paths and Trails
· Fitness Circuit
· Mountain Bike Skills Course
· Parking
· Multiple Rest Rooms
· Performance/Large Gathering Space
· Xeric Demonstration Garden
· Re-Vegetation with Native Species
· On-site Storm Water Management
· Porous Paving Applications

Services

· Coordination with the Town of Parachute and the Common Grounds Park Committee
· Master Planning Through 20% DD
· Cost Estimating
· Multiple Public Presentations
· Assistance in Securing Grants and Other Monetary or Labor Donations

Website Links

· Battlement Mesa

-RESIDENCE 1

RESIDENCE 1

Client: Private
Project Status: Completed 2016


This property is located adjacent to a pond and a public trail easement. In order to meet Aspen zoning regulations, the first story of the house was suspended, as opposed to demolished, while a basement was built. To maximize the basement area, a 16-foot soil nail wall was installed as close as possible to the trail easement. C1D then designed and teamed with Shachtman Studios out of Denver to create an artistic installment of corten pipes that follow the vertical and horizontal contours of the soil nail wall. In addition to its striking sculptural aesthetic, the pipes were planned to meet code regulations and serve as a guard rail. This corten pipe was mirrored with a corten plate retaining wall on the edge of the terrace. Echoing the curvature of the corten pipes, a circular hot tub sits on a multi-level curvilinear deck. The deck is made from ipe to soften and add warmth to the north-facing, sunken terrace, and provide contrast to the rectilinear form of the residence.

This property also includes a black granite water feature surrounded by Mexican Feather Grasses, which provides a focal point from the main outdoor dining terrace and creates white noise to distract from traffic.

Design Elements

· Corten Pipe Wall
· Hot Tub
· Granite Paving
· Linear Fire Feature
· Granite Water Feature
· Contemporary Planting

Services

· Schematic Design through CA

Website Links

· Forum Phi Architects
· Shachtman Design Studios
· Draper White Photography

DENISON RESIDENCE

DENISON RESIDENCE

Client:
Location: Aspen, Colorado
Project Status:
color bar, yellow

Design Elements

·

Services

·

Website Links

·

news archive

Public Phase of Basalt Master-Plan Process Nears the End
Aspen Daily News
Basalt residents and other concerned parties in the midvalley had one last chance to weigh in on the town’s forthcoming master plan en masse last week during a public open house at Basalt High School.
(https://www.aspendailynews.com/news/public-phase-of-basalt-master-plan-process-nears-the-end/article_22bd5814-0cd9-11ea-8a3f-4b0d39886130.html)

Basalt River Park

Basalt River Park Finally Taking Shape with $1 Million Plan
The Aspen Times
After years of planning, gnashing teeth in a political battle and a costly relocation of mobile homes, Basalt is finally ready to add amenities to its River Park.
(www.aspentimes.com/news/local/basalt-river-park-finally-takes-shape-with-1-million-plan)

Basalt Residents Can Help Settle Density, Other Issues at Wednesday Open House
The Aspen Times
Basalt residents will be able to weigh in Wednesday night on everything from the development density on four key parcels of land to whether more art should be displayed in public spaces.
(www.aspentimes.com/news/basalt-residents-can-help-settle-density-other-issues-at-meeting-tonight)

New Town Park Designs Shown to Snowmass Town Council
The Aspen Times
Snowmass Parks, Recreation and Trails officials presented a handful of conceptual drafts of the Town Park Master Plan renovations to Town Council on Sept. 16.
(www.aspentimes.com/snowmass/new-town-park-designs-shown-to-smass-council)

Basalt Gets First Look at River Park Proposals
Aspen Daily News
Members of the Basalt Town Council, the Planning and Zoning Commission and the Parks, Open Space and Trails Committee got their first look Wednesday afternoon at two proposed designs for the Basalt River Park in the heart of downtown.
(www.aspendailynews.com/news/basalt-gets-first-look-at-river-park-proposals/article_61546f04-e006-11e9-a095-af5714836d42.html)

A Reminder for Responsible Landscaping
Aspen Snowmass | Sotheby’s International Realty
As the Roaring Fork Valley’s vivid green surroundings turn to glowing gold in the coming month, residential, commercial and public space landscapes will face a transition, too, which require special attention to sustaining the season ahead.
(www.aspensnowmasssir.com/archive/a-reminder-for-responsible-landscaping)

Mountain Muse
luxe interiors + design
A whimsical Aspen home connects to its surroundings with natural hues and modern forms.
(connectonedesign.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/LX_CO58_HOM_Dulcinea_10.pdf)

Aspen Residence by CCY Architects
Architectural Record
The project site is located at the end of a mountain road with panoramic views of Colorado’s Elk Mountain Range. Nestled in a grove of Aspen trees, the public realms of the house capture the views and sun while some of the more private spaces embrace the solitude and shade of the trees.
(https://www.architecturalrecord.com/articles/12893-aspen-residence-by-ccy-architects)

City of Aspen Supportive of Controversial Trail to be Built in Castle Creek Valley
February 6, 2018 — The Aspen Times
Open space and trails officials will go back to the drawing board to design a new trail along Castle Creek Road to make a safer route for Aspen Music School and Aspen Country Day School students.
(www.aspentimes.com/news/local/city-of-aspen-supportive-of-controversial-trail-to-be-built-in-castle-creek-valley)

A Modest Proposal
February 2018 — 5280
The High Lonesome Ranch in western Colorado is big enough to be a national park, but its owners, led by Paul Vahldiek Jr., don’t take their cues from the government. Instead, they’ve developed a unique approach to land management that could revolutionize the conservation movement for both private and public open spaces.
(www.5280.com/2018/01/a-modest-proposal)

A Modernist Aspen Home Pays Tribute to Its Terrain
January 16, 2018 — Luxe Daily
The house that architects Rich Carr and Matthew Smith recently designed for the Aspen landscape looks a lot like a modernist hilltop castle. The arrangement of minimalist forms–perched among towering trees and the Elk Mountains–serves as a multi-generational retreat for a couple, their son and his husband. “Our focus was for the design to embrace the site and the views,” says Carr.
(https://luxesource.com/a-modernist-aspen-residence-pays-tribute-to-its-mountain-terrain/#.X9fesy2ZPUL)

Council Approves Castle Creek Bridge Improvements to Begin in the Spring
January 22, 2018 — The Aspen Times
Aspen City Council last night approved contracts totaling just over $4.65 million for long-awaited improvements to the Entrance to Aspen.
The project’s key component is an 8-foot-wide concrete trail from Bugsy Barnard Park across the north side of Castle Creek Bridge to Seventh and Hallam streets. There also will be new bus shelters both in and outbound, as well as a new intersection and crosswalk location near Eighth Street.
(https://www.aspentimes.com/news/council-approves-castle-creek-bridge-improvements-to-begin-in-the-spring)

Colorado’s Coolest Pools and Tallest Falls
Aspen Magazine
In the landlocked Rockies, the chance to swim somewhere other than a frigid mountain lake or to enjoy the sound of water near one’s home is especially welcome. Add in the opportunity to go beyond the traditional pool design or garden fountain, and the pleasure gets kicked up a notch, or three. This trio of water features—two pools and a series of waterfalls—stand out for the feats of engineering and technological prowess required to create them, and for their seamless integration of the raw and refined.
(https://www.aspensojo.com/articles/2017/7/26/cool-pools-and-tall-falls-that-make-a-splash)

An Aspen Abode Masters Landscape and Interior Design
Luxe Interiors + Design
When a couple from Iowa were ready for a change, they made it a big one. After selling a business they had owned for more than 30 years, the pair set out on an adventure to look for a new home. “We decided to pursue a lifelong dream of living out West,” the wife says. That dream led them to the Roaring Fork Valley, where they landed on a 50-acre ranch overlooking Mount Sopris. “We traveled all over the West and wound up in this valley,” the husband says of the picturesque locale near Carbondale. “It feels like we’re in a very remote setting, yet we’re only 15 minutes from culture and dining. It’s the perfect balance.”
(https://luxesource.com/features/article/an-aspen-abode-masters-landscape-and-interior-desi)

A Redesigned Traditional Palladio Home
Luxe Interiors + Design
When architect Donald H. Ruggles walked into a house in Aspen’s historic West End that a client was thinking of acquiring and renovating, something felt, well, right. It inspired him. It spoke to him. It whispered: “Palladio.” “I realized that the underlying notion was really strong, and that the fundamentals were there; they were just covered up by a lot of remodels and decor,” Ruggles recalls. It turns out the original home, designed by Colorado Springs architect Stan Mathis and built by Aspen-based Thomas Daly, in fact had traces of Andrea Palladio’s nine square grid arrangement. “It occurred to me that we could enrich and expand it,” says Ruggles.
(https://luxesource.com/features/article/a-redesigned-traditional-palladio-home)

City Approves Bridge Design, Hallam Street Improvements
March 13, 2017 — Aspen Daily News
Aspen City Council opted for a $150,000 upgrade in the design of new bus shelters at the entrance to Aspen last week, part of a larger pedestrian-friendly renovation of the corridor from Seventh Street to the Castle Creek Bridge set to launch in May.
(http://www.aspendailynews.com/section/home/174592)

Community, Parents, and Teachers Get Involved
March 28, 2016 — Aspen Sojourner
Connect One Design collaborated on a pro bono basis with the Aspen Elementary School in Colorado to offer the design and execution of a more usable, exciting and educational outdoor space for the students. A multitude of activities keep the rotation of 500 children busy over recess.
(http://www.landscapeonline.com/research/article-a.php?number=28042)

Basalt Completes the “Other” Riverside Park
September 19, 2015 — The Aspen Times
While the fate of the Pan and Fork parcel along the Roaring Fork River in Basalt has hogged attention, the town government has quietly completed the design and construction of a different riverfront park right across the Roaring Fork River.
(http://www.aspentimes.com/news/18244612-113/basalt-completes-the-other-riverside-park)

Aspen Penthouse Fetches $15.8 million
November 25, 2014 — The Aspen Times
A downtown Aspen penthouse reeled in $15.8 million Tuesday, marking Pitkin County’s fourth eight-figure property sale of November.
(https://www.aspentimes.com/news/aspen-penthouse-fetches-15-8-million)

Basalt Honored for Bridge Restoration Project
May 25, 2014 — The Aspen Times
A community project to transform a dilapidated, decommissioned traffic bridge into a pedestrian crossing with the feel of a pocket park earned Basalt special recognition on May 22.
(http://www.aspentimes.com/news/11537721-113/bridge-town-project-basalt)

Roaring Fork Transportation Authority Laying Giant Eggs
May 21, 2013 — The Aspen Times
The Roaring Fork Transportation Authority is laying giant eggs at its bus stations. The oversized eggs are a nod to VelociRFTA, the name of RFTA’s bus-rapid-transit service, scheduled to debut this fall. Bus stations that will serve the speedier, new bus system are under construction along Highway 82 between Aspen and Glenwood Springs; the eggs are a recent addition. They’ve been stockpiled at the new park-and-ride lot being built in El Jebel and have started popping up at various stations, emerging from the ground like paleontological surprises.
(http://www.aspentimes.com/news/6598201-113/eggs-stations-bus-aspen)

New Elk Camp Restaurant Debuts
November 20, 2012 — The Aspen Times
The new $12.9 million Elk Camp restaurant opens for business at the Snowmass ski area on Thanksgiving Day. Located next to the terminus of the Elk Camp gondola, the new restaurant replaces Cafe Suzanne and extends the Aspen Skiing Co.’s master plan for the east side of the Snowmass ski area. “Completing Elk Camp is part of our 10-year, $30 million master plan for our company restaurants,” said Dave Corbin, vice president of planning and development for Skico. “We started this process three years ago with the replacement of the Sam’s Knob restaurant, continued it two years ago with the major remodel of the Merry Go Round restaurant at Highlands, and then proceeded last summer and this summer with the construction of Elk Camp.”
(http://www.aspentimes.com/article/20121121/NEWS/121129992)

Progress in The Park
November 7, 2012 — Post Independent
BATTLEMENT MESA – Backers of an elaborate and ambitious public park planned in Battlement Mesa scored a victory on Oct. 31, when they received a $350,000 grant from the recently established Garfield County Federal Mineral Lease District. Backers of the park, to be located on Sipprelle Drive next to Grand Valley Middle School, say the grant will allow them to take initial steps toward construction. “The first phase is to get surveying done,” said Jerry Mohrlang of the Battlement Mesa community group “Common Ground,” which has been a major player in the park’s conception and design. “We’ve got a long way to go, even with this grant.”
(http://www.postindependent.com/article/20121108/MISC04/121109998)

Basalt Bridge Project a Huge Success!
June 26, 2012 — Roaring Fork Outdoor Volunteers
One of our best attended projects in our 17 year history, the Basalt Bridge Project was a huge success! Over 70 volunteers showed up to help beautify and complete bridge enhancements.
(http://rfov.org/basalt-bridge-project-a-huge-success)

Feds Move Aspen into Warmer Climate Zone
February 24, 2012 — Aspen Daily News
Federal agriculture officials recently released new national climate designations for the United States, confirming for Aspen what you may have already noticed: winter is getting warmer around here. The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) this month released revised zones for “plant hardiness.” It’s the first update since 1990. The zones are effectively used to guide farmers and gardeners on what plants can survive in each area. It’s scientifically based on the average minimum winter temperature between 1976 and 2005. The scale includes 13 zones in the U.S., with 1 being the coldest and 13 the hottest.
(http://www.aspendailynews.com/section/home/151984)

Ponte Vecchio It’s Not, but Basalt Bridge Has Potential
October 2, 2011 — The Aspen Times
Basalt is considering an $80,000 project to make the old 7-Eleven bridge a more attractive place to hang out along the town’s riverfront and a more inviting link in the pedestrian trail system.
(http://www.aspentimes.com/article/20111002/NEWS/111009989)

Recess About to Get More Fun at Aspen Elementary School
September 17, 2011 — The Aspen Times
After years of talk and months of negotiations, bids and fundraising, Aspen Elementary School kids are just weeks away from spending recess on a brand-new playground. “We are almost there,” said parent Lynne Seeman, who has led the charge for the new playground along with fellow PTO member Stacey Greene. “This is the final push.” The “final push” is both figurative and literal. Seeman and Greene hope hundreds will turn out Sunday for the second annual AES Run for Funds to benefit the playground. A 5K run and one-mile family walk (with a barbecue to follow), the event’s aim is to raise money for the playground wish list, as well as raise awareness.
(http://www.aspentimes.com/article/20110917/NEWS/110919862)

2011 Pitkin County Volunteer Awards
June 2011 — The City of Aspen and Pitkin County
The goal of the Pitkin County Volunteer Awards is to honor individuals in Pitkin County for their outstanding service, leadership and civic involvement. There are several award categories including: Children and Youth, Seniors, Health, Community Pride, Education, Good Samaritan, Centennial, Environment.
The 2011 award winners in Education category: Stacey Greene, Lynne Seeman, and Gyles Thornely for their tireless work for the past three years designing, raising funds and building the new Aspen Elementary School playground, in addition to countless hours of additional volunteering in the school.
(www.aspenpitkin.com/Portals/0/docs/Pitkin%20County%20Cares%20Winners.doc)

Race to Raise Funds to Improve Aspen School Playground
May 22, 2010 — The Aspen Times
Every week, Aspen Elementary School kids spend approximately 33 hours in school. Some weeks, they get to run and play around two hours total; when it’s PE week, add another 50 minutes to that amount. That’s a lot of learning, which is a good thing. But it’s not much time for burning the energy that all kids have, and that can be challenging. Adding to the challenge at the school is the playground itself, which is outdated (it hasn’t been updated or improved in 13 years), poorly designed for drainage (the city of Aspen had to stop holding soccer games there a few years back because of the mud and muck), and simply is in need of a complete overhaul. But it won’t be like this for long if the school’s Parent-Teacher Organization has anything to do with it. “We all realized something needed to be done about the playground,” said parent Lynne Seeman, who is leading the charge with PTO president Stacey Greene. “And we also realized we were going to have to take charge and make it happen.”
(http://www.aspentimes.com/article/20100522/NEWS/100529946)