Farmers Market Pavilion - view from 8th looking north (this and other renderings by FFA Architecture + Interiors)
Just
a brief blog entry this week, as seasonal obligations and work demands compete
for my limited time: I recently stumbled across the renderings for the new Lane
County Farmers Market pavilion by FFA
Architecture + Interiors. Construction of the pavilion is poised
to take a big leap forward in the coming weeks, as the glulam framing and CLT
(cross-laminated timber) panels are on site awaiting their imminent assembly. The
construction manager/general contractor for the project is Lease CrutcherLewis.
For
FFA, the design challenge was how to accommodate a longstanding agricultural
tradition within an urban setting. The firm looked to greenhouses for
inspiration, settling upon “a simple form that is open and transparent, allowing
the activity inside to be the primary focus.” The design’s simplicity kept
costs in check, ensuring the biggest bang for the available bucks. When
completed before next year’s market season, the pavilion will provide a commodious,
all-season shelter for vendors while being a deferential backdrop to the Farmer’s
Market Plaza and a future Eugene City Hall.
FFA designed the pavilion to open to the surrounding plaza and streets as much as possible. Visitors and vendors will move easily between indoor and outdoor spaces.
View through Polycarbonate Facade to Mass Timber Structure
Indoor-Outdoor Connection to West Park Street
The old
Eugene Producers’ Public Market originally occupied this same site more than a
century ago, so the current Farmers Market Pavilion and Market Plaza project is
a return to its roots. As part of the greater Eugene Town Square project designed by Cameron McCarthy Landscape Architecture & Planning, it promises to help rejuvenate the city’s historic center. The
overall concept is an organic outcome of a multiplicity of
factors, not the least of which was a serendipitous share of dumb luck. The
Town Square project promises to unify the Park Blocks, the Wayne Morse Free
Speech Plaza, and the new City Hall & Farmers Market Block in a way that is
synergistic. The whole will certainly be much more than the sum of its parts.
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