PARK AND POLK

PARK AND POLK
© Matthew Segal

PARK AND POLK

Jonathan Segal Architect

LOCATION
San Diego, United States

PHOTOGRAPHS
Matthew Segal, Jeff Durkin

AREA
100000 ft²

YEAR
2018

CATEGORY
Mixed Use Architecture, Sustainability, Residential

ENGINEERING
DCI Engineers

MANUFACTURERS
Graphisoft, Tremco, Arcadia Inc., Firestone Building Products, Leviton, Bentley Mills, Cim, Dal Tile, Enphase, Lg Hvac, Lg Solar, Siemens Electrical, York Hvac

LEAD ARCHITECTS
Jonathan Segal Faia, Matthew Segal Aia

DESIGN TEAM
Greg Yeatter, Matthew Segal, Jonathan Segal

CONSULTANTS
David Nutter Electrical Engineering, Bob Succup Civil Engineerin, J Geyer Plumbing

Text description provided by architect.

Once the site of a large church, this empty site sat unoccupied as a blighted fenced dirt lot for nearly 10 years.

PARK AND POLK
© Jeff Durkin
PARK AND POLK
© Matthew Segal

Jonathan Segal FAIA acquired the site and through the community review process, the building’s mass and program developed.

This mixed-use project contains 43 residential lofts, 4 very low-income affordable units, 7 office studios, and ground-floor retail spaces.

PARK AND POLK
© Matthew Segal
PARK AND POLK
© Jeff Durkin

Unlike most buildings with very low income-affordable housing, this project did not accept any government funding or tax incentives.

PARK AND POLK
© Matthew Segal
PARK AND POLK
© Matthew Segal

Jonathan Segal FAIA, being both the architect and developer of the project, absorbed all costs.The dynamic mix of uses throughout the building engages tenants, creating community in both living and working. 

PARK AND POLK
© Matthew Segal
PARK AND POLK
© Matthew Segal
PARK AND POLK
© Matthew Segal

When viewing the building from a distance on Washington Street or along Park Boulevard, the glass and concrete objects stand above its surroundings.

Rotating around, the bold shape of the ‘H’ floor plan inverts the typical mass-produced donut-shaped buildings. Instead, large voids are created on the perimeter drawing the depth of the structure inward and lightening the legs of the “H”.

PARK AND POLK
© Matthew Segal
PARK AND POLK
© Matthew Segal

Spanning nearly 80 feet, the roofline bridges seamlessly connecting the ‘H’ legs to each other to retain the cube form of the building.

This inversion allows for all units to have daylight, visual connectivity with the street as well as large outdoor deck areas. Privacy is still maintained by careful arrangement of the floor plans, private and public areas, and solid massing.

PARK AND POLK
© Matthew Segal
PARK AND POLK
© Matthew Segal

The western elevation has thin delicate fins tha provide lighting and heat control. When traveling up and down Park Boulevard the articulating façade is rhythmically changing.

Light romantically defines different shadows as the sun passes and the form, which can appear as a solid mass, breaks apart into the individual linear elements.

PARK AND POLK
© Matthew Segal
PARK AND POLK
© Matthew Segal

The fins, modeled off of vintage car grilles, were delicately cast in place and taper from only three inches at the face to six inches where they bite into the slab cantilevering off of the building.

PARK AND POLK
© Matthew Segal
PARK AND POLK
© Matthew Segal

Along Park Blvd, two rows of large trees line the street and define what Park Boulevard should be. The ground floor commercial engages the street with floor-to-ceiling glazing and a carved-out corner allows for protected outdoor seating and pedestrian engagement.

PARK AND POLK
© Jeff Durkin
PARK AND POLK
© Matthew Segal
PARK AND POLK
© Matthew Segal
PARK AND POLK
© Matthew Segal

At the rooftop large olive trees in oversized concrete planters shelter a large communal outdoor space and cooking area.

This rooftop patio allows for building tenants and guests to congregate together while enjoying the unobstructed expansive views in all directions.

PARK AND POLK
© Jeff Durkin
PARK AND POLK
© Jeff Durkin

At both the north and the southern ends of the first-floor roof massive above-ground planters are dedicated to naturally drought tolerant grasses and an olive tree that filters stormwater.

At both the north and the southern ends of the first-floor roof massive above-ground planters are dedicated to naturally drought tolerant grasses and an olive tree that filters stormwater.


PARK AND POLK
Plan - Site
PARK AND POLK
Plan