Design Firm Opens Community Centers at Orange County Great Park MP

Gathering spaces allow seamless transition from indoor areas to the outdoors.

3 MIN READ
Homes in the Orange County Great Park master plan.

Homes in the Orange County Great Park master plan.

Studio One Eleven has unveiled community centers at the Orange County Great Park master plan in Irvine, where builders include Lennar, Pulte Homes, KB Home, TRI Pointe Homes, K. Hovnanian Homes, Taylor Morrison, Richmond American and Shea Homes. The master plan is being built on the former Marine Corps Air Station El Toro.

The recently opened spaces are in four of the 10 neighborhoods emerging at the 1,300-acre Great Park, one of the largest urban master plans in the U.S. They include indoor-outdoor environments including: chef’s kitchen, coffee house, art centers, greenhouse, co-working zones, rooftop terrace, and amphitheater, as well as outdoor rooms and plazas.

“Inspired by the vast canvas of the Great Park, we crafted multiple, artful experiences for its new residents,” said Studio One Eleven Founding Principal Alan Pullman, AIA. ”These spaces embrace the ways people want to live together, fulfilling their needs for creativity and togetherness, with elevated and appealing designs.”

Studio One Eleven served as architect for the community buildings, collaborating with FivePoint, the developer of the Orange County Great Park, and BrightView, the landscape architect for the Orange County Great Park.

Some of the new spaces are specifically programmable, such as the chef’s kitchen, greenhouse, visual arts gallery and coffee house. All maximize the mild climate and open expanses of the Great Park by incorporating indoor-outdoor inventions such as slide-up garage doors and exterior fireplaces. And all of them center on the larger open spaces, parks and trails that anchor each of the Great Park neighborhoods. The three neighborhoods housing Studio One Eleven’s designs are Novel Park, Cadence Park, Parasol Park and Rise Park.

Novel Park

At Novel Park, the community center sets the stage for serendipitous encounters in a community attractive to millennials. In this neighborhood of townhomes are three community spaces: a coffee house (named Cup), the Grand Home, and The Garage. These places expand residents’ living space and encourage social interaction. At Novel Park, Studio One Eleven worked with its partner company RDC, which designed the interiors and provided procurement services, including custom pieces and unique finds such as the vintage motorcycle that is showcased in the common area known as the Garage.

The Garage at Novel Park, with vintage motorcycle. Photo by Tsutsumida Pictures

The Garage at Novel Park, with vintage motorcycle. Photo by Tsutsumida Pictures

The Grand Home is the primary community building, with several gathering spaces. A chef’s kitchen accommodates large parties, spilling out into a large, light-filled living room with soaring two-story, floor-to-ceiling windows. The windows frame a mature ficus heritage tree and the neighborhood beyond. The windows allow contemporary-style pendant chandeliers to become beacons of light in the evenings.

Cup coffee house at Novel Park. Photo by Tsutsumida Pictures

Cup coffee house at Novel Park. Photo by Tsutsumida Pictures

Cadence Park

The Cadence Park neighborhood includes a new, state-of-the-art school and an arts park. It is built for families of all sizes in a mix of architectural styles. At its neighborhood park, Studio One Eleven created site planning, architecture and interiors for three distinct buildings, each for a unique art program – performing arts, visual arts and literary arts.

The primary gathering space is centered on a lowered courtyard to set it apart from the remainder of the park, creating a protected agora for gatherings and events. The arts buildings cluster to create a visually protected space.

Collapsing glass doors slide open at Cadence Park’s Visual Arts building. Photo by Tsutsumida Pictures

Collapsing glass doors slide open at Cadence Park’s Visual Arts building. Photo by Tsutsumida Pictures

Parasol Park

At Parasol Park designers placed the Living Room community center and greenhouse as close as possible to the existing 75-foot stone pine tree. They carved the large plaza out of the ground, blended the roofline into the landscape, and created a garden with a deck beneath the large tree canopy overlooking the neighborhood.

Warm, earthy materials include poured-in-place concrete, Corten steel, oiled teak wood and dark bronze accents. The indoor space has a suspended fireplace and opens onto a large community plaza with park furniture typically found in the backyard.

The greenhouse was designed and programmed in conjunction with The Ecology Center, based in San Juan Capistrano. It offers a “learning garden” with raised beds and outdoor kitchen, bringing community members together for multi-generational gardening workshops.

Public spaces and pine tree at Parasol Park. Photo by Studio One Eleven

Public spaces and pine tree at Parasol Park. Photo by Studio One Eleven

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