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Consilium Design welcomes Landscape Architect Julie Hendricksen to the team

Consilium Design welcomes Landscape Architect, Julie Hendricksen to the team

Denver CO – Consilium Design is proud to announce that Landscape Architect, Julie Hendricksen has joined their growing team!  Julie brings over 15 years of experience in residential, commercial and community master planning.  She has worked on many notable projects, such as Copper Mountain, Butterfield Trails and Southpark Business Park. She received her degree in Landscape Architecture from Utah State.

Consilium Principal, Craig Karn stated, “Julie has hit the ground running!  She is a talented planner and designer with strong leadership skills.  We are looking forward to her input on many of the exciting projects that we have on the boards.”

Julie brings a wide range of experience including design-build, staff management and strong connections in the industry.  She is enthusiastic about joining Consilium and says, “Consilium has some serious momentum right now and I am really excited about this opportunity!

Julie’s passion for art, horticulture and land stewardship is reflected in her designs from concept to completion.

Please feel free to welcome Julie to the Consilium team, jhendricksen@consiliumdesign.com

Media Contact:
Kim Ketchel, Consilium Design
303-224-9520 x23
kketchel@consiliumdesign.com

Consilium Design Has A New Home!

‘Tis the season! Oh wait, not THAT season…it’s MOVING season! At least for Consilium Design!

As of Friday, November 16th, our new office address is:

2755 South Locust Street, Suite 236, Denver CO 80222

We are now located just off of I25 and Yale…if you are in the neighborhood, please come by and say hello! Also, be on the lookout for an office-warming invitation from us…coming soon!

Our phone number remains the same, however our phones may temporarily be down on Thursday the 15th, please call Kristie at 303-915-2840 or Kim at 303-523-0937 if you need to reach any of the staff, and we’ll get you connected.

All the best, your team at Consilium Design

Consilium Design Announces Unanimous Approval of Haskins Station in Arvada, Colorado

For Immediate Release:
Date: October 30, 2018

Consilium Design Announces Unanimous Approval of Haskins Station in Arvada, Colorado

Centennial CO – Consilium Design is proud to announce that the Arvada City Council has unanimously approved the preliminary development plan for Haskins Station in Arvada, Colorado.

Together with development partner SSM Ridge LLC, we created a master plan of the 61-acre parcel that outlines a transit-oriented development with strong multi-modal features. Residents will enjoy pedestrian and bicycle trails and connectivity to the Ward Street Station, as it is within easy walking distance from these homes.

Haskin’s Station features a stunning mix of 5 different home product types; from single family patio homes to 3-story walk-up condominiums. There is a total of 477 homes in this new community which also boasts 32% open space that includes as centrally located park as a focal point.

The development team was diligent in working with the surrounding community to make certain that Haskin’s would fit well into the culture of the area.

Chris Elliott, Manager of SSM Ridge, LLC says, “We have a history of creating successful communities in Arvada; Leyden Rock, Richard’s Farm, Whisper Creek, so we know and love this community. We are thrilled to take the next step in bringing Haskins Station to life.”

Consilium Principal, Craig Karn stated, “This community is going to be great, we are elated by this approval. Haskins Station is going to be an award-winning community, we feel very certain of that!”

Media Contact:
Kim Ketchel, Consilium Design
303-224-9520 x23
kketchel@consiliumdesign.com

The Changing Marketplace of Master-Planned Communities

In the most recent edition of The Meyers Edge Ali Wolf, Director of Economic Research told us that affordability is driving the deceleration of the housing market. The first of four things Wolf noted to consider in responding to the changing market was:

“Be strategic. There hasn’t been an overnight change in demand where people no longer want to buy homes, but as prices rise and incomes are stretched, buyers are becoming increasingly picky. This will force the industry to focus more on community and product strategy.”

At Thursday’s Colorado Real Estate Journal’s Residential and Commercial Land Development Conference, “place-making” and “creating a sense of place” were some top buzz words from several developers on the panel.

Our Principal Craig Karn has been talking this talk (and walking the walk for that matter) for over three decades.  I asked Craig to flesh out some thoughts on the topic for me, and here is our conversation:

At which point in your career did you begin to feel the importance of creating a community, not just doing a project?

Very early in my career I started seeing the disconnect between planning and landscape architecture. In early 80’s planning, the “bubble plan” ruled. A few nicely colored land use bubbles and a summary chart and the “project” was on its way. Streets got engineered and the landscape architect came in at the end, often months or years later, and filled in the leftover space with plants. I like to call it “putting makeup on the pig”.

We always begin the community design process with the end in mind. The spaces we plan for early in the community design process become the places where we want to live at the end of that process.

What are some of the components that planners should take into consideration for community-building?

Respect all the stakeholders. The success of the community will depend on it.

Don’t fall into the trap of designing a community around some latest trend in design. People want authenticity. They want to live in a home, a neighborhood and a community that they feel is unique, not just a little newer or a little better than the one down the street.

Establish the image of community that you want to achieve early on and use it as a guidepost for design and decision-making through the entire community development process. 

Can you expand a bit more about the process of community building?

I like to explain it like this – sustainable and successful community design is a three-legged stool;

Leg 1 – the physical environment – The “green” stuff everyone likes to talk about.

Leg 2 – economics – If the community design is not economically sustainable it will fail. Build to the community’s needs and means so the site achieves and maintains economic viability.

Leg 3 – culture – A sustainable community will reflect the history of the site and the greater community while supporting the diverse lifestyles and lifecycles of the residents.

Do you have a favorite community that you have planned?

Sun Kingdom in Chongqing, P R China. The design opportunity was great, but the opportunity to learn and teach was a highlight of my career.

At Consilium Design our focus is on community every day. We design compelling, successful, beautiful communities and neighborhoods throughout Colorado and the U.S.  Please visit our portfolio page: https://www.consiliumdesign.com/portfolio/ and see our latest award-winning work on creating communities. In particular, note Leyden Rock, Boulevard One and Stanley Marketplace.

Consilium Design Invites You To Attend Growlers & Grapes

Consilium Design invites you to attend Growlers & Grapes, a craft beer and wine tasting event benefiting HomeAid Colorado.

You’ll enjoy a selection of wine, beer and appetizers, an auction and entertainment, all of which will benefit HomeAid Colorado’s homeless housing and community outreach programs and will support the development of much-needed housing for the homeless community.

When:
August 29, 2018
5:30 p.m. – 8:30 p.m.

Where:
The Lakehouse at Southshore
27151 E. Lakeview Dr.
Aurora, CO 80016

Tickets:
$85 Early Bird Ticket
$100 After August 1st
*all ticket options include unlimited food and beverage and entertainment for one guest.

BUY TICKETS


Consilium Design is proud to be a sponsor of HomeAid Colorado. If you are interested in supporting this great organization, which makes a critical impact in the lives of the underserved members of our community, please consider clicking here and making a donation on their website.

Consilium Design Earns Pacific Coast Builder Gold Nugget Honors

For Immediate Release: July 16, 2018

Centennial CO – Judges for the 2018 Gold Nugget Awards have named Consilium Design and the team who worked on Stanley Marketplace (Workshop8, White Construction and Flightline Ventures) as one of their Award of Merit winners for their work on Stanley Marketplace, which was honored for Best Rehabilitation Project..

The Golden Nugget Awards honors architectural design and planning excellence and draws entries from throughout the United States and internationally. “Gold Nugget Award winners reflect our industry’s best, brightest and most innovative architects, planners and builder/developers,” said Judging Chairman and Gold Nugget ceremonies administrator Lisa Parrish.

Now in its 55th year, the Pacific Coast Builders Gold Nugget Awards are the largest and most prestigious competition of its kind in the nation. It honors design and planning achievements in community and home design, green-built housing, site planning, commercial, retail, mixed-use development, and specialty housing categories. Winners this year were chosen from over 600 entries from around the world.

Gold Nugget Awards — Recognizing those who improve our communities through exceptional concepts in design, planning and development.

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About Consilium Design:
Consilium Design, located in Centennial, CO, is a landscape architecture, land planning and urban design firm performing work locally, nationally and internationally. Specializing in master planned communities, mixed-use, parks, office and institutional facilities. For more information, visit www.consiliumdesign.com.

 

Media Contact:
Kim Ketchel, Consilium Design
303-224-9520 x23
kketchel@consiliumdesign.com

Consilium Design is proud to welcome Landscape Designer Katie Laughlin to our growing team!

Centennial CO – Consilium Design is proud to announce that Landscape Designer Katie Laughlin has joined their growing team!  Katie is a Colorado native with a passion for natural systems, social engagement, and human-environmental interaction.  She has a Master’s Degree in Landscape Architecture from the University of Arizona and an undergraduate background in Geography and Studio Art. She is practiced in both design-build and high-end boutique landscape architecture firms.

Consilium Principal, Craig Karn stated, “Katie is a great addition to our design team, she is an innovative thinker, very creative and meticulous.  She has brought some fun energy to our studio and has rolled up her sleeves and jumped right in. We are fortunate to have her”.

Katie brings a wide range of experience including sustainable design practices, low water-use planting design, and construction management.  She is enthusiastic about joining Consilium and says, “Consilium Design is an ideal fit for me considering the wide variety of project types and the focus on creating healthy, sustainable, and beautiful communities.  The combination of innovation, open mindedness, and prioritizing our client’s needs makes me proud to be a part of this team!”

Please feel free to welcome Katie to the Consilium team, klaughlin@consiliumdesign.com

Stanley Marketplace wins USGBC’s Mountain West Leadership Award: Outdoor Environments

For Immediate Release: April 4, 2018

Centennial CO – Consilium Design is proud to announce that Stanley Marketplace has been awarded the 2018 U.S. Green Building Council Mountain West Leadership Award for Outdoor Environments.  The honor is awarded to a project that demonstrates innovative use of integrating landscape design into their space and utilizes environmentally responsible landscaping techniques.

The Stanley team, led by Mark Shaker of Flightline Ventures, consisted of Workshop8 (architects), Ware Malcomb (civil engineers), Consilium Design (land planners/landscape architects), and White Construction, displayed unparalleled creativity, innovation and teamwork to create this incredible community marketplace.

“We are so proud to have worked on such an amazing project with this group of very talented professionals,” said Craig Karn, Principal at Consilium Design. “We wanted Stanley to set a standard for adaptive reuse, water quality strategies, urban heat island reduction and overall sustainable landscape design practices for the industry.”

According to Marcel van Garderen, Vice President at Workshop 8, “The architectural vision was to save as much as possible from the existing structure and to celebrate the authentic midcentury character and industrial expression of the building in its revisioning.”

Mark Shaker notes, “We knew we couldn’t bring this historical building to life without also enhancing the spaces around it. Our patios and greenways and other outdoor spaces play a key role in establishing Stanley as a community gathering place.”

The 2018 USGBC Mountain West Awards will be presented at the Rocky Mountain Green conference, May 3rd and 4th, at the Hyatt Regency Denver at the Colorado Convention Center during the 4 p.m. Keynote address.

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Consilium Design, located in Centennial, CO, is a landscape architecture, land planning and urban design firm performing work locally, nationally and internationally. Specializing in master planned communities, mixed-use, parks, office and institutional facilities. For more information, visit www.consiliumdesign.com

About Stanley Marketplace:
Stanley is no ordinary marketplace. Located in northwest Aurora on the border of Denver’s Stapleton neighborhood, Stanley Marketplace is a community of like-minded businesses and people who believe in doing things differently: sustainably, creatively, and with more than the bottom line in mind. The more than 22-acre, 100,000 sq ft. indoor/outdoor space was once Stanley Aviation headquarters. Today, the same innovative spirit that once filled this building has been harnessed to offer community members an urban marketplace featuring goods and services from local, independent businesses, as well as a robust philanthropic and community outreach program. For more information, visit www.stanleymarketplace.com.

The U.S. Green Building Council’s (USGBC) vision is that buildings and communities will regenerate and sustain the health and vitality of all life within a generation. Our mission is to transform the way buildings and communities are designed, built and operated, enabling an environmentally and socially responsible, healthy, and prosperous environment that improves the quality of life.

Media Contact:
Kim Ketchel, Consilium Design
303-224-9520 x23
kketchel@consiliumdesign.com

Consilium Design’s Barnabas Kane will Conduct Training on Water-Use Strategies and Rainwater Harvesting

Consilium Design’s Barnabas Kane, one of our Senior Landscape Architects and a hydrology expert will be conducting two workshops in Prescott, Arizona in April.

Participants will learn about local landscape planning and water use at the Citizens Water Advocacy Group (CWAG), at the Granite Peak Unitarian Universalist Congregation building at 882 Sunset Avenue, Prescott, Az. from 10:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. Saturday, April 14.

Later that afternoon, from 3:00 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. at the Prescott Public Library, Kane will offer a second workshop on rainwater harvesting as part of Librarypalooza.

Consilium Design and Barnabas invite you to join in and learn about water strategies and design!

The Consilium Interview Series – Barnabas Kane

For our first installment of the Consilium Interview Series, we will be conducting staff interviews to give you a chance to meet some of the incredible members of our team. We recently conducted the following Q&A with Barnabas Kane, Senior Landscape Architect of Consilium Design.


Where did you grow up?

Rural burbs of NYC, Westchester County from 0-9. Extremely rural Northern Vermont, 9-18.

Were you influenced at an early age by architecture, landscaping, etc.?  If not, what or who WERE you influenced by?

My major influence was my father, Tom Kane, he is a Landscape Architect.  So, I grew up with a critical eye for art, design, architecture. And a huge appreciation for historic buildings, gardening and a love of nature.

What was your path to becoming a LA?

I interned at my Dad’s office during the summers, then worked for him full time after high school. I considered Industrial Design but settled on Landscape Architecture at UMASS Amherst.

How did you end up in Colorado?

I lived in Arizona for 23 years, camped all over the west. In 2014, we moved to Leadville, Colorado for my wife’s job and LOVED IT!

Where were you before joining CD?

I had my own Landscape Architecture firm in Arizona.

What do you like/love about what you do?  What gets you passionate about a project?

Making sense of overlapping systems and energies, turning them into a beautiful functional product, problem-solving, identifying synergies, changing peoples lives.

Do you have a favorite project that you have worked on?

Naropa University in Boulder (not yet built), and the SW Wine Center in Cottonwood Arizona

Advice for people just starting out in LA?

Get good at presentation mediums. Learn as much as you can about Architecture.  The tricky part is getting it built, not getting it designed.

Now some silly fun questions:

Dog or cat?

Cat

His/her name?

Tiger Lily aka Honey Badger

 

Favorite song (yes you have to pick just one)

Honky Tonk Woman