The
Shoppes at the Creek
Cave Creek, Arizona
Completion 2005

A
boutique retail center, The Shoppes at the Creek
encompasses 17,000 SF within a carefully composed
village of buildings. The pedestrian-oriented center
is settled into the heart of the wild-west town
of Cave Creek, Arizona. To reinforce the frontier
image that pervades this town caught between the
edge of Phoenix sprawl and the beautiful Sonoran
desert wilderness, the project was conceived to
evoke the town's potential first buildings. But
because there are few actual historic buildings
remaining in the town, and, to not confuse the design
with true history, the design does not replicate
or copy historic structures.

The
project's design combines modern planning concepts
and elegant rustic detailing with traditional storefronts
to create a “folk art” sensibility. However
simple and unassuming at first glance, the buildings
carry a sophistication through historical scale, careful
massing and finely crafted detailing.

In
striving to create an interactive town-center, the
project was designed to further enhance the pedestrian
nature of the town. Parking is hidden in the rear
on two levels. Pedestrian access is anticipated from
all four directions with multiple pedestrian access
points on each side. Even equestrian access is accommodated.
All sides of the building are protected by porches,
canopies and portales, creating shady spaces. These
one-story projections also bring the scale of the
two-story building portions down to the human scale
found throughout Cave Creek. And the project successfully
creates the heart of town by engaging the adjacent
neighboring buildings such as the post office, a bank
and a popular restaurant with a huge, oasis courtyard.
The project also anticipates a pedestrian connection
for the undeveloped multi-acre parcel to the rear
of the parcel.

The
historically scaled building elements within the Shoppes'
"village" retain their individuality and
truly appear to be individual buildings - not storefronts
tacked to a big box. This design approach retains
the historic scale of a gathering of small buildings
from all viewpoints and further enhances the pedestrian
experience of old-town Cave Creek.

The
center's design imagines the potential founding buildings
of territorial Cave Creek. Fronting Cave Creek Road
on the right side is the outpost”, a free-standing,
rustic stone structure with a hipped roof and tower.
Off of the grid of town, it represents the settlement's
first structure established as a stronghold.

At
the opposite end of the center's street frontage is
a simple adobe-looking commercial building the first
general store.

Protected
between these two establishments is a gabled structure
similar in form and detailing to the one-room schoolhouses
of the frontier days. The remaining Shoppes at the
Creek's spaces behind this frontage are designed to
appear to have been added through time, and all possess
a historic scale, even the second-level, glassy restaurant
space.

Completing
the street-front composition of the project is a rounded
two-story structure with a curving portale that has
been “added” to the “general store.
This sweeping form draws one into the central courtyard.
The eye follows the sweep to the counter-point of
the project - the restaurant's cylindrical entrance
tower encased in rusting corrugated steel.

While
the storefronts reach out to the town on all sides,
overall the project's spaces are organized around
a central courtyard. At the courtyard's second level
is the restaurant that features multi-panel sliding
glass doors on three sides of the dining and bar areas.
With these doors open, the restaurant becomes an open-air
pavilion with dining balconies that overlook both
the project's central courtyard and the surrounding
Sonoran desert. The restaurant's interior and exterior
plan arrangement was carefully integrated into the
overall design of the project. At this time, the Shoppes
at the Creek also includes galleries, apparel boutiques,
an interior design center, a day spa and office spaces.

The
extensive landscape design emulates the naturally
lush and rolling character of the desert foothills
with specimen native plantings and arroyo-like terrain
features (the “Creek ”of the Shoppes at
the Creek). The two-level parking garage was designed
to appear to be only surface parking. The hidden lower
level of parking receives light via large window and
stairwells filled with desert landscaping. The top
deck of parking is further screened by landscape walls
and plantings.

Finish
materials reflect the desert environment. They are
vibrant and rustic. The predominant materials are:
stucco painted in many natural desert colors; logs
and timbers both stained and left natural; rusty and
galvanized steel roofs and siding; and native stone
in a humble, full mortar set. The contrast of materials,
textures and colors are designed to further enhance
the village of buildings.

The
design honors the true essence of Cave Creek. This
essence is the town's authentic relationship with
both Arizona history and the living desert in its
most abundant and natural state.

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