

The development, named the “City of Champions Revitalization Project,” builds on the momentum of the original 238-acre mixeduse project currently under construction at Hollywood Park after years of community engagement and the approval of entitlements by the Inglewood City Council in 2009. The recent reopening of The Forum enhances the potential of the sports and entertainment district.
The expanded project also will create meaningful employment opportunities for Inglewood residents and businesses. Specifically, the project adheres to the provisions from the City of Inglewood’s 2009 approval, which established a goal of at least 30% participation of minority/disadvantaged business enterprises in the construction of the project and adds a goal of hiring qualified Inglewood residents for at least 35% of long-term, post-construction jobs at the property.
Incorporating the 60 neighboring acres acquired by TKG into the Hollywood Park Specific Plan provides an opportunity to create a cohesive central district in Inglewood. This new project will blend a sports and entertainment district into the core components of the original plan, including new residential neighborhoods, public open space, parks and a lifestyle retail area.
and grow.
A green space is created to provide group activities and local merchandise. It aims to develop a feeling of belonging to the community.
The conceptual design is derived from prioritizing the children space and establishing a barrier that only
The design is cost effective and provides a playful style that is different from the rest of the
Located in the heart of Napa Valley, Cakebread is one of Napa’s oldest family-run wineries. The new 10,000 SF addition blends seamlessly with the existing 43,000 SF main building by ensuring a continuity of form and materials. The architectural style relies on a restrained use of natural materials and textures that harmonize with the surrounding vines and cherished vegetable garden.
The main floor of the addition consists of a large barrel storage room, a light filled stateof-the-art wine lab, and a series of private tasting rooms, each with their own view to the vineyards just outside. On the second floor, the new Wine Club room provides dramatic views eastward over the grapes to Howell Mountain. Continuing with the natural modern aesthetic first established by original architect William Turnbull, this winery addition was BCV’s first collaboration with architect Don Brandenburger, who designed the majority of the buildings at this Rutherford site.
The Cakebread family has established their presence in the wine world by producing the highest quality wines, and providing a wine tasting experience that is a highlight of any wine country visit. The architecture of the project unites and enhances this wine tasting experience in a celebration of wine, food, friends and a sense of place.
The goal of this project is to realize the potential embodied in the heritage of the terroir and history of the Sullivan winery and create an estate winery that will support the production and enjoyment of some of the greatest wines in the world. The project is located on an exceptional parcel in one of the greatest wine growing regions of the world, the Rutherford appellation in Napa Valley.
Centered on the town of Rutherford, the Rutherford Bench boasts one of the more exceptional concentrations of great wine producers in the world. Back in the 1930s Beaulieu Vineyard’s enologist Andre Tchelistcheff described what he called “Rutherford dust” in the taste of Beaulieu’s top of the line private reserve cabernet, noting that “there is little question that the soils here are special; they rest on agravelly bed deposited by an old stream.”
Located in the San Francisco Bay, Treasure Island is currently undergoing an ambitious transit-oriented, mixed-use re-development. BCV, in partnership with SOM, CMG, and other design consultants, has developed an ecologically sensitive master plan for the Island. BCV is also the design architect for the retail and civic portions of the project, which respond to the desire for sustainability by concentrating activity and transportation at a centralized hub.
The Island Core plan also includes an expansion of the existing marina to include a new ferry terminal and recreational uses supported by sports and marine retailers. A retail main street will connect the historic Hanger One, which will house a grocery store and artisanal food market, and the original hemi-circle Administration Building, with its civic uses and the ferry terminal on axis beyond.
The Welcome Center interior is an expansive light-filled space. Visitors to Treasure Island will pass through the building lobby en route to Marina Plaza and Clipper Cove. The interior may be an appropriate site for temporary installations using light and digital media.
The Cultural Center and the adjacent park are the island’s hub for dynamic art programming.
The surrounding bosque of trees provides an idyllic setting for the existing chapel, as well as a place of refuge for both visitors and island dwellers alike. A spectacular view of the San Francisco skyline, spanning from the Golden Gate to the Bay Bridge, is highlighted throughout the park’s design.
Clipper Cove Beach Park will provide a unique public open space amenity along with access to the water and the delightful beach that rings the western edge of Clipper Cove. In addition to the relocation of a building and the park improvements, this Major Phase application includes additional site urnishings and picnic areas, provision of an accessible route from the Causeway to the Beach level, and a new public access stair and boat slide.
The Loft is an approximately 6,000 SF residence located on Fiddleneck Place within Sugar Bowl’s East Village development. The home is within easy walking distance to the Lodge at Sugar Bowl and many of the resort’s lifts.
The home’s ‘bar-bell’ scheme preserves as many of the existing trees onsite as possible, as well as providing open views to the west and preserving privacy from adjacent residences. A boardformed concrete mass anchors the home to the ground, while the lighter wood structure above is distinguished by glass curtain walls and slim, tree-like truss members. The dramatic roof form is inspired by the gondola terminus and lodge at Sugar Bowl.
The home includes seven bedrooms, five baths and two half-baths, as well as open kitchen, dining and living areas. Designed for year-round enjoyment, outdoor areas include two decks at the second floor (one with a hot tub) and a patio at ground level for summer use.
We recognized that Fashion Island has elements that already suggest a sense of elegance and placemaking unrivaled anywhere in Southern California.
The proposed design maintains much of the existing organization of buildings and exterior spaces, but seeks to reinvent their detail, scale and proportions so that the facades are more classical in their construct. Further, the intention is that the facades are not mere decorations, but are extensions of the structure within, so larger buildings can properly contain the retail tenant program.
A new group of restaurants at the entry to Fashion Island extends the identity of the complex to the street. These restaurants are conceptualized as a village on the edge of town.