The Whole Foods Market in Napa Valley boasts a 1,200-sf culinary center. |
Sectioning off large open spaces without making everything feel closed off was the challenge faced by two very different projects—one an upscale food market in Napa Valley, the other a corporate office in Southern California. Movable glass wall systems proved to be the solution in both projects.
The new Whole Foods Market in the heart of Napa Valley's wine country was designed to be a grander version of your typical neighborhood Whole Foods. A major enhancement, a 1,200-sf culinary center at the heart of the 50,000-sf store, needed to be closed off from the sales floor when cooking classes or private events were in session.
Closing off any part of the store, however, ran counter to the open-air market concept created by the San Francisco design firm Field Paoli. Their plan called for capturing the casual, indoor/outdoor lifestyle of Northern California by blurring internal/external boundaries. At the same time, they wanted to imbue the culinary center—an interior space—with a sense of connection to the outside.
A NanaWall system connects the center and the store, and provides privacy when cooking classes and special events are held. |
The architects had already specified a NanaWall door system on the front façade, and they felt that using NanaWall inside the store might offer that same sense of openness. "It's not often you see what's considered a storefront system in the interior of the space," says Christen Soares, an associate at Field Paoli. "But using NanaWall lends itself to the feeling of being open to the outside without actually being open to the exterior," she says.
The opening between the culinary center and the rest of the Whole Foods sales floor is about 20 feet wide. The curved, segmented door system used to section off the space consists of wood-framed glass panels roughly three feet wide, with two swinging panels for ingress and egress. The custom system can be completely opened or partially closed in a variety of configurations; the market typically keeps them wide open unless there's a class or event in progress. Privacy wasn't an issue, says Bill Brigham, principal at Field Paoli. "There are no blinds on the panels, it's all open. The intent was to have it as open as possible." Nor was noise a concern. "There was no worry about STC ratings," he says. "The culinary center opens into the 'Whole Body' department, which is soft goods—lotions and clothing rather than groceries—so it isn't a particularly noisy one."
"The whole point of using NanaWall inside and out was a cross-fertilization between indoor and outdoor, public and private space," says Brigham. "I feel like we've succeeded in enclosing space without making any of it them feel isolated."
When the Moveo wall systems are open, the BeachBody office in Santa Monica, Calif., has a multifunction, 2,500-sf great room . |
When BeachBody was moving its offices from Beverly Hills to Santa Monica, Calif., the health and fitness company wanted an open-plan space that would be flooded with natural daylight. Designers at Wolcott Architecture|Interiors of Culver City, Calif., were tasked with creating flexible conference spaces that offered privacy without blocking light from filtering into the office.
The architects devised an open great room concept for the office's entry, and located two conference rooms within the space that can be sectioned off with custom Moveo glass wall systems from Modernfold. When open, the space functions as one large, bright 2,500-sf great room for parties, meetings, and other large gatherings. When closed, the glass panel systems section the room into three light-filled spaces: reception and staff lounge, large conference room (550 sf), and medium conference room (325 sf). Seventy-five linear feet of glass panels are used in the great room.
In creating the room separations, the movable panels had to form two corners, and there could be no recessed tracks in the floor that would make it awkward using the space when it's fully opened. The glass panels also had to provide significant sound isolation. "These were huge issues, and it was a challenge finding something that worked," says Mika Yagi, senior designer at Wolcott.
When closed, the office has two conference rooms and a separate reception area/employee lounge. Note the unobtrusive solid corner panels. |
The corners were particularly difficult to configure. "We obviously didn't want corner posts, which would interrupt the great room concept, and we initially didn't want solid panels, which would block daylight," says Yagi. A structural element was needed, and a compromise was reached: Solid panels were positioned at the inside corners, making them virtually imperceptible and blocking little daylight when the conference rooms are in use.
It was also important to Yagi that the panels operate without channel tracks in the floor; the aluminum-framed panels are hung at the ceiling and manually opened and closed. When open, they stack against the wall rather than being stored in pockets.
To achieve acoustic privacy in the conference rooms, Yagi says she went through four different glass options before finally deciding on the Moveo system. "BeachBody wanted an STC rating of at least 43, which is what you typically get in a conference room with drywall construction," says Yagi. The Moveo system offered an STC rating of 45.
Yagi says the client is pleased with the final set-up. The office has a flexible, open-space plan, access to two private conference rooms, and plenty of daylight no matter how the conference rooms are configured.
Energy use has been cut by 25% compared to conventional office design, which helped earn the 55,000-sf space LEED CI Gold.
Related Stories
Sponsored | BD+C University Course | May 3, 2022
For glass openings, how big is too big?
Advances in glazing materials and glass building systems offer a seemingly unlimited horizon for not only glass performance, but also for the size and extent of these light, transparent forms. Both for enclosures and for indoor environments, novel products and assemblies allow for more glass and less opaque structure—often in places that previously limited their use.
Sponsored | BD+C University Course | Apr 10, 2022
Designing with commercial and industrial insulated metal wall panels
Discover the characteristics, benefits and design options for commercial/industrial buildings using insulated metal panels (IMPs). Recognize the factors affecting panel spans and the relationship of these to structural supports. Gain knowledge of IMP code compliance.
Cladding and Facade Systems | Oct 26, 2021
14 projects recognized by DOE for high-performance building envelope design
The inaugural class of DOE’s Better Buildings Building Envelope Campaign includes a medical office building that uses hybrid vacuum-insulated glass and a net-zero concrete-and-timber community center.
Glass and Glazing | Sep 30, 2021
Plans move forward on Central Place Sydney, duel towers with an AI-driven façade system
SOM and Fender Katsalidis are designing the project.
75 Top Building Products | Dec 1, 2020
Top Building Envelope Products for 2020
Sherwin-Williams' Emerald Rain Refresh and James Hardie's Aspyre Collection are among the 23 new building envelope products to make Building Design + Construction's 2020 75 Top Products report.
Coronavirus | Apr 8, 2020
COVID-19 alert: Most U.S. roofing contractors hit by coronavirus, says NRCA
NRCA survey shows 52% of roofing contractor said COVID-19 pandemic was having a significant or very significant impact on their businesses.
75 Top Building Products | Dec 16, 2019
Top Window and Door Products for 2019
Pella’s Rolscreen retractable screen and NanaWall’s HSW single-track sliding glass wall are among the 16 window and door products to make Building Design+Construction’s 2019 101 Top Products report.
75 Top Building Products | Dec 16, 2019
101 Top Products for 2019
Building Design+Construction readers and editors select their top building products for the past 12 months in the fourth-annual 101 Top Products report.
75 Top Building Products | Dec 16, 2019
Top Glass and Glazing Products for 2019
SageGlass's Harmony dynamic glass and Vitro Architectural Glass's Acuity low-iron glass are among the nine new glass and glazing products to make Building Design+Construction's 2019 101 Top Products report.
75 Top Building Products | Dec 12, 2019
Top Building Envelope Products for 2019
Sto's beetle-inspired exterior coating and Dörken Systems' UV-resistant vapor-permeable barrier are among the 28 new building envelope products to make Building Design+Construction's 2019 101 Top Products report.