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Draftsmen & Craftsmen

3/25/16

San Diego-based Smith Consulting Architects has completed the site planning, shell redesign and interior design for the new Petco San Diego National Support Center. The project is located at 10850 Via Frontera in the Rancho Bernardo area of San Diego.

Whiting Turner, general contractor for the project, began construction in mid-July of 2014 and recently completed the nearly 300k sf, two-level facility, 63k sf of which is on a level below existing grade. Petco’s Sr. Vice President of Supply Chain, Mark Hilborn, provided oversight of the project, with Mike Rosen, Director of Corporate Facilities & Services, as the on-site project manager.

The project design embodies Petco’s values of collaboration, community, sustainability and pet-friendly environments, while addressing the needs of a workforce that is becoming increasingly more mobile. The project features an “Industrial Urban Park” design theme -- essentially an urban park environment within an existing industrial building where employees and their pets can coexist in a comfortable, productive environment.

The primary structural steel frame of the 1981 vintage building was, for the most part, retained and the exterior was clad with a glass and metal panel curtainwall system. The east and west entries into the building are well defined with red metal panels above the doors, creating an interesting contrast to the curtain wall system. A 28-foot-high, perforated stainless steel screen integrating Petco’s logo, including dog and cat “Ruff” and “Mews,” highlights the entry while providing a prominent branding element.

The entry lobby, with a suspended wood blade ceiling and adjacent coffee kiosk, opens into a large atrium or “community park” that extends from the lower level to a height of more than 45 feet, created by removing and replacing the building structure in this area. Opposite the lobby in this atrium are terraces that function for informal meetings, dining or large company events. A large video wall sits opposite the terraces, with a bridge crossing the atrium at the main level connecting the east and west sides of the building. The “community park” is furnished with diffused daylight from a translucent panel skylight system.

The large floorplate created a circulation challenge, which was addressed with a network of diagonal paths. Within this network, departments become “neighborhoods,” with travel between them easy and efficient. At the intersection of paths, there are “connection hubs” -- 10 total -- that provide gathering spots for informal discussions and interdepartmental interaction. Also essential to the large floorplate is the introduction of natural light. The translucent panels in the atrium, in conjunction with the exterior curtainwall system and the numerous skylights over the office area, maximize natural daylight, which is good not only for employees’ health and productivity, but also their pets’ wellbeing.

The exterior provides a diversity of settings ranging from an outdoor dining area to natural sitting areas, a basketball court, three dog parks and a jogging trail, all affording employees and their pets options that best suit their personality or mood on a particular day. The architectural design integrates interior and exterior spaces, bringing the outdoors in and allowing the exterior spaces to function as work environments.

Additional amenities on the site include a fitness center, full-service cafe with interior dining space that opens to the exterior dining area, photo studio, electric car charging stations, and an 850-kilowatt, roof-mounted solar panel system, which provides more than half of the building’s energy needs.

In addition to Cairns, the Smith Consulting Architects project team also included Mark Langan as project executive, Arati Rangaswamy as project manager, Milos Makaric as project designer for the shell and site, and Andrew Tarango as project designer of the interior spaces.

Project consultants included Wiseman and Rohy as structural engineer, RBF as civil engineer, MPE as electrical engineer, McParlane & Associates as mechanical and plumbing engineer, and Ridge Landscape Architects as landscape architect.





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