Tellepsen Family Downtown YMCA
Houston, Texas
Year in Showcase: 2011
Project Description
Its 40-foot-tall glass curtainwall, complete with enormous YMCA graphics, amounts to an outsized hello to the streets of Houston, with the buzzing activity within on full display. But the design of the Tellepsen Family Downtown YMCA — a LEED Gold replacement for the original downtown Y that incorporates design elements from the 1941 building — actually builds on an intimate element common to early Southern architecture. Designers envisioned this "front porch" as a two-story component comprising a café and outdoor seating area that serves as a relaxed, welcoming entry to the building. Tucked underneath the curtainwall that spans the upper three floors of the north facade, this gathering space is the gateway to a bustling facility, with visitors experiencing the building vertically from bottom to top, from the public spaces and locker rooms on the lower floors to the exercise spaces on the upper floors.
The judges responded to the active and social spaces, and the manner in which they meshed around a grand central staircase intended to orient visitors and provide a place for social interaction — in much the same way that the front porch joins the building with the streetscape. In the words of one judge, "The project's interior circulation is successful in unifying and bringing clarity to a large, vertically stacked facility. The project is also notable for the attention given to providing strong visual and physical connections to the surrounding urban context."

Judges' Comments
Vertically stacked programs like this often lack cohesion. The designers obviously took great care to ensure a connection between floors, between program spaces and from inside to outside.
— Jeff Piette
A terrific solution for a tight urban site. The "front porch" defines the entry transition from the street. There are nice design touches throughout, like clerestory windows in the locker rooms.
— John Dierdorf
The overall design very nicely organizes the program elements of a YMCA and creates a strong visual connection to the street and downtown Houston beyond. The vertical organization, the curtainwall and the oversize graphics successfully support the designers' vision of a front porch element.
— Tom Scarlata
Project Details
Architect of Record: Kirksey Architecture; Houston, Texas
Funded By: Donors and sale of existing property
Major Facility Components: Pool, gymnasium, running track, fitness center, racquetball courts, group exercise rooms, multipurpose room, women's wellness room, café
Construction Cost: $33.5 million
Square Feet: 115,000
Occupancy: September 2010
Vendors
Basketball Backboards/Supports: Porter Athletic Inc.
Cardiovascular Equipment:
Cybex International Inc.
Cardiovascular Equipment: Expresso
Cardiovascular Equipment: Fitlinxx
Cardiovascular Equipment: Precor Incorporated
Deck/Basin Surface: Stonehard
Dehumidifiers: Seresco Technologies Inc.
Divider Curtains: Porter Athletic Inc.
Dryers: Scott Equipment
Flooring, Aerobics:
Action Floor Systems LLC
Flooring, Aerobics: Advantage Sport
Flooring, Aerobics:
Mondo
Flooring, Fitness Center:
Action Floor Systems LLC
Flooring, Fitness Center: Advantage Sport
Flooring, Fitness Center:
Mondo
Free-Weight Equipment:
Cybex International Inc.
Free-Weight Equipment: Expresso
Free-Weight Equipment: Fitlinxx
Free-Weight Equipment: Precor Incorporated
Lighting: Metalumen Lighting
Lockers: Bradley Corp.
Lockers: Lenox Locker Co. Inc.
Multipurpose:
Action Floor Systems LLC
Racquetball/Squash Courts: The Court Company
Saunas/Whirlpools: Am-Finn Sauna Company
Scoreboards/Timing Systems: Nevco Inc.
Strength Equipment:
Cybex International Inc.
Strength Equipment: Expresso
Strength Equipment: Fitlinxx
Strength Equipment: Precor Incorporated
Track:
Mondo
Wall Padding: Porter Athletic Inc.
Washers: Scott Equipment