Celebrating Conservation and Sustainability 
{"autoplay":"true","autoplay_speed":"8000","speed":"1000","arrows":"true","dots":"false","loop":"true","nav_slide_column":5,"rtl":"false"}
{"autoplay":"true","autoplay_speed":"8000","speed":"1000","arrows":"true","dots":"false","loop":"true","nav_slide_column":5,"rtl":"false"}

DETAILS

LocationCulpeper, Virginia United States
Size44 acres

A 45-acre site 70 miles southwest of Washington, D.C. serves as the home for the Library of Congress’s Motion Picture, Broadcasting, and Recorded Sound Collections. The 400,000-square-foot complex consolidates the world’s largest audio-visual collection and provides improved facilities for research, digital conversion, long-term conservation, and public appreciation of the collection’s 11 million items, some dating to the original copyrights of Thomas Edison.

The landscape design also celebrates the spirit of conservation by creating a sylvan setting that minimizes the impact of buildings on the upland meadow site and meets the highest standards for sustainable design. The project’s economic sustainability highlights the adaptive reuse of a bunkered building with a high level of temperature control. Burying nitrate vaults into the mountain and covering the rest with green roof ensured cool enough temperatures to store film with great energy efficiency and a reduced cooling cost. In addition, the choice to restore so much of the landscape to native, natural plantings that required no maintenance after the initial plantings keeps upkeep costs to a minimum, while achieving a sustainable landscape.

The team clustered the building program within five of the 45 acres and configured the structures to conform to the hillside topography, thereby minimizing grading and site disturbance. SWA’s on-structure roof gardens cover all three buildings, masking their presence on the rural Virginia hillside and forming one of the largest single roof gardens east of the Mississippi River. Of the total 228,000 square feet (five acres), 146,000 square feet is “extensive” green roof, with a planting profile of less than 10 inches and a palette of sedum and grasses. The remaining 82,000 square feet is “intensive” green roof, with a deeper profile varying from 12 to 48 inches. The intensive profile reflects the stepped profile of the Collections Building and supports a wider range of plant material. Its depth helps to reduce cooling loads required to maintain the Collections Building storage vault temperatures.

While the Collections and Nitrate Buildings are largely buried, the central three-story Conservation Building emerges above grade to provide natural light to offices and work spaces through a series of terraced concrete arcades. The building follows the slope to enclose a central lawn court, which represents the project’s only formal, irrigated open space and functions as both a viewing garden and an outdoor event space. The courtyard consists of stepped lawn terraces around a circular reflection basin that reflects the shifting cloud patterns of the foothill region, bringing sky to earth and a sense of openness into the heart of the facility.

The arcades themselves provide a series of trellises, and the arcade beams double as irrigated, insulated planters for deciduous Boston ivy. These living awnings shade the floor-to-ceiling glazing of the workspaces in the summer, while in winter the leafless vines allow sunlight to penetrate deep into the building and offset energy demands.

Related Projects

Fort Worth Museum of Modern Art

SWA was selected to provide design services for the new Modem Art Museum of Fort Worth located across the street from the renowned Kimbell Art Museum designed by architect Louis Kahn. The direction for the landscape concept here evolved from the vision of Japanese architect Tadao Ando, whose design was selected as the winning entry in an international invitati...

Atherton Civic Center and Library

The vision for the Atherton Civic Center landscape is a community space set in a peaceful garden, designed to enhance the local ecology and mitigate the urban impacts of the new development. The landscape design integrates new architecture into the wider Atherton community through a strolling garden approach to site circulation. The planting areas are comprise...

Yorba Linda Library + Arts Center

Here a new public library and cultural arts center were artfully sited to create memorable outdoor spaces. Working in collaboration with Group 4 architects, SWA transformed an earlier parking-fronted concept into a plan that resulted in landmark building and outdoor space composition along one of Yorba Linda’s main streets. The outdoor space – the Paseo – serv...

Alief Park and Neighborhood Center

Located in West Houston, the Alief Neighborhood Center and Park serves one of the city’s most diverse communities. Over 90 languages are spoken in Alief, which is home to first-generation immigrants from across the world and refugees from as far away as Vietnam and close as Louisiana—especially in the wake up Hurricane Katrina, when many families made a ...

Yorba Linda Library + Arts Center

Here a new public library and cultural arts center were artfully sited to create memorable outdoor spaces. Working in collaboration with Group 4 architects, SWA transformed an earlier parking-fronted concept into a plan that resulted in landmark building and outdoor space composition along one of Yorba Linda’s main streets. The outdoor space – the Paseo – serv...

Elk Grove Civic Center

SWA’s design for this community resource improves upon part of a 56-acre master plan with a civic center campus set within a beautiful park, and an added public outdoor commons. The pedestrian-friendly commons weaves new buildings together with mature trees and an outdoor living space linking together a community center, an aquatics center, and a future librar...

Nanjing International Youth Cultural Centre

SWA was retained to design the landscape of this mixed-use development collaboratively with Zaha Hadid Architects. It contains performing arts, hotel, residential, office and retail functions. Located adjacent to SWA’s Nanjing Youth Olympic Park, the design strives to merge architecture, the park landscape, and people at this iconic focal point. Landform...

California Academy of Sciences

One of San Francisco’s first sustainable building projects, the California Academy of Sciences supports a stunning 2.5-acre green roof. Emphasizing habitat quality and connectivity, the project has received two LEED Platinum certifications.

The building’s architectural team, the Renzo Piano Building Workshop (RPBW), invited SWA Group and horticultural c...