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1. Exterior View A wood-clad recess in the office’s simple box-like form announces the entry and provides a sheltered zone prior to entering the building. 7363 px 4913 px 33 MB A3 print |
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2. Site Plan The building is situated in a manner that preserves a large majority of a wooded site, portions of which have been sculpted to absorb infrastructure, create buffers, or collect stormwater. 2400 px 3170 px 1 MB Print - Low res only |
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3. Floor Plan The skillfully organized plan satisfies programmatic requirements while producing a rich spatial experience. 2400 px 1480 px 815 KB Print - Low res only |
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4. Reception In contrast to the exterior, the interior character is shaped by moments of materiality and color. 2994 px 1996 px 3 MB Print - Low res only |
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5. Reception Skylight The opaque north façade shields the sounds and sights of the parking lot while two large skylights draw ample natural light into the space. 2400 px 1800 px 4 MB Print - Low res only |
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6. Enlarged Section Building Section through Reception 2400 px 1602 px 125 KB Print - Low res only |
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7. Reception Desk The theme of removal begins as one enters the white-oak clad vestibule and moves into the reception area. 2991 px 1994 px 2 MB Print - Low res only |
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8. Core Wall A matte, richly painted blue core defines the sterilization and lab spaces while organizing the operatories. 2956 px 1971 px 3 MB Print - Low res only |
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9. Cross Section Cross section through support spaces 2400 px 1598 px 97 KB Print - Low res only |
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10. Cross Section Cross section through operatory 2400 px 1598 px 96 KB Print - Low res only |
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11. Dental Operatory 1 These equally proportioned, dark-frame windows strongly punctuate the white brick façade and produce a dynamic and rhythmic compositional effect while simultaneously concealing the standard and repetitive dental operatory unit inside. 2986 px 1991 px 3 MB Print - Low res only |
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12. Dental Operatory 2 From within each operatory, a pair of windows provide dappled natural light while framing a unique pairing of exterior views. 2989 px 1993 px 3 MB Print - Low res only |
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13. North Elevation The matte, white masonry reads monolithically from afar while revealing the textural and tactile quality of the masonry as users approach, including at the entryway where the bricks were spun around and installed with their grooved backs facing outwards. 2400 px 1598 px 102 KB Print - Low res only |
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14. West Elevation While the north and east façades are minimally fenestrated, window openings in several sizes on the south and west façades are deliberately and thoughtfully placed. 2400 px 1598 px 128 KB Print - Low res only |
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15. East Elevation 2400 px 1598 px 151 KB Print - Low res only |
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16. South Elevation 2400 px 1598 px 72 KB Print - Low res only |
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17. Private Office A corner skylight brings natural light into a private office. 1961 px 2941 px 3 MB Print - Low res only |
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18. Reception Vertical white oak cladding within the vestibule transitions to the floor in the waiting area. 3000 px 2000 px 4 MB Print - Low res only |
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19. North Elevation Exterior The exterior material palette is restrained in order to highlight the relationship between the building and the surrounding landscape. Norman-sized face brick with a soft-white, mineral paint finish provides a neutral backdrop to the seasonally changing colors and textures of the site. 6715 px 4433 px 16 MB A3 print |
Located as part of a 2-acre site in Rochester Hills, Michigan, Oakridge Dental Center is a dentistry office designed to create a unique and calming spatial experience for its patients and staff. The challenge was to achieve these characteristics adjacent to a traffic circle and within the project’s constrained construction and material budgets. The building is situated in a manner that preserves a large majority of a wooded site, portions of which have been sculpted to absorb infrastructure, create buffers, or collect stormwater.
The exterior material palette is restrained in order to highlight the relationship between the building and the surrounding landscape. Norman-sized face brick with a soft-white, mineral paint finish provides a neutral backdrop to the seasonally changing colors and textures of the site. This finish allowed for the use of an economical, transitional kiln brick that gives the building a muted presence. The matte, white masonry reads monolithically from afar while revealing the textural and tactile quality of the masonry as users approach, including at the entryway where the bricks were spun around and installed with their grooved backs facing outwards.
While the north and east façades are minimally fenestrated, window openings in several sizes on the south and west façades are deliberately and thoughtfully placed. These equally proportioned, dark-frame windows strongly punctuate the white brick façade and produce a dynamic and rhythmic compositional effect while simultaneously concealing the standard and repetitive dental operatory unit inside. From within each operatory, a pair of windows provide dappled natural light while framing a unique pairing of exterior views.
The main entrance is situated on the northeast corner where visitors are pulled into a quiet portion of the site removed from the adjacent road and busy traffic circle. A wood-clad recess in the office’s simple box-like form announces the entry and provides a sheltered zone prior to entering the building.
In contrast to the exterior, the interior character is shaped by moments of materiality and color. Vertical white oak cladding within the vestibule transitions to the floor in the waiting area. A matte, richly painted blue core defines the sterilization and lab spaces while organizing the operatories. Spatially, the interior of the building is designed to first remove—and then selectively reconnect—users to the surrounding landscape. The theme of removal begins as one enters the white-oak clad vestibule and moves into the reception area. The opaque north façade shields the sounds and sights of the parking lot while two large skylights draw ample natural light into the space. As one moves around the sterilization core, natural light from the perimeter as well as above, along with views to outside, are choreographed in a series of re-framed interactions: of tree limbs, circling birds, a grassy berm, or passing clouds — with not a hint of the nearby cars and trucks going round and round.
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AWARDS
“Building Award” AIA Detroit Honor Awards, 2020
“M-Award for Excellence in Masonry Design” Masonry Institute of Michigan and AIA Michigan, 2020
Exterior photos: Kilmer
Interior photos: Muftari
Project size | 3200 ft2 |
Completion date | 2019 |
Building levels | 1 |
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M1DTW Architects |