This 3,200-square-foot recreational facility blends the legacy of golfing with the latest technological developments. Acknowledging the Neoclassical design of the nearby 1911 clubhouse, our modern architecture houses the most current equipment and software in golf simulation.
In response to the scale of nearby homes, we split the singular mass of our building into two. This composition results in the unique double roof. At one end, two gables provide the most traditional and welcoming of roof lines for visitors. At the other end, the gables transition to two long shed roofs, reducing the building’s volume. While providing a dynamic ceiling form within, the roof design also delivers an iconic form seen from the upper golf course.
On the interior, we reinterpret the traditional beadboard wall cladding. The building’s interior walls of vertical wood planks sweep around convex and concave curved corners, like the arc of a golf ball or swing of a club. The exterior design comprises white acrylic-resin plaster, standing seam galvanized metal roof, glass and aluminum accordion doors, and a steel and wood trellis. At the end of a 400-yard fairway, the Golf Performance Center provides a landmark structure that honors the history of this property while looking towards the future.
Photography by Hunter Kerhart.
This 3,200-square-foot recreational facility blends the legacy of golfing with the latest technological developments. Acknowledging the Neoclassical design of the nearby 1911 clubhouse, our modern architecture houses the most current equipment and software in golf simulation.
In response to the scale of nearby homes, we split the singular mass of our building into two. This composition results in the unique double roof. At one end, two gables provide the most traditional and welcoming of roof lines for visitors. At the other end, the gables transition to two long shed roofs, reducing the building’s volume. While providing a dynamic ceiling form within, the roof design also delivers an iconic form seen from the upper golf course.
On the interior, we reinterpret the traditional beadboard wall cladding. The building’s interior walls of vertical wood planks sweep around convex and concave curved corners, like the arc of a golf ball or swing of a club. The exterior design comprises white acrylic-resin plaster, standing seam galvanized metal roof, glass and aluminum accordion doors, and a steel and wood trellis. At the end of a 400-yard fairway, the Golf Performance Center provides a landmark structure that honors the history of this property while looking towards the future.
Photography by Hunter Kerhart.
This 3,200-square-foot recreational facility blends the legacy of golfing with the latest technological developments. Acknowledging the Neoclassical design of the nearby 1911 clubhouse, our modern architecture houses the most current equipment and software in golf simulation.
In response to the scale of nearby homes, we split the singular mass of our building into two. This composition results in the unique double roof. At one end, two gables provide the most traditional and welcoming of roof lines for visitors. At the other end, the gables transition to two long shed roofs, reducing the building’s volume. While providing a dynamic ceiling form within, the roof design also delivers an iconic form seen from the upper golf course.
On the interior, we reinterpret the traditional beadboard wall cladding. The building’s interior walls of vertical wood planks sweep around convex and concave curved corners, like the arc of a golf ball or swing of a club. The exterior design comprises white acrylic-resin plaster, standing seam galvanized metal roof, glass and aluminum accordion doors, and a steel and wood trellis. At the end of a 400-yard fairway, the Golf Performance Center provides a landmark structure that honors the history of this property while looking towards the future.
Photography by Hunter Kerhart.
This 3,200-square-foot recreational facility blends the legacy of golfing with the latest technological developments. Acknowledging the Neoclassical design of the nearby 1911 clubhouse, our modern architecture houses the most current equipment and software in golf simulation.
In response to the scale of nearby homes, we split the singular mass of our building into two. This composition results in the unique double roof. At one end, two gables provide the most traditional and welcoming of roof lines for visitors. At the other end, the gables transition to two long shed roofs, reducing the building’s volume. While providing a dynamic ceiling form within, the roof design also delivers an iconic form seen from the upper golf course.
On the interior, we reinterpret the traditional beadboard wall cladding. The building’s interior walls of vertical wood planks sweep around convex and concave curved corners, like the arc of a golf ball or swing of a club. The exterior design comprises white acrylic-resin plaster, standing seam galvanized metal roof, glass and aluminum accordion doors, and a steel and wood trellis. At the end of a 400-yard fairway, the Golf Performance Center provides a landmark structure that honors the history of this property while looking towards the future.
Photography by Hunter Kerhart.
This 3,200-square-foot recreational facility blends the legacy of golfing with the latest technological developments. Acknowledging the Neoclassical design of the nearby 1911 clubhouse, our modern architecture houses the most current equipment and software in golf simulation.
In response to the scale of nearby homes, we split the singular mass of our building into two. This composition results in the unique double roof. At one end, two gables provide the most traditional and welcoming of roof lines for visitors. At the other end, the gables transition to two long shed roofs, reducing the building’s volume. While providing a dynamic ceiling form within, the roof design also delivers an iconic form seen from the upper golf course.
On the interior, we reinterpret the traditional beadboard wall cladding. The building’s interior walls of vertical wood planks sweep around convex and concave curved corners, like the arc of a golf ball or swing of a club. The exterior design comprises white acrylic-resin plaster, standing seam galvanized metal roof, glass and aluminum accordion doors, and a steel and wood trellis. At the end of a 400-yard fairway, the Golf Performance Center provides a landmark structure that honors the history of this property while looking towards the future.
Photography by Hunter Kerhart.
This 3,200-square-foot recreational facility blends the legacy of golfing with the latest technological developments. Acknowledging the Neoclassical design of the nearby 1911 clubhouse, our modern architecture houses the most current equipment and software in golf simulation.
In response to the scale of nearby homes, we split the singular mass of our building into two. This composition results in the unique double roof. At one end, two gables provide the most traditional and welcoming of roof lines for visitors. At the other end, the gables transition to two long shed roofs, reducing the building’s volume. While providing a dynamic ceiling form within, the roof design also delivers an iconic form seen from the upper golf course.
On the interior, we reinterpret the traditional beadboard wall cladding. The building’s interior walls of vertical wood planks sweep around convex and concave curved corners, like the arc of a golf ball or swing of a club. The exterior design comprises white acrylic-resin plaster, standing seam galvanized metal roof, glass and aluminum accordion doors, and a steel and wood trellis. At the end of a 400-yard fairway, the Golf Performance Center provides a landmark structure that honors the history of this property while looking towards the future.
Photography by Hunter Kerhart.
This 3,200-square-foot recreational facility blends the legacy of golfing with the latest technological developments. Acknowledging the Neoclassical design of the nearby 1911 clubhouse, our modern architecture houses the most current equipment and software in golf simulation.
In response to the scale of nearby homes, we split the singular mass of our building into two. This composition results in the unique double roof. At one end, two gables provide the most traditional and welcoming of roof lines for visitors. At the other end, the gables transition to two long shed roofs, reducing the building’s volume. While providing a dynamic ceiling form within, the roof design also delivers an iconic form seen from the upper golf course.
On the interior, we reinterpret the traditional beadboard wall cladding. The building’s interior walls of vertical wood planks sweep around convex and concave curved corners, like the arc of a golf ball or swing of a club. The exterior design comprises white acrylic-resin plaster, standing seam galvanized metal roof, glass and aluminum accordion doors, and a steel and wood trellis. At the end of a 400-yard fairway, the Golf Performance Center provides a landmark structure that honors the history of this property while looking towards the future.
Photography by Hunter Kerhart.
This 3,200-square-foot recreational facility blends the legacy of golfing with the latest technological developments. Acknowledging the Neoclassical design of the nearby 1911 clubhouse, our modern architecture houses the most current equipment and software in golf simulation.
In response to the scale of nearby homes, we split the singular mass of our building into two. This composition results in the unique double roof. At one end, two gables provide the most traditional and welcoming of roof lines for visitors. At the other end, the gables transition to two long shed roofs, reducing the building’s volume. While providing a dynamic ceiling form within, the roof design also delivers an iconic form seen from the upper golf course.
On the interior, we reinterpret the traditional beadboard wall cladding. The building’s interior walls of vertical wood planks sweep around convex and concave curved corners, like the arc of a golf ball or swing of a club. The exterior design comprises white acrylic-resin plaster, standing seam galvanized metal roof, glass and aluminum accordion doors, and a steel and wood trellis. At the end of a 400-yard fairway, the Golf Performance Center provides a landmark structure that honors the history of this property while looking towards the future.
Photography by Hunter Kerhart.
This 3,200-square-foot recreational facility blends the legacy of golfing with the latest technological developments. Acknowledging the Neoclassical design of the nearby 1911 clubhouse, our modern architecture houses the most current equipment and software in golf simulation.
In response to the scale of nearby homes, we split the singular mass of our building into two. This composition results in the unique double roof. At one end, two gables provide the most traditional and welcoming of roof lines for visitors. At the other end, the gables transition to two long shed roofs, reducing the building’s volume. While providing a dynamic ceiling form within, the roof design also delivers an iconic form seen from the upper golf course.
On the interior, we reinterpret the traditional beadboard wall cladding. The building’s interior walls of vertical wood planks sweep around convex and concave curved corners, like the arc of a golf ball or swing of a club. The exterior design comprises white acrylic-resin plaster, standing seam galvanized metal roof, glass and aluminum accordion doors, and a steel and wood trellis. At the end of a 400-yard fairway, the Golf Performance Center provides a landmark structure that honors the history of this property while looking towards the future.
Photography by Hunter Kerhart.
This 3,200-square-foot recreational facility blends the legacy of golfing with the latest technological developments. Acknowledging the Neoclassical design of the nearby 1911 clubhouse, our modern architecture houses the most current equipment and software in golf simulation.
In response to the scale of nearby homes, we split the singular mass of our building into two. This composition results in the unique double roof. At one end, two gables provide the most traditional and welcoming of roof lines for visitors. At the other end, the gables transition to two long shed roofs, reducing the building’s volume. While providing a dynamic ceiling form within, the roof design also delivers an iconic form seen from the upper golf course.
On the interior, we reinterpret the traditional beadboard wall cladding. The building’s interior walls of vertical wood planks sweep around convex and concave curved corners, like the arc of a golf ball or swing of a club. The exterior design comprises white acrylic-resin plaster, standing seam galvanized metal roof, glass and aluminum accordion doors, and a steel and wood trellis. At the end of a 400-yard fairway, the Golf Performance Center provides a landmark structure that honors the history of this property while looking towards the future.
Photography by Hunter Kerhart.
This 3,200-square-foot recreational facility blends the legacy of golfing with the latest technological developments. Acknowledging the Neoclassical design of the nearby 1911 clubhouse, our modern architecture houses the most current equipment and software in golf simulation.
In response to the scale of nearby homes, we split the singular mass of our building into two. This composition results in the unique double roof. At one end, two gables provide the most traditional and welcoming of roof lines for visitors. At the other end, the gables transition to two long shed roofs, reducing the building’s volume. While providing a dynamic ceiling form within, the roof design also delivers an iconic form seen from the upper golf course.
On the interior, we reinterpret the traditional beadboard wall cladding. The building’s interior walls of vertical wood planks sweep around convex and concave curved corners, like the arc of a golf ball or swing of a club. The exterior design comprises white acrylic-resin plaster, standing seam galvanized metal roof, glass and aluminum accordion doors, and a steel and wood trellis. At the end of a 400-yard fairway, the Golf Performance Center provides a landmark structure that honors the history of this property while looking towards the future.
Photography by Hunter Kerhart.
This 3,200-square-foot recreational facility blends the legacy of golfing with the latest technological developments. Acknowledging the Neoclassical design of the nearby 1911 clubhouse, our modern architecture houses the most current equipment and software in golf simulation.
In response to the scale of nearby homes, we split the singular mass of our building into two. This composition results in the unique double roof. At one end, two gables provide the most traditional and welcoming of roof lines for visitors. At the other end, the gables transition to two long shed roofs, reducing the building’s volume. While providing a dynamic ceiling form within, the roof design also delivers an iconic form seen from the upper golf course.
On the interior, we reinterpret the traditional beadboard wall cladding. The building’s interior walls of vertical wood planks sweep around convex and concave curved corners, like the arc of a golf ball or swing of a club. The exterior design comprises white acrylic-resin plaster, standing seam galvanized metal roof, glass and aluminum accordion doors, and a steel and wood trellis. At the end of a 400-yard fairway, the Golf Performance Center provides a landmark structure that honors the history of this property while looking towards the future.
Photography by Hunter Kerhart.