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Sanders Pace Architecture

Sanders Pace Architecture

Knoxville, TN

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Loghaven Artist Residency

The Loghaven Artist Residency is a multidisciplinary artist residency occupying 90 acres just 2 miles from downtown Knoxville.  The site consists of 5 historic log cabins dating from the 1930’s which have been rehabilitated into residences for visiting artists, a new Gateway Building which provides communal artist spaces along with a multidisciplinary studio, and two studio buildings purpose-built for visual and performing artists.  Completed in late 2019, the project is the culmination of years of planning, research, and coordination between a charitable foundation and the design team.  Threatened with development, the property was initially acquired by the foundation in 2008 with the goal of preserving the site for future generations.  From the outset goals and priorities were established including: 

  • The rehabilitation strategy that included the preservation of the original 1930’s era log cabins originally constructed by Myssie Thompson as rental homes for her family;
  • An ecological strategy that preserved and enhanced the existing character of Loghaven Drive and the surrounding 90 acre property;
  • A strategy for new construction which contrasts but complements the character of the originals, reinterpreting the typology, scale, and materiality of the original buildings in new ways. 

The site is programmed with 3 primary functions including artist cabins, a Gateway Building, and dedicated artist studio space.  These programs are all interconnected by a combination of original roads and paths and a newly constructed trail system which weaves through the forest and woodlands flanking both sides of a ridge.   A brief description of each including cost data is as follows: 

Loghaven Artist Cabins

In the 1930’s Martha “Myssie” Thompson began developing the community, including four log cabins along Loghaven Drive and one on Cherokee Cove.  The rehabilitation of these cabins and associated site infrastructure improvements were the initial projects on campus.  After documenting years of deferred maintenance and poorly constructed additions it became clear that the cabins were not originally built to last the 80 years they had lasted, much less another 80 years.  Along with stabilization of each of the cabins the design team preserved the important characteristics of each cabin while carefully adapting and modernizing them for their new use as residences for visiting artists.  

Gateway Building

The first new building on the campus includes space for a rotating entry gallery, a director’s office, a commercial kitchen staffed by a local chef, communal living and dining spaces for residents, and a multidisciplinary studio space dedicated to one of the visiting artists. This space is also capable of hosting lectures, performances, multimedia exhibitions. 

Loghaven Artist Studios

Located just a short walk from the Gateway building through the woods of Loghaven, The Visual Arts Studio and Performing Arts Studio are designed as companion buildings with flexible open workspaces that can accommodate these artists.  Each studio is designed with privacy in mind, with large panoramic windows opening to the surrounding wooded landscape and distant views to the Smoky Mountains beyond.

 
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Status: Built
Location: Knoxville, TN, US
Firm Role: Architect
Additional Credits: Stephen W. Hackney Landscape Architects (Landscape Architecture)
Facility Systems Consultants (MEP - Studios and Artist Cabins)
Smith Seckman Reid (MEP - McDonough House)
Fulghum Macindoe (Civil Engineering)
SIGHTE (Lighting Design)
Acoustic Distinctions (Acoustic Consultant)
Erin Fearins (McDonough House Furnishings)
Lauderdale Design Group (Artist Cabins Furnishings)

 
Bruce Cole Photography
Bruce Cole Photography
Bruce Cole Photography
Bruce Cole Photography
Bruce Cole Photography
Bruce Cole Photography
Bruce Cole Photography
Bruce Cole Photography
Bruce Cole Photography
Bruce Cole Photography
Bruce Cole Photography
Bruce Cole Photography
Bruce Cole Photography
Bruce Cole Photography
Bruce Cole Photography
Bruce Cole Photography
Bruce Cole Photography
Bruce Cole Photography
Bruce Cole Photography
Bruce Cole Photography
Bruce Cole Photography
Bruce Cole Photography
Bruce Cole Photography
Bruce Cole Photography
Bruce Cole Photography
Bruce Cole Photography
Bruce Cole Photography
Bruce Cole Photography
Bruce Cole Photography
Bruce Cole Photography
Bruce Cole Photography
Bruce Cole Photography
Bruce Cole Photography
Bruce Cole Photography
Bruce Cole Photography
Bruce Cole Photography
Bruce Cole Photography
Bruce Cole Photography
Bruce Cole Photography
Bruce Cole Photography