
Alaska Company
COMMERCIAL / OFFICE
Alaska Company
ROLE: | Interior Design Tenant Improvements & Construction Administration |
CLIENT: | Confidential |
PHOTOGRAPHY: | Chris Arend Photography |




COMMERCIAL / OFFICE
Alaska Company
ROLE: | Interior Design Tenant Improvements & Construction Administration |
CLIENT: | Confidential |
PHOTOGRAPHY: | Chris Arend Photography |
COMMERCIAL / OFFICE
BART Headquarters
ROLE: | Lead Architect |
CLIENT: | Bay Area Rapid Transit |
PHOTOGRAPHY: | Tyler Chartier |
AWARDS: |
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In collaboration with Turner Construction, RIM Architects designed this 250,000 SF restack and relocation of Bay Area Rapid Transit’s (BART) headquarters to a newly acquired building in Oakland, California. This progressive design-build project involved 10 floors, and a roof deck, and shifted the internal space from a traditional arrangement to a primarily open office configuration with strategically positioned private offices at key locations.
Time was the most critical project component the team faced, as BART needed to move out of their current leased space and relocate to their new headquarters in Downtown Oakland in a little less than a year from the time of project kickoff.
COMMERCIAL / OFFICE
Swinerton Concord Office
ROLE: | Interior Design Tenant Improvements; Programming |
CLIENT: | Swinerton Builders |
PHOTOGRAPHY: | Tyler Chartier |
COMMERCIAL / RETAIL
Honolulu Design Center
ROLE: | Architect |
CLIENT: | Thomas Sorensen |
AWARDS: |
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The Honolulu Design Center (HDC), a 3-story, 80,000 GSF, modern retail building providing spaces that stimulate creativity, and offer highly interactive environments for all the creative arts. This high-end furniture center includes a fine dining restaurant, cafe, wine bar, and space for special events and performances.
As a showcase of contemporary architecture, the design picks up the subtle curves of the surrounding buildings while at the same time incorporating cutting edges that reflect the retail within. Clad in bold materials and colors, the orange pearlescent paint was custom-created for this project and nicknamed “Honolulu Red”. Much of the facade is transparent to show the inside contents of the building. The architectural design has two intersecting forms – a solid (the “initial” orange wave) and a void (the “reflected” curtain wall wave), with terminating wing extensions that greet visitors on Pensacola and Pi`ikoi Streets.
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