People/Products

Since the Walt Disney Company imported its brand from Anaheim, California to Orlando, Florida, in 1971, its themed empire has become synonymous with the family vacation. A trip to Disney World is a childhood rite of passage, and, for some adults, akin to the fulfillment of a religious pilgrimage. But over the decades, other entertainment enterprises have edged in for a piece of the action, and now 62 million tourists flock to Orlando'the most-visited U.S. destination'every year. Comcast, which owns Universal Parks & Resorts, has played aggressively, winning significant market share. Contributing to Universal's expansion is the recent arrival of Diagon Alley, its second Harry Potter'themed attraction. Also making an impact is the nearby Cabana Bay Beach Resort, a sprawling, fanciful, midcentury-themed family hotel designed by Miami-based Shulman + Associates that, with 1,800 rooms, is Universal Orlando's fourth and largest such facility.

Universal recognized the need for a moderately priced amenity (the company's three other local properties'which, like Cabana Bay, are shared ventures with Loews'are classified as deluxe). “We kept coming back to the 'drive-to' vacation of the '50s and '60s that represented a simpler time,” says Russ Dagon, vice president and executive project director for Universal Parks & Resorts. “We fell in love with the idea of the motel building'one that would resonate with anyone who's been to a coastal hotel.” The corporation's creative group found Allan Shulman, who has researched and written extensively on Miami Modernism and whose firm has considerable hospitality and midcentury restoration and adaptive-reuse projects in its portfolio. But its hotels have been in the urban boutique category. Surrounded by exurban bleakness on 40 acres, Cabana Bay, with its swimming pools, water follies, bowling alleys, and 650-seat dining hall, is another beast altogether (and there are already plans to expand). “This is a hotel of another order'it's more of a campus or a complex,” says Shulman. “I had to think like an urban planner as well as an architect.” And while Universal saw the theming as an extension of its mission to create immersive experiences, Shulman was intrigued by the possibility of honoring the languages of the Florida Modern period in a contemporary reinterpretation.

Approaching this massive project, Shulman riffed on his deep knowledge of midcentury hotel design. “The most important component, which we elevated to the major organizing feature, was the pool deck,” he says, referring to the ubiquity of this element as lifestyle space in the postwar era at Florida institutions from Miami's luxurious Fontainebleau to the smallest motel on the strip in Sunny Isles Beach. Traditionally, follies were scattered around this sheltered area'shade structures, diving platforms, barbecue pits'features that animated the open space and became distinguishing features of each hotel. True to this model, at Cabana Bay the architects created a kind of “great room,” with a large pool at the north end, by enclosing the space with four-story orthogonal bars of guest rooms that open to exterior walkways. To the south, the seven-story guest room wings (with interior corridors) extend out as long zigzagging arms embracing the breezy green space and pools in between. Projecting concrete floor plates and colorful grids of aluminum panels provide depth and character to the huge facades, stylistic moves that borrow from popular midcentury architecture, which often relied on simple means and legible functionality for expression. “In Florida,” notes Shulman, pointing to the shadows cast across the elevations, “architects who could not indulge in expensive materials understood that they had the sun to work with.”

Linking the north and the south is a curvilinear arrival building that contains the lobby, restaurants, lounge, and recreation spaces. Recalling grand entry sequences of the past, a broad circular drive-up space with a swoopy porte cochere whisks guests into a soaring, white, terrazzo-floored lobby with a giant palm-tree “terrarium” as its focal point. This space hums throughout the day as guests come and go from the theme parks and spill out in bathing suits to the enormous pool area beyond. A mall-like “concourse” also leads from the lobby, linking a gift shop, Starbucks, food court, double-height 14,000-square-foot dining hall, and, on a mezzanine level, an arcade and bowling alley. (The program developed over the rapid, 26-month design and construction period, notes Shulman.) Big, open public spaces are complemented with smaller environments: conversation areas, cabanas, fire pits, and other amenities that break down the scale and facilitate intimate gatherings.

In sync with Shulman's approach, Philadelphia-based Daroff Design considered the interiors also as a modern interpretation of the time. “Every element of the lobby was imagined to be 'bigger than life' rather than a slavish recreation of the period,” says principal designer Karen Daroff. Sprightly finishes and motifs throughout the resort underscore the pursuit of leisure. The conceit is potent, but it doesn't quite go over the top: a vibrant palette of aqua, orange, and lime green is tamed by terrazzo, teak, walnut, and bronze. And the smartly designed guest rooms, the suites in particular, evoke the traditional motel room while correcting its missteps, offering added daylight, privacy, and flexibility with logical floor plans and screening devices.

With Cabana Bay, the design team has taken an outsize commercial venture and used it to elevate the experience of the middle-market family vacation. Despite the staff's bowling shirts, the '50s pop soundtrack, and vintage cars out front, the hotel does not lapse into nostalgia. “For me, the midcentury era represented a time of optimism, the feeling of endless possibilities,” says Shulman. The complex, with its logical spatial organization, clean lines, and jaunty vibe saluting simple pleasures, communicates this idealism while bringing dignity to a building type that typically lacks this quality.


People

Formal name of building:
Universal's Cabana Bay Beach Resort

Location:
Orlando, Florida

Completion Date:
March, 2014

Gross square footage:
1,248,033

Total project/construction cost:
Confidential

Client:
Universal Parks & Resorts / Universal Creative / Loew's Hotels

Owner:
Universal Parks & Resorts

Architect:
Design Architect:
Shulman + Associates
100 NE 38 Street
Miami, FL 33137
(305) 438 0609 T / (305) 438 0170 F

Personnel in architect's firm who should receive special credit:
Principal-in-Charge: Buck Lindsay FAIA
Design Architect: Mike Clifford
Production Architects: Jim Lord, Christine Spence, Dan Anderson, Izzy Torres, Binita Vora
Construction Architects: Tom Owens, Jennifer Faulkinberry AIA
Design Architect: Shulman + Associates ' Design principal: Allan Shulman
Project managers/designers: Derek Sommers, Juan Alvarenga, Brand Gonzalez, Luis Sanchez, Herman Courrau, Wesley Kean, Michelle Bilbao
Graphics: Jason Walker, Claudia Aguado, Andres Camacho, Mike Galea, Smitha Vasan, Monica Socorro

Architect of record:
Lindsay Pope Brayfield Clifford & Associates
Atlanta, GA

Interior Designer & Interior Architect:
Daroff Design Inc.
Philadelphia, PA
Karen Daroff, principal designer; Katie Pass, associate designer; Richard Lanning, senior architect

Engineers:
Structural, MEP, Fire Protection, Fire Alarm Engineers: Lindsay Pope Brayfield Clifford & Associates, Atlanta

Structural Engineer: Greg Brayfield

Civil Engineer:
Harris Engineering, Torben Abbott

Consultant(s):
Landscape Design:
Esciences, Inc., Keith Oropeza

Lighting Design:
CD+M Lighting Design Group, LLC, Atlanta

Lighting Consultant: CDM, Hilary Wainer

Graphics: WrenHouse Design

Colorist: Lynne Cerro

Low Voltage Design:
Network Technologies, Inc., Lawrenceville, GA

Pool Design:
Aquatic Design & Engineering, Orlando

Food Service: LGM Design/Lutz

Purchasing Company: Benjamin West

General contractor:
Balfour Beatty Construction, Miles Gibbs

Photographer(s):
Robin Hill
(305) 785 6538
rh@robinhill.net

Garrett Rowland
(917) 774 9166
garrett@garrettrowland.com

Size:

1,250,000 square feet

Completion date:

March 2014

 

Products

Structural System
Cabana Bay Beach Resort:
Phase 1 - Three 4-story guestroom buildings (600 rooms)
Phase 2 ' 2-story arrival building (check-in, shop, caf', restaurant, bowling, fitness, meeting, back-of-house)
Phase 3 - Two 7-story guestroom buildings (1,200 rooms)

Phase 1 - Cast in place concrete slabs/CMU bearing walls
Phase 2 - Steel structure Phase 3 - Post-tensioned concrete slabs with concrete columns

Exterior cladding
EIFS, Prefinished aluminum cladding, flashing; guardrails with wire mesh infill; perforated paneling

Metal Panels: McNichols Perforated Prefinished Metal Panel

EIFS, ACM, or other: EIFS (Dryvit)

Other cladding unique to this project: Ipe wood louver and lattice panels on Cabana structures.

Roofing
Single-ply membrane, flat roofs

Windows
Prefinished aluminum thermally-broken storefront

Glazing
Glass: Oldcastle BuildingEnvelope® insulating low e

Insulated-panel or plastic glazing: Insulated exterior glazing infill panels (Mapes)

Doors
Metal doors: Painted hollow metal doors

Fire-control doors, security grilles: Won fire doors

Hardware
Locksets: Hard swipe electronic locksets

Interior finishes
Acoustical ceilings: spray textured ceiling, gypsum ceilings, acoustical ceilings

Wall coverings: Vinyl

Special surfacing: Formica

Floor and wall tile: Custom mosaic tile throughout

Special interior finishes unique to this project: Terrazzo flooring; acoustical spray for large public areas; intumescent paint on structural steel columns

Furnishings
American Leather
Herman Miller
JLF
Knoll
Kravet
Shelby Williams
Unifactor

Conveyance
Elevators/Escalators: Otis Gen 2