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Honda Advanced Design Studio

Pasadena, CA
George Yu Architects

With high-speed, streamlined curves, the late George Yu created a shimmering cocoon of a workspace for Honda’s Advanced Design Center.

By Sarah Amelar

Top-secret research is not usually hidden behind the bare, plate-glass windows of a corner storefront at the intersection of two busy shopping streets. But that’s exactly where Honda, the automotive company, has inserted its new Advanced Design Center, a studio where scrupulously guarded concepts for future cars are born.

Honda Advanced Design Studio
Photo © Fotoworks, Benny Chan
Honda Advanced Design Studio

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George Yu
Photo © Fotoworks, Benny Chan
George Yu

Before moving to this surprisingly exposed location in the Old Town area of Pasadena, California, the 10-person advanced-design team, an in-house R&D engine, had been buried deep in Honda’s corporate campus some 25 miles down the freeway, in Torrance. “We definitely needed a cooler, more vibrant environment—right in the thick of a hot neighborhood—to inspire us,” says Dave Marek, the company’s chief auto designer for its R&D Americas division.

Pasadena offered a lively creative scene within easy access to Honda headquarters; and just up the road from Old Town is the Art Center College of Design with its world-class automotive design school. Plus, the city already had a strong connection with Honda through the car company’s longtime sponsorship of the Rose Bowl and Rose Parade there. But how to give the Advanced Design studio an intriguing yet stealthy presence—and even more crucial, how to keep the team’s secret workings under wraps in such a curiously public spot?

Given the center’s focus on innovation, the solution clearly had to be the architectural equivalent of the experimental car of the future. When Marek met architect George Yu, he sensed an immediate creative kinship. Yu, who died of cancer this past July, had a history of rethinking conventional workplaces and exploring the possibilities of sometimes ordinary materials and cutting-edge, often digital, technologies, as with the Virgin Digital/Lost Boys studio, in Vancouver, where he and Jason King created sheer polyester window coverings embedded with light-responsive “memory coils” and IBM’s e-business center, in Chicago, where they integrated plasma screens and lenticular coatings into the interior furnishings.

When Yu toured Honda’s Torrance facility early in the project, he was captivated by the computer-controlled milling machines on which  designers make high-density foam, rapid-prototyping molds for full-scale car models. Excited by the prospect of borrowing this technology, he asked for permission to “play with” the equipment after-hours to create architectural components for the Pasadena studio. His concept was to insert into that 6,000-square-foot space, at the base of a 1904 building, an undulant “cocoon” of translucent acrylic. Since local ordinance prohibited storefront window coverings, the idea was to shield the 10 designers’ workstations and model shop from street view, while filtering daylight into that inner realm.

Formal name of project: Honda Advanced Design Studio

Location:
39 N. Raymond, Pasadena, CA

Gross square footage: 6000 sq.ft.

Completion Date: December 5th 2006

Owner: Honda R&D Americas, INC.

Architect:
George Yu Architects
Info@Georgeyuarchitects.com

 

 

 

Want the full story? Read the entire article in our September 2007 issue. Subscribe to Get Free Architectural Record newsletter | Architectural Record in print | Back Issues | Manage your subscription | Get Architectural Record digitally

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