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The Lodge at Black Butte Ranch

The Lodge at Black Butte Ranch
Hacker

The Lodge at Black Butte Ranch

Planned and built in the early 1970s, Black Butte Ranch sits at the base of The Three Sisters Wilderness in Oregon’s Central Cascades and is a gateway to the region’s high desert from the Central Willamette Valley. The 1,800-acre site is a home for year-round residents and a popular vacation destination. The Ranch community began a comprehensive redevelopment plan in 2013, and after working with Hacker on the new Lakeside recreation and dining complex (completed in 2016) and a new General Store (completed in 2021), the team’s attention turned to the resort’s 50-year-old Lodge.

photo_credit Hacker
Hacker

As one of the Ranch’s original structures, the Lodge’s iconic 1970’s architecture made it beloved by many, including the Hacker design team. Hacker’s analysis found accessibility issues, aging mechanical systems, and an outdated layout, making a renovation impractical. After the decision for new construction was made, Hacker began an extensive year-long outreach process to understand the community’s vision and priorities for its replacement.Like Hacker’s work on other parts of the Ranch, the new 28,000-square-foot structure (21,000-square-foot interior plus a 6,000-square-foot exterior deck) aims to honor and evolve the design language of the original ranch buildings while elevating the experience of the surrounding landscape through the careful framing and layering of views and a sensitive interpretation of regional materials and forms. The interior celebrates the ranch tradition of highlighting wood through its exposed structure and finishes, using contrasting tones of native wood species to create a sense of both warmth and openness. The entire space is set around a uniquely textured double-height stone fireplace, stitching the nostalgia of the old lodge back into the new. The restaurant booths appear to be carved away in the same way the nearby Metolius River has carved pools into the underlying lava flows. As much of the wood from the original lodge as possible has been salvaged to create guard rails, screens, furniture, and wall finishes. This connection also extends to the outside where an established pine tree on the site could not be saved so it was transformed into custom tabletops for the restaurant and bar. The exterior is clad in Shou Sugi Ban (charred cedar), a traditional Japanese wood treatment that maintains the weathered look of the previous building while providing additional resistance to insects and fire. This focus on local resources is also visible in the landscape design, which uses drought-tolerant native plants, encouraging habitat creation and celebrating the surrounding environment. Building materials will be sourced regionally, adding to the Lodge’s unique architecture while reducing transportation impacts and boosting the local economy. 

photo_credit Hacker
Hacker

The new building will include twice the square footage of the existing Lodge and is divided into three main sections: public spaces including the 70-seat Lodge restaurant and bar, 12-seat Fireside lounge, 50-seat second floor Aspen lounge, deck, and bar, 16-seat Ponderosa private dining room, and outside lounge; The Three Sisters private event area with a large, 210 seat capacity event room (divisible into two distinct event spaces, Faith and Hope), large dressing room, and Charity meeting room; and a state-of-the-art kitchen with expanded catering services, centrally located to serve the needs for the entire the new building and serving as the catering kitchen for all venues on the ranch.

photo_credit Hacker
Hacker

Hacker design team 
Design Principal: Corey Martin  
Project Manager: Nick Hodges 
Project Architects: Scott Mannhard and Brendan Hart 
Architectural Design Team: John Dalit, Jake Freauff, Matthew Sugarbaker, and Charles Dorn 
Interior Design Principal: Jennie Fowler 
Interior Designer: Mayumi Nakazato

photo_credit Hacker
Hacker

Project team 
Architecture and Interior Design: Hacker 
Contractor: Kirby Nagelhout 
Landscape: Walker Macy Landscape Architecture 
Kitchen Designer: Bargreen Ellingson Restaurant Supply and Design 
Civil Engineer: Harper Houf Peterson Righellis Inc. (HHPR) 
Structural Engineer: Madden & Baughman Engineering 
Mechanical and Plumbing Engineer: PAE Consulting Engineers 
Electrical Engineer: PAE Consulting Engineers 
Lighting: Luma Lighting Design 
Acoustical Engineer: Listen Acoustics

Materials and finishes  
Mass timber and light wood framing, with CIP concrete lateral elements 
Shou Sugi Ban charred cedar exterior wood siding 
Custom designed tables and benches from felled ponderosa pine: fabricated by Straight Edge Designs 
Interior wood siding, wood flooring, and wood ceiling: Pioneer Millworks 
Brazilian black slate flooring: Portland Direct Tile & Marble 
Feature stone fireplace: Cowboy Coffee ledgestone; installation by Rasmussen Masonry

 

For more information on Black Butte Ranch please visit: https://www.blackbutteranch.com/

photo_credit Hacker
Hacker

Project credits

Architects

Project data

Project Year
2023
Category
Restaurants
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