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Let's Get Lost
New Resort Offers
Retreat in Central Texas Setting
Who wouldn't want to slip away
to the new Hyatt Regency Lost Pines Resort & Spa? The
new facility, built by Lyda Swinerton Builders, will offer
guests a historical Central Texas ambience complete with an
18-hole golf course, a lazy river for tubing and the shade
of pecan trees.
by Rob Patterson
Lyda Swinerton Builders is nearing completion on the resort
outside of Austin on a 400-acre site above the Colorado
River |
The Hyatt Regency Lost Pines
Resort & Spa near Bastrop, about 15 mi. east of Austin,
blends in so seamlessly with its surroundings that guests
may not detect at first glance that its main building is a
450,000-sq.-ft. structure housing 500 guest rooms and two
ballrooms.
Lyda Swinerton Builders of San Antonio began construction
on the resort in June 2004 on a 400-acre site on a bluff above
the Colorado River adjacent to the McKinney Roughs Nature
Park. The $135 million project is 90 percent complete and
scheduled for a June opening. Lyda Swinerton's portion of
the contract was $66 million.
"The biggest guiding force on this project was the site
- a lovely meadow in a valley with these gorgeous and enormous
pecan trees," said Doug Atmore, project architect for
Hill Glazier Architects of Palo Alto, Calif. "We tried
to be careful with the scale and the massing of the building
and surgically insert the project into the site as cleanly
as possible.
"The building rambles to do a couple of things. We wanted
to dodge in and out of all the different trees to miss as
many as we possibly could and to break down the scale of the
building so it looks like a collection of smaller buildings
woven through the trees."
To achieve that scale, the guest-room wings are three to
four levels high and extend out from the center of the structure.
The public spaces are a similar height.
"It was a challenge to get the layout of the building
to weave into the site and through the trees," Atmore
said. "Drawing it on paper was one thing. Actually making
sure it worked in the field was another thing."
In addition to the main structure, the project includes a
20,000-sq.-ft. spa building and a 25,000-sq.-ft. clubhouse
serving the resort's 18-hole golf course. "The architectural
styles took their cues from the local vernacular - very simple
forms and building traditions," Atmore said.
The design of the entrance and guest reception area of the
main building was based on the "dogtrot" farmhouse
structures common to Central Texas. The ballroom wing of the
structure utilizes the style and façade of small-town
Texas harmony halls and features a 16,000-sq.-ft. main ballroom
and a 8,000-sq.-ft. junior ballroom as well as 40 meeting
rooms and banquet facilities.
Materials Evoke Tradition The
frame of the main building is stainless galvanized structural
steel studs on the guest wings and structural steel girders
on the ballroom wing. "The framing was economical and
went up quickly," Atmore said.
The walls are primarily a combination of cement hardy plank
and prefabricated galvanized steel stud wall panels. Oklahoma
sandstone faces the ballroom wing and is used as an accent
throughout the project. The ballroom wing has a galvanized
stainless-steel, standing-seam roof, and the guest wings are
roofed with a combination of asphalt composition shingles
and concrete tile shingles that resemble wood shakes.

Materials were selected to
replicate natural products traditionally used in the Central
Texas area. Above, workers complete the exterior of the
restaurant building at Lost Pines. |
The materials were selected to replicate natural products
traditionally used on buildings in the area. "We took
a lot of care to make sure that the uneducated eye would not
know the difference," said Gary Coffman, senior vice
president of Woodbine Development, the project's owner.
Manufactured materials also give the structure a greater
permanence and fire resistance. "You also have to be
careful about building things out of lumber in the area,"
Coffman said. "With the moisture content, it can be a
maintenance nightmare. We deliberately set out to build a
structure that looked like it was made out of lumber using
synthetic products that would withstand that moisture."
Although the main building was erected around more than 60
old-growth pecan trees, three of the trees had to be removed.
Those trees and others removed from the golf course were custom
milled to provide flooring and trim in the lobby and restaurants
and a bar in the main barroom. Douglas fir ceilings and trusses
were used in the restaurants and reception area.
Lyda Swinerton constructed gunite swimming pools with a "lazy
river" for guests to go tubing. A 5-acre irrigation pond,
dug by Oliphant Golf Construction of Scottsdale, Ariz., provided
50,000 cu. yds. of fill for use under the foundations of the
buildings. Oliphant also built the golf course.
The golf clubhouse is wood frame with hardy plank board and
batten siding to replicate the traditional wooden barn designs
of the region. It has an 11,000-sq.-ft. concrete basement.
The spa building is wood frame with a combination of limestone
and corrugated metal siding. "It was a conscious decision
to take the risk and use wood on the smaller buildings,"
Coffman said. He said that wood was more economical and flexible
as well as true to the regional styles of the design.
The contractor and developer coordinated early purchases
of materials to avoid higher costs due to rising steel and
petroleum prices.
"Obtaining materials has been a difficulty, but we did
a lot of prepurchasing," said Cliff Pawelek, project
manager for Lyda Swinerton. "One of the best things we
did was pave the parking area early on, so we were able to
have significant laydown area for storage of materials."
Navigating the Waters The majority
of the main building is on a concrete slab on grade. A 20-ft.
deep basement underneath the meeting rooms and lobby that
contains mechanical and electric equipment as well as housekeeping,
laundry and data facilities extended below the 100-year flood
plain of the Colorado River.
"The developer was concerned that if the ground becomes
saturated, you would get a lot of hydrostatic pressure and
water will be forced into every little nook and cranny of
the basement," Atmore said. "The waterproofing system
had to be designed and installed to resist that kind of pressure.
All the waterproofing membranes had to have backings that
were capable of resisting that force, and hydrophilic sealants
that expand when it gets wet were used on the seams and conduits."
Woodbine felt it was critical to take extra measures to guard
against even the least likeliest of scenarios. "No piping
or conduit was allowed to penetrate the basement below the
flood plain," Coffman said. "The basement is as
watertight as the hull of a boat."
The horizontal structure of the main building required greater
coordination than a vertical structure of a similar size.
"It's a little tougher to route water and utilities
through the 10 acres of three to four stories than to route
the same utilities though a 450,000-sq.-ft. high-rise building,"
Coffman said. The resort's remote site required utility providers
to bring in lengthy pipes, conduits and wires to provide services
including an 8-mi. gas line from the nearest pipeline.
The proximately to Austin affected the availability of workers.
"Austin right now is one of the hottest spots in the
state with a lot of building going on," Coffman said.
"It has almost been a bidding war to keep the labor that's
out there."
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