Astelier Architectural Workshop, Livingston, Montana, USA

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Architecture Firm Astelier Architectural Workshop
People Delmer Cox
Address 157 Spring Creek Hills Rd
Livingston, Montana, 59047 USA
Telephone (406) 223-3905
Fax (406) 222-0535
Email delmer@astelier.com
Web Site http://www.astelier.com
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Contents


[edit] Services

Architecture, Design, Design/Build, Consulting, Project Management

[edit] Focus

Complete architectural services for Commercial, Residential and Ranch development.

[edit] Projects

  • Completed December 2006, [[1]] Yellowstone Club, Big Sky, Montana, 6000 s.f. Ski Lodge
  • Preliminary Design complete Fall 2007, Hintz Residence, Paradise Valley, Livingston, Montana, 3500 s.f farmhouse style residence
  • Construction Phase I remodel complete, Winter 2008, Grunseth Residence, Wilsall, Montana, Remodel / Addition, Design / Build, 3000 s.f. Hillside Rustic
  • Construction Phase I remodel complete, Summer 2008, Judkins Residence, Wilsall, Montana, Remodel / Renovation, 3000 s.f Bungalow
  • Construction in Progress, Spring 2009, [[2]] Cole Residence, Paradise Valley, Livingston, Montana, 4000 s.f Craftsman Style Residence
  • Construction in progress Spring 2009, Walters Residence, Paradise Valley, Livingston, Montana, 3200 s.f ranch style residence
  • Construction in progress, Spring 2009, [[3]], Riverside Liquors, High Prairie, Alberta, Canada, 2000 s.f.
  • Preliminary Design complete, Spring 2009, Pine Creek School remodel, Livingston, Montana
  • Preliminary Design in progress, Spring 2009, Spring Creek Hill residence, Livingston, Montana

    [edit] Firm Statement

    Based in Livingston, Montana and serving the Big Sky, Bozeman, Livingston and Paradise Valley areas, Astelier provides complete services for commercial and residential architecture, and ranch development. Services include Architectural Design, Design/Build, Consulting, and Project Management.

    Astelier Architectural Workshop is an embodiment of views and goals for the architectural environment that we are able to affect. Tantamount amongst these goals is the coordination of sculptural exterior forms with innovative and intriguing interior spaces.

    Space is identified as the forum of interaction between humans and the built environment. It is the inside, the tactile elements and their interstices. Form is what you perceive when viewing the entity as a whole. It is the outside, the visual object with all of its subcomponents. It is a relationship of proportions and scale, both within its own composition as well as between itself and things beyond.

    Historically form has more often than not followed function: the spaces are laid out in the most appropriate arrangement, walls are thrown up, a roof put on, and decoration added. The polar opposite to this approach would be a purely sculptural piece of architecture whose function is made to work within the desired statement of its form.

    Most contemporary buildings fall between these two poles and form is always taken into consideration as spaces are laid out, or spaces are kept in mind as the form is massaged. The best designs are the result of conscious and organized synergy between these two elements. To realize this successful union it is imperative that a variety of interdependent factors are in alignment. Each client's individual program and personal desires must be addressed through cooperative interaction at every stage of the design and construction process. Since there is never just one solution to a given program, working together to find a vision that satisfies both aesthetic ideals and functional goals is an indispensable part of the owner-architect relationship.

    Material choices, structural integrity, environmental influences, governmental regulations and all the various ingredients that go into a building and the design of a building provide the embodiment of this solid conceptual base; the exceptional interaction of space and form.


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