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Element Moline Wins “Best Hotel Focused Service” BDNY Gold Key Award for Excellence in Hospitality Design

December 10, 2018 Community, News by Legat Architects

Hospitality industry’s most prestigious awards program honors adaptive reuse project that transforms century-old warehouse/distribution facility into Element Moline, the eco-friendly Element brand’s Illinois debut

Element Moline won the “Best Hotel Focused Service” award in the 2018 BDNY Gold Key Awards.

On November 12, over 500 hotel industry moguls gathered at the sold-out BDNY Gold Key Awards Gala at Gotham Hall in Midtown Manhattan. The program, sponsored by Boutique Design magazine, “recognizes the most influential and innovative design work in the hospitality industry.”

The jury of leaders in hospitality design, operations, development, and investment industries chose the 96-room Element Moline as the “Best Hotel Focused Service” winner. The project, designed by Legat Architects and Sheedy/DeLaRosa Interiors and built by Russell, beat out hotels in Hong Kong and Manhattan. It retrofits a 100-year-old warehouse/distribution facility into Marriott International’s eco-friendly Element brand’s first Illinois property . . . and its first adaptive reuse project.

The interiors of Element Moline emphasize texture and minimize color to celebrate the original facility’s design highlights.

The category includes “inexpensive hotels that provide no-frills, basic services. At the lowest price point, there may be a limited range of facilities and meals may be fairly simple.”

“The judges were impressed by the creativity behind Element’s first adaptive reuse project,” said Mary Scoviak, emcee and executive editor of Boutique Design magazine. “Their view was that the design and architecture showed a great deal of innovation in fitting the brand prototype into a non-prototypical facility. They also appreciated the sensitivity in the choices of materials to ensure the hotel reflected Element’s sustainability mandate.”

Legat’s April Maifield and Sheedy/DeLaRosa Interiors’ Marcie DeLaRosa accepted the award at the gala. Element Moline is owned by The Amin Group and operated by Ctwo Hotels.

Designers broke down the layout into modules based on the original facility’s structural grid. This lounge, for instance, fits into a module defined by columns.

Fitting In

How to fit a hotel brand prototype in Moline’s historic O’Rourke Building, a former Sears Roebuck & Company warehouse built in 1917? This was the challenge posed to Legat, Sheedy/DeLaRosa, and Russell at the beginning of the Element Moline project. The compromise came in exposing elements of the facility (columns, concrete floors, bricks) to reinforce the brand’s sustainable image.

The project was coordinated through the National Park Service, which works with communities to preserve buildings and local history. The organization reviewed and approved every preservation aspect of the project, including the restored interior portions.

Each renovated room exposes a different part of the historic building, offering a much different experience than a cookie-cutter franchise hotel.

The existing 60,000-square-foot structure holds 65% of guest rooms and a 22,000-square-foot addition houses the remainder. The architect, interior designer, contractor, and owner walked through every room to determine layout and location of furniture and TVs.

Element Moline ties into a multimodal development called The Q. The hotel connects to a train station grand hall and tenant space, as well as a grand lawn and future high-speed rail stop.

Element Moline is the hotel component of The Q, a transit-oriented development that includes a train station with service to Chicago. The hotel renovation includes 16,000 square feet of retail/restaurant space, along with a new glass pavilion that serves as the rail station’s grand hall on the east side.

The courtyard features a mural with a 1950s-era aerial photo of downtown Moline (including the hotel’s former manifestation).

Millennial and Sustainable

Element Moline was designed and constructed to appeal to a Millennial and sustainable mindset. For instance, a muted color scheme gives the hotel a contemporary feel and lets the exposed elements of the original facility tell a story.

Recycled materials (e.g., bicycle parts, tennis rackets) make up the lobby artwork, while custom-designed bamboo backdrops hold television monitors and keep the lobby space open. Piping in the lobby houses electrical/cable wiring and reinforces the industrial feel of the hotel.

The lobby and some rooms within the renovated portion reveal Chevron braced frames added to strengthen wind resistance against the original brick walls.

Element Moline also exemplifies transit-oriented development that reduces reliance on automobiles. Its “Bikes to Borrow” program allows guests to check out bicycles for rides on the adjacent Great River Trail that runs along the Mississippi River. Additionally, destinations within walking distance of the hotel include many restaurants, a 12,000-seat multipurpose arena, and an agricultural museum. A bus transfer station is located across the street.

“What a fantastic experience!” writes one TripAdvisor reviewer. “Decor was cool, room was enormous, outdoor patio was nice, breakfast was great, beer/wine/cheese time was excellent. Common area was conducive to hanging out. Place was clean and quiet . . . staff was helpful and friendly . . . and the price was ‘right.’”

View more images of Element Moline or learn about the adaptive reuse award it won from the Moline Preservation Society.

Contact us to learn more about hospitality design or comment below to share your thoughts on this post.

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