Asante Public Library
Asante Public Library
Surprise, AZ

Uplifting the Park and Community Around Through Design

This 10,000-square-foot library, sited on a 12-acre park in Surprise, Arizona, was built to accommodate a growing community while framing extraordinary views of the state’s White Tank Mountains. Through its design, the building emulates the interplay of dappled sunlight and shadow that one might experience while resting beneath a desert tree.

From the earliest conceptual plans to final approval, the city faced a significant challenge in securing funding for the much-needed library. Throughout the interactive design process, all decisions were based on the value added to the project and the relative cost impacts, resulting in a project that never exceeded its budget and preserved the team’s vision for the library.

The park currently serves as a regional retention basin that drains along the local green belt. In order to reduce overall site disturbance, four-foot retaining walls serve as an elevated plinth. Doing so ensured the required clearance for rainfall collection would remain while allowing the plinth to function as the library’s foundation.

Inside, the library offers a large, open reading room where full-height glazing affords sweeping views of the nearby mountain range. Glazed study rooms also maintain visual connections to the surrounding landscape from all interior spaces. The modern facility allows patrons to arrange the furniture as needed, and access flooring supports the rearrangement of electrical and data outlets to accommodate the library’s future needs.

The library’s core programmatic functions are organized along its north edge inside a solid core finished with aluminum composite wall panels. The solid core forms the entry facade as well as the backdrop for an extended outdoor plaza that borders the library and the street edge. The plaza is a multi-use space that features integrated bench seating shaded by its tree canopy.

To temper the solar impact on the library’s glazing, a vertical canopy running along the library’s eastern, southern, and western elevations became the building’s dominant visual expression. It is built from metal c-channels that rotate, angle, and merge to create a unique pattern. The canopy’s continuity creates a dynamic facade of filtered sunlight, playful shadows, and an artistic reference to the park’s trees.

Constructed of folded perforated metal baffles in a white powder coat finish, the canopy form and perforation provide filtered sunlight to emulate the diffused light of a tree canopy for occupants of the building. The continuity between vertical and horizontal planes, in both exterior and interior applications, creates a dynamic façade of filtered sunlight, shadow play, and an artistic draw back to the tree canopy in the park. The architecture is meant to be an abstraction and representation of reading under a tree at the park. The canopy and shade invoke that feeling throughout a dynamic and sheltered space within the desert. 


Design Architect:  Richärd Kennedy Architects


Architect of Record:  Richärd Kennedy Architects


Client:  City of Surprise


Size:  10,000 SF


Project Type:  Civic + Public


Services:  Architecture, Programming, Interior Design


Delivery Method:  Design-Build


General Contractor:  Haydon Building Company


Structural Engineer:  Pangolin Structural


MEP Engineer:  ESD


Landscape Architect:  Logan Simpson Design


Photographers:  Roehner+Ryan | Mark Boisclair


Certification:  LEED Silver

2022 – Sources for Design, Shadow & Light, November 2022


2022 – Arizona Forward: Environmental Excellence Award


2022 – RED Awards, Recreation or Public Works Project of the Year


2021 – RED Awards, Merit Award


2021 – The Chicago Athenaeum, International Architecture Award


2021 – SEAOA, Merit Award


2020 – AIA Arizona, Honor Award


2020 – AIA Western Mountain Region, Merit Award

Constructed of folded perforated metal baffles in a white powder coat finish, the canopy form and perforation provide filtered sunlight to emulate the diffused light of a tree canopy for occupants of the building. The continuity between vertical and horizontal planes, in both exterior and interior applications, creates a dynamic façade of filtered sunlight, shadow play, and an artistic draw back to the tree canopy in the park. The architecture is meant to be an abstraction and representation of reading under a tree at the park. The canopy and shade invoke that feeling throughout a dynamic and sheltered space within the desert. 

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