John Walters Architect
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John Walters, Architect PLLC was established in Tryon, NC in 2002 with the singular goal of producing design of the highest quality - timeless design that meets a client's functional needs while responding to both the natural and built environment. Personal attention to programmatic needs and budget ensures a successful design solution. With a background encompassing commercial, healthcare, institutional, and residential design, John Walters, Architect PLLC offers the experience to make your project successful.
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Smith Phayer Hospice House is a twelve-bed inpatient unit in Landrum, SC.
It provides hospice inpatient care for Polk County, NC and the surrounding areas.
The 20,000 sf facility is organized around a circular lobby, illuminated with clerestory windows, and includes twelve patient beds, administrative functions, a dining facility, family rooms, and patient activity rooms.
The facility, located on a heavily wooded site, is designed to provide each room with an unobstructed view of the forest.
The facility is designed to accommodate a twelve-bed addition, for a total capacity of twenty-four beds.
The St. Luke's Hospital Infusion Center is a renovation of building four in the St. Luke's Medical Office Park in Columbus, NC.
Affiliated with the Levine Cancer Institute, the Center offers cancer care and infusion therapy.
The facility offers both open and private treatment bays, exam rooms, a meeting room for education programs, and support space.
This domed rotunda has played an important role in the history of North Carolina State University.
Designed by Hobart Upjohn in 1926 as the College's Library, the two-story rotunda, with its marble balustrade and Corinthian columns, served as the symbol for the new campus center.
In 1956, the building became home to the School of Design and took on a new use as the "jury room" for student project reviews.
The addition of a new floor level and a new ceiling suspended below the dome, altered the space's original character.
The Tryon Town Hall was built in the early 1900s as a two-level school.
During the early 1940s, the original sloped roof was removed and a third floor added, converting the building to a hotel.
The Town of Tryon converted the building to its Town Hall in 1953.
This renovation proposal returns features of the original building design, such as a sloped roof feature and larger window openings to the facade.
Town functions and Police functions are distributed within the building in order to provide both street level and third level tenant space.
This addition to the Tryon Fine Arts Center adds a multi-purpose, two-story-high addition designed to accommodate dinners, lectures, exhibits and light performances.
Interior renovations within the existing building include ADA compliance, new storage areas, dressing rooms, rehearsal spaces and toilets serving both the addition and the existing amphitheater.
The new multi-purpose space is oriented to take advantage of the mountain view, and opens onto a renovated Farwell Garden, which will allow simultaneous indoor and outdoor activities.
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