Courtyard by Marriott Santa Cruz Hotel Architectural Design

The Courtyard Marriott Santa Cruz complements the Spanish Mediterranean style of historical Santa Cruz, with a prime location just two blocks from the beach and boardwalk.

Location:

Santa Cruz, California

Client:

Lotus Management

Scale:

150 rooms over 4 stories

A new-build hotel project designed and constructed from the ground up in the footprint previously occupied by three budget hotels, AXIS/GFA’s San Francisco studio’s design for the property incorporates 150 guestrooms spanning four floors, and creates a new hospitality destination only two blocks away from the city’s legendary beach and boardwalk.

Upon approaching the hotel, the arrival experience is stunning on account of the edifice’s horizontal scale and the depth of the entrance promenade, while at the same time is warmly familiar and authentically at-home in the surrounding Spanish Colonial cityscape. The lobby entrance is significantly set-in from the street, creating the first of several city plaza-like courtyards on the property. Emphasizing the immersive nature of the arrival experience, receding terraced hardscaping cleverly adds forced perspective to the guest pedestrian approach.

Completing the exterior design program, the façade’s classic Spanish Revival architectural core is balanced with a blend of modern touches. The curves of classic balustrades and doorway arches are offset with an angular modern fenestration program and contemporary landscape architecture features, while the expected classic Spanish Colonial terracotta roofing tiles, adobe stucco and exposed roof beams all share modern embellishments that make the design timeless.

Making the hotel complete, a modern lobby and reception, café, meeting rooms, fitness center, and second floor pool and spa round-out AXIS/GFA’s design of the property.

AXIS/GFA’s design of the Courtyard by Marriott Santa Cruz is on behalf of San Jose’s Lotus Management Inc. Interior design expertise was provided by Baker Design Associates and DRG. Photos courtesy of www.marriott.com, with photo credit to William Rust at William James Photography.