The proposed project at 6828 Depot Street will be a small, design-oriented boutique hotel with 66 rooms. The hotel will operate 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, year-round. The Hotel will also include a lobby and reception area, retail, artist/maker studios, restaurant, bar, lounge, wellness center, public courtyard, private gardens, outdoor rooftop decks, meeting rooms, and other hotel amenities. There will be a total of 122 parking spaces for the project, including 30 on-street and 92 located on an adjacent parcel across Brown Street.
Designed using feedback from the community, the buildings will be FSC redwood siding and vertical slats, carbonized redwood siding, textured concrete, a light-colored species wood siding, weathered steel panels, and covered in vine planting. The materials reference the local natural palate and rely on naturally sustainable materials.
The massing of the buildings is broken up to match the smaller scale of the surrounding buildings and context. This provides a finer grain that matches that of the town. The highest portion of the building is positioned across from the tallest adjacent building, the Rialto cinema, and then steps down two stories towards the south corner to adjust to the height of the neighboring building and allow more sunlight into the public courtyard.
Landscaping will be featured in the public courtyard, private gardens, passage, roof decks, green roofs, and streetscapes. It will be composed of plant species that are native to the area and will be maintained with a rainwater collection system or low-water drip irrigation. Concrete paving and permeable pavers provide a hardscape. The public courtyard will be mostly open to accommodate people and seating, and the private gardens will be an intimate space for the pool and wellness center.
Signage for the project will be located on both McKinley St and the corner of Petaluma and Depot. It will be placed at street level and will be legible and well-lit.
This project will take a sustainable green approach to construction and operations, included in the plan are solar roof panels for water heating to conserve electricity, storm water management, renewable/reused materials, and rainwater collection. The project goal is to achieve a LEED certification.