Silver Gardens opens
Silver Gardens, the first affordable housing development in New Mexico  designed to achieve LEED Platinum certification, has opened in downtown  Albuquerque, across from the Alvarado Transportation Center. Developer  Jonathan Rose described the $12.5 million, 66-unit project as “a model  transit-oriented, mixed-income green solution to the changing climate.”
The four stories of energy-efficient rentals, for low- and middle-income  families, form a “U” around a courtyard. Among the project’s  resource-conserving elements is a roof whose slopes help to collect  rainwater, which is then used to water the 15,000 sq. ft. courtyard.  There is an underground cistern.
Rose wanted to incorporate contemporary architecture into downtown  Albuquerque, and the new building makes a sharp contrast to the more  traditional buildings Moule & Polyzoides had designed a few years  ago for the city’s Historic District Improvement Company. Silver Gardens  has mostly flat unornamented surfaces on its exterior — barebones, some  would say. The building was designed by Claudio Vigil Architects of  Albuquerque and OZ Architecture of Denver.
The courtyard contains a sculpture of stacked stone representing the  region’s early architecture, and a spiral vortex based on the Chaco  culture sundial. Courtyard elements were created by New Mexico artists  and designers Nocona Burgess and Alejandro Ortiz. Sited on a former  brownfield, the apartments were co-developed by the Supportive Housing  Coalition of New Mexico and Romero Rose LLC, the Albuquerque affiliate  of Jonathan Rose Companies.