The Arroyo Corporate Center is the premier master-planned mixed-use development located in the southwest submarket of the Las Vegas. This superbly conceived 450-acre project incorporates every element to provide unsurpassed tenant satisfaction in a state-of-the-art corporate environment. The Arroyo Corporate Center offers a full spectrum of business location options, including Class A office buildings. The two-building project includes American International Group and Stantec Consulting as its first tenants. The center offers floor-to-ceiling glass façades, exterior portions clad in copper, and interior common areas with mahogany and polished-granite, plus fiber-optic wiring and covered parking.
The whole project is focused around an interior intersection away from Rainbow Boulevard and Buffalo Drive, the streets that border the development. The retail component flows toward Rainbow Boulevard and offers easy access from the I-215 to appeal to the surrounding communities.
I became involved with these projects after another engineering firm was unable to satisfy the owner’s needs. The offices were originally engineered by another engineering firm; the owner became dissatisfied, and I was assigned the task of “re-engineering” the building, taking into account the architect’s and the owner’s specific needs. By considering the structural elements required with a focus on economy and aesthetics, several columns were eliminated, innovative ledgers were incorporated to allow the architectural glazing elements to be emphasized, and exterior tilt-up panels were revised with the contractor in mind. Ultimately, the engineering saved the owner tens of thousands of dollars.
The whole project is focused around an interior intersection away from Rainbow Boulevard and Buffalo Drive, the streets that border the development. The retail component flows toward Rainbow Boulevard and offers easy access from the I-215 to appeal to the surrounding communities.
I became involved with these projects after another engineering firm was unable to satisfy the owner’s needs. The offices were originally engineered by another engineering firm; the owner became dissatisfied, and I was assigned the task of “re-engineering” the building, taking into account the architect’s and the owner’s specific needs. By considering the structural elements required with a focus on economy and aesthetics, several columns were eliminated, innovative ledgers were incorporated to allow the architectural glazing elements to be emphasized, and exterior tilt-up panels were revised with the contractor in mind. Ultimately, the engineering saved the owner tens of thousands of dollars.