Lewis built out a 20,546 square foot tenant improvement for Swedish Medical Center at the First Hill Medical Pavilion. This project required a high level of organization throughout construction to coordinate the work the renovation and expansion of the building, and to avoid disruption to medical lab tenants who stayed operational through the project.
Lewis recently completed a new 63,535 square foot athletics center on the occupied Lakeside Upper School campus. Upgrades include a competition gym with permanent seating for 800, four full-sized practice courts, a padded mat room, strength and conditioning and sports medicine facilities, three classrooms, locker rooms, staff offices, and lobby and event space. Sustainability features include photovoltaics on the roof.
Lewis recently completed this 19-story, 462,000 square foot Class A office tower in Downtown Bellevue. The parking garage is adjacent to the tower and partially above-grade, allowing Nine Two Nine to hit the leasing market far in advance of every competing project. The building features a prominent two-story lobby and incorporates a broad range of tenant-focused amenities. The exterior curtain wall design features a combination of high-performance glazing, precast concrete elements, and architectural metal accents. It is targeting LEED Gold certification.
This 84,000 square foot Earth Advantage Gold student housing complex includes two four-story buildings and one five-story building “connected via indoor bridges” and houses 91 living units with a mix of quad-single and quad-double rooms. Each floor includes specified units for resident assistants and resident directors with a variety of additional spaces for student interaction and collaboration such as a game room, a central kitchen, and meeting rooms with projection screen for study spaces.
Lewis constructed a new 44,800 square foot, two-story freestanding medical, dental, and human services clinic in North Seattle for NeighborCare, a non-profit care provider. Facilities include 14 exam rooms, 12 dental operatories, a pharmacy, a laboratory, conference rooms, and a demonstration kitchen used to teach healthy cooking. The active campus includes an existing King County clinic alongside the new building. The project is expected to achieve LEED Gold certification.
Lewis recently completed five years of projects at Seattle’s premier private school. The final phase was the new Paul G. Allen Athletics Center, a 63,535 square foot addition with a gym seating 800, sports medicine, a weight room, locker rooms, and rooftop photovoltaics. Prior to this project, Lewis completed the following work on campus: the renovation and expansion of Allen-Gates Hall (named after the Microsoft founders, who first met at Lakeside), including science classrooms; the historic renovation of Bliss Hall, with seismic, restoration, and MEP; and smaller renovations to Moore and Fix Halls.
Situated on the banks of the Columbia River, this project created light industrial space and offices for Boeing subsidiary, Insitu. The 125,000 square foot building is composed of four distinct spaces including a warehouse, manufacturing facility, office space and a research and testing area. Unique to the facility are chambers that allow for aircraft engine testing on-site. The project is LEED Silver certified and sustainable features include a green roof entry canopy, reclaimed lumber finishes, and daylighting strategies.
As CM/GC, Lewis managed this first generation, 12-floor, 250,000 square foot, fast track tenant improvement for six federal government agencies. Substantial security features such as duress buttons on walls and under desks, key card readers and wire mesh within walls adjacent to occupied spaces were included in the project. Lewis also added structural steel to support high density files and x-ray machines and installed owner furnished magnetometers. The project is certified LEED Gold for Commercial Interiors.
Lewis extensively restored and updated this high school, a Seattle landmark since 1923. This included a new free-standing athletic and performing arts building. The gymnasium includes 14 basketball hoops, bleachers with 1,827 seats, and gymnastic, wrestling, and volleyball equipment. Other areas include locker rooms, a weight room, a training room, and a Teen Life Center (also with a gym) that is run by the City of Seattle. Outdoors, the project included a synthetic turf football/soccer field with grandstand, a track, and facilities for shot put, pole vault, long jump, and high jump.
Lewis has been onsite continuously from 1999 to present at one of the world’s leading cancer research centers. Examples of Lewis’ hundreds of projects include a cGMP cell processing facility with clean room, a BSL-3 suite, a quality control room, and many other laboratory, office, and support spaces. Individual projects range up to 90,000 square feet.