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The hotel’s name, Populus, comes from the scientific name for quaking aspen: Populus tremuloides. Studio Gang, which is based in Chicago and has projects around the world, is the hotel’s ...
The shape of the window is apparently "informed by studying the characteristic patterns found on Aspen trees (Populus tremuloides)," according to Studio Gang. The firm adds: "As the trees grow ...
The hotel’s moniker comes from the scientific name for the quaking aspen (Populus tremuloides), the native tree that served as muse for the project. An avid hiker, Gang explored many of Colorado ...
The Prairie Gold aspen (Populus tremuloides ‘Prairie Gold’) is a deciduous tree that can be a lovely addition to a central Ohio landscape. The fast-growing tree’s trunk grows in a narrow ...
Designed by the Studio Gang architecture firm, the building was inspired by Colorado's native Populus Tremuloides tree, also known as the quaking aspen. And despite being located in an urban area ...
In fact, its namesake is the scientific term for aspens, Populus tremuloides. Esquire’s Jeff Gordinier gushed about the aesthetic, from the exterior with its arched windows designed to deter ...
In Minnesota we have two native aspens — quaking aspen (populus tremuloides) and bigtooth aspen (populus grandidentata). Some other Minnesota trees in the populus genus include the native balsam ...
Populus tremuloides, not the stadium designers) and the project wears the influences on its sleeve. The facade, arranged in columns of white “tree trunks,” will be pocked with eye-shaped ...
It makes sense considering its moniker is the scientific name for aspen trees (Populus tremuloides) and its exterior is meant to mimic the distinct eye-shaped patterns on the tree. Put together by ...
Populus, located in downtown Denver, aims to become the country's first carbon-positive hotel. Sustainability is a buzzword in many industries, including hospitality. While carbon neutrality is ...
The name Populus takes inspiration from Colorado’s widespread Aspen trees (Populus tremuloides); as does its facade. Fluted to recall the recognizable slim, white trunks, the glass-fiber ...
The hotel takes its name from Populus Tremuloides, or the aspen tree, whose eye-shaped markings also inspire the structure’s distinctive façade. The hotel’s eye-like windows change in size across the ...