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Arbuckle Costic Architects
363 State Street
Salem, Or 97301
Phone: (503) 581-4114
Fax: (503) 581-3655
Arbuckle Costic Architects website:
www.arbucklecostic.com
Arbuckle Costic Architects is a Salem-based architectural
corporation with more than 42 years of service to clients
throughout the Willamette Valley and greater Oregon. Since
1958, the firm has steadily expanded its capabilities. Arbuckle
Costic Architects serves a broadly based spectrum of clients
ranging from education to health and commerce, as well as
clients at all levels of government from municipal to state
and federal. Staff architects are licensed in Oregon, Washington,
and California.
Salem area projects include the following:
Courthouse Square Transit Mall
Oregon Military Department Headquarters
Leslie Middle School
Farrar Building Remodel
Paulus Building Remodel
Marion County Public Works Office Building
Candalaria Office Building
Chemeketa Community College, Multiple Projects
Willamette University, Multiple Projects
Christian Center of Salem
State Capitol Hearing Room Remodel
West Coast Bank Main Salem Branch
Salems Riverfront Carousel (Design)
Trinity Covenant Church
A.C. Gilbert Discovery Village, Multiple Projects
Arbuckle Costic Architects performs the following services
on a regular basis:
Bond Assistance
Architectural Design
Cost Control Estimates
Project Research (Feasibility Studies)
Space Need
Programming
Construction Documents
Life Cycle Cost Analysis
Energy Conservation Studies
Master Planning Construction Inspection
Building and Life Safety Code Reviews Interior Design and
Space Planning
Arbuckle Costic Architects presently employs twenty-one individuals.
The firm has eight professionally licensed architects, three
interns, three clerical employees, three interior designers,
three drafters, and a marketing/public relations coordinator.
Farrar Building (Arbuckle Costic Architects Office Building)
Built in 1917, located in Downtown Salem, the 6,400-square-foot
Farrar building is the last one-story brick structure on its
block and one of few remaining in downtown Salem. An interior
renovation in 1995 provided an art gallery effect and an excellent
work environment, as well as space for displaying pictures
of the firms projects. It was necessary to coordinate
with the National Register of Historic Places in order to
maintain its listing on the National Registry and to properly
preserve the building.
The west side is a professional office space which includes
three private offices, three conference rooms, and twenty
other desks in a combination of shared and individual cubicle
spaces. The work spaces are separated by five-foot walls allowing
an open feeling, enhanced by the eleven-foot tall ceilings,
throughout the office. The east bay, currently being leased,
includes additional office space in the front and restroom
and break room facilities, shared by both businesses, in the
rear.
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