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Located on the Atlantic side of Great Abaco Island, Schooner Bay is a town steeped in
the architectural and design legacy of traditional Bahamian settlements. The site offers
the only harbor opportunity on the Atlantic coast of the island for twenty miles in either
direction and features sweeping views of the ocean. It will comprise two neighborhoods
centered around a generous harbour, and features a continuous promenade lined with
shops, restaurants serving locally grown food, and other mixed-use buildings, generating
a civic and commercial vitality. All daily needs are intended to be met in this center
by foot, bicycle, or golf cart. An island in the harbour also offers cottages as part of a
boutique hotel program. Schooner Bay will be a model for the future growth of Great
Abaco, redirecting the regional development trend away from sprawl and towards
environmental and community responsibility.
Schooner Bay utilizes both design and technology to achieve the highest standards of
sustainability. A buffer along the beach front will preserve natural dunes and vegetation.
Landscaping will consist of native species that flourish naturally. A contiguous greenway
permeates the site, designed to preserve the preferred habitat of the Bahamian
parrot, which migrates through the area annually. All aspects of the civil engineering
and infrastructure are also handled as environmental planning opportunities. These
include strategies for reducing energy use, such as shading devices, geothermal cooling
and walkable (zero-emission) neighborhoods; advanced stormwater and wastewater
management strategies, including pervious pavements, greywater reuse, and catchment
and storage strategies, and zero-waste generation. Waste will be recycled, composted,
or incinerated. In addition, a program that extends to the greater Bahamian community
called the Commons has an agricultural component that will, along with the area fi shery,
provide fresh and local sources of food on-site, and education to the larger community
on sustainability and health. The program will be hosted at Schooner Bay’s new South
Abaco Community Centre.
Building types and streetscapes are arranged according to the local transect, and the
scale and design of the architecture is inspired by the Caribbean vernacular, as seen
in Harbour Island and nearby Hope Town. Buildings are primarily cottages, relating to the
street with small masonry walls, hedges and fences. Screened porches offer semiprivate
space, temperature regulation, and reflect the character and tradition of the
Bahamas.
website: www.lindroth.cc/ID.htm
project tearsheet: 139 Kb PDF file
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