Salt Lake City

Design Workshop's Salt Lake City office is housed in a renovated candy factory in the downtown area. The office is focused on urban design, new community planning, and parks and open space design. Urban design work includes a town center plan for North Logan, master planning of a 61-acre urban commercial and residential center in the center of downtown Las Vegas, a mixed-use redevelopment plan for 20 acres in downtown Ogden, the site planning and exterior interpretive design for the new Utah Museum of Natural History, and the first commercial village in the new Daybreak community in South Jordan.

Salt Lake offers the amenities of a major metropolitan area with the friendliness of a small, western city. The 2002 Olympic Winter Games highlighted Salt Lake City as both a world-class travel and family-friendly destination. Salt Lake is nestled in a valley at the foot of the Wasatch and Oquirrh Mountains and has a climate with abundant sunshine and low humidity that is comfortable year-round.

The Salt Lake office is lead by Shareholder/Principal, Terrall Budge. He is supported by an outstanding team, including Operations Manager, Steve Brozo.


 

The Salt Lake City office of Design Workshop hosted a Green Drinks event in which approximately 50 people attended. Green Drinks is a grass roots organization formed for the purpose of providing a casual, informal meeting place for people interested in sustainable living, design and environmental issues. The Salt Lake City tag line is, “Friendly drinks and a healthy helping of eco-inspiration!” Salt Lake City Green Drinks encourages the use of carpools, public transportation, bicycles and feet.


Employee Insight


“Living at 9th & 9th is great because it's possible to go for two weeks without driving a car. The grocery store, bike shop, coffee house, post office, and Liberty Park are all in five minute walk and downtown is in a ten minute bicycle ride. Evenings on the front porch at 9th and 9th are more entertaining than television. The neighborhood's vibrancy makes people watching a great way to add to the street life. The central location of 9th and 9th allows us to ride bikes to work downtown and to ride to play in the Wasatch Range. Yes, there is a Starbucks on the corner and no, it didn't run the local coffee house out of business.”

– Steve Brozo