Marketing materials for the Exo apartments—which feature a gleaming contemporary façade—encourage residents to “live in full color” in this 457-unit multifamily residential community that opened in July 2018 in Reston, Va. Exo residents live less than 25 miles from Washington, D.C.
Apartment façade features gleaming Alucobond Spectra color-shifting cladding

Exo Apartments, Reston, Va. Photo: Mark Kempf Photography, Courtesy of 3A Composites USA Inc.
Consisting of two identical 16-floor towers connected with a single-story reception-area link building, the 530,000-square-foot Exo is clad in Alucobond PLUS aluminum composite material (ACM) in the Spectra Ocean color-shifting finish by 3A Composites USA Inc., Davidson, N.C. The Alucobond Spectra was selected as a complementary building material to the Exo’s color-changing smart glass technology that adjusts window tint to allow optimal natural light in.
R2L: Architects PLLC, Washington, D.C., was tasked with designing Exo for Charleston, S.C.-based Greystar as the first multifamily residential community in the United States to feature View Dynamic Glass by View Inc., Milpitas, Calif.
“Our design was driven by smart glass technology,” says Sacha Rosen, AIA, principal, R2L: Architects. “This was to be a world demonstration project, serving as the first all-residential building using View Dynamic Glass. Incorporating smart glass technology required an extensive design process.”
The pre-glazed windows utilize electrochromic technology, which requires that wiring be directed to each window for electrical control. (The windows are powered by a photo array on the building’s roof.) Apartment residents can control the windows in their apartment through an app that lets in natural light while reducing glare, lowering energy costs and eliminating the need for shades or curtains. Apartment managers also have access to an overall building control for the windows.
To aid in this intricate window design, Custom Walls & Windows Inc., Jessup, Md., began work with general contractor John Moriarty & Associates of Virginia LLC, based in Arlington, Va., and R2L: Architects in early 2017.
“It was Custom Walls & Windows’ suggestion to clad the building with Alucobond Spectra panels,” says Rosen. “The thought was: If the glass changes colors, why not use metal panels that change colors?”
The project features 150,000 square feet of 4-mm Alucobond PLUS in the Spectra Ocean color-shifting finishing system. Alucobond Spectra colors allow architects to incorporate a unique, ever-changing color spectrum in the cladding of sophisticated building designs. Alucobond Spectra panels change colors as different wavelengths of light are reflected back to the audience, depending upon the viewing angle.
“The color of the overall design was generated by the smart glass, so the cladding color had to look good with the glass,” according to Rosen, who said the smart-glass technology offers residents four tints ranging from clear to darkening shades of blue. “Custom Walls & Windows suggested the Alucobond Spectra Ocean color. The color was perfect, so there was no need to pursue custom colors.”
The Exo’s twin 16-story towers rise above a landscaped parking plinth featuring 646 parking spaces and are connected by a link building designed completely in smart glass. The building facades, according to an architect’s statement, are “modularized, designed to leverage efficiencies in fabrication and construction, while scattered balconies punctuate the elevations.”
While the box-like design of the residential towers may be straightforward, the color-changing building materials make them stand out, according to Rosen.
“There are so many new developments on the market in the Washington, D.C., area, you have to differentiate your offering,” says Rosen. “The Exo is very contemporary and different from everything else out there. We used the building materials to make it striking.”
Approximately 16,000 Alucobond Spectra Ocean panels were fabricated and installed with a male/female interlocking system by Custom Walls & Windows.
“The owners are very happy with the Spectra panels,” says Alex Bennefield, vice president, Custom Walls & Windows. “We’ve heard more comments about these panels than anything else on this project. The color shift really follows you.”
“The Spectra looks fantastic,” says Rosen. “It’s even more intense than I had hoped. It’s very striking and contemporary. Often you have a vision for a design and then have to figure out how to make it a reality. It’s very rewarding as an architect to have access to a unique and special material like Spectra and to work with a contractor who knows how to use it.”
The Exo is targeted to achieve LEED Gold status with the inclusion of sustainable building materials and techniques, including smart glass technology. Recyclable Alucobond—which is manufactured with both post-manufacturing and post-consumer content—contributes LEED credits to building projects.
Nick Scheib serves as vice president, architectural sales and marketing, Americas, for 3A Composites USA Inc. and is based at the company’s headquarters in Davidson, N.C. For more information about Alucobond ACM, call (800) 626-3365, email info.usa@3acomposites.com or visit www.3acompositesusa.com.
