Animal Care
At Loven Contracting, we understand the unique challenges and opportunities involved in building state-of-the-art veterinary facilities, luxurious riding arenas, and durable animal shelters.
We Know Animal Care Construction
Our expertise extends to tailored solutions for veterinary hospitals, addressing individual needs and services to provide the best experiences for our four-legged friends. Our skilled team offers various project delivery choices, encompassing renovations and comprehensive design + build services, to bring your practice’s evolution to fruition.
Caring for Our Four-Legged Friends
Animal shelters and veterinary hospitals are the center of a community’s animal care program, and as such must fulfill multiple needs. Loven Contracting’s experience includes an understanding of these requirements, including but not limited to:
- Retail interface for adoptions
- Community education facilities
- Animal housing to reduce stress
- Quarantine and hygiene systems to reduce disease transmission
- Veterinary service facilities
- Enrichment and training facilities
Recent Projects
GILA COUNTY ANIMAL SHELTER
Loven Contracting, The Architecture Company, and Shelter Planners of America collaborated on the design of this 7,500SF building designed to meet the long-term needs of this southern Arizona community.
GRAND CANYON HOUNDS STABLE & KENNEL
Loven Contracting worked closely with the architect and Grand Canyon Hounds Stable & Kennel to deliver a 28,000SF indoor riding arena, 6,700SF stables for up to 30 horses, a kennel capable of housing 100 dogs, and support facilities with tack storage, veterinary and observation kennels, exam and grooming spaces, and adjacent living quarters for caretaker and kennel staff.
YAKI MULE BARN RE-ROOF
This historical preservation project completed within the Grand Canyon National Park consisted of the re-roofing of the National Park Service’s Mule Barn.
We also completed additional structural repairs while balancing weather conditions and long lead time items. The team consulted with the National Park Service’s historical architect to preserve the barn.