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The San Diego Union-Tribune: The best architecture in San Diego

The best architecture in San Diego

Joseph Wong Design Associates’ first phase of the North Embarcadero Visionary Plan won both urban design honor award and a “divine detail” award.
Joseph Wong Design Associates’ first phase of the North Embarcadero Visionary Plan won both urban design honor award and a “divine detail” award. James Brady

San Diego’s second annual Archtoberfest celebration of local architecture ended this week with top honors going to big and small projects.

The American Institute of Architects’ local chapter handed out its yearly Design Awards on Thursday in Balboa Park, passing along comments from a five-member, Seattle-based jury.

Words like “sweet,” “playful,” “fluidity” and “simplicity” were sprinkled throughout their critiques.

“The general overall quality of the work was really high,” said jury chairwoman Anne Shopf.

Of the 62 entries judged by written background and emailed images, she cited in particular the Joseph Wong Design Associates’ approach to the first phase of the North Embarcadero Visionary Plan. It won both an urban design honor award and a “divine detail” award.

“I think that was awesome that we could award a project for planning and detail,” she said. “It had that breadth of excellence and that really shone through.”

Honor award jurors

Anne Schopf, Mahlum

Susan Jones, Altelierjones

Donald Horn, GSA Office of Federal High-Performance Green Buildings

John Chau, LMN Architects

Dawn Bushnaq, Bushnaq Studio Architecture + Design

Details: aiasandiego.org

Steve Shinn, the AIA’s program committee chairman, said the jury seemed to focus on how materials, from wood to concrete, were used. They also looked at how sustainable buildings were in their use of energy and environmental impact. Another factor — how design helped to foster a “sense of community.”

“The advantage of selecting a jury that is somewhat remote is you get a more impartial jury that probably will not recognize the buildings or the architects,” Shinn said, “ so it becomes more of a focus of design as opposed to firm recognition.”

More broadly, Shinn said the winners reflect a new found confidence bolstered by a growing economy in which architects and their clients can explore new directions.

Honor Awards

The North Parker, North Park, Jonathan Segal Architects; Palomar College Humanities Building, San Marcos, LPA

Guss Lodl Apartment, La Jolla

North Embarcadero Visionary Plan, downtown, Joseph Wong Design Associates; Urban Discovery Academy, downtown, AVRP Studios

UC San Diego Biomedical Research Facility Unit 2, ZGF Architects (honor award); Pitzer College Residential Life Phase 2 (merit award), Carrier Johnson + Culture

Other awards

San Diego Central Library major donor recognition via art and architectural interventions, by Luce et Studio Architects; North Embarcadero Visionary Plan roof cutouts by Joseph Wong Design Associates; Weightless Lounge at the Balboa Park Activity Center by Steven Lombardi Architects

Del Monte in Ocean Beach by Steven Lombardi Architects

Sage Creek High School, Carlsbad, by Roesling Nakamura Terada Architects; Cal Poly Pomona Student Recreation Center by LPA

Horton Plaza shopping center, Jerde Partnership

San Diego Board of Supervisors and the county Department of General Services

Maxine Ward

Merit awards

Palomar College Humanities Building, LPA; Sorrento, Steven Lombardi Architects; 801 Alma Family Housing, Rob Wellington Quigley; North Park Post Office Lofts, FoundationForForm Architecture & Development; Richard’s Grove Pavilion, A-Squared Studios; UC San Diego Audrey Geisel University House architectural rehabilitation; UC San Diego Medical Center central utility plant, Yazdani Studio of Cannon Design; UC San Diego Biological Research Facility Unit 2, ZGF Architects.

BKM Headquarters and Showroom, Hollander Design Group.

Discover Architects Exhibit

  Discover Architects is sponsored by AIA Palomar, a non-profit organization, designed to reveal the diversity of services and talents offered by AIA Palomar members. The exhibit will include models and plans for residential, commercial and other projects ranging from small-scale homes to high-rise office buildings. All members are encouraged to submit entries designed to promote architecture and projects in North County. 2015_Discover_Architect_Entry_Form_FF-1

San Diego Project Selected for 2015 Education Facility Design Awards

Nine Projects Selected for the 2015 Education Facility Design Awards

Best new learning centers showcase latest design trends in education

Contact:  MattTinder 202-626-7462 mtinder@aia.org http://twitter.com/AIA_Media

Washington, D.C. – August 10, 2015 –  The American Institute of Architects (AIA) Committee on Architecture for Education (CAE) has selected nine educational facilities for this year’s CAE Education Facility Design Awards.  The program honors educational facilities that the jury believes should serve as an example of a superb place in which to learn, furthering the client's mission, goals and educational program while demonstrating excellence in architectural design.

Learn more about the recipients below or here.  Contact Matt Tinder (mtinder@aia.org) for high resolution images.

Berklee Tower | Berklee College of Music; Boston Award of Excellence William Rawn Associates, Architects, Inc.

This 16-story mixed-use building creates a center of gravity and a strong identity for the Berklee College of Music campus.  Most prominent is a 40 foot high performance/dining space that fronts onto a major Boston thoroughfare, showcasing student performances nightly.  Twelve floors, housing 380 students plus a fitness center and music practice rooms, sit above the performance space.  Six double height lounges on the residential floors help build community by linking two floors of students.  In support of Berklee’s growing programs in music technology, two floors below grade house the largest recording studio complex in New England.

Health Sciences Education Building (HSEB), University of Arizona & Northern Arizona University; Phoenix, Arizona Award of Excellence CO Architects with Ayers Saint Gross

The most salient external design feature of the project is the striated copper cladding, which is a response to the harsh desert climate.  The design meets the two universities’ high aspirations for identity, sustainability and powerful new learning environments.  Many student-focused spaces encourage interaction between students and lecturers.  The instructional elements of the project are organized in east-west blocks to minimize the building’s exposure to the intense Arizona sun.  These blocks are located close together, creating a narrow, man-made “canyon”.  This self-shaded space is for outdoor gatherings and provides access to lecture halls and innovative learning studios.

University Center, The New School; New York City Award of Excellence Skidmore, Owings & Merrill LLP with SLCE Architects

This new multipurpose facility is the “heart” of The New School.  With its 230,000-square-foot, seven-story campus center and 130,000-square-foot residential tower, the University Center reimagines the organizing elements of a traditional campus, from quads to classrooms and living quarters.  Vertical, horizontal, and diagonal campus pathways work together to facilitate movement through the building, while increasing opportunities for interaction among students and faculty, reflective of the university’s interdisciplinary nature.  Academic spaces are flexible and easily adaptable, and can be renovated or reconfigured with minimal impact on power, data, or lighting to meet changing needs.

Vashon Island High School; Vashon Island, Washington Award of Excellence Integrus Architecture

Located on a small island in Puget Sound, the design team worked with the community to understand the close connection the students have to the landscape.  The design team sought to preserve this sense of connection by imparting a quality of porosity to the new building. The concept of porosity defines how the building supports spatial connections and how students move in and out of the building.  Shared areas are located adjacent to more formal teaching spaces, while a learning commons extends the library. A small group presentation room is perched within the commons and a central courtyard provides sheltered outdoor learning areas.

Carl Sandburg Elementary School; Kirkland, Washington Award of Merit NAC|Architecture

Preserving and enhancing the park-like feel of the northwest corner of Carl Sandburg Elementary School was central to the planning of the replacement school.  The majority of the classroom neighborhoods are focused on a grove of 70 year old Big Leaf maples, creating multiple outdoor learning spaces that enjoy the natural setting.  The school accommodates a capacity of 600 students in neighborhoods of either 3 or 4 classrooms. Each neighborhood is organized around an open shared learning area, small group rooms, and teacher planning areas. Transparency between spaces expands the classroom, allowing small and large group activities to occur in the adjacent shared areas.

Clough Undergraduate Learning Commons, Georgia Institute of Technology; Atlanta Award of Merit Bohlin Cywinski Jackson

The Clough Commons supports collaborative learning, scientific instruction and undergraduate life at the center of Georgia Tech’s campus.  The three dimensional grid of circulation and daylight frames large zones of flexible furnished common spaces supporting student study, interaction and experiential learning.  The building transforms its hillside site, anchoring campus circulation and framing Tech Green, the school’s central outdoor space.  Clough Commons has become the hub of academic activity on the Tech campus, while its landscaped roof garden is one of Tech’s most popular destination amenities.

Reed College Performing Arts Building; Portland, Oregon Award of Merit Opsis Architecture LLP

Reed College’s Performing Arts Building consolidates theatre, dance, and music programs, previously scattered across the 116-acre campus, into a vibrant and cross-disciplinary home for the arts.  The 78,000-square-foot building incorporates spaces specifically attuned to the technical needs of each program, yet adaptable to encourage teamwork, experimentation, and change.  The building functions as the public front door to the campus.  A variety of sustainable design strategies fully complement its numerous functions.  All performance and teaching spaces open to the three-level, light-filled, arts atrium merging informal and formal learning.

e3 Civic High School; San Diego Walter Taylor Award LPA, Inc.

From the entry park the central circulation provides students with more than just a path of travel.  The transparent connection between education and community is emphasized with the central steps and gallery space connecting the two floors.  Every gathering space has a pull out or quiet area and every learning cluster or village has a small team room in addition to the larger social space.  These informal environments support 21st century learning skills with areas for critical thinking, collaboration, and communication.  To encourage movement throughout e3, every space has multiple functions to give purpose and attract multiple users.

Nueva School at Bay Meadows; San Mateo, California Shirley Cooper Award Leddy Maytum Stacy Architects

The Nueva School presents high school students with an integrated “ecology of learning” that connects them to a complex changing world.  The new campus provides a landscape of innovative educational spaces that supports cross disciplinary engagement and project-based inquiry, fosters a strong community, and models healthy, low-carbon living and learning.  Adaptively reusing space at a former horse racing venue, the school is an integral new part of its budding community.

The jury for the 2015 Educational Facility Design Awards includes:  J. Stuart Pettitt, AIA (Chair), Straub Pettitt Yaste Architects, William C. Ayers, education advocate; Victoria S. Bergsagel, Architects of Achievement; Mark Kranz, AIA, SmithGroup JJR and Robert Miklos, FAIA, designLAB architects.

About The American Institute of Architects Founded in 1857, the American Institute of Architects consistently works to create more valuable, healthy, secure, and sustainable buildings, neighborhoods, and communities. Through nearly 300 state and local chapters, the AIA advocates for public policies that promote economic vitality and public wellbeing. Members adhere to a code of ethics and conduct to ensure the highest professional standards. The AIA provides members with tools and resources to assist them in their careers and business as well as engaging civic and government leaders and the public to find solutions to pressing issues facing our communities, institutions, nation and world. Visit www.aia.org.

SGPA President Retires After Four Decades

  Admired President Announces Retirement After Four Decades With California-Based Architecture Firm

As one of its most influential leaders prepares to retire, SGPA reflects on the lessons imparted and honors a lifetime of career achievements.

SAN DIEGO, Calif. (July 30th, 2015) – After 40 years with SGPA Architecture and Planning, President Dave Reinker is retiring. Dave served SGPA as Director of the San Francisco office (1981-1988), Project Principal (1988-1997), and most recently as President for the past eighteen years (1997-2015).

“For decades, Dave has been a steadfast leader for the firm and his presence will be sorely missed,” said Keith Pittsford, Vice President of SGPA. “He bestowed his vision, lessons, and legacy to our staff of 40 dedicated professionals inspired to carry on his standards of excellence.”

During Dave’s tenure, he led by example with integrity, passion and foresight. Dave managed complex architectural projects across the firm’s portfolio, including education, senior living, retail, mixed-use, office, and civic clients. A Registered Architect in California, Nevada, Arizona, and Utah, Dave has been a speaker and panel member on retail and mixed-use projects for the International Council of Shopping Centers and is a past member of its program committee. Dave is also a member of the American Institute of Architects (AIA), the National Council of Architectural Registration Boards (NCARB), and is known for his expertise in the realm of entitlements and governmental processing procedures.

Dave pursued and received a Bachelor of Architecture degree from Miami University in Oxford, Ohio. In 1975, Dave joined SGPA Architecture and Planning’s San Diego office, the only office at the time. Under Dave’s leadership, the San Francisco office opened in the 1980s. Dave returned to Southern California as a Project Principal in 1988, and from 1997 to 2015, Dave served as SGPA’s President.

A look back at some of Dave’s projects over the last 40 years includes the following:

San Diego International Airport appointed SGPA to lead the design team for new construction of Terminal 2 as part of its 1998 Airport Upgrade Project. Incorporating highly technical design elements in a creative design, Dave acted as Principal In Charge on Terminal 2, the largest single component of this mega-project. The 320,000 square foot expansion included eight new gates, a new ticketing concourse, revised baggage system, retail concessions and an award-winning energy management system. Dave and his team were an integral part of this large, successful and challenging project.

Dave led the renovation of the Flower Hill Promenade, located near California’s famous Del Mar racetrack. This mixed-use project entailed a full renovation of common spaces, new construction, and landscaping. Flower Hill is a leading example of a successful “retail destination” – under Dave’s influence, SGPA integrated hospitality elements in common areas and blended retail with active uses.

The Bay Area’s Alameda Marina Village is a project Dave recalls fondly as one of the first challenging and motivating projects early in his career.  It left a large impression on Dave and helped to guide work for the firm on future projects.

While Dave will not be involved with day-to-day operations at SGPA, he will continue to sit as a Chairman on the SGPA Board of Directors.

About SGPA Architecture and Planning

Forty-six years ago, SGPA was founded when Donald Schoell, Eugene Geritz, Robert Paul and Arthur Allard merged their architectural practices to form a new entity. Since opening its doors, the firm has designed an integral part of the Southern California and Bay Area landscape, providing places for thousands of people to shop, gather, learn, and heal.

Today, SGPA consists of 40 people across two offices in San Diego and San Francisco. The collaborative technologies that allow us to function as one team across time and distance have expanded the scope of SGPA’s work immensely. We believe that the ever-evolving marketplace will continue to change over the next few decades, especially as densification and mixed use become more viable and desirable. SGPA aims to meet these changes by keeping its focus on what’s important: creating places that enrich daily life.

Additional information can be found at www.sgpa.com.

2016 AIA San Diego Slate of Officers and Directors

OFFICERS
  • *President: Daniel Stewart, AIA
  •  Vice-President/Pres-Elect: Philip Bona, AIA
  • Secretary/Treasurer: Steve Shinn, AIA
  • **At Large Director: To be confirmed
COMMISSIONERS
  • Advocacy: Sandra Gramley, AIA
  • Public Awareness: Kevin Bussett, AIA
  • Emerging Professionals: David Garcia, Assoc AIA
AIACC DIRECTORS***
  • President: Daniel Stewart, AIA
  • President-Elect: Philip Bona, AIA
  • Immediate Past President: Michael Roush, AIA
*Automatically succeeds from president-elect position. Not put to the membership for a vote.
**The At-Large Director is an ex-officio (non-voting) position whose primary responsibility is sponsorship development with the goal of increasing sponsorship revenue. The Director will work with the Chapter’s Executive Director and President to develop and implement the Board’s sponsorship development program. Additional responsibilities include attending monthly Board meetings and working with the Executive Director and Chapter President to promote and enhance the Chapter’s visibility in the community.
** The chapter's three AIACC directors, per our chapter bylaws, are the president, president-elect, and immediate past president. In effect, they are ex-officio positions.

TIMELINE:

  • Jul 23: Nominating Committee requests the AIASD Board approve the proposed slate at July 24 Board of Directors meeting.
  • Jul 24: AIASD Board-approved slate mailed to members 60 days before election.
  • Aug 18: Deadline for additional nominations from the members. (Requires five letters/nominations from members in good standing as well as an electronic profile to be distributed to the membership).
  • Aug 22: If no additional nominations received, Board Secretary may cast one ballot on behalf of all members for any/all uncontested seats.
  • Sep 2: Distribute ballots and post electronic profiles. (Only when additional nominations occur.)
  • Sep 16: Deadline for votes to arrive (if a mail ballot has been sent).
  • Sep 24: Annual Meeting/Election if Needed; votes tabulated and President declares elections.

Overview of the Nominating/Election Process for the 2016 Board of Directors

BYLAWS SECTION 4.3

(4.31)       Nominations.  [Committee’s] slate shall be approved by the Board of Directors and published in the Chapter newsletter at least 60 days prior to the election.  Noticed in this same publication will be the qualifications for each officer/director position and a time schedule and procedure that would allow more names to be added to the slate by the general membership. All Institute assigned members, in good standing, may be added to the Nominating Committee’s slate by producing letters from five (5) Institute assigned members (in good standing) nominating him/her for a specific officer or director position. Additional nominations are to be received by the Chapter no later than 25 days after the mailing of the Chapter’s newsletter announcing the Nominating Committee’s slate. Profiles of all qualified candidates shall be published in the Chapter’s newsletter and mailed to the membership 20 days prior to the election.

(4.32)       Voting; When Required.  If there is only one nominee for any office or directorship, 20 days before the election, the Secretary may cast a ballot for the full number of votes of the membership for the said nominee, whereupon the President shall declare the candidate(s) elected by acclamation. Otherwise, each contested office and directorship shall be placed on ballots for the voting thereof. Such voting shall be by ballot in accordance with the provisions of these bylaws.

AIA Selects Eight Projects for National Healthcare Design Awards

Projects showcase the best of healthcare building design and health design-oriented research

Contact:  Matt Tinder 202-626-7462 mtinder@aia.org http://twitter.com/AIA_Media

 For immediate release: Washington, D.C. – July 20, 2015 – The American Institute of Architects (AIA) Academy of Architecture for Health (AAH) has selected the recipients of the AIA National Healthcare Design Awards program. The AIA Healthcare Awards program showcases the best of healthcare building design and healthcare design-oriented research. Projects exhibit conceptual strengths that solve aesthetic, civic, urban, and social concerns as well as the requisite functional and sustainability concerns of a hospital.

Recipients were selected in four different categories:

Category A: Built, Less than $25 million in construction cost Category B: Built, More than $25 million in construction cost Category C: Unbuilt, Must be commissioned for compensation by a client with the authority and intention to build Category D: Innovations in Planning and Design Research, Built and Unbuilt

Please contact Matt Tinder for high resolution images.

Category A Cleveland Clinic, Brunswick Family Health Center Emergency Department; Cleveland Westlake Reed Leskosky

This addition to the Cleveland Clinic Brunswick Family Health Center provides a new 22,500-gross-square-foot emergency department at grade, a processing lab, an imaging center, a second story expansion space of 17,000 square feet intended for future fitout as exam rooms and offices and a roof top heliport. Compatible with the original structure but easily identifiable as a new component, the project promotes a healing environment of serenity through intuitive way finding, resolution in the integration of medical equipment and devices, a strategic placement of art and a strong connection to the natural environment.

Providence Sacred Heart Medical Center Pediatric Emergency Department; Spokane, WA Mahlum

This addition creates a safe, calming environment for young patients in traumatic circumstances.  The building’s ‘emergency red’ panels serve as recognizable focal point on the medical campus, while a light-filled atrium accented by wood and warm colors welcomes visitors arriving from the sheltered drop-off zone. Clinical and public spaces employ graphics, art, comfortable furnishings, and inspirational displays to create restorative surroundings. The Kid’s Club overlooks a healing garden, providing refuge and views for patients and their families. Advanced medical care is delivered via central care team zones close to patient care areas; glass partitions allow visual connections with acoustical privacy.

New York Hospital Queens Astoria Primary Care Clinic; Queens, New York Michielli + Wyetzner Architects

This new offsite primary care clinic is one in a series of new neighborhood practices intended to raise the profile of the New York Hospital Queens (NYHQ) in the surrounding community. Located in Astoria on a corner site along a busy thoroughfare, the two-story brick building was completely gutted to accommodate new exam and consultation rooms. A perforated metal screen masks the irregular pattern of existing windows on the ground floor, allowing daylight to enter during the day and artificial light to emit a glow at night. An illuminated ceiling is visible through the full height glass, contributing to the unique presence of NYHQ in the neighborhood. The attention to detail, abundance of natural light, and select use of color make this a soothing and sophisticated patient environment.

Vitenas Cosmetic Surgery and Mirror Mirror Beauty Boutique; Houston Harrell Architects, LP

This ambulatory surgery center is squeezed into a tight 19,100-square-foot site that was completely redeveloped. The resulting three story building reflects the surgeon’s personal style and emulates the quality of his cosmetic surgery practice. The exterior is clad in white metal panels, corrugated zinc panels, and white plaster; all accented by the two story corner "jewel box" window wall. The interiors continue the sleek design of the building exterior with minimal color and crisp detailing that speak of the surgeon’s attention to design. A variety of textures were introduced via the flooring, custom wall panels, and drapery. The design puts patients at ease with its elegant palette of materials, furnishings and lighting.

Category B Bridgepoint Active Healthcare; Toronto Planning, Design and Compliance Architects: Stantec Architecture / KPMB Architects Design, Build, Finance and Maintain Architects: HDR Architecture / Diamond Schmitt Architects

Bridgepoint Active Healthcare is designed to meet the needs of those coping with complex chronic disease.  In a setting inspired by nature, rehabilitation is fostered by motivating recovery through salutogenic design that connects with a person’s sense of physical and emotional well-being. From animated public spaces to intimate private ones, Bridgepoint embraces community and landscape. Panoramic views in every patient room, open terraces on the roof, mid-tower and at grade provide broad visual engagement with the surrounding community.  These linkages are ‘personalized’ across the building facade with a seemingly randomized pattern of 472 vertical window projections, each representing a patient.

Category C Fifth XiangYa Hospital; Changsha, China Payette

Located in ChangSha, China in the growing Tianxian district, the Fifth XiangYa Hospital is slated to anchor the developing community adjacent to Xianguling Park.  The hospital is connected to the park, both physically and visually. The new 2,500-bed hospital will provide a new world class model for the delivery of healthcare in an integrated, efficient and uplifting environment.  Each half of the campus is organized around a central concourse, along which all the clinical functions are organized. The meandering inpatient towers hover above it. Two levels of service functions and parking provide the operational base below ground.

U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, Robley Rex VA Replacement Medical Center and VBO Office Building; Louisville, Kentucky URS/SmithGroup Joint Venture

The future Robley Rex VA Medical Center embraces a model of care that embodies healing with honor.  By consciously integrating nature with architecture, patients and families will find solidarity and respite in a light-filled concourse, quiet air gardens, and elevated courtyards.  Each setting offers a unique experience, from contemplation to celebration; and provides a framework for integrating art, education, and support. Designed as a full replacement of the existing facility, the cost-effective facility is planned for one million square feet of inpatient and outpatient services and 104 beds, providing north central Kentucky and southern Indiana veterans with easy, timely access to care.

Category D Studio Dental Mobile Unit Montalba Architects, Inc.

Montalba Architects Inc.’s primary challenge was to create a spacious interior while accommodating Studio Dental’s required program for its Mobile Unit, which travels to businesses offering convenient dentistry.  The 26-foot-long trailer with 230 interior square feet features a waiting area, sterilization room, and two operatories.  The sterilization room is hidden behind millwork panels that wrap around to form the patient waiting bench.  A centralized, double-sided millwork panel houses equipment for both operatories and gestures up to 11-foot-plus ceilings with translucent sculpted skylights.  The materials reinforce Studio Dental’s identity with natural wood millwork, bright-white surfaces, and a custom perforation pattern.

Jurors for the 2015 National Healthcare Design Awards include: Scott Habjan, AIA(Chair), SOM; Michael Folonis, FAIA, Michael W. Folonis Architects; Charles H. Griffin, AIA, WHR Architects, Inc.; Elizabeth Mahon, AIA, Ballinger; Marc Marchant, AIA, LS3P Associates LTD.; Connie McFarland, FAIA, McFarland Architects and Joseph Strauss, AIA, Cleveland Clinic (this juror was recused from the review of the Cleveland Clinic, Brunswick Family Health Center Emergency Department project).

About The American Institute of Architects Founded in 1857, the American Institute of Architects consistently works to create more valuable, healthy, secure, and sustainable buildings, neighborhoods, and communities. Through nearly 300 state and local chapters, the AIA advocates for public policies that promote economic vitality and public wellbeing. Members adhere to a code of ethics and conduct to ensure the highest professional standards. The AIA provides members with tools and resources to assist them in their careers and business as well as engaging civic and government leaders and the public to find solutions to pressing issues facing our communities, institutions, nation and world. Visit www.aia.org.

Harley Ellis Devereaux's San Jacinto Animal Shelter Receives a Design Award

SJAS_706x450-8 The San Jacinto Animal Shelter in California has received a Merit Award in the Public/Civic Category from the Concrete Masonry Association of California and Nevada (CMACN), co-sponsored by AIA California Council (AIACC). The program recognizes and encourages outstanding architectural design that incorporates the use of concrete masonry in the building envelope.

The use of masonry is a key determinant in the character of the whole campus and the result evokes an agrarian quality that befits the humane treatment of animals in a rural setting. Though the 10 building complex accommodates a wide range of programmatic function, they share a common palette that references the local vernacular of simple forms and economic building systems. The main building is constructed with concrete masonry units with a honed surface in a neutral color that matches the ground material. Not only does its load bearing capabilities provide the primary structural system, but its thermal mass reduces the load on the mechanical systems, saving energy. The animal holding areas need to be able to stand up to an extremely intensive maintenance program, but also provide an attractive backdrop for the adoption of pets. In response, a glazed masonry unit was selected for its self-finished characteristics, in addition to the wide range of colors available, providing the opportunity to create a pixilated interpretation of the surrounding rural landscape.

The Jury commented, ‘we believe that the architecture of this project might improve the experience of visiting an animal shelter and might even increase the rate of pet adoption. Good design is good business!’

The Awards Banquet will be held at the Island Hotel, in Newport Beach, California on September 18.

For more information, contact Gary Leivers AIA, RIBA, LEED AP Phone: (619) 929 2854 Email: gpleivers@hedev.com 

See more photos and read more here.

AIASD Architects Recipients of 2015 CMACN/AIACC Concrete Masonry Design Awards Competition

Congratulations to the four San Diego architecture firms who recently won awards at the 2015 CMACN/AIACC Concrete Masonry Design Awards Competition. The award winning AIA architect-members recognized for their achievements help sustain the region’s tradition of producing innovative, beautiful and efficient buildings. For more information on the awards, visit www.cmacn.org Solterra Winery

Honor Award for Commercial Design Project: Solterra Winery and Kitchen, Leucadia, California Firm: Brian Church Architecture, Del Mar, California Architect: Brian Church, AIA, Principal

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Merit Award for Education Design Project: Del Lago Academy – Campus of Applied Science, Escondido, California Firm: BakerNowicki Design Studio, San Diego, California Architects: Richard Nowicki, AIA, Partner Buddy Gessel, AIA, LEED® AP, Principal

17-South west view of 4_x8_x16_ cmu privacy wall

Merit Award for Residential Design Project: El Do, San Diego, California Firm: Steven Lombardi Architect, San Diego, California Architect: Steven Lombardi, AIA Principal

SJAS_706x450-8

Merit Award for Public/Civic Design Project: San Jacinto Animal Shelter, San Jacinto, California Firm: Harley Ellis Devereaux, San Diego, California Architect: Gary Leivers AIA, RIBA, LEED® AP

Larger, More Accessible Homes Increase in Demand by Homeowners Preparing to Age-In-Place

Residential architects report robust business conditions

Contact:  Matt Tinder 202-626-7462 mtinder@aia.org http://twitter.com/AIA_Media

For immediate release: Washington, D.C. – June 29, 2015 – As the housing market continues its recovery, homeowners are increasingly seeking more square footage while simultaneously looking for more accessibility inside and outside of the home.  These findings are from the American Institute of Architects (AIA) Home Design Trends Survey for the first quarter of 2015, which focuses specifically on overall home layout and the use of interior and exterior space.

All of the data can be accessed through AIA's newly redesigned home design trends survey infographic.

“An increase in home square footage with the rising popularity of accessible design concepts points to a population that is preparing to age-in-place, or, perhaps, is anticipating responsibility for caretaking of older relatives in the future,” said AIA Chief Economist Kermit Baker, PhD, Hon. AIA. “As homeowners prepare to stay in their current homes, investment in outdoor living spaces has also increased.”

The survey further demonstrates gains across all major housing sectors, except for new construction.  “The lag in new construction, taken together with the increases in remodeling, may be another indicator of homeowners wanting to remain in their current residences for the long haul,” according to Baker.

Residential elements (% of respondents that reported increases) 2015 2014
     
In-home accessibility 70% 65%
Access in/out of home 59% 55%
Informal space 56% 52%
Open space layout 61% 50%
Single-floor plan 46% 47%
Volume 26% 28%
Square footage 20% 15%
Lot size 2% 3%

% of firms reporting “increasing” activity for that characteristic; Q1 2015

Outdoor living and landscaping trends

Residential elements (% of respondents that reported increases)                2015 2014
     
Outdoor living space 72% 69%
Low irrigation landscaping 61% 60%
Blended indoor / outdoor living 58% 56%
Outdoor features 21% 16%
Exterior / security lighting 36% 36%

% of firms reporting “increasing” activity for that characteristic; Q1 2015

Housing market business conditions

AIA Home Design Survey Index for Q1 2015 (any score above 50 is positive)

  • Billings: 66
  • Inquiries for new projects: 73

“The fundamentals of the economy demonstrate steady progress, with incomes continuing to stabilize, as illustrated by the survey’s positive findings,”  Baker added. “Business conditions at residential architecture firms continue to show solid gains, as billings, new design contracts, and inquiries for future project activity are all improving.”

Specific residential segments*          2015 2014
     
Kitchen and bath remodeling 57 57
Remodeling additions / alterations 61 59
Custom / luxury home market 33 29
Move-up homes 30 27
Townhouse / condo market 15 15
First-time buyer / affordable home market 9 5
Second / vacation home market 1 -9

% of respondents reporting sector “improving” minus % reporting “weakening”; Q1 2015 About the AIA Home Design Trends Survey The AIA Home Design Trend Survey is conducted quarterly with a panel of more than 500 architecture firms that concentrate their practice in the residential sector.  Residential architects are design leaders in shaping how homes function, look, and integrate into communities and this survey helps to identify emerging trends in the housing marketplace.  Business conditions are also monitored on a quarterly basis.  Future surveys will focus on specialty rooms and systems (September 2015), community design trends (December 2015) and kitchen and bath trends (February2016).

About The American Institute of Architects Founded in 1857, the American Institute of Architects consistently works to create more valuable, healthy, secure, and sustainable buildings, neighborhoods, and communities. Through nearly 300 state and local chapters, the AIA advocates for public policies that promote economic vitality and public wellbeing. Members adhere to a code of ethics and conduct to ensure the highest professional standards. The AIA provides members with tools and resources to assist them in their careers and business as well as engaging civic and government leaders and the public to find solutions to pressing issues facing our communities, institutions, nation and world. Visit www.aia.org.

San Diego Chapter Architects Awarded Photography Honors

San Diego Chapter architects received honors in the 2015 AIA National Photography Competition. Jerry Shonkwiler AIA and Michael Wilkes FAIA (former San Diego Chapter President 1985) were awarded seven of the fourteen photographs selected for recognition. Shonkwiler receive Second Place for “Red, White, Blue and Yellow.” He was also awarded two Honorable Mention Awards. Wilkes was awarded Third Place for “Colorful Room with Three Chimneys” and three Honorable Mention Awards.

Former San Diego Chapter President (2000) W. Ward Thompson was awarded First Place for “Before the Rush.”

The winning photographs are on line at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QI6QVaqe-1I

The American Institute of Architects Select the 2015 COTE Top Ten Green Projects

Projects showcase excellence in ecological design principles and reduced energy consumption

Contact: Scott Frank 202-626-7467 sfrank@aia.org http://twitter.com/AIA_Media

For immediate release: Washington, D.C. – April 22, 2015 – The American Institute of Architects (AIA) and its Committee on the Environment (COTE) have selected the top ten examples of sustainable architecture and ecological design projects that protect and enhance the environment. The projects will be honored at the AIA 2015 National Convention and Design Exposition in Atlanta.

The COTE Top Ten Awards program, now in its 19th year, is the profession's most rigorous recognition program for sustainable design excellence. The program celebrates projects that are the result of a thoroughly integrated approach to architecture, natural systems and technology. They make a positive contribution to their communities, improve comfort for building occupants and reduce environmental impacts through strategies such as reuse of existing structures, connection to transit systems, low-impact and regenerative site development, energy and water conservation, use of sustainable or renewable construction materials, and design that improves indoor air quality.

The descriptions below give a brief summary of the projects. You can learn more about these projects by clicking on the name of the project/firm name. If you are interested in obtaining high resolution images, please contact Matt Tinder at mtinder@aia.org.

The Bullitt Center; Seattle The Miller Hull Partnership

The Bullitt Center is a high performance urban office building demonstrating a commercially-viable structure with essentially no environmental footprint is possible; it is the largest certified Living Building. Performance metrics drove building design with every material and system in the self-sustaining six-story, 52,000-square-foot office building evaluated toward the goal of net zero energy, water and waste—resulting in an unprecedented Energy Use Intensity (EUI) of 10kbtu/sf/yr. Sustainable design moves responding to regional context include operable floor-to-ceiling windows for daylight and fresh air, heavy-timber framing, a transparent ‘irresistible stair’ with dramatic views, and overhanging roof characteristic of Northwest design vernacular. A new paradigm for design, the building serves as a living laboratory for high-performance architecture and sustainability education seeking to influence the way society views the relationship of a building to its environment.

CANMET Materials Technology Laboratory; Hamilton, Ontario, Canada Diamond Schmitt

This 174,300-square-foot lab and support office space incorporates a complex industrial program of pilot scale casting, rolling and welding, corrosion and mechanical testing alongside microstructure evaluations and radiation testing. With over 800 customized pieces of equipment in addition to generic lab equipment CANMET is a complex energy use intensive building. The pursuit of LEED Platinum triggered a comprehensive Integrated Design Process (IDP), which was pivotal to the resulting design. A building charter targeted significant energy use reduction to exceed the 2030 Challenge and achieve a 70% energy use reduction, a goal that is particularly challenging for an industrial lab building.

Collaborative Life Sciences Building for OHSU, PSU & OSU; Portland, OR SERA Architects and CO Architects

Oregon Health & Science University, Portland State University, and Oregon State University partnered to create a new allied health, academic and research building. Located on a former brownfield site constrained by adjacent roadway and bridge construction, the building is conceived as an innovative model of interdisciplinary health sciences education, research and education. Interior glazed walls foster “research and teaching on display,” allowing occupants and pedestrians to view the activity in labs and classrooms. The atrium offers dynamic connections between program elements through connecting bridges and informal study areas for students. As one of only two projects in the U.S. over a half million square feet that has been certified Platinum under the LEED NC v2009 rating system, this project incorporates a number of sustainable design innovations including: transformation of an existing brownfield, light pollution reduction, stormwater management, ecoroofs to reduce stormwater runoff, nonpotable water for toilet flushing, atrium heat recovery, and low ventilation fume hoods.

E+ // 226-232 Highland Street Townhouses; Boston Interface Studio Architects (ISA) and Urbanica Design

The project was conceived as a replicable prototype for family friendly, energy efficient, urban townhomes. Each unit is approximately 1850-square-feet, with flexible living areas, 3 bedrooms, and 2.5 bathrooms. The project was the first completed under the City of Boston’s Energy Plus (E+) Green Building Program, a pilot initiative to develop energy positive sustainable housing. The project team was chosen through a design competition organized by the Boston Redevelopment Authority (BRA) and the Department of Neighborhood Development. Incorporating both passive and active energy efficiency measures, the project has achieved HERS ratings between 6 and 9, and is certified LEED for Homes Platinum.

Hughes Warehouse Adaptive Reuse; San Antonio Overland Partners

This adaptive reuse project transforms an early 20th century warehouse into an innovative but functional studio space. The balance between maintaining the historic integrity of the building and improving energy efficiency was critical for the nearly 100-year-old building. As a result, the design team focused on preserving the open plan space and leaving interventions light in order to maximize flexibility of the space for future users as well as to encourage collaboration amongst staff and minimize material usage, achieved through the elimination of private offices. Though it decreased leasable square footage, the project’s newly inserted courtyard became integral to the design, providing a place for public life, improving daylighting, and decreasing the amount of conditioned space.

Military Medical Hospital; San Antonio RTKL

San Antonio Military Medical Center (SAMMC) is home to a world class burn treatment and recovery unit, and the design both accommodates this function and draws its architectural inspiration from it. A long trellis canopy spans the length of the south elevation, throwing dappled shade on the building and presenting the welcoming image of a large veranda. Under this umbrella, the footprint of the façade varies to break down the scale of a very long elevation while shading the building as the sun moves toward the west. Surfaces at the front edge have no fenestration, avoiding heat gain, while the surfaces at the back of the trellis are extensively glazed and shaded. These simple architectural gestures humanize the scale and image of the medical center while aiding environmental performance.

New Orleans BioInnovation Center (NOBIC); New Orleans Eskew+Dumez+Ripple

The NOBIC, a LEED Gold research facility serves as an incubator for biotech startups, helping ideas conceived locally to become local jobs and industries. The facility includes a flexible 100 person conferencing center, breakout spaces, and a 2,000-sqaure-foot café. The design reinterprets vernacular regional climate responsive strategies—the slatted shutter, the landscaped courtyard water feature, the sheltered porch—to provide a facility that is both of its place and of its time. The facility captures rainwater and diffuses it to plants and soils on site, and is supplemented by the AC condensate (up to 20,000 gallons per week), which provides all landscape irrigation on site.

Sweetwater Spectrum Community; Sonoma, CA LEDDY MAYTUM STACY Architects

Sweetwater Spectrum is a new national model for supportive housing for adults with autism, offering life with purpose and dignity. The project includes four homes, a community center, therapy pools and urban farm. Practical sustainable design strategies promote health and wellness, reduce energy consumption, and offer multiple long term benefits to residents, staff and the Sonoma community. The project is a Pacific Gas & Electric Zero Net Energy Pilot Project and exceeds the 2030 Commitment. A variety of passive and active strategies, including building orientation, high performance envelope, building integrated photovoltaic and solar thermal panels reduce energy consumption by 88% from baseline.

Tassafaronga Village; Oakland, CA David Baker Architects

This project includes a 60 unit affordable apartment building, 77 affordable attached "townhouses" for rent (clustered in 13 buildings), and 20 supportive apartments with onsite medical clinic. Deep roof overhangs, fin walls, site plantings, and thoughtful window placement provide resilience against heat spikes, relieving high southern and hot western sun. The building design provides comfortable daylight, views, and airflow by increasing the exposure in individual rooms and units. All rooms within each unit meet the standard for natural ventilation under ASHRAE 62.22007. A well-insulated thermal envelope and reduced infiltration allow improved comfort and protection from odors, noise, and other pollutants.

University Center – The New School; New York City Skidmore, Owings & Merrill LLP

The LEED Gold building provides space for all aspects of a traditional campus, with 200,000 square feet of academic space on the first seven floors and 150,000 square feet for a 600 bed student residence on the levels above. A thermal energy storage was developed to create and store ice at night, smoothing the load of the building’s daytime operations and allowing systems to be both downsized and right sized. Constructed with an extensive 13,500-square-foot green roof, able to detain up to 40% of annual rainfall, this project enabled the design team to take advantage of a combined heat and power system, combining onsite generation with domestic hot water preheating for the dormitory areas, and a black water treatment system combined with low flow features reduce the building’s potable water consumption by 75% over baseline.

The 2015 COTE Top Ten Green Projects jury includes: John Quale, LEED AP BD+C, Associate AIA, University of New Mexico School of Architecture + Planning; Alex Wilson, Resilient Design Institute; Peter Busby, C.M., FRAIC, MAIBC, LEED Fellow, Perkins+Will; Peter Rumsey, PE, Point Energy Innovations and David John Neuman, Neu Campus Planning, Inc.

About The American Institute of Architects Founded in 1857, the American Institute of Architects consistently works to create more valuable, healthy, secure, and sustainable buildings, neighborhoods, and communities. Through nearly 300 state and local chapters, the AIA advocates for public policies that promote economic vitality and public wellbeing. Members adhere to a code of ethics and conduct to ensure the highest professional standards. The AIA provides members with tools and resources to assist them in their careers and business as well as engaging civic and government leaders and the public to find solutions to pressing issues facing our communities, institutions, nation and world. Visit www.aia.org.

AIA National: Architecture Billings Index Improves in February

After its first negative score in ten months, the Architecture Billings Index (ABI) showed a nominal increase in design activity in February, and has been positive ten out of the past twelve months. As a leading economic indicator of construction activity, the ABI reflects the approximate nine to twelve month lead time between architecture billings and construction spending. The American Institute of Architects (AIA) reported the February ABI score was 50.4, up slightly from a mark of 49.9 in January. This score reflects a minor increase in design services (any score above 50 indicates an increase in billings). The new projects inquiry index was 56.6, down from a reading of 58.7 the previous month. “The health of the institutional market has been the key factor for positive business conditions for the design and construction industry in recent months, and it is encouraging to see that sector remain on solid footing,” said AIA Chief Economist Kermit Baker, Hon. AIA, PhD. “However, we’re seeing some slowing in the other major construction sectors. Design billings for residential projects had its first negative month in over three years, and commercial design billings have seen only modest growth in recent years.”

Key February ABI highlights:

  • Regional averages: South (52.5), Midwest (50.2), Northeast (48.0), West (46.7)
  • Sector index breakdown: institutional (52.2), commercial / industrial (51.4), multi-family residential (48.9), mixed practice (45.3)
  • Project inquiries index: 56.6
  • Design contracts index: 50.0

The regional and sector categories are calculated as a 3-month moving average, whereas the national index, design contracts and inquiries are monthly numbers.

About the AIA Architecture Billings Index The Architecture Billings Index (ABI), produced by the AIA Economics & Market Research Group, is a leading economic indicator that provides an approximately nine to twelve month glimpse into the future of nonresidential construction spending activity. The diffusion indexes contained in the full report are derived from a monthly “Work-on-the-Boards” survey that is sent to a panel of AIA member-owned firms. Participants are asked whether their billings increased, decreased, or stayed the same in the month that just ended as compared to the prior month, and the results are then compiled into the ABI.  These monthly results are also seasonally adjusted to allow for comparison to prior months. The monthly ABI index scores are centered around 50, with scores above 50 indicating an aggregate increase in billings, and scores below 50 indicating a decline. The regional and sector data are formulated using a three-month moving average. More information on the ABI and the analysis of its relationship to construction activity can be found in the recently released White Paper, Designing the Construction Future: Reviewing the Performance and Extending the Applications of the AIA’s Architecture Billings Index on the AIA web site.

About The American Institute of Architects Founded in 1857, the American Institute of Architects consistently works to create more valuable, healthy, secure, and sustainable buildings, neighborhoods, and communities. Through nearly 300 state and local chapters, the AIA advocates for public policies that promote economic vitality and public wellbeing. Members adhere to a code of ethics and conduct to ensure the highest professional standards. The AIA provides members with tools and resources to assist them in their careers and business as well as engaging civic and government leaders and the public to find solutions to pressing issues facing our communities, institutions, nation and world. Visit www.aia.org.

Local SD Architect Kevin deFreitas Elevated to College of Fellows

The American Institute of Architects Elevates San Diego Architect Kevin deFreitas to the College of Fellows AIA Fellowship Recognizes Significant Contributions to the Profession of Architecture and Society

deFreitas_head_shotWEB

The 2015 Jury of Fellows of the American Institute of Architects (AIA) elevated Kevin deFreitas, FAIA of deFreitas Architects to its prestigious College of Fellows, an honor awarded to members who have made significant contributions to the profession.

Kevin deFreitas, FAIA will be honored at an investiture ceremony at the 2015 National AIA Convention and Design Exposition in Atlanta.

The Fellowship program was developed to elevate those architects who have made a significant contribution to architecture and society and who have achieved a standard of excellence in the profession.  Election to fellowship not only recognizes the achievements of architects as individuals, but also their significant contribution to architecture and society on a national level. Out of a total AIA membership of over 85,000, there are fewer than 3,100 distinguished with the honor of fellowship and honorary fellowship.

Recognized as a leader in the redevelopment process, deFreitas was elected to long-term directorial roles in the CCAC (community planning board) and the East Village Association, where he persistently led advocacy efforts for landmark infrastructure projects like Petco Park (home to the San Diego Padres) and the San Diego Central Library. Through design excellence, public advocacy, pro bono work, 38 awards (16 from the AIA), and inclusion in over 89 publications, deFreitas has elevated the public’s awareness of creative, thoughtful, and imaginative architecture as well as the value of the profession at large.

Kevin deFreitas, FAIA deFreitas Architects 885 Albion Street, San Diego, CA 92106 (619)222-9381 info@defreitasarchitects.com

BACKGROUND

A San Diego native, Kevin deFreitas’ formal design education began at the University of Arizona, where lessons in sustainability, designing for arid lands, and working with the environment became deeply embedded in all his work. A sole proprietor since 1998, deFreitas’ practice is intentionally small, freeing him to work as a principal without sacrificing quality or service, and while implementing vanguard design practices and emerging building technologies that move his projects and the profession forward. Committed to sustainable design, deFreitas educates clients early in the process about the ethical and financial benefits of designing and building “green,” dispelling the myth that doing so will compromise comfort or aesthetics. Several of his projects have been recognized with AIA COTE awards and achieved LEED Gold level certification. deFreitas was also a recipient of the 2009 AIA San Diego Young Architect of the Year and 2010 AIA National Young Architect of the Year.

Noteworthy projects include:

  • Rowhomes on F (located on 10th & F in downtown’s East Village neighborhood, this self-developed 17 unit project constructed out of concrete tilt-up walls, models a viable residential design strategy. Project awarded 2003 AIA San Diego Design Honor Award, 2003 Gold Nugget Grand Award, and 2004 AIA National Housing Committee Award.
  • Saint Bartholomew’s Chapel on the Rincon Indian Reservation The chapel achieved LEED Gold rating. Project awarded 2010 AIA San Diego Design Merit Award and 2010 Orchid Award.
  • Ocean Beach Comfort Station Acknowledging the community’s connection to, and fierce protection of, the natural environment, the restroom is an energy miser, 100% day lit and naturally ventilated. The project was awarded the 2012 AIA San Diego Design Merit Award, 2012 AIA San Diego Committee On The Environment Award, and 2012 Orchid Award.
  • Galbraith Hall at UC San Diego The Galbraith Hall Interior Renovation project adaptively repurposes 30,000 sf of existing space within the campus’ original library formerly known as CLICS (Center for Library and Instructional Computing Services). Galbraith Hall is LEED Gold Certified. 2013 Orchid Award, and 2014 AIA San Diego Design Interiors Award.
  • Casa Familia A highly sustainable family residence in Point Loma. 2008 AIA San Diego Design Honor Award, 2008 AIA San Diego Committee On The Environment Award, and 2008 Gold Nugget Grand Award.

San Diego Business Journal: Repositioning Gives New Life to Older Commercial Properties

San Diego Business Journal's reporter, Emmet Pierce interviews three AIA San Diego member firms for their input on how to reposition older commercial properties to attract more tenants. Rachel Inmon of LPA, Inc. says "Building owners need to make their buildings more attractive for today's work environment and work needs."

Kristine Woolsey of Carrier Johnson + CULTURE is quoted saying, "The world is changing... Building owners are really needing to update their facilities to create a more social environment."

"Designer Pauly De Bartolo, a partner at the De Bartolo + Rimanic Design Studio, agrees that repositioning is an important trend in San Diego."

For more information, please visit San Diego Business Journal's site.

Launching Soon: 2015 AIA Compensation Survey

logo_aia_sig_solid_3s Need up-to-date salary information? Participate in the 2015 AIA Compensation Survey!

It has been almost two years since the AIA published the 2013 AIA Compensation Survey Report - an industry standard, and the most comprehensive national survey on architect compensation. The new 2015 survey will provide compensation data for 40 positions at architecture firms, all nine regions of the country, plus many states and metro areas.

To thank you for your participation, you will receive a complimentary PDF copy of the complete survey report when it is released. If you received an invitation to participate, we ask that you respond as your reply is vital for the success of this study. If you are a firm leader who has not received an invitation and would like to participate, please send an email to Jennifer Riskus at compensationsurvey@aia.org. We thank you in advance for your participation.

2015 AIA Institute Honor Awards Recognize Excellence in Architecture, Interiors, and Urban Design

For immediate release:

Washington, D.C. – January 9, 2015 – The American Institute of Architects (AIA) has selected the 2015 recipients of the Institute Honor Awards, the profession’s highest recognition of works that exemplify excellence in architecture, interior architecture and urban design. Selected from roughly 500 submissions, 23 recipients located throughout the world will be honored at the AIA 2015 National Convention and Design Exposition in Atlanta.

To obtain high resolution images, please contact Matt Tinder: mtinder@aia.org

2015 Institute Honor Awards for Architecture The 2015 AIA Institute Honor Award for Architecture jury includes: Calvin Lewis, FAIA (Chair), Iowa State University; Ray Calabro, FAIA, Bohlin Cywinski Jackson; Nicole Gerou, AIAS Student Representative, Lawrence Technological University; Ana Guerra, Assoc. AIA, Jacobs; Sherri Gutierrez, AIA, Arquitectonica; Jill Lerner, FAIA, Kohn Pedersen Fox; James McDonald, AIA, A&E Architects; Waller McGuire, Executive Director, St. Louis Public Library and Angela O'Byrne, FAIA, Perez.

28th Street Apartments; Los Angeles Koning Eizenberg Architecture, Inc. The historic YMCA (1926) had been a focus of African-American life in the era of segregation but had fallen into severe disrepair. The design re-establishes the building’s role as a community focus, restores principal spaces for youth training programs, brings existing living quarters in compliance with contemporary standards and adds new housing units. Inventive integration of new building systems released the existing rooftop for outdoor social space that connects and anchors old and new.  The new addition is thin and cross-ventilated.  It is shaded to the south by a vertical photovoltaic panel array and wrapped to the north with lightweight perforated metal screens that contrast with the heft of the original masonry building.

Brockman Hall for Physics, Rice University; Houston KieranTimberlake The campus of Rice University is a continuously studied and managed “canvas” that represents an intensive ongoing collaboration between architects, planners, and administrators.  Its park-like environment—with live oaks, lawns, walkways, arcades, courtyards, and buildings—comprises a clear and timeless vision.  The Brockman Hall for Physics needed to fit within this distinctive setting, to gather together a faculty of physicists and engineers working in as many as five separate buildings, and to house highly sophisticated research facilities carefully isolated from the noise, vibrations, and temperature fluctuations that could destroy experiments.

California Memorial Stadium & Simpson Training Center; Berkeley, California HNTB Architecture; Associate Architect: STUDIOS Architecture The historic stadium is one of the most beloved and iconic structures on the UC Berkeley campus.  The key goals for this project were to restore the stadium’s historic and civic prominence, integrate modern training and amenity spaces, and address severe seismic concerns. By setting the new athlete training facility into the landscape, a new grand 2-acre public plaza for the stadium was created on the roof.  A new press box/club crowns the historic wall; its truss-like design acts as a counterpoint to the historic facade.

Cambridge Public Library; Cambridge, Massachusetts William Rawn Associates, Architects, Inc.; Associate Architect: Ann Beha Architects The Cambridge Public Library has become the civic “Town Common” for a city that celebrates and welcomes its highly diverse community (with over 50 languages spoken in its schools).  With its all-glass double-skin curtain wall front facade, the library opens seamlessly out to a major public park.  This double-skin curtain wall uses fixed and adjustable technologies to ensure that daylight is infused throughout the interiors and to maximize thermal comfort for the most active patron spaces looking out to the park.

Danish Maritime Museum; Elsinore, Denmark BIG | Bjarke Ingels Group The design solution to the site’s inherent dilemmas was to wrap a subterranean museum around a dry dock like a doughnut, where the hole was the dry dock itself and the centerpiece of the museum’s collection.  Three two-level bridges span the dry dock, serving as shortcuts to various sections of the museum.  All floors slope gently, so that a visitor continually descends further below the water’s edge to learn about Danish maritime lore. The civil engineering and construction work for the museum were among the most complicated ever undertaken in Denmark.

John Jay College of Criminal Justice; New York City Skidmore, Owings & Merrill LLP Located in Manhattan, John Jay College of Criminal Justice’s new building provides all the functions of a traditional college campus within the confines of a single city block. SOM’s 625,000-square-foot addition doubles the size of the college’s existing facilities by adding classrooms, laboratories, auditoriums, faculty offices, and social spaces.  These functions are arranged within a new 14-story tower and four-story podium topped with an expansive landscaped terrace that serves as an elevated campus commons.  A 500-foot-long cascade runs the length of the podium and functions as the social spine of the campus. SOM’s design places a premium on communal and interactive space so that students may enjoy the experiences of a traditional college setting.

Krishna P. Singh Center for Nanotechnology at the University of Pennsylvania; Philadelphia WEISS/MANFREDI Architecture/Landscape/Urbanism Challenging the established model of laboratory buildings, the Krishna P. Singh Center for Nanotechnology is organized around an ascending spiral that hybridizes the tradition of the campus quadrangle with the public promenade.  The Center for Nanotechnology twists its laboratories around a central campus green, opening the sciences to the University of Pennsylvania’s landscape while providing a suite of public spaces within the building for cross-disciplinary collaboration amongst scientists.  Here, multiple types—courtyard, laboratory loft, ascending gallery—each with their own distinct histories, are grafted together to create a new, but recognizable hybrid.

LeFrak Center at Lakeside Prospect Park; Brooklyn, New York Tod Williams Billie Tsien Architects This project restored 26 acres of Brooklyn’s Prospect Park, designed by Frederick Law Olmsted and Calvert Vaux in the 19th century and added a new 75,000-square-foot, year-round skating and recreational facility. In the winter, the facility’s two rinks are open for ice skating, and in the summer one rink converts to roller skating and the other to a large water-play fountain.  Clad in rough-hewn gray granite, the new LeFrak Center appears to be large stone retaining walls set in the landscape.  Much of the structure is tucked into the land.  The L-shaped plan consists of the east and north block, both one-story structures with roof terraces connected by a bridge.

Sant Lespwa, Center of Hope; Outside of Hinche, Haiti Rothschild Doyno Collaborative The Center of Hope, commissioned by World Vision, is located in a rural region in Haiti and provides support, education, and skill building opportunities.  The design process involved the entire community from children to elders.  Construction included on-the-job skills training for over 100 residents.  The courtyard scheme and breezeway capture prevailing winds while opening expansive views to the mountains beyond.  Careful planning for natural ventilation, daylighting, water collection, sewage treatment, and electricity generation resulted in a completely self-sufficient building.  The participatory and empathetic process created an uplifting environment that inspires hope.

United States Courthouse, Salt Lake City, Utah Thomas Phifer and Partners; Naylor Wentworth Lund Architects The design of the new United States Courthouse in Salt Lake City emanates from a search for a strong, iconic, transparent, and metaphorically egalitarian form to symbolize the American judiciary system.  The primary nature of the courthouse’s cubic mass projects grounded dignity, immovable order, and an equal face to all sides. The 400,000-square-foot, 10-story courthouse resides on a landscaped terrace that spans an entire city block, uniting the new and existing federal courthouses as a public-access amenity while fulfilling a required federal security setback from the street.

Wild Turkey Bourbon Visitor Center; Lawrenceburg, Kentucky De Leon & Primmer Architecture Workshop Located on a bluff overlooking the Kentucky River, the visitor center is the newest component of recent additions and expansions to the Wild Turkey Distillery Complex, one of seven original member distilleries of the Kentucky Bourbon Trail.  The 9,140-square-foot facility houses interactive exhibits, a gift shop, event venues, a tasting room, and ancillary support spaces. Utilizing a simple barn silhouette (an interpretation of Kentucky tobacco barns common to the area), the building, clad in a custom chevron pattern of stained wood siding, presents a clear and recognizable marker in the landscape. 2015 Institute Honor Awards for Interior Architecture

The 2015AIA Institute Honor Award for Interior Architecture jury includes: Rick Kremer, FAIA (Chair), Architect Rick Kremer, FAIA; Matt Murphy, AIA, RMTA; Luke Ogrydziak, AIA, Ogrydziak Prillinger Architects; Susan Elizabeth Seifert, AIA, seifertmurphy and Steven Shapiro, Hon. AIA, Clark Construction.

Arent Fox; Washington, D.C. STUDIOS Architecture Key elements of this office building include a formal reception space with a physical and visual connection to the building lobby, a conference center, an auditorium with tiered seating, break-out areas for receptions, and slab openings on typical office floors for visual connection to other floors.  The building has two primary street-facing sides and two sides that face an alley. To create parity between the two, the design places key elements on the alley side of the building to draw people from the front to the back for collaboration and support functions.  Glass was used to shape offices and conference rooms and to blur the line between circulation and enclosed spaces.

The Barbarian Group; New York City Clive Wilkinson Architects; Design Republic Partners Architects LLP The offices for digital marketing firm The Barbarian Group were designed with connectivity, accessibility, and collaboration in mind. Simplifying the basic needs of the conventional office to their core, an endless table was envisioned that connects all employees at a single surface. The table, dubbed “the Superdesk,” rises and falls throughout the space, lifting over pathways and creating work and meeting grottos beneath its arches. Its plywood underside is made of 870 unique laser-cut panels, and its top surface is a light-reflecting pearlescent white with a clear epoxy coating.

Beats By Dre; Culver City, California Bestor Architecture The Beats By Dre campus was designed to reflect the diverse and innovative work undertaken in the music and technological fields.  The main building is carved by a, two-story lobby that forms an axis and two courtyards to orient the work spaces.  Courtyards connect to the varied working environments and include offices, open workstations, flexible work zones, and interactive conference rooms.  The office plan encourages interaction and contact across departments by establishing a variety of calculated environments that exist within the larger workspace: peaceful, activated, elegant or minimal.

Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, Museum Store; Bentonville, Arkansas Marlon Blackwell Architect The work of a local Arkansas basket maker, Leon Niehues, known for his sculpturally ribbed baskets made from young white oak trees from the Ozarks, provided the design inspiration for the museum store, located at the heart of the Moshe Safdie, FAIA, designed museum (2011) in Bentonville, Arkansas.  A series of 224 parallel ribs, made of locally harvested cherry plywood, were digitally fabricated directly from the firm’s Building Information Modeling delivery process.  Beginning at the top of the exterior glass wall, the ribs extend across the ceiling and down the long rear wall of the store.

Illinois State Capitol West Wing Restoration; Springfield, Illinois Vinci Hamp Architects The West Wing of the Illinois State Capitol is the second phase of a comprehensive renovation program of this 293,000-square-foot National Historic Landmark. Designed by French émigré architect Alfred Piquenard between 1868 and 1888, the Capitol represents the apogee of Second Empire design in Illinois.  Over the years inappropriate changes were made through insensitive modifications and fires.  The project mandate was to restore the exuberant architecture of the West Wing’s four floors and basement, while simultaneously making necessary life safety, accessibility, security and energy efficient mechanical, electrical, & plumbing system upgrades.

Louisiana State Museum; Natchitoches, Louisiana Trahan Architects The Louisiana State Museum merges historical and sports collections, elevating the experience for both.  Set in the oldest settlement in the Louisiana Purchase on the banks of the Cane River Lake, the quiet yet innovative design reinterprets the geometry of the nearby plantation houses and the topography of the riverfront; between past and future. Spaces flow together to accommodate exhibits, education, event and support functions.  The hand-folded copper container contrasts with the digitally carved cast-stone entry and foyer within, highlighting the dialogue between the manmade and the natural.

National September 11 Memorial Museum; New York City Davis Brody Bond The 9/11 Memorial Museum is built upon the foundations of the Twin Towers, 70 feet below street level.  Visitors reach the museum via a gently sloped descent, a journey providing time and space for reflection and remembrance. Iconic features of the site, such as the surviving Slurry Wall, are progressively revealed.  This quiet procession allows visitors to connect to their own memories of 9/11 as part of the experience. Located at the site of the event, the museum provides an opportunity to link the act of memorialization with the stories, artifacts and history of that day.

Newport Beach Civic Center and Park; Newport Beach, California Bohlin Cywinski Jackson The Newport Beach Civic Center and Park creates a center for civic life in this Southern California beachside community.  Nestled within a new 17-acre park, the City Hall is designed for clarity and openness. A long, thin building supporting a rhythmic, wave-shaped roof provides a light and airy interior, complemented by connections to outdoor program elements, a maritime palette, and commanding views of the Pacific Ocean. The project’s form and expression are generated by place and sustainability, as well as the City’s democratic values of transparency and collaboration.

2015 Institute Honor Awards for Regional & Urban Design

The jury for the 2015 Institute Honor Awards for Regional & Urban Design includes: Frank Fuller, FAIA, (Chair), Field Paoli; Karl Grice, AIA, Grice Group; Anne-Marie Lubenau, AIA, Bruner Foundation; Klaus Philipsen, FAIA, ArchPlan and Adam Thies, AICP, Director of the Indianapolis Department of Metropolitan Development.

Beijing Tianqiao (Sky Bridge) Performing Arts District Master Plan; Beijing, China Skidmore, Owings & Merrill LLP Old Tianqiao was once a bustling hub of cultural activities and folk arts traditions ranging from storytelling, variety shows, acrobatics, and operas.  The project intends to reestablish the cultural heart of the capital with a collection of modern and traditional performance venues that respect the city’s sensitive, World Heritage context. An integrated design process across many disciplines laid out a series of environmental goals, including reintroducing the historic farm fabric, developing a storm water filtration system, reducing waste by using existing materials, and reducing automobile dependence and carbon footprint by creating walkable neighborhoods around three new subway stations.

The BIG U; New York City BIG | Bjarke Ingels Group The BIG U is a 10-mile protective ribbon around lower Manhattan that addresses vulnerabilities exposed by Superstorm Sandy (2012). The BIG U consists of three components: BIG Bench, Battery Berm, and Bridging Berm.  BIG Bench is a continuous protective element adapted to the local context that mediates new and existing infrastructure.  The Battery Berm weaves an elevated path through the park, enhancing the public realm while protecting the Financial District and critical transportation infrastructure.  This signature building features a “reverse aquarium” that enables visitors to observe tidal variations and sea level rise.  The Bridging Berm rises 14 feet by the highways, connecting the coast and communities with greenways.

Government Center Garage Redevelopment; Boston CBT Architects The redevelopment of the Government Center Garage project is an example of undoing the ills of the 1960's urban renewal in Boston that critically separated six thriving neighborhoods.  The plan unlocks neighborhood connections, reopens urban vistas, and creates engaging public spaces by strategically removing a portion of the garage while preserving the remaining structure through creative phasing to provide for a sustainable and economically feasible redevelopment.  The project introduces 3 million square-feet of housing dominant mixed-use program to downtown, creating a dynamic 24-hour neighborhood as a model for sustainable, transit-oriented development.  The project also sets up a new position for urban design in Boston by shaping the urban form to respond to acute desire lines of a pre-grid city and promoting slender building typologies.

Target Field Station; Minneapolis Perkins Eastman Target Field Station, opened in May 2014, is a distinctive transit station located in the heart of Minneapolis' revitalized North Loop neighborhood.  The project links the street fabric of the existing neighborhood with Target Field Stadium Promenade and to the larger downtown core beyond.  The station seamlessly links parking, light rail, regional rail, bus and bicycle modes of transit – while always privileging ease of pedestrian access. It also provides of a series of interconnected public open spaces, including an amphitheater and a ‘Great Lawn’ as additional amenities for public use.  By combining sustainable design, carefully crafted public space, landscape elements, public art, and private development, Target Field Station sets the bar for how modern cities leverage transit design to create iconic cultural centers.

 

About The American Institute of Architects Founded in 1857, members of the American Institute of Architects consistently work to create more valuable, healthy, secure, and sustainable buildings, neighborhoods, and communities. Through nearly 300 state and local chapters, the AIA advocates for public policies that promote economic vitality and public well being.  Members adhere to a code of ethics and conduct to ensure the highest professional standards. The AIA provides members with tools and resources to assist them in their careers and business as well as engaging civic and government leaders, and the public to find solutions to pressing issues facing our communities, institutions, nation and world. Visit www.aia.org.

2015 AIA National Convention: President Bill Clinton to Deliver Keynote Address

Washington, D.C. – January 6, 2015 – President Bill Clinton will deliver the keynote address during the 2015 AIA National Convention and Design Exposition in Atlanta on May 14th. The theme of this year’s AIA Convention is Impact, focusing on how architects impact their communities both locally and globally. Through learning the essential skills to become successful entrepreneurs, the AIA Convention will provide attendees the skills to grow, sell and promote their firm’s business.

President Bill Clinton William Jefferson Clinton was the first Democratic president in six decades to be elected twice – first in 1992 and then in 1996. Under his leadership, the country enjoyed the strongest economy in a generation and the longest economic expansion in U.S. history, including the creation of more than 22 million jobs.

After leaving the White House, President Clinton established the Clinton Foundation with the mission to improve global health, strengthen economies, promote health and wellness, and protect the environment.

In addition to his Foundation work, President Clinton has served as the top United Nations envoy for the Indian Ocean tsunami recovery effort and as the UN Special Envoy to Haiti. Today, the Clinton Foundation is supporting economic growth, capacity building, and education in Haiti.

President Clinton was born on August 19, 1946, in Hope, Arkansas. He and his wife Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton have one daughter, Chelsea, and live in Chappaqua, New York.

AIA Members Achieve Important Legislative Wins

A message from Robert Ivy, FAIA EVP/Chief Executive Officer of the AIA

It's been an extremely busy last few days in Washington – a period of time that has proved beneficial for our membership and our profession. In the last week, we've had great results in two key areas. Congress has:

  • Approved an important provision that reforms the design-build procurement process, providing more certainty and opportunity for firms that want to participate in federal projects. Since state and local government agencies – and many private sector clients – often follow federal practices, this change will help thousands of architecture firms compete for projects.
  • Passed legislation to restore several important incentives for energy efficient design, including the 179D energy efficient commercial building tax deduction, which has helped firms save millions of dollars for their clients and themselves while promoting sustainable design.

These wins result directly from a heightened advocacy presence from AIA members who responded to our calls for action on these issues, testified on Capitol Hill, met with their local representatives, and supported the AIA's champions through ArchiPAC, the AIA's political action committee. Their efforts prove what the AIA can accomplish when we speak with a strong, unified voice.

As we head into 2015 I encourage all of you to be integral to the AIA's advocacy efforts by visiting the AIA's Get Involved page, in addition to supporting ArchiPAC. In tandem with our new Look Up campaign, which aims to build more awareness of the AIA and our profession, we can continue to spread the word on the positive impact architects and designers have on every facet of the world around us.

We hope you all enjoy a safe holiday season and a Happy New Year.

Robert Ivy, FAIA

American Institute of Architects Confers Highest Award on Local Architects

American Institute of Architects Confers Highest Award on Local Architects

Contact:  Buu Huynh Phone: (619) 232-0109 Email: bhuynh@aiasandiego.org Twitter: @aiasandiego

San Diego, CA – November 10, 2014 The American Institute of Architects San Diego is pleased to announce the recent presentation, at the 2014 AIA San Diego Design Awards on October 30, of its highest honor, the Lifetime Achievement Award, to two of the region’s most important architects; Eugene “Gene” Weston III and Paul McKim. The long and varied careers of both men, both won regional and national design awards, spanned one of the most dynamic periods in California design with the emergence and establishment of modernism as the defining typology of progressive architecture. Their early contributions are today recognized as exemplars and are widely embraced for their originality and livability.

Paul McKim

Eugene Weston Photo 1

As building design and technology evolved in the 60’s and 70’s, Messrs. Weston and McKim continued their commitment to the highest standards for their projects, both as individuals and as part of larger firms. Their diverse output ranged from residential projects to large-scale institutional and commercial commissions, and included incorporating such important trends as adaptive reuse and sustainable design. In addition, both men expanded their spheres of influence to include participation as volunteers on planning boards and community groups – helping shape the region’s built environment far beyond their own projects. Further, the long and impressive list of architects and designers directly influenced by these men is a testament to their broad-based contributions to the profession. Gene Weston passed away in 2012. Paul McKim continues his design practice in San Diego County.

For more information, please contact AIA San Diego, email info@aiasandiego.org or call 619.232.0109

AIA San Diego was established in 1927 by the city’s leading architects of the time, including Irving Gill.  With offices located in the historic Center City Building (1927, Frank Stevenson), adjacent to City Hall, the chapter serves the interests of its nearly 850 members through a vigorous program of professional development, advocacy, public awareness and fellowship.   For more information please visit www.aiasandiego.org

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