AIA launches 3rd annual I Look Up Film Challenge

American Institute of Architects (AIA) Announces 3rd Annual I Look Up Film Challenge Call for filmmakers and architects to showcase architecture as a Blueprint for Better

Contact: Matt Tinder 202-626-7462 mtinder@aia.org

The American Institute of Architects (AIA) 2017 I Look Up Film Challenge is now open for registration, inviting architects across the country to collaborate with filmmakers by highlighting projects that are changing communities for the better.

Architecture is at its best when practiced in service of the community. The I Look Up Film Challenge is an opportunity for architects and filmmakers to come together to showcase exactly that. “This year’s Blueprint for Better theme is a tremendous opportunity for filmmakers to shine a light on the groundbreaking work architects are doing in their communities,” said 2017 AIA President, Tom Vonier, FAIA.

Midtown. A Blueprint for Better., is a motivating example of the film challenge’s theme in action, depicting how architecture can revitalize a community.

“We’re proud to celebrate the amazing work of AIA architects,“ said Vonier, “and we continue to be inspired by the filmmakers and architects that contribute to this competition every year.”

All films submitted by August 13 will be reviewed by an esteemed panel of judges from the media and architecture world, along with a chance to win the public’s vote. Winners will be screened in early November at the Architecture and Design Film Festival, and win cash and distribution prizes.

Visit http://www.ilookup.org/to register by June 26 and submit films by August 13. Use the hashtag #ilookup to join the conversation.

Please see below for details, logos, photos, and videos.

FILM CHALLENGE DETAILS

  • Registration Closes 6/26/17
  • Challenge Period 6/27/17 - 8/13/17
  • Final Films Due 8/13/17
  • Judging 8/17/17 - 8/30/17
  • Public Voting 8/21/17 - 10/06/17

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.

AIASD Member News: Carrier Johnson + CULTURE Honored by Community Choice as “Most Admired” San Diego Business

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Carrier Johnson + CULTURE Honored by Community Choice as “Most Admired” San Diego Business

Voters online choose global architecture-and-interiors firm to receive Malin Burnham Award for business with “greatest philanthropic impact” in the region.

SAN DIEGO, CA, May 25, 2017 – With a longstanding commitment to the betterment of its home city and places far beyond San Diego, the global architecture, interiors and branding firm Carrier Johnson + CULTURE has been selected a winner of the 2017 Malin Burnham Awards for their philanthropic activities in the category of “Most Admired Business/Corporation.” The recognition this week comes from the community at large, with Carrier Johnson + CULTURE being selected by popular vote from a list of San Diego’s most prominent companies and corporations to receive the Malin Burnham Award for the most admired.

Gordon Carrier, AIA, NCARB, design principal and one of Carrier Johnson + CULTURE’s founders, attended the awards presentation event at the University of California-San Diego Tuesday night. “It’s a tremendous honor and a humbling one,” says Carrier. “For decades Malin Burnham’s reputation throughout the region has been as San Diego’s most highly regarded businessman and philanthropist. To receive this award with his name—and to know that area residents and business leaders voted for us—carries a lot of weight.”

“There are not sufficient words to express our gratitude,” adds Carrier.

The Malin Burnham Awards are sponsored by the nonprofit organization Reality Changers, a group devoted to transforming young people’s lives “by providing youth from disadvantaged backgrounds with the academic support, financial assistance, and leadership training to become college graduates.” The award program takes its name from the real estate developer and accomplished sailor who became widely known in the San Diego area for his business acumen and extensive charitable work. Reality Changers created the awards program to recall Burnham’s continued and generous support and to celebrate people and groups in Southern California who embody Burnham’s motto, “Community Before Self.” In this spirit, all award recipients are selected by community vote. Other nominees for the Most Admired Business award included AT&T, San Diego Gas & Electric, Swinerton Builders, and UBS Financial Services and eleven other companies with distinguished records of significant local philanthropic activity.

Carrier Johnson + CULTURE distinguished itself for this honor in large part because of a longstanding commitment to both charitable giving and volunteerism, fostered actively among the firm’s leadership and staff. In fact, a number of architects and designers with the firm volunteer directly with Reality Changers. In addition, the firm is well known for a focus on supporting major charitable events, such as the recent Open House San Diego. Carrier

Johnson + CULTURE’s principals — Gordon Carrier, FAIA, NCARB, and Michael Johnson, AIA, NCARB, along with managing principal Vincent Mudd — are also well known for their commitment to building design and urban planning that results in active and inclusive environments blending creativity, art, and social expression with sustainable economic development.

The honor was compounded shortly after the awards program by a commendation letter to the firm from Myrtle Cole, President of San Diego’s Fourth District Council, in recognition of the “Most Admired” award. Written on behalf of the Fourth District and of the City, the letter expresses gratitude to Carrier Johnson + CULTURE for “countless contributions toward making San Diego a world-class city for all.”

Other awards were presented to the Most Admired Public Leader, Most Admired News Outlet, and similar honors for foundations and service organizations. Proceeds from fundraising for the Malin Burnham Awards will help Reality Changers reach their target of $2 million to increase the number of first-generation college students in San Diego.

About Carrier Johnson + CULTURE Reflecting a new focus in the practice of architecture and design, Carrier Johnson + CULTURE is reinventing a model for the future of designed environments. As a design-centric practice focused on the merger of architecture, interior design and strategic branding, Carrier Johnson + CULTURE works in partnership with market leaders in higher education, hospitality, healthcare, civic life, mixed-use development to deliver meaningful design innovation in building, living, wellness, and communication solutions. Our focus on solutions steeped in authenticity, reflects the unique three-dimensional brand opportunity of each commission. Visit www.carrierjohnson.com.

AIA: Design billings increasing entering height of construction season

Design billings increasing entering height of construction seasonAll regions report positive business conditions

Contact: Matt Tinder 202-626-7462 mtinder@aia.org

Washington, D.C. – May 24, 2017 – After beginning the year with a marginal decline, the Architecture Billings Index has posted three consecutive months of growth in design revenue at architecture firms. 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 April ABI score was 50.9, down from a score of 54.3 in the previous month. This score still reflects an increase in design services (any score above 50 indicates an increase in billings). The new projects inquiry index was 60.2, up from a reading of 59.8 the previous month, while the new design contracts index increased from 52.3 to 53.2.

“Probably even better news for the construction outlook is that new project work coming into architecture firms has seen exceptionally strong growth so far this year,” said AIA Chief Economist, Kermit Baker, Hon. AIA, PhD. “In fact, new project activity has pushed up project backlogs at architecture firm to their highest level since the design market began its recovery earlier this decade.”

Key April ABI highlights:

  • Regional averages: South (55.3), Midwest (53.3), West (50.9), Northeast (50.7)
  • Sector index breakdown: institutional (54.0), mixed practice (53.4), commercial / industrial (52.4), multi-family residential (49.9)
  • Project inquiries index: 60.2
  • Design contracts index: 53.2

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.

AIA Public Outreach Efforts

This week, The American Institute of Architects launched the latest installment of our annual public awareness "I Look Up" campaign. This board approved initiative is intended to raise the visibility and understanding of architecture and the profession with targeted audiences. Take a look below at the latest developments: AIA television commercial

We are pleased to share with you all the final version of the commercial. It's available for you to view here. Beginning this week, the commercial will air on HGTV and Hulu for 3-4 weeks and then again in the fall for 4-5 weeks. AIA also will be among the sponsors for HGTV's popular "Urban Oasis."

Film challenge

The third annual I Look Up Film Challenge will officially launch in the next few weeks. In the meantime, you can visit www.ilookup.org to watch the seed film, "Midtown: A Blueprint for Better." The Film Challenge encourages architects and film producers to tell wonderful, often emotionally touching stories that show how smart design and architecture can help to change lives, communities and society for the better. We appreciate your helping us to promote this engaging competition when it launches in June.

Topic Architecture

Topic Architecture, also known as TopicA, is the AIA's public-facing website to further show how great design can change lives. The site will build awareness and consideration of architecture services among potential clients. As the leading edge for our public awareness efforts, Topic Architecture will engage visitors with effective editorial content that's easy to digest so that they can reach the decision stage to hire an architect. (www.topicarchitecture.com)

PAID SEARCH VIA GOOGLE

Also kicking off is our paid search optimization via Google, which will also run during our spring and fall flights on HGTV and Hulu. That traffic will be directed to our newly-launched, public-facing website www.topicarchitecture.com.

The Architect's Voice

Do your part! Would you like to get involved in the public awareness campaign? The greatest impact you can have is through face-to-face, one-on-one communication with potential clients, community leaders, local businesses and in your schools. The Architect's Voice message book has tested messages to improve how you and your peers describe to key audiences the value architects bring to any project.

Learn more about Blueprint for Better here.

Please contact Caitlin Reagan, Manager, Public Affairs (caitlinreagan@aia.org) for more information.

Bisnow: Coalition Of Housing Affordability Interests Launches ‘Housing You Matters’

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Coalition Of Housing Affordability Interests Launches ‘Housing You Matters’

December 08, 2016 Patricia Kirk, Bisnow, SD Coalition Of Housing Affordability Interests Launches ‘Housing You Matters’ - Affordable Housing

Holland Partner Group's Park & Market mixed-use development in east village

A broad coalition of San Diego builders, employers, environmentalists and community planners, called Housing You Matters, aims to solve the region’s housing affordability problem. Calling 2017 the year of reckoning, San Diego County Building Industry Association president/CEO Borre Winckel said the median home price topped $500k in October for the first time since 2005, when home prices peaked. Despite extremely low apartment vacancy and new home inventories, housing production is half what it was before the housing bubble burst 10 years ago.

The organization has 51 members from 39 organizations, ranging from grass-roots groups to big corporations like Qualcomm, and has raised tens of thousands of dollars to hire staff to plan and carry out its agenda for 2017, reports the San Diego Union-Tribune. Housing You Matters plans to serve as an advocate for changing policy to promote creation of sustainable housing at all income levels in cities throughout the San Diego region, not champion specific projects.

The $200M, 426-unit Park & Market project (above) is adjacent to the Trolley Station on Park Boulevard in East Village and includes 85 affordable housing units. This is the type of dense, transit-oriented project Housing You Matters believes is the answer to San Diego's housing affordability problem.

Former executive director of the local ULI chapter Mary Lydon has been hired as consultant to coordinate projects, public events and outreach efforts for the organization. She said Housing You Matters grew out of a report by Point Loma Nazarene University economist Lynn Reaser that estimates 40% of new housing costs are due to regulation and fees. The study suggested a slight reduction in housing regulations would increase annual housing production by two-thirds.

Initiatives planned for the coming year will include educational programs, including:

  • Design workshops organized by the local chapter of the American Institute of Architects to sketch what San Diego neighborhoods with more housing might look like in 2050.
  • An innovative housing concepts event presented by the San Diego Architectural Foundation.
  • Housing regulation, production and finance best practices compiled by the Urban Land Institute’s Terwilliger Center and presented by the local ULI chapter.
  • A workshop by the coalition to analyze the impediments to housing production regionally and how to overcome them. [SDUT]

AIASD Member News: Safdie Rabines Architects Featured in Architect Magazine

Congratulations to Safdie Rabines Architects for their work on the National City Aquatic Center.

"Safdie Rabines Architects is pleased to announce completion of the much-anticipated National City Aquatic Center. Located fifteen miles north of the U.S./Mexico border in southern San Diego County, CA, the single-story, two-structure center marks the realization of National City’s long-term goal to replace a makeshift facility housed in trailers for over a decade."

View/read the article here

AIASD Member News: Gensler Featured in the SD Union Tribune, Redesigning San Diego, from north to south

Written by Roger Showley

Gensler, San Francisco’s largest architectural firm, is quietly remaking San Diego , judging by a raft of megaprojects on its plate.

It’s responsible for redesigning the proposed redevelopment of the Qualcomm Stadium site, the downtown Navy Broadway Complex and Harbor Island rental car lots. It also is involved in Chula Vista’s Otay Ranch commercial development, new buildings at local major universities and consulting with the county and city governments on their office needs.

Its 100-member local office, ranked a close second locallyto rival firm Carrier Johnson + Culture, also is working on continued expansion of Lindbergh Field terminals, and county and city governments office needs.Last year, it designed the Union-Tribune’s downtown offices at 600 B St.

“This is probably one of the most exciting times to be in San Diego,” said managing director Kevin Heinly. “So many incredible properties are up for redevelopment and they will redefine the city for the next century.”

Besides its active project list, Gensler has another point of pride to boast about. It’s just relocated into the former NBC-Channel 7 studios in first two floors of the office tower at 225 Broadway, where it previously occupied parts of three upper floors, and showed off its digs at a grand opening Wednesday.

Highlights include an outdoor terrace overlooking Broadway and Horton Plaza park and the second floor employee lounge, complete with a “living room” and its chess board, TV, couch and, nearby, a period Eames lounge and Nelson bubble lamp. He said the overall design takes its inspiration from the building’s mid-1970s minimalist look.

However, artful splashes include a “Gensler Red”-painted support I-beam and repurposed window mullions, refashioned into an art piece above the reception desk to represent San Diego’s downtown skyline.

But the space is far cry from the cubicles and private offices common in those days. There’s a special virtual reality room, where architects can get “inside” their artist’s renderings and computer-generated images; adjustable standup desktops; and an 1,800-square-foot product and samples library, triple the previous space.

To promote collaboration and team work, there are long, common-area tables, white boards, pin-up boards and small conference rooms (named for streets and landmarks surrounding the building). The lobby is big enough to host public events and presentations. And, in keeping with promoting teamwork, there’s only a handful of private offices, so mangers and executives will be more likely found roaming the floor chatting up architects and designers.

For employee comfort, louvered windows have been installed to let in natural air, signaled by a green light around the corner from the lobby. There are lockers and showers available to staffers for the first time and a small fleet of red bicycles (Heinly used one recently to get to a construction site). Though it’s a global firm, the Gensler office stocks local coffee beans from WestBean Coffee Roasters, located across Broadway.

The “Gensler” in Gensler is M. Arthur Gensler, 81, who founded the firm in the Bay Area in 1965 with an emphasis on interior design. By 2000 Steve Jobs hired him to design the prototype for Apple Stores.

Today Gensler, the firm, counts more than 5,000 employees in 45 offices in the U.S. and around the world. Some of its best-known projects include San Francisco International Airport terminals, the 4-million-square-foot Shanghai Tower office building and Facebook’s headquarters in Menlo Park. Due to open next year is the Banc of California Stadium for the Los Angeles Football Club, a Major League Soccer expansion franchise team.

Heinly, 49, developed his interest in architecture while growing up in Lancaster, Penn., where he helped his lawyer father restore farmhouses and barns. He joined Gensler in 1998 after working at various firms in the Los Angeles area and came to the San Diego office eight years ago. He lives with his wife and 11-year-old son in a Point Loma house designed by the late, mid-century-modern architect Homer Delawie.

“I think our responsibility as architects and designers and to our community is to make great places,” Heinly said, “uniquely San Diegan and not something that has been imported from someplace else.”

One direction Gensler is investigating is 3-D printed buildings. It’s already possible to “print” a concrete component of a building, a system that could help remote areas recover from natural disasters.

In other applications, construction might not cost less using 3-D printers, but they might save time and hence financing costs and speed up an opening date and thus the payback period.

“It’s in its infancy,” Heinly said.

Gensler projects in San Diego

(completed unless otherwise noted)

Cal State San Marcos field house expansion

Fifth Avenue Landing hotel, downtown San Diego (proposed)

Harbor Island East redevelopment (OliverMcMillan proposal)

Lindbergh Field Terminal 2 (ongoing)

Museum of Photographic Arts lobby, Balboa Park

San Diego civic center office plans, downtown San Diego (ongoing)

San Diego County reuse study of old courthouse (analysis)

Schwartz Federal Courthouse remodel (ongoing), downtown

Southwestern College DeVore Stadium and field house and wellness and aquatic center (completion Dec. 2017)

Sunroad Centrum office building, Kearny Mesa (proposed)

SoccerCity, Mission Valley (proposed)

Manchester Pacific Gateway, downtown (demolition under way)

TaylorMade-Adidas Golf and Ashworth offices and showroom, Carlsbad

Think office building at Millenia, Chula Vista’s Otay Ranch (approved)

Township 14 offices for Latham & Watkins, Del Mar Heights

UC San Diego east campus office building and and Triton Ballpark

AIASD Member News: Alahe Aldo, AIA Joins Carrier Johnson + CULTURE

Alahe Aldo, AIA, LEED AP, has joined Carrier Johnson+CULTURE as Director of Higher Education, bringing to the position her extensive knowledge of campus planning as well as commercial and workplace architecture. With 30+ years of experience in the field, Aldo has worked extensively with campuses across the northeastern United States, including Harvard University, MIT, and Boston College. Read more:

http://www.carrierjohnson.com/leading-architect-in-campus-planning-design-alahe-aldo-joins-carrier-johnson-culture/

AIASD Member News: Asquared Studios Project Participates in "New Bathroom" Idea Book

Asquared Studios's remodel of a master bathroom will be featured in the NEW Bathroom IDEA BOOK. Authored by Jamie Gold, CKD, CAPS the NEW Bathroom IDEA BOOK published by The Taunton Press is an inspirational book filled with over 370 photos to provide design options for all areas of the bathroom. Part of a whole home renovation project, this master bathroom first gained attention when it was awarded a Bath of The Year Award in 2009. The NEW Bathroom IDEA BOOK is available on Amazon.com.

The Daily Transcript: Series of events to address housing shortage

Monday, April 24, 2017

Series of events to address housing shortage

By Mark Armao, mark_armao@sdtranscript.com

Building on the discussion of how to accommodate the city's future housing needs, the Housing San Diego's Future alliance will host events this year bringing various stakeholders together to develop possible solutions.

Organizations, including the San Diego Architectural Foundation, the American Institute of Architects San Diego, Housing You Matters and CityAge, will host various conferences, workshops and presentations to explore ways to house the region's population, which SANDAG projects will increase by 1 million by 2050.

"It's critical now for thought leaders and practitioners to synergize their ideas and work together." said Mary Lydon, executive director of Housing You Matters, a local coalition that aims to address the region's housing needs. "These events will bring together community members, organizations, professionals and important stakeholders as a meeting of the minds to identify and envision real solutions."

The first event of the program is CityAge: Build the Future, which begins on Tuesday. The two­day conference is part of an international program that brings civic, business and academic leaders together to discuss ways for a city to catalyze growth and compete in the global economy.

Sessions will highlight topics including "Brands and the Business of City Building," "Partnerships to Build the Future City," and "The Business of Housing."

Speakers will include Mayor Kevin Faulconer; San Diego Regional Chamber president and CEO Jerry Sanders; and Mark Cafferty, president and CEO of the San Diego Regional Economic Development Corp. The event will be held at the San Diego Central Library.

The American Institute of Architects San Diego is holding workshops leading up to its Housing the Next 1 Million Planning & Design Charrette on November 4 and 5.

The event will feature presentations from 12 multidisciplinary teams of architects, planners, engineers, developers, builders, community planning­group representatives, students and faculty who will introduce ideas to increase San Diego's housing stock.

"If we're going to change San Diego, and we're going to have another million people, then everybody deserves an opportunity to help shape that future," said Phil Bona, president of AIA San Diego. During several workshops and meetings, the teams­one for each of the nine city council districts and North County, East County and South County­will take a fine­grained approach to adding housing within neighborhoods SANDAG has identified as smart growth areas.

To plan for the additional 400,000 housing units that SANDAG projects will be needed to accommodate the region's population in 2050, the teams will target sites that are conducive to urban infill and brownfield redevelopment.

"We can always sprawl, but we don't want to do that­we don't need to do that," Bona said. "There are other moves we can make and that's what we want to focus on."

With suggestions about where to put housing, the teams will also make recommendations on changes to the land­use code that would foster smart growth. These will likely include policies that would allow for residential units to be built alongside light industrial uses and would encourage the development of alternative housing forms such as granny flats, which are small, detached units built on residential properties.

After the teams' ideas are "thrown in a blender," each will develop presentations­complete with graphic representations­that will be revealed to the public at the culminating event in the fall.

On June 6, the San Diego Architectural Foundation will host Context Vol. 4, which will feature exhibits and lectures focusing on the importance of design in creating a denser, more affordable city.

SDAF's fourth annual Context forum, Neighborhoods 2027, will comprise a free public event with exhibits, films and guest speakers, and a ticket­only reception and panel discussion.

"We're having a ten­year look­ahead as to what neighborhoods might look like if we actually got busy thinking about them and planning them now," said SDAF vice president Margit Whitlock.

The event, which will be held at greenACRE Campus Pointe, will highlight studio work by design students from NewSchool of Architecture + Design, Woodbury University, USD, UCSD and others.

Vishaan Chakabarti, author of "A Country of Cities: A Manifesto for an Urban America," will deliver the keynote address.

"If we keep talking about it from all these different angles, it might just sink in," Whitlock said. "As long as we're aware and we have a common mission, we can do it together."

Housing You Matters, in partnership with California Forward, will host the 2017 California Economic Summit in midNovember. During the conference, leaders from the public, private and civic sectors will develop a shared economic agenda to "expand prosperity for all," according to a release.

Bona said the ongoing discourse regarding San Diego's housing needs is imperative if city leaders want to cultivate a livable, affordable environment for future generations.

"We're no longer going to build like we've been building for the last hundred years," Bona said. "We're going to begin to build and design for the next hundred years."

AIASD Member News: Brian Church, AIA Featured in Modern Luxury's "San Diego's Men of the Moment"

Brian Church, AIA is featured as one of five of Modern Luxury's "San Diego Men of the Moment" in the April 2017 issue. Church shares updates on the firm's latest project, "Park 101" a 3,500-square-foot deli-style restaurant in Carlsbad, CA, and the firm's recent office expansion.

Congratulations!

Read the original article here

 

AIASD Member News: BWE’s Hector Maytorena and Jeff Morgan obtain Engineer Licenses

BWE’s Hector Maytorena and Jeff Morgan obtain Engineer Licenses Hector Maytorena and Jeff Morgan have passed their Engineer License Exams. Mr. Maytorena has passed the Professional Engineer Exam, while Mr. Morgan, who already held a Professional Engineer license in California, has passed the Structural Engineer license exam.

Mr. Maytorena has beenwith BWE since 2004 and has over 18 years of experience designing a variety of project types including civic, commercial and military work. As a project engineer, he regularly coordinates with other consultants and clients to ensure timely and accurate completion of projects. His recent projects include UCSD Jacobs Medical Center & Central Plant in La Jolla, CA; P-114 MV-22 Double Hangar Replacement in Camp Pendleton, CA; and Bonita Valley Community Church in Bonita, CA.

“Hector has been a valuable member of the BWE Civil Engineering team for over 12 years. He is always conscientious of our clients’ needs, providing them with cost-effective and constructible solutions.  His license confirms what we already know – Hector is a skilled engineer who knows how to achieve a balance between the technical and the personal sides of engineering.”

– Ambrose Wong, PE, QSD – Principal

 

With 10 years of engineering experience, Mr. Morgan recently joined the BWE team as a Structural Project Manager. He excels in client relations and ensures communication with project architects and other consultants. He has advanced skills with analysis and drafting software, has experience in reviewing plans and calculations, and estimating design costs. Although Mr. Morgan is a relatively recent addition to BWE, he has already displayed his technical acumen on projects such as the City of Bellflower Events Center and Fire Museum; the Army Reserve Center in Riverside, CA; and the Westin Carlsbad Resort and Spa.

“What sets Mr. Morgan apart from others is his creative solutions for structural design. His patience, problem solving skills, and ability to multi-task enable him to provide superior service to our clients. We are proud to have such an exceptional professional on the BWE team.”

– Charlie Colvin, SE – Principal

 

Since 1971, BWE has provided structural and civil engineering, land surveying and land planning services on construction projects throughout San Diego, the Southwest, and beyond. Our engineers have built a reputation for excellence in design and service by fulfilling our self-imposed mandate to exceed the expectations of our clients and colleagues. BWE supports the career development of its employees through mentoring, training, licensure fees, professional association dues among other means.

Governor Brown Signs SB-496 Providing Indemnity Relief for Design Professionals

Governor Brown Signs SB-496 Providing Indemnity Relief for Design Professionals

Article written by:

View/download original article: SB-496 Signed Into Law

Last week with optimism we reported that the California State Assembly passed Senate Bill 496 (“SB-496”) which sought to lessen the burden of indemnity provisions and the dreaded immediate duty to defend in public and private contracts involving design professionals. We are pleased to announce that on Friday April 28, 2017, Governor Jerry Brown signed the bill into law!

SB-496 modifies Civil Code section 2782.8, adding protections to private contracts entered into by design professionals after January 1, 2018. Importantly, SB-496 limits the “duty to defend” to the comparative fault of the professional in private and public contracts. Civil Code section 2782.8 previously applied to public contracts entered into by design professionals with public agencies, excluding state agencies as defined in the statute. SB-496 places private contracts and public contracts with non-state agencies on equal footing.

The practical implications of SB-496 are extremely beneficial to design professionals, especially those working primarily in the private sector. For all private contracts entered into by a design professional prior to January 1, 2018 (meaning those contracts without the protections of SB-496) that contain a provision requiring the professional to indemnify and/or defend their client, the design professional could have to pay for all of their client’s attorneys’ fees and costs by virtue of being sued, even if the professional was ultimately found negligent free by the trier of fact. For private and applicable public contracts entered into after January 1, 2018, with the added protections of SB-496, if the design professional is found to be 25% at fault, then the law provides that they would only be liable for 25% of the attorneys’ fees and costs of a party seeking contractual indemnity and defense reimbursement. If found 0% at fault, the professional would not be responsible for any of their client’s attorneys’ fees or costs.

This is a significant step forward in making contracts between design professionals and owners in California both fair and insurable. This will allow for more equitable risk sharing on contracts concerning the built environment in 2018 and beyond.

Contact us to discuss further: Justin D. Witzmann jwitzmann@ccmslaw.com

Ryan P. Harley rharley@ccmslaw.com


Are you interested in learning more? Have questions? Attend "You’ve Got Friends: Risk Management and Architecture Practice" - May 10, 2017!

Join Cavignac & Associates, with the assistance of Collins Collins Muir + Stewart, two of AIA San Diego’s leading sponsors & supporters, for an important and timely workshop on how to manage the risks that arise from design practice. Learn the simple yet proven techniques that can help inoculate you and your team from excessive liability exposure and discover how to shift risk, reduce cost and protect the value of the business you’re worked so hard to build. Don’t miss this once-a-year program.

Wednesday May 10, 2017 12:00 noon – 1:00 pm Cavignac & Associates 401 B St 18th floor San Diego CA 92101

Parking voucher and informal lunch included. CE credits included and recorded by AIA|SD.

Free for AIA members and their guests. $15 for non-members

REGISTER HERE

AIASD Member News: ASquared Studios Featured in San Diego Home/Garden Lifestyles

Recipient of the a 2015 City of San Diego Historical Architectural Award, the Levine House is one of the projects featured in the May 2017 issue of San Diego Home/Garden Lifestyles Magazines on newsstands now or online.

 

Asquared Studios is a contemporary architectural design studio seeking to embrace projects that present us with the challenges of vernacular living within the context of our modern environment. We believe that our clients come first, and that all projects require an interactive collaboration to develop an artfully crafted result. We are invigorated by the notion that the basic fundamentals of function and cost can be translated into sophisticated spaces,elegant details, and environmental sustainability. With locations in both Northern and Southern California we are able to take on a broad range of projects in diverse locations.

AIA National: William J. Bates, FAIA, elected 2019 AIA President

William J. Bates, FAIA, elected 2019 AIA President Patrick P. Panetta, AIA, elected 2018-2019 Treasurer, Emily Grandstaff-Rice, FAIA, elected At-large Director

Contact: Matt Tinder 202-626-7462 mtinder@aia.org

For immediate release: Washington, D.C. – April 28, 2017 – William J. Bates, FAIA, from AIA Pittsburgh/AIA Pennsylvania, was elected 2018 First Vice President/2019 President-elect.  He has served as a member of the Board of Directors since 2011, along with stints as a vice president and the chair of the Board Community Committee from 2015-2016. In 1991 and again in 2010 he served as president of AIA Pennsylvania; he was also president of AIA Pittsburgh in 1987.

"As a profession, we solve our clients’ problems by listening and synthesizing solutions," Bates says. "These are the skills that we need to apply internally to make our profession more prosperous and inclusive for the next generation."

The vice president of real estate at Eat’n Park Hospitality Group, Inc., and an adjunct professor at Carnegie Mellon University, he received his B.Arch. from the University of Notre Dame and pursued graduate studies in Construction Management at both Pennsylvania State University and the Harvard Graduate School of Design.

Patrick P. Panetta, AIA, from AIA Phoenix Metro/AIA Arizona, was elected 2018-2019 Treasurer. He is currently serving as a director of AIA Western Mountain Region and as a member of the AIA Strategic Council; in 2016 he served as the co-chair of the Council's Political Influence Study Group. He is also a member of the AIA Board Finance Committee and the AIA Board Government Advocacy Committee.

"I am enthusiastic about the recent re-organization of Institute expenditures into programmatic portfolios,” says Panetta, “and look forward to working closely with Institute staff to monitor and measure the effectiveness of each portfolio, suggesting any changes or modifications to budgeting and spending that might increase the quality and efficient delivery of member services."

The director of real estate project management at Arizona State University, he received his B.Arch. from the University of Miami and his MBA from the University of Arizona.

Emily Grandstaff-Rice, FAIA, from the Boston Society of Architects-AIA/AIA Massachusetts, was elected an At-large Director.  She served as the 2014 President of the Boston Society of Architects and was a member of their Board of Directors from 2009-2015. Her AIA service includes chairing the Equity and Future of Architecture Committee, Equity in Architecture Commission, Continuing Education Committee and as a member of the Culture Collective and Young Architects Forum.

"The AIA was created to support architects as a community of peers and a collective voice in shaping the built environment," said Grandstaff-Rice. "We have the ability, through our day-to-day work as knowledge experts and community members, to testify to and expand the power of design in shaping a better future for all."

A senior associate at Arrowstreet in Boston, she received a B.S. and B.Arch. from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute and a Master’s degree in Educational Technology from Harvard University.

To view the full AIA Board of Directors and Strategic Council, visit aia.org/leadership.

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.

The American Institute of Architects Releases the 2017 AIA Contract Documents

The American Institute of Architects Releases the 2017 AIA Contract Documents For immediate release: Washington, D.C. – April 27, 2017The American Institute of Architects (AIA) today announced, at A’17 Conference on Architecture ,the release of the 2017 edition of the A201 family of documents. This release includes updated versions of the AIA’s flagship documents, developed for the design-bid-build delivery model. Working with architects, contractors, subcontractors and owners, the AIA Documents Committee updates this core set of documents every 10 years. This helps ensure that the AIA legal form and agreements reflect changes and trends in the industry, and that the AIA Contract Documents remain the Industry Standard.

“It is critically important that industry professionals learn about the 2017 revisions,” says Kenneth Cobleigh, Esq., Managing Director and Counsel of AIA Contract Documents. “The changes impact the roles and responsibilities of each of the parties directly, and understanding the changes will help everyone to promptly review and finalize project contracts. We hope that all industry participants take advantage of the significant written resources and education programming opportunities available to learn about, and understand, the 2017 revisions and the full portfolio of AIA Contract Documents.”

Some of the major owner/architect changes include:

  • Single Sustainable Projects Exhibit that can be used on any project and added to most AIA contracts to address the risks and responsibilities associated with sustainable design and construction services.
  • Agreements contain a fill point to prompt the parties to discuss and insert an appropriate “Termination Fee” for terminations for the owner’s convenience.
  •  Architect is no longer required to re-design for no additional compensation if he or she could not have reasonably anticipated the market conditions that caused the bids or proposals to exceed the owner’s budget.
  •  Services beyond Basic Services and identified at the time of agreement are now categorized as Supplemental Services, to avoid confusing them with Additional Services that arise during the course of the project.
  • Agreements clarify how the Architect’s progress payments will be calculated if compensation is based on a percentage of the owner’s budget for the Work.

Some of the major owner/contractor changes include:

  • New exhibit with comprehensive insurance and bonds provisions that can be attached to many of the AIA owner/contractor agreements.
  • New provisions relating to direct communications between the owner and contractor.
  • Revised provisions pertaining to the owner’s obligation to provide proof that it has made financial arrangements to pay for the project.
  • Simplified provisions for the contractor to apply for, and receive, payments.
  • Sustainable Projects Exhibit, as noted above under the owner/architect changes

The documents included in this April release are:

  • A101™–2017, Standard Form of Agreement Between Owner and Contractor where the basis of payment is a Stipulated Sum
  • A102™–2017, Standard Form of Agreement Between Owner and Contractor where the basis of payment is the Cost of the Work Plus a Fee with a Guaranteed Maximum Price
  • A103™–2017, Standard Form of Agreement Between Owner and Contractor where the basis of payment is the Cost of the Work Plus a Fee without a Guaranteed Maximum Price
  • A104™–2017(formerly A107-2007), Standard Abbreviated Form of Agreement Between Owner and Contractor
  • A105™–2017, Standard Short Form of Agreement Between Owner and Contractor
  • A201™–2017, General Conditions of the Contract for Construction
  • A401™–2017, Standard Form of Agreement Between Contractor and Subcontractor
  • B101™–2017, Standard Form of Agreement Between Owner and Architect
  • B102™–2017, Standard Form of Agreement Between Owner and Architect without a Predefined Scope of Architect’s Services
  • B103™–2017, Standard Form of Agreement Between Owner and Architect for a Complex Project
  • B104™–2017, Standard Abbreviated Form of Agreement Between Owner and Architect
  • B105™–2017, Standard Short Form of Agreement Between Owner and Architect
  • C401™–2017, Standard Form of Agreement Between Architect and Consultant
  • E204™–2017, Sustainable Projects Exhibit

The new 2017 documents are currently available through an unlimited license or as a single customizable document on ACD5, the online platform.  The documents are also available as single, non-editable documents on AIA Documents on Demand and as paper version through some AIA Chapters.  Visit www.aiacontracts.org/purchase for more information. Comparative versions showing the differences between the 2017 and 2007 editions are also available at www.aiacontracts.org/learn.

Condo Conversions: Protect Yourself with a Building Conditions Report

By: Ron Whitehead, Xpera Group

Over the last few years, we have seen a surge in apartment construction, yet very few new condominiums. As Millennials start considering homeownership, we anticipate a large uptick in condominium conversions to meet that demand. But these conversions can pose plenty of legal risks, making a solid building condition report more important than ever.

Under San Diego Municipal Code §144.0504, for all condominium conversion projects, a Building Conditions Report (BCR) must be prepared by a California registered architect or engineer licensed by the State of California. A condominium conversion shall not be approved until the BCR has been submitted to and accepted by the city as complete. The report shall also be provided to a prospective purchaser prior to opening an escrow account. The purpose and intent of the report is to provide prospective buyers with an analysis of how the building does/does not comply with current codes, and lists the proposed improvements and integral building components with a useful life of five years or less.

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