AIA National: 2018 AIA Institute Honor Awards

2018 AIA Institute Honor Awards recognize excellence in architecture, interior architecture, and regional & urban design

Washington, D.C. – January 12, 2018 – The American Institute of Architects (AIA) has selected the 2018 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, 17 recipients located throughout the world will be honored at the AIA Conference on Architecture 2018 in New York City.

2018 Institute Honor Awards for Architecture

The jury for the 2018 AIA Institute Honor Awards for Architecture includes: Lee Becker, FAIA (Chair), Hartman-Cox Architects; Anne Marie Decker, FAIA, Duvall Decker Architects; Susan Johnson, AIA, Strata; Anna Jones, Assoc. AIA, MOD Design; Caitlin Kessler, AIAS Student Representative, University of Arizona; Marilee Meacock, AIA, KSS Architects; Robert Miller, FAIA, Bohlin Cywinski Jackson; Sharon Prince, Grace Farms Foundation; and Rob Rogers, FAIA, Rogers Partners.

Audain Art Museum; Whistler, British Columbia, Canada

Patkau Architects Inc.

The Audain Art Museum is a private museum built to house and exhibit Michael Audain’s personal art collection, including British Columbia art from the late 18th century to the present. The design navigates three main determinants by connecting local culture with the permanent collection and traveling exhibits of all kinds, by spanning the revegetated floodplain of Fitzsimons Creek, and by strategically shedding the enormous snowfall typical of Whistler. The building’s minimal interiors recede behind the art and its calm exterior foregrounds the natural landscape.

The Broad; Los Angeles

Diller Scofidio + Renfro, Associate Firm: Gensler

With its innovative “veil-and-vault” concept, The Broad showcases artworks from the 2,000+ works in the Broad collection. The “vault” storage holding shapes the museum experience for visitors who enter the lobby below its carved underside, shoot through it in the elevator, stand above it in the galleries, and peer in through viewing windows. The vault is enveloped by the “veil,” an airy, honeycomb-like structure that filters daylight into public galleries. Since opening in 2015, The Broad has welcomed more than 1.7 million visitors and has been heralded as a catalyst for urbanizing downtown Los Angeles.

Chicago Riverwalk; Chicago

Ross Barney Architects

As early as Burnham and Bennett’s 1909 “Plan of Chicago”, the Main Branch of Chicago River was envisioned as a place of both leisure and commerce. Nearly a century later the Chicago Riverwalk has realized this vision. Through changes in its shape and form, the continuous river level path drives a series of new programmatic connections to the water. Above all, the Riverwalk honors the iconic quality of the existing urban context by embracing and interpreting Chicago’s layered history.

Gohar Khatoon Girls' School; Mazar-i-Sharif, Afghanistan

Robert Hull, FAIA, and the University of Washington, Department of Architecture

Located in Mazar-i-Sharif, Afghanistan’s fourth largest city, the Gohar Khatoon Girls’ School is an important urban center educating several thousand girls every day. Commissioned by the Balkh Province Ministry of Education, in partnership with a U.S.-based non-profit organization, the school is integrated into the national education system expanding Afghanistan’s push toward the development of women and girls and their contribution and inclusion within Afghan society. Gohar Khatoon supports this process by promoting stability, comfort, and community engagement and has become a model for other girls’ schools in the country.

Manhattan Districts 1/2/5 & Spring Street Salt Shed; New York City

Dattner Architects in association with WXY architecture + urban design

Located at the edge of Manhattan in a dense mixed-use neighborhood, the Department of Sanitation’s garage and a salt shed were signature projects of NYC’s Design Excellence program. The 425,000-square-foot garage’s double skin façade is clad in perforated metal fins, reducing solar loading while providing a strong vertical articulation of the project’s mass. The 5,000-square-foot salt shed, with faceted concrete planes, has become an iconic structure, attracting photo shoots, architectural tourists, and curious locals. The design and siting of these two projects provide a dignified example of vital civic architecture.

Mercer Island Fire Station 92; Mercer Island, Washington

Miller Hull Partnership

From the earliest ages, we are drawn almost magically to the firefighters, firetrucks and the equipment contained in these civic landmarks.  The design for the 8,000-square-foot replacement of FS92, originally built in 1962, embraces this attraction by providing inviting views into the apparatus bay from the main pedestrian and vehicular thoroughfare in this small island community. This visibility promotes a greater connection to the people that the fire station serves, resulting in increased awareness and vocal advocacy for these vital services. The design team incorporated a number of sustainable features to reduce energy use and provide thermal comfort for the firefighters. The station boasts a thermally efficient envelope, and fast-acting bi-fold doors in the vehicle bays reduce the amount of time the doors are opened following an emergency response.

New United States Courthouse; Los Angeles

Skidmore, Owings & Merrill LLP

The New United States Courthouse – Los Angeles houses the U.S. District Court, Central District of California. The building’s architectural expression is an inextricable union of site orientation, environmental performance and principles that honor the public realm. An innovative hat-truss structure allows this cubic form to “float” above a stone base, opening up new public spaces, giving the project a clear civic presence and separating it from its commercial neighbors. The design is rooted in classic principles of American civic architecture as seen through the lens of 21st Century Los Angeles.

Vol Walker Hall & the Steven L. Anderson Design Center; Fayetteville, Arkansas

Marlon Blackwell Architects

The Steven L. Anderson Design Center is a contemporary addition to a carefully restored and renovated historical building, Vol Walker Hall, the University of Arkansas’s original library and home to the Fay Jones School of Architecture and Design since 1968. The coupling of old and new creates a striking hybrid, invigorating the historical center of the university’s campus and revitalizing the educational environment of the School. The expanded facility unites all three departments – architecture, landscape architecture, and interior design – under one roof for the first time, reinforcing the School’s identity and creating cross-disciplinary, collaborative learning environments.

Washington Fruit & Produce Company Headquarters; Yakima, Washington

Graham Baba Architects

Company leaders desired a new office/headquarters that would serve as a refuge from the industrial agribusiness landscape that surround them. They asked for warmer materials, little-to-no concrete, non-boxlike forms, protection from the freeway, and a spare office aesthetic that minimized visible equipment or devices. The approach for the new 16,500-square-foot office was to create an inwardly focused oasis. The building is light, from the delicate, expressive structural beams to the ample amount of daylight throughout. The building tucks into its environment to merge with nature.

2018 Institute Honor Awards for Interior Architecture

The jury for the 2018 AIA Institute Honor Awards for Interior Architecture includes: Brian Caldwell, AIA (Chair), THINKTANK Design Group; Joshua Aidlin, AIA, Aidlin Darling Design; Kiyomi Kurooka, AIA, DWL Architects + Planners Inc.; John Paquin, AIA, Statesville; and William T. Ruhl, AIA, RUHL WALKER Architects.

Chicago Public Library, Chinatown Branch; Chicago

Skidmore, Owings & Merrill LLP

The Chicago Public Library, Chinatown Branch serves as a civic, educational, and social hub for the city’s Chinatown neighborhood. The most visited branch in the Chicago Public Library system, the library provides a much-needed public gathering place geared toward community activities and technology-based learning. Anchored by a skylit two-story central atrium, the building’s interiors are open concept, flexible, and sustainable, and feature daylighting, panoramic neighborhood views, with bright, comfortable furnishings for visitors of all ages, including a vibrant site-specific 60-foot mural on the history of Chicago’s Chinatown painted by a local artist.

Photographer's Loft; New York City

Desai Chia Architecture

This industrial loft renovation was designed for a photographer seeking a serene live-work environment. The library/reception area immediately off the entry vestibule serves as a hinge for two distinct zones – the east zone flows directly into the ‘private’ domain of her photography studio and private bedroom, while the south zone flows into the ‘public’ domain of her kitchen, dining, and living areas. By cutting and folding the ceiling planes, light gently bounces throughout and anchors the seating areas. Functional raw steel, wood, and resin elements artfully shape the environment throughout.

Reeds Spring Middle School; Reeds Spring, Missouri

Dake Wells Architecture

Taking advantage of the site’s dramatic topography, this new middle school places the two largest programmatic spaces below grade, providing energy efficiency and storm resiliency for nearly 400 students and teachers. A cascading atrium is the heart of the school, flooded with light and activity, connecting collaborative teaching zones and flexible learning environments.  A wood screen references the nearby woods while providing added safety and warmth to the building interior.

Sound Transit University of Washington Station; Seattle

LMN Architects

The Sound Transit University of Washington Station creates a unified solution at one of Seattle’s busiest intersections and provides a unique gateway to the UW campus through its above and below-grade experiences. At the heart of the 156,000-square-foot station, LMN Architects and artist Leo Saul Berk collaborated to create an integrated experience for travelers, where the architecture seamlessly merges with Berk’s artwork, Subterraneum. Backlit perforated metal panels clad the chamber walls, forming patterns of light that express the geological layers of earth, and suffuse the space with ambient light. The Station opened as the second of two stops on the University link in 2016, increasing system ridership by 80 percent.

Square, Inc. Headquarters; San Francisco

Bohlin Cywinski Jackson

Square’s headquarters, spanning four floors of a converted data center, utilizes urban planning principles to transform vast floorplates into a vibrant workplace. A central boulevard, lined with landmarks that break down the scale of the expansive project, serves as the organizational spine of the 295,000-square-foot space. A monumental amphitheater unifies the office floors, providing a flexible venue for a host of activities. Clean lines and predominantly white interiors resonate with Square’s brand at both aesthetic and functional levels, highlighting the company’s core values to create a refined, seamless experience.

2018 Institute Honor Awards for Regional and Urban Design

The jury for the 2018 AIA Institute Honor Awards for Regional and Urban Design includes: Roger Schluntz, FAIA (Chair), School of Architecture and Planning, University of Mexico; Lisa Chronister, AIA, City of Oklahoma City Planning Department; Suzanne DiGeronimo, FAIA, DiGeronimo Architects; Tim Griffin, AIA, Minnesota Design Center; and Gerry Tierney, AIA, Perkins+Will.

Chicago Riverwalk; Chicago

Ross Barney Architects

Utilizing derelict infrastructure, the Chicago Riverwalk is a one-and-a-quarter-mile-long civic space between Lake Michigan and the confluence of the main, north, and south branches of the Chicago River. What might have been unimaginable years ago has been achieved: an activated riverfront in the heart of a booming urban core. The Riverwalk has transformed Chicago and in turn has become a beloved park for residents, visitors, and people of all backgrounds.

Salty Urbanism: Sea Level Rise Adaptation Strategies for Urban Areas; Ft. Lauderdale, Florida

Brooks + Scarpa, Florida Atlantic University and University of Southern California

Salty Urbanism is a sea-level rise adaptation design framework for urban areas that envisions and quantifies the experiential and ecological outcomes of alternative lifestyles within a future of saturated landscapes. As an integrative design tool, Salty Urbanism accommodates a variety of best management practices to be implemented over time. Tactics and techniques outlined are implemented step-wise and successively across various fronts to establish meaningful conversations among stakeholders as they reimagine and realize a prosperous way forward for the region while adapting to sea level rise and climate disruptions.

Urban Watershed Framework Plan: A Reconciliation Landscape for Conway, Arkansas

University of Arkansas Community Design Center

In rapidly growing Conway, Arkansas, the Urban Watershed Framework Plan recalibrates urban infrastructure according to ideals espoused in the concepts of ecosystem services. The plan envisions highly livable green spaces developed through low-tech but high-concept enhancements to investments already servicing Conway’s growth. Employing green infrastructure to deliver ecosystem services, the plan includes a portfolio of retrofits that complement conventional infrastructure that can be transferred to any urban watershed. As ecological problems are often social problems, property owners and low-income residents downstream often suffer the most economic damage. To combat this, the plan bolsters social equity by providing a number of suggested policy revisions and holistic solutions that benefit all interests.

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 international, state and local chapters, 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. 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.

Contact

Matt Tinder 202-626-7462

AIACC: Indemnity Relief For Design Professionals Effective Immediately In 2018

In April 2017, California Governor Jerry Brown signed into law Senate Bill-496 (SB-496), which modifies the existing Civil Code section 2782.8, adding protections for private contracts entered into by design professionals on or after January 1, 2018 and strengthening the protections available to design professionals with regard to public contracts too. Importantly, the new law limits the “duty to defend” to the comparative fault of the professional in both private and most public construction contracts. Civil Code section 2782.8 previously applied to public contracts entered into by design professionals with local public agencies, excluding state agencies as defined in the statute. The revised 2782.8 places private contracts and public contracts, with non-state agencies, on equal footing with some limited exceptions. Read more on AIACC's blog

27th Annual Kitchen of the Year for 2018

 

Kitchens of the Year contest is a professionally juried program that honors excellence in kitchen design.

All projects in San Diego County completed within the last two years, not published by other local and regional media, and not in homes for sale are eligible.

27th Annual Kitchen of the Year for 2018 - Deadline for Entry is 2/5/18. Click here for entry form

AIASD: Vacant Committee Chair Opportunities

AIA San Diego is recruiting candidates interested in volunteer committee/knowledge community leadership positions with the Chapter for 2018 & beyond. Chairs are required to be AIA Chapter members (Architect, Associate, Emeritus or Corporate Allied).  Three committee-chair positions are currently vacant. Committee on the Environment (COTE) AIA|San Diego & AIA|Palomar Chapters

Part of a national network of local committees dedicated to advancing the goal of sustainable design.  Note: this is a joint AIA|SD & AIA|Palomar Committee (about 1,000 members all told, across various categories)

Committee Chair Duties

  • Recruit members from the AIA|San Diego & AIA|Palomar Chapters;
  • Lead a quarterly meeting of committee members;
  • Lead the committee to provide programs that support the COTE mission and provide AIA members with the tools they need to meet sustainability goals in their projects and practices;
  • Post information to the website that is useful for practitioners;
  • Develop and maintain more alignment between the local COTE chapter, other chapters, and the national COTE Advisory Group; act as the liaison and primary point of contact between these groups;
  • Support the AIA-SD Design Awards team with regards to the COTE design award.

Women in Architecture (WIA) San Diego Chapter

WIA is an informal AIA networking organization dedicated to supporting women in the San Diego architecture and design community. WIA recognizes that there are gender diversity issues within the architectural profession and strives to increase awareness of women’s contributions to the built environment.

Committee Chair Duties

  • Organize regular committee meetings, happy hours, professional development events, lectures, films, tours, volunteering/community building, and book clubs that focus on enhancing the career experience, networking, professional development and employment opportunities for female architects;
  • WIA has typically gathered every 2nd Tuesday of the month from 6pm to 8pm, at various locations throughout San Diego;
  • The 2018 Chair is permitted flexibility in organizing and running the WIA|SD Committee;
  • AIA|Palomar also has a WIA Committee. Cooperation/coordination between the two entities is encouraged;

Custom Residential Architects Network (CRAN) AIA|San Diego & AIA|Palomar Chapters

The Custom Residential Architects Network (CRAN) Knowledge Community (part of a national network supported by AIA) develops knowledge and information to benefit architects who are engaged in, or who are interested in learning more about, custom residential practice including remodels, renovations, restorations, additions & new construction.

Committee Chair Duties

  • Facilitate the exchange of knowledge and expertise to promote the professional development of its members via continuing education programs, discussion forums, national symposia and conventions, publications, and local activities;
  • Guide the Chapter’s efforts to promote the residential design expertise of our members among selected consumer segments;
  • Contribute to creating a strategy for advancing the interests of our members involved in residential design;
  • Support an effective response for members of the public who contact the Chapter for information and recommendations, including assisting the Chapter with the development of suitable web-based tools for public-use;
  • Contribute to supporting the Chapter when it is approached by media contacts for information or solicitations for design competitions;
  • Assist with developing a member-recruitment strategy and outreach;
  • Schedule and chair quarterly (or more frequent) gatherings of CRAN|SD-Palomar members.

Member News: Stephen Dalton Architects Featured in San Diego Home/Garden Magazine

Stephen Dalton Architects is featured in the January 2018 issue of San Diego Home/Garden Lifestyles Magazine for their Del Mar residential remodel. The architect transformed the project from a pseudo-Italianate style house to a contemporary minimalist beach home. Visit San Diego Home/Garden for more information or pick up a copy at newsstands.

Member News: AIASD Firms Featured in San Diego Business Journal Report

AVRP Skyport Studios, Gensler, BNIM, and LPA mentioned in San Diego Business Journal's Special Report: Commercial Real Estate feature "A New Day at the Office."

 

 

Member News: Greg McClure, AIA, LEED AP BD+ C, Delawie's Senior Associate, Promoted to Principal

San Diego, California – January 3, 2018 – The award-winning architectural and interior design firm, Delawie, is pleased to announce the promotion of Greg McClure, Senior Associate, to Principal. Greg has been a senior project manager and designer for a number of the firm’s recent projects, including BioLegend's corporate headquarters here in San Diego, CSUB’s University Office Center, Veterans Village of San Diego's Escondido housing development, and various Qualcomm Incorporated projects.

With over 20 years of experience, Greg will continue to exhibit design excellence in all phases of projects, from life science and technology to corporate and civic, provide hands-on leadership to the firm's projects, and support the firm’s longstanding clients and consultants.

Greg will continue to cultivate the firm's unique culture and talented staff. His responsibilities will include leadership focus on business development for new and expanding markets and working closely with the other four firm principals in the overall management and strategic vision into the future.

“I’m very excited, humbled and honored to serve the Delawie staff, grow relationships in the community and continue the legacy of the Delawie name for the next 25+ years!” – Greg McClure

Greg is a licensed architect in California as well as North Carolina and has a Bachelor of Architecture from Virginia Tech. He is a member of the American Institute of Architects (AIA) San Diego Chapter and Biocom. Greg joins Principals Michael Asaro, AIA, LEED AP, Frank Ternasky, AIA, LEED AP, M. Andrew Rodrigues, AIA, and Paul Schroeder, AIA, Associate DBIA, to guide the future direction of the firm.

About Delawie Delawie, founded in 1961, is a leading sustainable and high-performance architecture firm headquartered in San Diego, California. The firm’s principals mentor over 55 design professionals and leverage the firm’s size and experience to provide design services to clients with projects of varying scope, size and complexity. Delawie’s current projects include the Moxy in downtown San Diego, Marriott’s newest hotel brand, the expansion of the award-winning Pechanga Resort and Casino in Temecula, California and BioLegend's corporate headquarters here in San Diego. More information on Delawie and its services can be found at www.delawie.com.

AIA: Architecture billings upturn shows broad strength

Architecture billings upturn shows broad strength

 

Business conditions continue to reflect healthy construction market

 

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

Washington, D.C. – December 20, 2017 – Even with the uncertainty related to pending tax reform legislation that likely will have a mixed effect on the construction industry, design services at architecture firms remains in high demand. The American Institute of Architects (AIA) reported the November ABI score was 55.0, up from a score of 51.7 in the previous month. This score reflects an increase in design services provided by U.S. architecture firms (any score above 50 indicates an increase in billings). The new projects inquiry index was 61.1, up from a reading of 60.2 the previous month, while the new design contracts index rose slightly from 52.8 to 53.2.

 

“Not only are design billings overall seeing their strongest growth of the year, the strength is reflected in all major regions and construction sectors,” said AIA Chief Economist, Kermit Baker, Hon. AIA, PhD. “The construction industry continues to show surprising momentum heading into 2018.”

 

Key November ABI highlights:

 

•           Regional averages: West (54.8), Northeast (52.8), South (52.8), Midwest (50.4)

•           Sector index breakdown: multi-family residential (53.9), mixed practice (53.6), commercial / industrial (53.3), institutional (52.4)

•           Project inquiries index: 61.1

•           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: Demand for higher density development appears to be waning

Demand for higher density development appears to be waning Overall business conditions remain healthy for residential architects

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

Washington, D.C. – December 19, 2017Recent gains in demand for infill development and other factors associated with community accessibility appear to be moderating. Showing signs of market saturation, demand for walkable neighborhoods, multi-generational housing and access to public transportation remain very strong, but growth has leveled off, according to the findings from the American Institute of Architects (AIA) Home Design Trends Survey for the third quarter of 2017, which focuses on community and neighborhood design.

AIA Home Design Trends Survey highlights

Community design elements 2017 2016
Infill development 59% 68%
Mixed-use facilities 59% 56%
Increase in tear-downs 56% 68%
Higher density development 54% 53%
Multi-generational housing 54% 52%
Access to public transportation 53% 55%
More walkable neighborhoods 46% 49%
More recreational opportunities 42% 50%

(% respond. report. popularity of feature “increasing” minus % report. “decreasing”; Q3)

All of the data from this survey can be access in this infographic.  View this press release online here: https://www.aia.org/press-releases/167411-demand-for-higher-density-development-appea

“Intense development pressure on urban neighborhoods seems to be tapering as more development swings back to suburban and exurban locations,” said AIA Chief Economist, Kermit Baker, PhD, Hon. AIA. “Though homeowners still desire access to community amenities, these results reflect a slowing of migration toward more dense neighborhoods.”

Popular Home Exteriors Features 2017 2016
Low maintenance exterior materials 59% 68%
Windows (number and size) 41% 47%
Contemporary design 40% 43%
Front/side porches 30% 40%
Smaller / custom design 29% 35%
Metal finishes 23% 36%
Fire resistant exterior material 23% 26%
Exterior accent lighting 27% 18%
Simpler exterior detailing 19% 22%
Single story homes 16% 25%

(% respond. report. popularity of feature “increasing” minus % report. “decreasing”; Q3)

“Homeowner priorities remain consistent, with low maintenance building materials topping the home exterior features list,” Baker added.

Housing market business conditions

AIA Home Design Survey Index for Q3 2017 (any score above 50 is positive)

  • Billings: 58
  • Inquiries for new projects: 59
  • Regional averages: Midwest (60.0), South (59.4), Northeast (56.9), West (56.1)

Baker noted, “Business conditions at residential architecture firms remain strong across all regions, with improvements to existing homes continuing to top the list for specific residential sectors.”

Specific construction segments 2017 2016
Additions / alterations 60% 57%
Kitchen and bath remodeling 52% 49%
Move-up home market 20% 22%
Townhouse / condo market 16% 11%
Custom / luxury home market 14% 20%
First-time buyer / affordable home market -2% -1%
Second / vacation home -16% -6%

(% respond. report. popularity of feature “increasing” minus % report. “decreasing”; Q3)

About the AIA Home Design Trends Survey

The AIA Home Design Trend Survey is conducted quarterly with a panel of over 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 kitchen and bath trends (March 2018), overall home layout and use (June 2018), and specialty rooms and systems (September 2018).

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.

Member News: Jonathan Segal, FAIA Featured in LA Times

View original article here

L.A. Times: A father and son's La Jolla masterpiece wins top architectural award by R. Daniel Foster, December 15, 2017 6:00AM

What the eye doesn’t see — empty space — is correlative to what it does see.

Architect Rudolph Schindler grasped this deceptively simple perceptual law in spades, creating buildings of pure grace. No wonder, then, that a La Jolla residence built by architect-developer Jonathan Segal has drawn so many Schindler comparisons.

An American Institute of Architects San Diego jury also referred to Schindler when awarding the three-bedroom home (build cost: $1.55 million) its sole “honor award” last month.

“We used the most simple gesture to get the job done,” said Segal, who, sharing design credit with son Matthew, completed the 5,300-square-foot home in 2014 after nine months of construction. “If we could have removed more, we would have.”

Indeed, this is architecture by subtraction.

The Segals began with a simple rectangle box sketched on paper, erasing plane after plane until left with mere suggestion: the implied shape of an adjacent patio, a vast exterior room. The area is delineated by a few brush strokes — concrete supports that faintly outline the area, its roof nothing less than a framed sky.

The L-shaped interior (two stories above ground, one below) cradles all that negative space, mirrored by an L-shaped pool at the front that the home appears to float on. Built of cast-in-place concrete sheathing floor-to-ceiling glass, the home embodies a gravitas shot through with light — warmed by flooring and built-ins of California walnut.

Wood form casts were used to riddle the concrete with holes, grain and tone gradations, a “rude, nasty, unfinished look in contrast to the pristine walnut and glass,” said Jonathan Segal, 56.

The coarse surfaces further marry the structure (its glass walls recede, creating an open-air pavilion) to nearby bluffs and, 80 yards away, the crashing ocean.

Sweeping cantilevers that appear razor-thin shield the inset glass walls; a 50-foot beam that spans the patio is just 8 inches thick, made possible by the concrete construction.

Since building the home, the Segals, in fact, have shunned wood-frame construction.

“These kind of cantilevers just weren’t practical or feasible with wood,” said Matthew Segal, 30, a recent graduate of USC School of Architecture.

Other notable features: the generous 2,000-square foot basement lit by lengthy strips of skylight, a rooftop 6.5-kilowatt solar array and the skinny 5,000-square-foot lot. Adjacent properties are about four times that size, noted the American Institute of Architects, extolling the Segals’ efficient use of space.

The home’s sole decorative feature is a 9-foot-tall safety gate created by Christopher Puzio that separates the lap pool from the front reflecting pool. The portal’s jagged design is artfully mirrored in the water and casts exceptional shadows.

The home sold last month for $5.5 million.

A neighborhood comparison: In the home’s 92037 ZIP Code, based on 615 sales, the median sales price for single family homes this year through September was $1.178 million, up 12.2 % over the same period a year earlier, according to CoreLogic.

Member News: Carrier Johnson + CULTURE Receive 2017 Best of Design Awards for Building of the Year

Read the original article on The Architect's Newspaper here 2017 Best of Design Awards for Building of the Year – West - Archpaper.com 2017 Best of Design Awards for Building of the Year – West

2017 Best of Design Awards for Building of the Year – West: Point Loma Nazarene University Science Complex

ArchitectCarrier Johnson + CULTURE LocationSan Diego, California

This 3,500-student university in California—a coastal campus with 1800s landmarks in the theosophist vernacular—is known for rigorous science programs and successful medical school placements. Recently, this evangelical Christian institution dedicated a large science and academic center almost twenty years in the making. The work makes the school’s vibrant dialogue between scientific progress and biblical teachings physical. The 13 new labs and classrooms are wrapped in insulating glass and smooth concrete, equipped inside for biology and chemistry classes. A feathered curve of perforated-metal panels extends on its south exposure, embracing a grassy slope where students gather. Conceived for shade, the environmental-screen is laser-cut with Greek letters, alpha and omega, symbols with religious and scientific allusion, while filtered light streams through to suggest a cathedral wall.

“The campus building embraces the slope while maintaining a sense of levity. The perforated aluminum louvers play with light and juxtapose the floating geometric roof slab. It is interesting how the walls weave around the roof column.”Emily Bauer, landscape architect, Bjarke Ingels Group (juror)

General Contractor: Rudolph and Sletten

Landscape Architect: Spurlock Poirier Landscape Architects

Structural Engineer: Hope Amundson

Mechanical Plumbing Engineer: MA Engineers

Electrical Engineer: Michael Wall Engineering

Member News: SCA Architecture Completes Design of 23-Acre Campus Expansion for Viasat in Carlsbad

NEWS FROM:  SCA ArchitectureCONTACT:  Bonnie Kutch, bkutch@kutchco.com, 619-299-1010

SCA Architecture Completes Design of 23-Acre Campus Expansion for Viasat in Carlsbad, Calif.

The new campus augments Viasat’s existing main campus, and can accommodate six office buildings, three parking structures, a cafe/conference center and employee amenities

SAN DIEGO – December 14, 2017SCA Architecture (formerly known as Smith Consulting Architects), a San Diego-based architectural firm, has completed the planning, design, and entitlements for a new 23-acre campus expansion on behalf of global communications company, Viasat (Nasdaq: VSAT), located on El Camino Real, Carlsbad, Calif., announced SCA Architecture President and Founder Cheryl (Dennie) Smith.

Located across the street from Viasat’s existing headquarters, the new campus is being built on a 23-acre vacant parcel of land, which Viasat acquired in October 2015.  The site is south of Gateway Road, north of Town Garden Road and west of Alicante Road, near the master-planned community of Bressi Ranch. The campus expansion can accommodate six office buildings, three parking structures, a cafe/conference center and recreational amenities for company employees.

The new campus is designed to embody Viasat’s culture of creativity, exploration, freedom and innovation, as well as foster interaction between employees, clients and visitors. The two- and three-story office buildings range in size from 77,000 to 120,000 square feet, and total 587,000 square feet of space.  The corner building at El Camino Real and Gateway Drive features below-grade parking to provide visitors a secure entrance without compromising the open campus feel.  Careful consideration was given not only to the internal campus elevations, but also to those buildings facing El Camino Real and Viasat’s adjacent neighbors.

Three parking structures, subterranean parking and a surface parking area accommodate a total of 2,053 vehicles, with 1,955 stalls between the parking structures, 70 stalls underneath the corner building, and 16 surface stalls in front of Building 12. The concrete structures are situated on the low side of the site, affording 5.3 acres of open space within the campus, once phase three is complete.

Woven throughout the open, outdoor space are “unexpected experiences” such as hammocks, swings, bocce ball courts, jogging trails, water filling stations, several shade structures for informal meetings including some with banquette seating, trees surrounded with bar-height counters for outdoor eating, an outdoor stage, fire pits, a barbeque, charging stations for mobile devices and other amenities, as well as displays of Viasat’s latest technologies.

Whiting Turner, general contractor, broke ground late February 2017, with the first phase scheduled for completion in August of 2018.

Mark Langan is principal-in-charge for SCA Architecture, with Arati Rangaswamy, Milos Makaric, and Julie Spiegel serving as co-project managers.

Project consultants include PLSA as civil engineer; Ground Level, landscape architect; Wiseman & Rohy, structural engineer; Syska Hennessy, mechanical/plumbing engineer; Michael Wall, electrical engineer; and Brummitt Energy Associates, serving as energy consultant.

About SCA Architecture:

Founded in 1988 by Cheryl (Dennie) Smith, SCA Architecture is a full-service planning, architecture and interior design firm. In addition to corporate headquarters and office facilities, the firm has specialized expertise in retail, R&D, life science, medical, manufacturing, and industrial facilities. SCA Architecture is a member of the U.S. Green Building Council, with extensive expertise in energy efficiency and sustainable design.  The firm is comprised of 25 design and support professionals, and located at 13280 Evening Creek Dr. South, Suite 125, San Diego, CA 92128.  More information about the firm can be found on the Web at www.sca-sd.com.

Member News: Victor Navarro, AIA Joins Architects Mosher Drew

Read original announcement on the Architects Mosher Drew website here Victor H. Navarro, AIA, NCARB, approaches architecture through a collaborative process called Emergent Design. His work engages discussions on social and environmental issues, and evokes a hybrid of research, rationale, and intuition, resulting in unique design solutions.

Born in Chile into a military regime, Victor’s family fled to the U.S. in the late 70’s for 10 years and returned after democracy was reinstated. He began his architecture studies at Universidad Central de Chile and later obtained an M.Arch and B.Arch degrees with honors from Lawrence Technological University in Michigan.

His specialties include single family residential, multifamily mixed-use, restaurants/hospitality, retail, and education.

Victor is also a faculty member at Newschool of Architecture and Design and co-authored the book Social, Growing and Expandable Housing in a Border Community.

For Sale: Canon iPF825 and Scanner

   

Spurlock is putting our Canon imagePROGRAF iPF825 MFP large format printer and Colortrac Ci C40 Color Scanner (with stand and monitor) up for sale.  The images are excellent quality and it has worked without issue for the past three years.

We purchased ALL of the accessories, and there will be ink cartridges that will be part of the package.  Everything is in great working condition and looks like new.

If you know someone who might be interested, please let me know.

https://www.usa.canon.com/internet/portal/us/home/support/details/printers/support-imageprograf-printers/imageprograf-ipf825-mfp

https://www.colortrac.com/scanners/mfp-solutions/ (scroll down page for Ci 40 inch)

Contact Dana Sather at dsather(at)spurlock-land.com or (619)681-0090.