Tools of the Trade: New Technologies for the Job Site

Event: New Tools for Builders
Location: Center for Architecture, 11.29.10
Speakers: Onalee Finio — Director of Technical Services, The Hilti Group; Larry DeGennaro — Strategic Business Director, The Hilti Group; Rick Pulling — Director, Worldwide New Equipment, Otis Elevator Company; Saulius Toleikis — Director of Sales, Festool
Introduction: Anthony Schirripa, FAIA, IIDA — AIANY 2010 President
Organizer: Center for Architecture as part of the “Innovate:Integrate” exhibition
Sponsors: Lead Sponsors: ABC Imaging; Competition Architectural Metals; Coreslab Structures; Ductal by Lafarge; F. J. Sciame Construction Co.; Gensler; Georgia Institute of Technology, Digital Fabrication Laboratory; kammetal; Lutron; Mancini·Duffy; MechoShade Systems; Oldcastle Building Envelope; Peter Arbour / RFR Consulting Engineers; Permasteelisa North America; Plaza Construction; Structure Tone; Syska Hennessy Group; Turner; Zetlin & De Chiara; Sponsors: Aerotech Manufacturing; Francis Cauffman; Polytek; HeliOptix; STUDIOS Architecture; and Trespa North America
Supporters: AKF Group; db3; Forest City Ratner Companies; Hugo S. Subotovsky Architects; Levien & Company; National Institute of Building Sciences; Pennoni Engineering and Surveying of New York; Peter Pennoyer Architects; SMART; Steelcase; Stephan Jaklitsch Architects; Thornton Tomasetti; WB Wood; Friends: Benjamin Moore; Brenda Levin; Matthews Coatings; New York Building Congress; Presentation Products; Theo. David Architects TDA/KAL; Weidlinger Associates

Speed Sleeve by The Hilti Group.

Hilti.com

The Hilti Group, Festool, and Otis are known for innovation in the areas of job-site safety and productivity, as well as for the energy efficiency of their tools. As part of the exhibition “Innovate:Integrate” (on view through 01.15.11), representatives from these manufacturers gathered at the Center for Architecture to exhibit and demonstrate their latest products.

Hilti is a manufacturer of low-velocity, powder-actuated tools. They produce a high-speed fastening system that allows workers to lay steel deck in one-third of the time compared to traditional methods, according to Onalee Finio, director of technical services. The company now also manufactures the Speed Sleeve, a cable management fire-stop device that “takes all of the guesswork out of the contractor’s hands,” explained Finio. It does this with “spin on” flanges that allow for quick installation and the flexibility for cables to be inserted at any height. In addition, Hilti has developed software programs that perform calculations and aid in specifications for decking, fire protection, and anchor systems.

Festool produces woodworking and cabinet-making tools, including cordless drills, jigsaws, and routers, as well as dust extractors, which improve air quality on the job site. With a focus on efficiency, Festool’s motto is “Faster. Easier. Smarter.” For example, they claim their dual-mode sander achieves results up to three times faster than traditional sanders.

Otis Elevator Company’s two new models have proven popular with architects because of their reduced footprints and energy efficiency. The Gen2 System operates with polyurethane coated-steel belts instead of the traditional metal cable. No gears or lubrication are required. According to Rick Pulling, director of worldwide new equipment, the model uses half the energy of a typical elevator. The ReGen system takes energy conservation a step further by working with gravity and capturing energy that otherwise would be lost in braking. This energy can then be fed back into the building’s grid.

AIANY won the AIANYS Empire State Challenge for the project, “Regulatory Review Coordination and the NYC Charter Revision Commission: An Issue with Statewide Implications.” The Chapter received $5,000 at the AIANY Board Inaugural to further the initiative in 2011.

The 2011 AIANY Nominating Committee has been elected: Michael Arad, AIA; Lance Jay Brown, FAIA; Sara Caples, AIA; Yvonne Szeto, FAIA and Tony Schirripa, FAIA.

Serena Chen, AIA, LEED AP, is the recipient of the first annual ENYA Merit Award. The AIANY Emerging New York Architects Committee (ENYA) established the $1,500 award to defray ARE exam expenses.

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) recognized five projects with the 2010 National Award for Smart Growth Achievement including Smart.Growth@NYC, which won the award for Overall Excellence…

Under the theme “Challenge of the Time,” NYC-based L.E.FT has been selected as one of the Top Ten List by the Iakov Chernikhov International Prize for Young Architects…

12.10.10 Call for Entries: The Art of Urban Environments

12.13.10 Call for Ideas: suckerPUNCH: new, larger home for the museum of cartoon and comic art [MoCCA]

12.10.11 Call for Entries: 2011 AIA Housing Awards

12.10.11 Call for Entries: 2011 AIA/HUD Secretary Awards

01.07.11 Call for Entries: AIA National Healthcare Design Awards

01.10.11 Call for Submissions: d3 Housing Tomorrow 2011

01.10.11 Call for Submissions: Structures for Inclusion 11 SEED Competition

01.11.11 Call for Entries: AIA Small Projects Awards

01.14.11 Call for Entries: AIA/ALA Library Building Awards

01.15.11 Call for Entries: The City of Dreams 2011 Pavilion

01.17.11 Call for Submissions: 2011 Ceramic Tiles of Italy

Community Space is the Heart of Supportive Housing

Event: Homeless Housing: LA and NY
Location: Center for Architecture, 11.12.10
Speakers: Michael Maltzan, FAIA — Principal, Michael Maltzan Architecture; Jonathan Kirschenfeld — Principal, Jonathan Kirschenfeld Architect; Rosanne Haggerty — President, Common Ground
Introduction: Andres Lepik — Curator, MoMA Department of Architecture and Design
Moderator: Michael Bell — Director, Housing Studios, Columbia University Graduate School of Architecture, Planning & Preservation, & Michael Bell Architecture
Organizer: Museum of Modern Art; Center for Architecture

NewCarverApartments

Carver Apartments by Michael Maltzan Architecture.

Image ©Iwan Baan

New York and Los Angeles both face high rates of homelessness. To address this issue, several architects and non-profits in the two cities have created new housing models. In conjunction with the “Small Scale, Big Change” exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art, a panel — comprised of architects Michael Maltzan, FAIA, and Jonathan Kirschenfeld, along with Rosanne Haggerty, founder and president of Common Ground — discussed their housing projects.

Maltzan approaches homeless housing as “architecture from a therapeutic standpoint.” His first project for the Skidrow Housing Trust in downtown LA was the 89-unit Rainbow Apartments. The façade features sunshades lined with cheerful red paint, and the building’s U-shaped configuration defines a safe and secure central courtyard. He approached the 97-unit Carver Apartments in a similar way. The round volume with sharp serrations allows the building to capture light and views of downtown while blocking sound from the nearby freeway and creating a secure environment. The form encapsulates a central courtyard, which is the “social heart of the building,” according to Maltzan.

Kirschenfeld designed The Domenech in Brownsville, Brooklyn, a new 72-unit supportive housing complex for Common Ground (see OCULUS Fall 2010, “Common Sense”). Kirschenfeld articulated the exterior of the LEED-Silver building with inexpensive shading devices to lower energy consumption, and incorporated tile donated from Daltile at the base. The building’s narrow courtyard functions as an “outdoor room,” and its walls are lined with energy-efficient Kalwal that diffuses light into the units.

Rosanne Haggerty believes that “supportive housing works,” citing other successful Common Ground projects such as The Schermerhorn by Ennead Architects (formerly Polshek Partnership Architects), adjacent to a range of other building types and includes attractive common spaces. She also cited the expansion of The Andrews on the Bowery by OCV Architects, which follows the model of the traditional lodging house. Haggerty pointed out that supportive housing costs less than prisons, shelters, and hospitals, and though she admitted that, “we can’t build our way out of homelessness,” she feels that “these projects fire the imagination.”

Passive House Design Keeps it Simple

Event: NY Passive House presents: The Hudson Passive Project by Dennis Wedlick & PH 101
Location: Center for Architecture, 11.16.10
Speakers: Dennis Wedlick, AIA — Principal, Dennis Wedlick Architect
Introduction: Ken Levenson, AIA — Assistant Organizer, NY Passive House
Organizer: NY Passive House; Center for Architecture
Sponsor: Dennis Wedlick Architect, LLC

PassiveHouseProject2

The Hudson Passive Project.

Digital rendering by Neil Benjamin

Passive house design draws on traditional building methods and common sense, with the intention of drastically reducing energy use while establishing high interior air quality. Ken Levenson, AIA, who practices in Brooklyn and serves as founding director of NY Passive House, a trade organization that promotes the Passive House building energy standard in NY State, explained that “Passive House is about broad objectives,” including health, comfort, energy, affordability, and predictability. The certification program was founded in Germany and is gaining popularity in the U.S., resulting in buildings that boast a 90% reduction in heating loads, according to the Passive House Institute U.S. Two years ago, Dennis Wedlick, AIA, created The Hudson Passive Project, a home that is designed as a variation of a traditional timber frame house. The frame was raised in June and it recently became one of first houses in NY State to achieve Passive House certification.

Wedlick explained that passive homes should be compact and simple in form, like a cardboard coffee cup: the size and shape minimize surface area and heat loss, a sleeve serves as a thermal break, and the act of stacking multiple cups provides extra insulation. In fact, Wedlick added one foot of insulation beneath his passive house — six times more than the typical home. Passive design is more of a philosophy than an exact science, but a blower door test should be conducted to confirm air-tightness. Wedlick emphasized that failure is not the end of the world: “If testing fails, you just size the equipment larger.” Air-tightness might seem counterintuitive to a healthy interior, but it allows the home to maintain a consistent temperature, and a heat recovery ventilator filters the air to keep it fresh.

Levenson noted that NY Passive House is not in competition with other green movements. The point is to “get rid of the bells and whistles and simplify.” An airtight envelope is achieved through bulked-up versions of traditional materials, like triple-paned windows, thicker-than-average insulation, and thermal breaks; energy efficient building systems merely provide a back-up. Wedlick agreed that passive design is not about reinventing the wheel, but rather “using materials that are readily available in a different way.”

The Museum of Modern Art announced the P.S.1 Young Architects Program finalists to design an installation in the courtyard at P.S.1 for the 2011 summer season: FormlessFinder (Brooklyn); Interboro Partners (Brooklyn); Matter Architecture Practice (Brooklyn); MASS Design Group (Boston); and IJP Corporation Architects (London). The winner will be announced in February.

The National Trust for Historic Preservation has awarded a total of $60,000 to eight NYC projects that are of historic and cultural significance. Grant winners for the Robert and Elizabeth Jeffe Preservation Fund for New York City include: the Bartow-Pell Landmark Fund in the Bronx, which will host a workshop on historic landscape restoration of the formal gardens designed by Delano & Aldrich; Columbia Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation to support the Fitch Forum on preservation law and policy; Free Synagogue of Flushing, Queens, to lay the groundwork for future restorations of the complex’s late 19th-century mansion and a neo-Georgian style synagogue designed by Maurice Courland in 1927; Friends of the Upper East Side Historic Districts to produce an architectural and cultural guide featuring historic districts and landmarks; Louis Armstrong House Museum in Queens to fund a historic structures report; New York Landmarks Conservancy for funding a conditions assessment of Erasmus Academy building, constructed in 1787; Two Bridges Neighborhood Council to prepare State and National Register nominations for the Bowery; and World Monuments Fund to support the development of a model preservation program at Williamsburg High School for Architecture and Design.

The winners of the 18th Annual 2010 CANstruction New York competition include: “The BabushCAN,” by Thornton Tomasetti, Juror’s Favorite; “FEASTer Island,” by LERA, Best Structural Ingenuity; “Paint the Town ‘Fed,'” by Dattner Architects, Best Meal; “I Think I ‘Can,'” by MTA New York City Transit, Best Use of Labels. “Cups Can Only Spill,” by GilSanz Murray Steficek, and “Tomato Tornado,” by Skidmore, Owings & Merrill, won Honorable Mentions. “ShenaniCANs Care!” by Shen Milsom & Wilke, won the Cheri Award in honor of Cheri Melillo, Hon. AIA, the founder of CANstruction…

The Switzer Group is hosting the first-annual “Architects for Animals” event on 12.07.10. Participating design firms include: Gruzen Samton; Cannon Design; IA Interior Architects; Kohn Pedersen Fox; Davis Brody Bond Aedas; Zimmerman Workshop Architecture and Design; Tietz Baccon; Ryall Porter Sheridan Architects; and Larry Friedberg, AIA. Firms will build and donate outdoor winter shelters to provide NYC’s homeless cats with refuge from the weather…

Terence Riley, AIA, had been appointed Chief Curator for the 2011 Shenzhen & Hong Kong Biennale of UrbanismArchitecture…

Friends of the High Line announced that Google, Inc. has donated $1 million to the Campaign for the High Line, which will support construction and an endowment for future park maintenance and operations…

Magnusson Architecture and Planning has been designated an Enterprise Green Communities Technical Assistance Provider under Enterprise Communities Partners…

Mark D. Harbick, AIA, IIDA, LEED AP, has joined Mancini Duffy as Design Principal in the NY Corporate Interiors Group… J. David Hoglund, FAIA, LEED AP, has been appointed President of Perkins Eastman…

12.01.10 Call for Entries: 2011 Reign In Spain A&D Tour

12.06.10 Call for Collaboration: AIA Global Dialogues Haiti Habitat Program

12.07.10 Call for Entries: Freegreen.com Who’s Next

12.15.10 Call for Entries: $10,000 Zero Net Energy Building Award

12.31.10 Call for Comments: Next Update of U.S. Green Building Council’s LEED Green Building Program Opens for First Public Comment

01.10.11 Call for Entries: LifeEdited

01.24.11 Call for Submissions: 2011 AIA/COTE Top Ten Green Project Awards

01.24.11 Call for Entries: ED+C Magazine & Coverings’ PROJECT: Green Showcase

EASTON + COMBS Curates the Environment

Event: New Practices 2010 Winner Presentation: EASTON + COMBS
Location: Center for Architecture, 11.04.10
Speaker: Lonn Combs — Principal, EASTON + COMBS
Sponsors: Lead Sponsors: Dornbracht, MG & Company and Valiant Technology; Sponsors: Espasso, Hafele and Skidmore, Owings & Merrill; Media Sponsor: The Architect’s Newspaper

EASTON-COMBS

Model of Lux Nova by EASTON + COMBS.

Adam Ward

EASTON + COMBS, founded by Lonn Combs and Rona Easton, AIA, LEED AP, was established as a firm to watch when Lux Nova was a finalist in MoMA’s P.S.1 Young Architect’s Program. Although the firm did not have the opportunity to build its installation, it was to be constructed with extruded cellular polycarbonate, a material that offers many benefits including insulation, flexibility, and lightness while exhibiting extraordinary structural capacity. The plastic forms of Lux Nova were to pinwheel throughout the P.S.1 courtyard, establishing distinctive, color-coded zones and creating an interesting play of light and shadow. “We were interested in curating the environment,” Combs explained. Perhaps this is why they won the highest honor in this year’s New Practices New York competition.

Though Lux Nova may have put them on the map, EASTON + COMBS’ first built project is in an unlikely location — the Houston International Airport. The open-air, stand-alone parking facility operates at the scale of the automobile and features a long-span corrugated metal roof that arches unexpectedly. The simplistic, monochromatic structure seems to be on the opposite end of the architectural spectrum from Lux Nova in terms of color and scale, but they both illustrate the firm’s talent for making ordinary materials feel fresh again and shaping occupants’ expectations of public space.

Outside of the practice, Combs teaches at the Pratt Institute School of Architecture and oversees the Hunter Douglas Light Research Studio, where students developed a fabric model based on the structure of a typical Venetian blind. They explored the relationship between textile design and architecture “in a more pure way outside of some of the rigors of building,” he said.

He also participated in the design consortium behind HaitiSOFTHOUSE, a lightweight, transitional housing prototype that can be assembled in three hours. Along with three other designers, Rodney Leon, Mark Parsons, and Dragana Zoric, RA, RLA, Combs is forging a model that expresses “new ideas about practice, allowing us to step out of the traditional structure which is often purely about economic gain.”

New York Construction Best of 2010 winners include, in the category of Architectural Design, The Juilliard School Renovation and Expansion by Diller Scofidio + Renfro in collaboration with FXFOWLE Architects (Project of the Year); Cultural, Queens Theatre in the Park by Caples Jefferson Architects (Project of the Year), and Queens Community College Kupferberg Holocaust Resource Center by TEK Architects (Award of Merit); Government/Public Building, General Services Administration Massena U.S. Land Port of Entry by Smith-Miller + Hawkinson Architects (Project of the Year), and Fire Department of New York Rescue Company 3 by Ennead Architects (Award of Merit); Healthcare, New York Presbyterian Hospital Greenberg 14 Addition by Pei Cobb Freed & Partners (Award of Merit); Higher Education/Research, Westchester Community College Gateway Center by Ennead Architects (Project of the Year); Interior Design/Tenant Improvement, Grey Global at 200 Fifth Avenue by STUDIOS Architecture (Project of the Year); Landscaping/Urban Planning, Brooklyn Bridge Park by Michael Van Valkenburgh Associates (Project of the Year); Multi-Family Residential/Hospitality, One Madison Park by CetraRuddy (Project of the Year), The Lucida by Cook+Fox (Award of Merit) and One Jackson Square by Kohn Pedersen Fox Associates (Award of Merit); Office, Eleven Times Square by FXFOWLE Architects (Project of the Year); Retail, Rego Park Center by Ehrenkrantz Eckstut & Kuhn Architects (Project of the Year); and Transportation, LIRR Pavilion at Atlantic Terminal by di Domenico + Partners (Award of Merit)…

Winners of the Boston Society of Architect’s 2010 Healthcare Facilities Design Awards include the Central Harlem STD Clinic by Stephen Yablon Architect… The Tabernacle at St. Cabrini Nursing Home by Landow & Landow Architects won a 2010 Annual Visual Arts BENE Award from Ministry & Liturgy magazine for the stained glass installation by Renovata Studios

Sharon Davis has received the 2010 Active Citizen’s Award from the global NG, Women for Women International (WFWI)… Zetlin & De Chiara announced that Best Lawyers of America has named Michael S. Zetlin the 2011 New York Construction Lawyer of the Year and recognized both founding partners Michael K. De Chiara and Michael S. Zetlin as Best Lawyers in Construction Law…

During the AIANYS/ASLA convention, 2011 officers were elected, including David. L. Businelli, AIA, President, and F. Eric Goshow, AIA, LEED AP, Vice President, Government Advocacy…

AIA Queens has launched a new website, www.aiaqueensny.org

Howard Slatkin has been named the City Planning Commission’s first Director of Sustainability…Roberta Brandes Gratz was removed from the NYC Landmarks Preservation Commission; according to the New York Times, she is expected to be appointed to the mayor’s sustainability advisory board…

SUPERFRONT founder Mitch McEwen has opened the Architecture Conglomerate in downtown Brooklyn, offering affordable shared office space…

Perkins Eastman and Ehrenkrantz Eckstut & Kuhn Architects (EE&K) announced that they have agreed to merge their practices…

MKDA announced that Al D’Elia has joined its NY office as executive vice president…Francis Cauffman announced that John J. Plappert, AIA, has joined the firm as Director of Health Facilities Planning…

11.10.10 Call for Nominations: 2011 AIANY Nominating Committee (if you are an active member and have not received log-in information, contact Suzanne Mecs)

11.12.10 Call for Ideas: BASF School Design Challenge and Embodied Energy Forums

11.22.10 Call for Entries: Women In Architecture 2011 Recognition Program

11.24.10 Call for Entries: Play for all

11.28.10 Call for Entries: Total Housing Competition 01: Apartments

12.04.10 Call for Submissions: SPP Journal — Social Networking: What has it done for you?

12.05.10 Call for Ideas: House for Santa Claus

12.06.10 Call for Collaboration: AIA Global Dialogues Haiti Habitat Program

12.15.10 Call for Nominations: The Arthur Ross Awards

01.12.11 Call for Entries: Congress for the New Urbanism 2011 Charter Awards

01.15.11 Call for Entries: ICFF Studio

01.15.11 Call for Entries: ICFF Schools