New Acropolis Doesn’t Lose Marbles Over Old

Event: Bernard Tschumi and Leo Argiris: Conceptual and Technical Issues — the New Acropolis Museum
Location: Center for Architecture 06.07.07
Organizers: The Hellenic-American Technical Society; AIANY Cultural Affairs Committee
Speakers: Bernard Tschumi, AIA, Director, and Joel Rutten, Project Director — Bernard Tschumi Architects; Leo Argiris, PE — ARUP
Introduction: George Leventis, PE — board member, Hellenic American Technical Society
Sponsors: Arup; Hunter Roberts; Langan Engineering & Environmental Services; Thornton Tomasetti; Koutsomitis, Architects; M.A. Angeliades

The New Acropolis Museum

The New Acropolis Museum is situated at the foot of the Acropolis in Athens, Greece.

Bernard Tschumi Architects

Designing a museum for the Parthenon Marbles frieze at the foot of the Acropolis is no small feat, as Bernard Tschumi Architects with engineers from Arup discovered — especially when the proposed site is already filled with 2,000-year-old artifacts. Furthermore, to get the New Acropolis Museum built, navigating the politics — ever-changing building codes, archaeologists, and local politicians — added a new realm of complication.

To avoid destroying the ancient street grid and remaining walls (and to placate the archaeologists), the building is constructed as a column grid with two parallel structural cores. The curtain wall of the top floor and the floor slabs are supported by and cantilever from these structural members. The large, cast-in-place concrete columns accommodate the structure and potential seismic loads. As they reach the ground, they also straddle ancient walls by separating into a tripod of smaller columns. The beams spanning over the remains are infilled with glass so visitors can view the artifacts as they walk above them on the first level.

The circulation of the building is a three-dimensional loop providing a temporal experience. After crossing lower-level ruins, viewers enter a double-height trapezoidal gallery for art from the Archaic period to the Roman Empire, and end their visit at a glass-enclosed gallery. With facilities located in the interior cores, the open grid of the trapezoidal gallery allows a maximum amount of flexibility for exhibitions.

The New Acropolis Museum constantly references the ancient Acropolis. Both the east-west orientation and the column spacing mimic that of the Parthenon. The glass-enclosed gallery housing the Parthenon Marbles, with a suspended curtain wall, is just above the Athens roofline allowing uninterrupted views of the Acropolis. Because of its nature, visitors can view the frieze, which was once attached to the Parthenon, with a maximum amount of natural light. Gradated, fritted glass helps protect the art and shelter visitors from the heat.

Much of the museum aligns with other Bernard Tschumi, AIA, projects and theories. He superimposes the existing city grid around the perimeter of the site, the ancient street grid of the ruins, and the east-west axis of the Parthenon. He emphasizes movement through the building, sequence of space and time. According to the Project Director, Joel Rutten, the New Acropolis Museum could be the ultimate Tschumi of Tschumi projects. And considering its location and subject matter, designing a source at the source is very appropriate.

In this issue:
·CES Events Free for Members
·AIANY Welcomes New Director of Programs
·AIAS Finalists Rest Their Chairs in D.C.
·Builders Scrap Construction Carbon
·Standard 189 Now Open for Public Comment
·Website Launches for Architects and Engineers for 9/11 Truth


CES Events Free for Members
The AIANY Membership Services Committee is pleased to announce that AIA Members may now attend CES programs FREE! Beginning June 1, for a 6-month trial basis, AIANY is offering CES programs free to members while the non-member rate will be raised to $20. Visit the AIANY calendar to see what the organization has been planning to help you fulfill your Continuing Education needs.


AIANY Welcomes New Director of Programs
AIANY welcomes Beth Stryker as its new Director of Programs at the Center for Architecture. In addition to her work as Director of Programs, Beth will oversee the development of the Public Information Exchange (PIE), a permanent, interactive, multimedia installation on planning and architectural projects and urban issues across the five boroughs.

Beth received her MArch from Princeton University, and is a graduate of the Whitney Independent Study Program. Her work has been exhibited at the Wexner Center for the Arts, the Whitney Museum of American Art, and the Walker Art Center, among others. She is a past NYFA fellow, and was previously a principal in Utensil Art + Design studio.



AIAS Finalists Rest Their Chairs in D.C.

Andrew Rudolph and Travis Withers

Andrew Rudolph and Travis Withers — University of Louisiana at Lafayette, Third Place ($1,000).

Courtesy AIAS

Six finalists in the 2007 Chair Affair, sponsored by the International Corrugated Packaging Foundation (ICPF) and managed by the American Institute of Architecture Students (AIAS), will be displayed at the National Building Museum in Washington, D.C., July 18-23. The finalists were selected from a record 176 entries, submitted by teams or individuals representing 56 universities and colleges.

The Chair Affair competition challenges architecture students to design chairs using corrugated board and glue. The winning chair, designed by a group of Cornell University students, provides public seating and could easily be visualized in an airport setting. The other five finalists cover a wide range of designs that demonstrate corrugated versatility. The winners can be viewed on the competition website.


Builders Scrap Construction Carbon
Architecture and design firm Mithun, along with landscape architects at the Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center at the University of Texas, is making it easier for developers, builders, architects, and land planners to measure the carbon output of construction projects. In April, the two groups launched BuildCarbonNeutral.com, an online carbon calculator that tallies the amount of carbon dioxide released when transporting building materials to the construction site, and the amount of carbon released due to ecosystem degradation at the site. The carbon emissions associated with the construction process of a new building represents 13-18% of a building’s total embodied carbon, according to the United Environmental Programme. For landscape projects, the construction process accounts for 100% of the project’s embodied carbon.

Constructing new buildings and sites with the least possible environmental impact involves three important steps: reduce, renew, and offset. Offsetting means calculating the project’s carbon footprint so it can be balanced by funding resources or activities like renewable energy and land protection — resources that benefit and protect the planet. By using the calculator, designers can see how they might reduce their carbon footprint throughout site selection and design development, and the amount of carbon offsets their clients would need to purchase in order to negate the construction process.


Standard 189 Now Open for Public Comment
Standard 189, a proposed new standard that will provide minimum guidelines for green building practices, is nearly complete and has been released for public review and comment. Comments will be accepted through July 9, 2007 online. The standard is being developed by the American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air-Conditioning Engineers (ASHRAE) in conjunction with the Illuminating Engineering Society of North America (IESNA) and USGBC, and will be the first of its kind in the United States.


Website Launches for Architects and Engineers for 9/11 Truth
San Francisco-based architect Richard Gage, AIA, founder of Architects and Engineers for 9/11 Truth, announced the official launch of the group’s website. Gage, along with dozens of other architecture and engineering professionals, have signed a petition that questions official reports about the destruction of the World Trade Center (WTC) Twin Towers and Building 7 on 9/11 and calls for a new investigation. Gage, who suspects that the towers may have been destroyed with explosives rather than plane impact and fire, says he expects the website to also serve as a vehicle for ongoing research into the causes of the destruction of all 3 WTC high-rise buildings that day.

Gage’s presentation includes several different lines of evidence for his case, from analyses of the collapse to over 100 reports by first responders and the media of explosions at the scene. Gage also extensively covers the findings of chemical and physical evidence from Utah-based physicist Dr. Steven Jones, a physics professor formerly from Brigham Young University whose demolition hypothesis led to his appearance on MSNBC and many news articles. Jones’s continuing chemical and physical analysis of the WTC steel and dust has revealed what he claims is the signature of thermate, a high-performance incendiary cutter charge. Gage describes a key piece of evidence in support of Dr. Jones’s theory — the reports by a number of individuals, including the structural engineer of the WTC and the FDNY, of molten metal “flowing like lava” in the rubble pile during the weeks following 9/11.

The new website features a full presentation by Gage, both as a PowerPoint and a video, along with a discussion forum, the recently leaked WTC North Tower blueprints, ongoing publication of technical articles, and a broad range of multi-media offerings.

05.30.07

05.30.07

AIANY has lost two of its former presidents: Giorgio Cavaglieri, FAIA, and Denis Kuhn, FAIA. See the Around the AIA + Center for Architecture section for tributes submitted by AIANY Executive Director Rick Bell, FAIA, and other colleagues in the architecture community. If you would like to submit your memories, please e-mail e-oculus.
– Jessica Sheridan, Assoc. AIA, LEED AP

Note: In last issue’s New Yorkers Set Example at AIA Convention, The Architect’s Newspaper was omitted from the “New Practices New York” exhibition description. They were co-organizers and sponsors of the program, the exhibition, and the party.

Architecture Awards Look Outward

Event: AIA New York Chapter 2007 Design Awards Winners Symposium: Architecture
Location: Center for Architecture, 05.01.07
Speakers: Timothy Bade, Martin Cox — Steven Holl Architects; Peter Gluck — Peter L. Gluck and Partners; Scott Oliver, AIA — noroof architects; Nazila Shabestari, AIA — Skidmore, Owings & Merrill; Flavio Stigliano — Diller Scofidio + Renfro; Yehre Suh, Todd Hoehn — Weiss/Manfredi; John Woell — Steven Harris Architects; Michael Wurzel — Foster + Partners
Moderator: Dan Hanganu — AIANY 2007 Design Awards jury member
Organizer: AIANY Design Awards Committee

AIANY 2007 Design Awards

Courtesy AIANY

When the jury decided on the AIANY 2007 Design Awards, they were looking for new trends that are novel yet have a message, according to jury member and Canadian architect Dan Hanganu. What’s this year’s trend? Regardless of size or type, site and location played a major part in the design of all the award winners.

The New Residence at the Swiss Embassy in D.C., designed by Steven Holl Architects and receiving an Honor Award, has a cruciform plan that not only references Switzerland’s flag, but also allows for a spiraling sequence of spaces that culminate in a view of the Washington Monument. Because the architects were required to abide by Swiss engineering standards, orientation was key to abide by sustainability requirements.

Affordable Housing in Aspen, CO, by Peter L. Gluck and Partners, the only design-build project to win a Merit Award, is sited at the edge of the city grid creating a transition between the city and mountains. Instead of designing a skyscraper to provide the 17 units with 44 bedrooms, Peter Gluck designed a dense cluster of residences that allow for views of the mountains between.

Two inward-looking residential projects are oriented around existing site conditions. Honor Award-winning 92 Jane Street, designed by Steven Harris Architects, appears to be a typical West Village townhouse from the street, but opens up to the 750-square-foot garden (or “outdoor room”) in the back. The rear façade is transparent and all of the floor plans are oriented toward the garden. Noroof architects decided to preserve and design a vertical loft around the large maple tree on the small site for their Merit Award-winning Slot House in Brooklyn. The tree can always be seen from inside because of the “slot” window along the front of the house, and, because of its size, it is a passive solar feature for the 1,200-square-foot house.

The tight site at Pratt Institute for Honor Award-winning Higgins Hall presented a challenge to Steven Holl Architects. As an infill project, in order to negotiate between two existing buildings with different floor plate heights, ramps connect floors between buildings. Labeled a “dissonant zone,” the project is mainly a social connector space, accentuated by a translucent façade where students passing through can be seen day or night.

At the University of Iowa, the Merit Award-winning School of Art and Art History, also by Steven Holl Architects, sited the building so it connects directly to the existing art building — reaching toward it with cantilevers.

Two Honor Award-winning arts projects focus on the public realm in the urban environment. Weiss/Manfredi’s Olympic Sculpture Park creates a ‘Z’-shaped topographic transformation from the water’s edge to downtown Seattle. Along the outdoor park, museum visitors view sculpture and the skyline while traversing over three main arteries to the city, blending landscape, art, and architecture. Diller Scofidio + Renfro’s Institute of Contemporary Art in Boston animates the harbor front by incorporating a public walk. Outside space wraps into the interior core where an “outdoor room” can be used as an auditorium or gathering space.

The largest building among the Merit Award winners is the U.S. Census Bureau Headquarters in Suitland, MD, designed by Skidmore, Owings & Merrill. Reaching 1,000 feet end to end, the building is sited on natural woodland. To obtain a LEED Silver rating and stay true to natural surroundings, a wood screen makes up the enormous façade. Made from local laminated white oak, it provides sun shading and lessens the visual impact of the building. Ivy veils the parking garage to camouflage it as well as filters the air.

Finally, the Merit Award-winning Hearst Tower takes advantage of city views in a non-traditional way. By programming conference rooms instead of executive offices at the corners, Foster + Partners took a less hierarchical approach to commercial interiors.

None of the jury members are from the U.S., pointed out Hanganu. He claims that in Europe good design is defined by expression and detail. Acknowledging the amount of red tape involved in building in the U.S., the jury respected the extraordinary effort when subtlety and materiality are preserved in the design process. Obviously there is more to each project than its site, but when analyzing threads that tie all of the projects together, it is evident that location is key to the success of all of the award-winning buildings.

From Doghouse to High Fashion: WORK AC Prevails in Style

Event: New Practices New York: WORK AC
Location: Häfele Showroom, 05.10.07
Speakers: Amale Andraos and Dan Wood, AIA — principals, WORK AC
Organizers: AIANY, in association with The Architect’s Newspaper and Häfele America Co.
Sponsor: Häfele America Co.

WORK AC partners Amale Andraos and Dan Wood, AIA, have maintained a sense of humor in their approach to running a young practice. Andraos joked that many of their early projects were either “competitions or cancelled,” including a residential tower in Beirut and a large housing project in Los Angeles. When they founded the firm in 2002, “we didn’t start with big ideas about form,” explained Andraos. “Our biggest rule was to say yes to everything.” Their first project was a design for an urban doghouse that integrated a treadmill surrounded by three flat screens that play videos, allowing the urban dog to experience chasing cars or butterflies.

These days they can afford to break their own rule and say no, as they now have completed high-profile projects such as the new headquarters for Diane von Furstenberg Studio in the Meatpacking District. The design combines two historic buildings, preserving their landmarked façades. The design approach, Andraos explained, was to be “highly specific about one element and generic about others.” To bring light through the depth of the buildings to the offices, they designed a “Stairdelier” — a cross between a stair and chandelier. A heliostat mirror focuses sunlight on guardrails laced with Swarovski crystals, distributing light throughout the building and providing a unifying focal point for the design.

The sixth and final lecture and exhibition showcasing the winners of the 2006 AIANY New Practices Showcase with Zakrzewski Hyde Architects will be 07.12.07 at 6:00pm.

In this issue:
·Passings: Denis Glen Kuhn, FAIA, & Giorgio Cavaglieri, FAIA


Passings: Denis Glen Kuhn, FAIA, & Giorgio Cavaglieri, FAIA

Fuori di te nessuno lo ricordava
Non ho fatto ricerche: ora è inutile.
Dopo di te sono rimasto il solo
per cui egli è esistito. Ma è possibile,
lo sai, amare un-ombra, ombre noi stessi.

And no one remembered him except you.
I asked no questions; and now it’s useless.
I’m the only one after you
for whom he ever existed.
But it’s possible, you know, to love a shadow,
we ourselves being shadows.

From Tuo fratello morì giovane:
Eugenio Montale (1975 Nobel Laureate)

The obituaries for Giorgio Cavaglieri, FAIA, and Denis Kuhn, FAIA, were side-by-side in the New York Times Friday, May 18. Written by different writers, the intersecting lines of their lives were not noted in the parallel newsprint columns. Both were presidents of the AIA New York Chapter (Giorgio in 1970, Denis in 1989). Both cared passionately about the adaptive re-use of the architectural legacies found throughout our City, our cities. Both labored together and separately over projects in New York City and elsewhere, including the historic Union Station in Kansas City, Missouri.

Not mentioned in either obituary were their mutual respect and affection, and the fact that for over 15 years, Denis worked with Giorgio. Many called Denis “Giorgio’s right arm” at the time. Noted in Giorgio’s Times obituary was his fall, the tumble at age 93 “when he badly injured his right arm” and “then learned to paint watercolors with his left hand, fulfilling his first ambition to be a painter.” Giorgio painted his friends and colleagues, as did Denis in a different way, using words calmly and adroitly to diffuse tension and foster common purpose.

Outside Our Saviour Church in Manhasset where Denis was eulogized by friends and family on May 18, Stanton Eckstut, FAIA, his partner at Ehrenkrantz, Eckstut & Kuhn Architects, said that Denis resisted entreaties to slow down or take it easy, to not travel so much or not be so fully engaged in the life of the firm. Denis reportedly shrugged and asked what else would he do, what else was more important to do? Giorgio, too, kept his practice active until he was 93 years old. Two exemplary architects and leaders of the architectural profession, lost, sadly, at the same time.


In conversation, by note and by e-mail, their colleagues have sent remembrances. e-Oculus can be the vehicle for sharing these memories with others, starting with the following thoughts by Carl Galioto, FAIA, Nathan Jerry Maltz, AIA, LeAnn Shelton, Esq., AIA, Linda Yowell, FAIA, and Sarelle Weisberg, FAIA. Other remembrances are welcome and can be sent to e-Oculus.

Giorgio & Denis (Carl Galioto, FAIA, Skidmore, Owings & Merrill)
Giorgio brought creativity, passion, intensity and professionalism into every effort within each project. He carried himself into client meetings with a sense of dignify and greater purpose that helped me to realize that the ideals that I developed in school were not sophomoric dreams that needed to be discarded once in the real world, but could be the fundamental principles of practice. I don’t believe that Giorgio believed that he had a small practice — just a compact one that projected large and important ideas about the rethinking and rebirth of significant historical buildings, and the importance of the relationship between people and their multi-generational, pan-historical urban fabric. It was a very rich and lively vision.

Denis brought humor, stability, pragmatism, and a sense of craft to the work. We needed the humor as there was Giorgio, Denis, five staff, and a receptionist working in a carefully designed space of under 1,000 square feet. At that early stage in my career, Denis was a model of competence and confidence and I admired his ability to seemingly always know the right answer. Even then, Denis was devoted to the AIA as he labored on editions of Oculus. Typical of Giorgio, he sincerely wished the people who worked for him great professional success as they moved and only saw the larger picture of our profession and his adopted city that he loved.

Giorgio (Nathan Jerry Maltz, AIA)
Giorgio Cavaglieri’s spirit was indomitable. At the age of 90 he was still operating his architectural office, and expressed disappointment that some potential clients were concerned about his being able to perform the work. He remained active in the New York region, sketching, painting, designing, and attending many events sponsored by the professional organizations of which he was a member.

Several years ago he suffered an embolism that partially paralyzed his right hand — he was right-handed. Somewhat chagrined, but undaunted, he embarked upon a new “career” of painting watercolors left-handed! He completed numerous lively portraits in his Central Park West apartment, many of his professional colleagues and friends.

His memory will live with us for a long time to come.

A few thoughts on Denis (LeAnn Shelton, Esq., AIA, Ehrenkrantz, Eckstut & Kuhn)
Punta Patilla is the northernmost point of the Dominican Republic. They say it is the first place that Christopher Columbus landed when he came to the New World. The site is almost indescribable — an expanse of ocean running into beaches framed by morning glory-covered dunes, mangrove trees, rolling hills and lush ravines. The program for the site, an eco-resort, was incidental. It was the perfect place for an architect, steeped in historic preservation, to spend his last moments, completing his life and career, imagining a place that would preserve paradise.

Giorgio’s Relevance Today (Linda Yowell, FAIA, Linda Yowell Architects)
“Architects, as professionals responsible for shaping the environment must utilize their skills to reduce pollution through conservation of energy and through design planning” (“Architects Urge Pollution Fight,” New York Times, April 25, 1971). A widely-held belief in 2007 — but daring in 1971, when Giorgio Cavaglieri, then AIANY President, made this statement at a press conference to promote energy conservation goals. The 1971 list of recommendations is remarkably similar to those included in Mayor Bloomberg’s 2030 sustainability plan, including calling for “the massive reduction of private cars from selected areas of the city.”

Giorgio led the way in adaptive reuse of buildings, perhaps the ultimate act of conservation. He respected the work of earlier generations but was not a historicist. By simply believing that good design, elegance, quality and respect for others were timeless, Giorgio Cavaglieri was always ahead of his time.

About Giorgio (Sarelle Weisberg, FAIA)
1. At one of the first AIA National Conventions I attended — it was in Kansas City — Giorgio invited me to go “on his arm” to the big party and I had such a fantastic evening! He knew everyone and they greeted him with great warmth. At that time he was an honored guest speaker at many conventions, discussing with and educating architects on adaptive reuse. He had submitted a proposal for the abandoned train station in Kansas City, which he showed me, but they didn’t move ahead with it, with him. I was in Kansas City last summer and that building now has a museum and a “destination” restaurant. (yes, adaptively reused — but not by Giorgio)

2. He did a wonderful restoration of the New York Public Library Fifth Avenue Periodical Room as the first major rehab/upgrade of that building’s major spaces. He told me at the time, when I complimented him in the space: “Every architect should have one client like that;” the Readers’ Digest people paid for the project and there was no budget limitation for Giorgio!

3. Just a year ago he painted my portrait — a watercolor — done with his good, left hand, in about an hour, in front of his glorious view-window. I regret I didn’t stop in more often, as I so often passed his building. His spirit was extraordinary, in light of the late tragedy of his fall.

4. Did you know, Giorgio did many Modern small projects? I know about several libraries in New York City neighborhoods. Also, by some odd serendipity, Denis Kuhn worked for a number of years for Giorgio before moving on to Cooper Eckstut. I doubt you want to mention that weird coincidence: that their obits were side-by-side in the Times — a generation apart.

New Yorkers Set Example at AIA Convention

Event: AIA 2007 National Convention and Design Expo
Location: San Antonio, TX, 05.02-05.07

AIA 2007 National Convention

Architects convene in San Antonio for the AIA 2007 National Convention.

Carolyn Sponza; Jeremy Edmunds

“Our theme of ‘Growing Beyond Green’ was chosen before the general public came to its new understanding of the threat climate change poses to our future,” AIA President RK Stewart, FAIA, said at this year’s AIA National Convention. Attracting 21,640 registrants, and 844 exhibitors, architects gathered in San Antonio for four days of panels, exhibitions, programs, and parties. With such a broad line-up (see the last issue’s list of events of interest to New Yorkers “Big Apple Tour of San Antonio“), here are just some of the highlights from the weekend.

Many AIANY Chapter members conducted or orchestrated seminars and symposia. One of the best attended was, “New York New Visions: Success or Failure?” led by Mark Strauss, FAIA, AICP, and Mark Ginsberg, FAIA, on Lower Manhattan and New York New Visions. The panel also included Alexander Garvin, Hon. AIA, APA, and Rosalie Genevro of The Architectural League of New York.

“Advocacy Tactics for a Sustainable Endgame: The Politics of Sustainability” was a seminar which stressed that many sustainability problems can only be solved with significant help from the political arena. Progress demands political savvy. Understanding and respect for the roles of federal, state, and local governments in regulating land use and other uses such as energy and transportation systems is vital. So said the speakers, who should know. John Norquist, Hon. AIA, was the mayor of Milwaukee from 1988 to 2004 before becoming president and CEO of the Congress for the New Urbanism. The Hon. Richard Swett, FAIA, is a former Congressman and former U.S. Ambassador to Denmark. Moderating was New York’s Jeremy Edmunds, Associate AIA, PE, LEED-AP, a sustainability advisor to brownfields redeveloper Cherokee Northeast.

AIANY members were also recipients of major awards at the Convention. One high point was the room filled with thousands of well-wishers applauding Lance Jay Brown, FAIA, who received the Topaz Medallion. Mary Barnes and John Barnes were also present to accept the Gold Medal award posthumously for Edward Larrabee Barnes, FAIA.

New Fellows were elevated at a most memorable location — the plaza in front of the Alamo. This year nine AIANY members received Fellowship: Mustafa Kemal Abadan, FAIA; Roger Duffy, FAIA; Frank J. Greene, FAIA; Paul Katz, FAIA; Blake Middleton, FAIA; Margaret Rietveld, FAIA; Henry Stolzman, FAIA; Calvin Tsao, FAIA; and Adam Yarinsky, FAIA. Nationwide, 76 new Fellows were individually recognized, along with honorary international Fellows.

The proposal entitled “On the Water, a Model for the Future: a Study of New York and New Jersey Upper Bay” was presented with the $100,000 Latrobe Prize. Awarded every other year by the AIA’s College of Fellows, the focus this year is on NYC’s harbor, but the findings can serve as a model for any waterfront area. The objective of On the Water is to rethink the relationship between ecology and infrastructure. Heading the team is Guy Nordenson, structural engineering professor at Princeton University School of Architecture, founder of NY-based Guy Nordenson and Associates, and former partner at ARUP. Team members are Princeton University’s Stan Allen, AIA, Catherine Seavitt, AIA, and James Smith; Michael Tantala of Tantala Associates; and Adam Yarinsky, FAIA, and Stephen Cassell, AIA, of the Architecture Research Office.

Speaking of politics, for most convention-goers the high point was the plenary session at which Al Gore spoke of environmental possibilities and the role of architects and buildings in preventing further environmental degradation. The line was long, as was the speech — accomplished with only the most minimal notes and prompts.

Off-site from the Convention Center, the “New Practices New York” showcase exhibition opened at the Blue Star Contemporary Arts gallery in the trendy King William district. With a re-installation (thanks to Häfele hardware) of last July’s exhibition at NYC’s Center for Architecture, many architectural personages, including Gaéton Siew, President of the International Union of Architects, attended the exhibition’s opening. Students and gallery-hoppers alike voiced enthusiasm for the program.

At a national level, delegates elected Marvin J. Malecha, FAIA, as the Institute’s 2009 president. Peter J. Arsenault, AIA, and Clark Manus, FAIA will each serve a two-year term as vice president, and Hal P. Munger, FAIA, will act as treasurer beginning this year.

The AIA 2008 National Convention and Design Expo themed “We the People” will be held May 15-17, 2008, in Boston. For more information about next year’s exhibition contact AIA Infocentral at 1-800-242-3837. To see photographs from the weekend, check out Sighted.

NYNV Extols plaNYC

Event: Mayor Bloomberg’s Plan for NYC 2030 New York New Visions: Exploring Implementation
Location: Center for Architecture, 05.07.07
Speakers: Ariella Rosenberg and Laurie Kerr, RA — Long Term Sustainability Respondents, Mayor’s Office of Planning and Long Term Sustainability; Ethel Sheffer — President, American Planning Association NYC Metro Chapter; Bruce Fowle, AIA, LEED AP — FXFOWLE Architects; Jeffrey Zupan — Senior Fellow, Transportation, Regional Plan Association; Rick Bell, FAIA — Executive Director, AIANY
Moderator: Ernest Hutton, Assoc. AIA, AICP — New York New Visions
Organizers & Sponsors: New York New Visions; AIANY Housing Committee; in conjuction with the AIANY Planning & Urban Design Committee; AIANY Transportation & Infrastructure Committee; and AIANY Committee on the Environment (COTE)

plaNYC

Courtesy nyc.gov

Panelists representing New York New Visions — a coalition of major design and planning organizations — expressed much enthusiasm for plaNYC 2030, although many were concerned about the plan’s longevity after Bloomberg’s mayoral term ends. The many improvements throughout the city over the last 30 years have inspired the mayor to aim high environmentally. With a goal to boost livability and sustainability, his unprecedented plaNYC 2030 targets land, housing, green space, water, air, transportation, and energy.

As an additional 900,000 residents are expected by 2030, there’s a demand for smart planning. To accommodate the 265,000 new housing units needed, more efficient use of government land, revitalized brownfields, and even decking over unused railways and highways are a few of the 127 proposals on the boards. Furthermore, 99% of New Yorkers will live within a ten-minute walk from a park and a subway entrance if the mayor has his way; a public plaza will be incorporated in every community, and one million new trees will be planted by 2017. All of the revenue from congestion pricing will be used to improve mass transit. In addition to these initiatives, panelists suggested the city implement a monitoring system to analyze progress that would be regularly disclosed to the public.

Without mitigation, the city’s annual energy bill will increase $3 billion by 2015, not to mention the effects on air quality and global warming. New York’s aging grid can’t handle 21st century demands, and many of the issues addressed in plaNYC are relevant globally as well as locally. If all goes well, New York has hopes of being not only the nation’s safest, but also its first truly sustainable city.

In this issue:
·Mayor Overhauls Building Codes
·AIA Members Receive Discount off Guggenheim Memberships
·AIANY Cruises NYC Waterways
·Survey Reveals Professional Growth
·Passing: Gregory Clement III, FAIA


Mayor Overhauls Building Codes
Mayor Bloomberg and Buildings Commissioner Patricia J. Lancaster, FAIA, submitted a landmark modernization of the City Building Code, the first since 1968, to the City Council for review and consideration. Fulfilling a promise made during the 2001 campaign, the Mayor’s proposal overhauls all aspects of the City’s construction codes, including the Building Code, setting new standards and rules that emphasize safety, efficiency, and sustainability. The proposal, to be called the NYC Construction Codes, draws on suggestions and input from hundreds of stakeholders the administration brought together for this effort, and is intended to simplify construction standards and foster long-term, environmentally-friendly growth.

The proposed Codes recognize electronic submissions and digital documents and will be organized according to the International Code Council format. To ensure the Codes never become dated, the proposed law will be tied to the national three-year revision cycle to take advantage of innovations in new materials and technology. The Department of Buildings (DOB) will also allow longer license durations. A cost study by the DOB has identified new code provisions for significant construction cost savings.

The Codes seeks to facilitate sustainable building by providing fee rebates for green design, requiring more efficient heating and cooling systems, requiring white roofs, and encouraging water conserving plumbing systems. The proposed Codes are available on the Buildings section of the New York City website. The website includes section-by-section documents that summarize each chapter and note key changes from the current Codes.


AIA Members Receive Discount off Guggenheim Memberships
AIANY is pleased to announce a partnership with the Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation. AIA Members can redeem a 15% discount on memberships up to and including the Supporting Associate level by using the discount code “AIA” during online purchases and phone purchases (212-432-3535) or by showing the AIA Membership Card at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum membership desk.

The Guggenheim Foundation promotes an understanding and appreciation of art, architecture, and other manifestations of visual culture, primarily of the modern and contemporary periods. The Foundation realizes this mission through exhibitions, educational programs, research initiatives, publications, and its unique network of museums and cultural partnerships. For more information, visit the website.

Guggenheim members receive free admission to all Guggenheim museums, invitations to exclusive exhibition previews, 10% discount at the museum store and café, a free subscription to Guggenheim magazine, and more!


AIANY Cruises NYC Waterways
AIANY with NY Waterway Tours is launching the first cruise dedicated to the landmarks and skyline of NYC. The tour kicks off May 25 and will run every Thursday and Sunday at noon through the end of October. “Certified” tour guides will provide facts about numerous structures, and a visual presentation will play on flat-screen monitors to further enhance the experience. Bar service will be available on-board and a food menu will be offered by the “Original” NY Milkshake Company, located at Pier 78. Click here for schedules and to purchase tickets.


Survey Reveals Professional Growth
The 2007 Survey of Registered Architects by the National Council of Architectural Registration Boards (NCARB) indicates that there are currently 112,650 registered architects in the U.S., reflecting a 4.5% increase over last year. More than 3,800 initial licenses were granted to architects, an increase of 34.5% over last year.

The survey also reveals that there are 109,546 reciprocal (out-of-state) architects and 222,196 total registrations. This means, on average, an architect is registered in at least two different jurisdictions. CA has the most resident architects (16,894) and the highest number of total registrations (21,852). In comparison, NY has 8,356 resident architects and a total of 14,124 registrations.

The Council’s Quality Assurance division collects data for the survey from its 54 member boards, which includes all 50 states, D.C., Guam, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands. NCARB makes this information available annually as a service to the profession.


Passing: Gregory Clement III, FAIA
Gregory Clement III, FAIA, died at home surrounded by family and friends on April 11, 2007. He was 56 and battled melanoma for nearly two years. Gregory served as a Managing Partner at Kohn Pedersen Fox Architects since 1993, overseeing numerous international and award-winning projects such as the Rodin Museum and the New Songdo City Master Plan, both in South Korea. He led the firm in its role as Executive Architect in the renovation and expansion of the Museum of Modern Art in NYC, working in tandem with Yoshio Taniguchi, Hon. FAIA.

Respected for his architectural contributions, Gregory was also admired for his personal relationships with clients and colleagues, his mentoring of young architects, and his warmth and integrity. He was inducted as a Fellow of the American Institute of Architects (FAIA) in 2005, and he actively participated in the AIA Large Firm Roundtable. He took part in student juries at Yale University, Princeton University, and Columbia University, among others. With his free time, he pursued painting and collage art, as well as golf.

Contributions in his memory may be made to the Gregory and Elizabeth Clement Melanoma Research Fund, Abramson Cancer Center of The University of Pennsylvania, 3535 Market St., Suite 750, Philadelphia, PA 19104. A memorial will be held June 1, 2007 at 4pm, the Church of the Heavenly Rest, 2 East 90th St. at Fifth Avenue.

03.07-04.07

Architecture Week and the celebration of the AIA 150th Anniversary is done, the National Convention is done, the summer is beginning to creep in to New York… what is left to anticipate for 2007? The AIA New York State Convention which will be held here in New York City from October 4-6, 2007. “The Past as Prologue” is the theme, the Grand Hyatt Hotel is the venue. We hope you will all attend the CES programming, product showcase, Host Chapter Party, walking tours, and more. For more information visit the AIANYS website. Sponsorship and product showcase opportunities are still available.

Reminder if you have not yet sent a renewal payment for 2007 membership your benefits have been suspended. The AIA offers a myriad of traditional benefits which can be reviewed here. In addition, the chapter has been working to extend member benefits and has recently formed alliances with the Guggenheim Museum and Kaplan AEC for discounts to our members. Please contact Suzanne Mecs, or 212-358-6115 as soon as possible to renew and restore your membership.

New Architect Members: Alyssa Murphy, Edelman Sultan Knox Wood Architects | Bobby K. Young, AIA, Gabellini Sheppard Associates, LLP | Cornelia Wu, Gluckman Mayner Architects | Darren Frederick Schroeder, AIA, Mulvanny G2 Architecture | Frank Mazzarella, AIA, Amaya Y Mazzarella Arquitectos | JaeJun Ryu, AIA, Rothzeid Kaiserman Thomson Bee | John I. Kim, AIA, Resolution: 4 Architecture | June Lois Daniel, Terrence O’Neal Architect LLC | Kim Yao, Architecture Research Office | Liza Crespo | Pia Kim, Perkins Eastman/ LSGS | Rodney Crumrine, NBBJ | Stephen Cassell, AIA, Architecture Research Office | Tony Tai, Gensler

The following individuals have recently upgraded to Architect level membership: March W. Chadwick, AIA, March Chadwick Architecture | Anna Lira V. Luis, AIA, Atelier Lira Luis, LLC | Christopher S. Reynolds, AIA

New Associate Members: Sigilit Brunn, Assoc. AIA, | Serena H. Chen, Assoc. AIA, Beyer Blinder Belle: Architects & Planners | Ethan P. Cohen, Assoc. AIA, City College Architecture Center | Elon Danziger, Assoc. AIA, Silberstang Lasky Architects | Stella Fleshler, Assoc. AIA, CUH2A (P.C.) | Felipe Guerrero, Assoc. AIA, Hillier | Viraj S. Hankare, Assoc. AIA, Costas Kondylis and Partners | Nathaly Haratz, Assoc. AIA | Carolyn J. Hinger, AIA, R.M. Kliment & Frances Halsband Architects | Kishel John, Assoc. AIA, Skidmore, Owings and Merrill, LLP | Marta E. Karamuz, Assoc. AIA, Hillier | Jonathan Francis Kirk, Assoc. AIA, Wettling Architects | Steven Morales, Assoc. AIA | Sharmiette Josepha Robinson, Assoc. AIA, Archetype | John A. Rolka, Assoc. AIA, Frank Seta Associates | Kashifa Saleem, Assoc. AIA, | John Robert Savage, Assoc. AIA, C.A. Lorentz Architect & John Savage Interior Design

New International Associate Members: Emilio Barletta, Int’l Assoc. AIA, Emilio Barletta Architect | Fernando Soler, Int’l Assoc. AIA, Cosentini Associates

New Titanium Corporate Members: Ibex Construction: William R. Brody | Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in New York: Monica Ramirez Montagut, Ph.D. | TRESPA: Aart-Jan van der Meijden, Darlene Byrne, Todd Kimmel

New Steel Corporate Members: Cosentini Associates: Robert Bazewicz | J.P. Morgan Chase Bank, N.A.: Tracy H. Levites | Onilda Cruz, Mohawk Industries

New Aluminum Corporate Members: Altamax Capital LLC : Robert F Geils | Jerome S. Gillman Consulting Architect, P.C.: Pamela Gillman | Lane Office Furniture: Greg Burke, Lauren Wichter Friedman | Metro Building Solutions Inc.: Dennis Italia | Oldcastle Glass: Edwin B. Hathaway, Susan Trimble | PPG Industries, Inc.: Mary Hosley, CSI, CCPR | Sustainable Design Collaborative: Jin Huang | Trojan Powder Coating: Carl Troiano | Vitra: Martin Feller |

New Center for Architecture Professional Members: Michael Casolari, Integrated Building Controls | Sheril Kern, HumanScale Corp. | Thomas Henry Kieren, Custom Corporate Photography | Carmen Rainieri, FAI Construction Consultants | Louise Silver, RCDD | Fusayo Yokota, Fu. Design

New Center for Architecture Public Members: Gautam Gidwani, Habitations Design | Catherine M. Perebinossoff

New Center for Architecture Student Members: William A. Arbizu, Columbia University Graduate School of Architecture, Planning & Preservation | Lara A. Delaney, AIAS at Pratt Institute, School of Architecture | Mingda Liu, New York School of Interior Design | Lesley Claire Merz

New Corresponding Member: David L. Dinhofer, AIA, BLDG Management Co., Inc.

Reinstated Members: Carol K. Chang, AIA, Gluckman Mayner Architects | Melissa Cicetti, AIA, Gluckman Mayner Architects | Richard Clarke, AIA, Zimmer Gunsul Frasca Architects LLP | Mark Collins | James H Counts, Jr., AIA, Gluckman Mayner Architects | Anne Reilly Fahim, AIA, Anne Fahim Architectural Services, PC | Safwat B. Fahim, AIA, Archronica Architects P.C. | Ely Fretz, Assoc. AIA, Brennan Beer Gorman Architects (BBG-BBGM) | Alec K. Galli, AIA, Alec Klee Galli Architects | Scott Habjan, AIA, Skidmore, Owings and Merrill, LLP | Elliott Kaufman, Elliott Kaufman Photography | Stephen Killcoyne, AIA, Stickley | Amanda Lehman, Assoc. AIA, Cook + Fox Architects, LLP | Omar C. Mitchell, Assoc. AIA, Stephen B. Jacobs Group, PC | Frank Uccellini, AIA, Stantec | Perry G. Whidden, AIA, Gluckman Mayner Architects

Members Transferred in from Another Chapter, Welcome to New York! Mark S. Boekenheide, AIA, The Related Companies, Inc. | Kimberly Brown, AIA | Benjamin Caldwell, AIA, Holzman Moss Architecture LLP | Elizabeth J. Derr, Assoc. AIA, Murdock Young Architects | Marta E. Karamuz, Assoc. AIA, Hillier | Sung W. Kim, AIA, Rafael Vinoly Architects P.C. | Matthew M. Konar, AIA, Redtop Architects | Anthony Machado, Assoc. AIA | Joseph S. Pagac, Assoc. AIA, Joseph Pagac Design

Members Transferred out to another Chapter, Good luck in your new Locale! Andrew Charles Deibel, AIA | Matthew Edwin Hufft, AIA, Hufft Projects LLC | James G. Kendrick, AIA, Cannon Design | Bethany Lundell, Assoc. AIA, Rafael Vinoly Architects P.C. | Chang-Hyun Park, AIA | Shaun S. Shih, AIA, DMJM Harris | Martin Siefering, AIA, Perkins Eastman | Rex Wong, Assoc. AIA

The Chapter mourns the passing of: Charles Vogelstein, AIA, Oppenheimer Brady Vogelstein