JDS Architects contracted to build new Holmenkollen Ski Jump in Oslo, Norway
Posted: Thursday, May 08, 2008
In September 2007, JDS Architects won the international competition for a new Holmenkollen ski jump in Oslo (previously on Bustler) and have now been commissioned to build the new jump tower and arena for the World Championship in 2011.

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Located on the hillside north west of Oslo center, Holmenkollen stands out as an iconic landmark for the city of Oslo as well as for the entire nation.

The new ski jump will replace the existing ski jump and will be built at the same site where it has resided since the first Holmenkollen ski jump was erected in 1892. Since then, the jump has been rebuilt 18 times.

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The new ski jump will be completed in time for the 2011 World Championship and bring the Holmenkollen ski jump up to date with new standards and regulations in accordance with the international skiing federation. The silhouette of the new tower has a sharp and simple cut. The profile follows the jumpers descent and is offset to create necessary wind protection. The smooth and bended rectangle hosts the slope, the main structure and circulation with an inclined elevator running from the bottom to the top where a 50 m2 bar/jumpers lounge and jump platform is located. The top is cut horizontally to accommodate a viewing platform with a 360º panorama view over the Oslo city landscape.

Danish JDS Architects have just opened a new office in Oslo.



Tags for this entry:
ski, norway, oslo, contract
London Festival of Architecture Seeking Volunteers
Posted: Thursday, May 08, 2008
London Festival of Architecture 2008 is looking for an army of skilled and enthusiastic individuals to become Festival Volunteers this summer. Roles will range from party stewarding and outdoor-event supervision to press hospitality, HQ assistants and market research. Donate anything from a day to a month of your time to build up valuable architecture/event-organising experience or just get out of the office on a summer’s day.

You are invited to attend one of the LFA2008 Volunteer Recruitment Evening to discuss the various opportunities with the Festival team:

Tuesday 20 & Wednesday 21 May, 5-7pm
@ New London Architecture, The Building Centre, 26 Store Street, WC1E 7BT

If you are unable to attend on these dates but are interested in volunteering the LFA would still like to hear from you. Please express your interest now at , stating any information on your particular skills and availability during the period of 10 June – 20 July 2008.

For further information on the Festival programme visit http://www.lfa2008.org.

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london, festival, volunteers
Reiser + Umemoto to Receive Presidential Citation from Cooper Union
Posted: Wednesday, May 07, 2008
JESSE REISER AND NANAKO UMEMOTO OF REISER + UMEMOTO / RUR ARCHITECTURE PC TO RECEIVE PRESIDENTIAL CITATION FROM THE COOPER UNION AT 149TH COMMENCEMENT.

NEW YORK - On May 28th 2008, Jesse Reiser and his partner Nanako Umemoto will receive the Cooper Union Presidential Citation from President George Campbell for outstanding practical and theoretical contributions to the field of architecture.

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Shenzhen Airport

Jesse Reiser and Nanako Umemoto graduated from the Cooper Union in 1981 and 1983 respectively and began their partnership in 1985. Their innovative design work, which embraced a range of scales from residential to regional, is widely recognized internationally.

Reiser + Umemoto gained considerable international attention last year when they were awarded first place honors during the international jury phase of the Shenzhen Airport Competition. Other competing firms included Lord Norman Foster, Foreign Office Architects, Kisho Kurokowa, and Massimiliano Fuksas. Reiser + Umemoto’s cutting edge concrete shell design, a radical shift away from airport ‘Hi-Tech,’ ultimately proved too challenging to the local Chinese jury, but nevertheless confirmed Reiser + Umemoto’s status as leading practitioners in the field of architecture, thus contributing to the decision for their presidential citation.

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Shenzhen Airport

The firm has also recently won first prize in the International Competition for the design of the Alishan Tourist Infrastructure in Taiwan, People’s Republic of China, which is due to begin construction in the coming year.

Currently, Reiser + Umemoto’s ‘Green Tower’ O-14 is under construction in Dubai. The building broke ground in February 2007 and sub-groundwork was completed in September 2007. The first four levels of lacelike concrete exoskeleton is now visible on the Dubai skyline, with the final 22 stories slated for completion in the spring of 2009.

In addition, Reiser + Umemoto are currently producing a prototype wall for the MoMA Home Delivery exhibition, scheduled to open in July 2008.

A comprehensive monograph of the firm’s architectural design work, Projects and their Consequences, is currently in production and is scheduled for publication by the Spanish publisher Actar in Spring 2009. Their book Atlas of Novel Tectonics was released by Princeton Architectural Press in March 2006 supported by grants from the New York State Council of the Arts as well as from the Graham Foundation. The book which is now in its fourth printing has consistently been on the Amazon.com Bestseller List for the past two years, and was the recipient of the 2007 Gutenberg Prize from the Bundesamt fur Kultur in Bern.

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cooper union
RAIC 2008 Governor General’s Medals Announced
Posted: Wednesday, May 07, 2008
OTTAWA, May 6 - The Royal Architectural Institute of Canada (RAIC) and the Canada Council for the Arts are pleased to announce the recipients of the Governor General's Medals in Architecture for 2008.

Terrence Donnelly Centre for Cellular and Biomolecular Research, University of Toronto (Toronto, ON)
architectsAlliance & Behnisch Architekten

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photo: Tom Arban


Nk'Mip Desert Cultural Centre (Osoyoos, BC)
Hotson Bakker Boniface Haden architects

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photo: Nic Lehoux


Jaypee Institute of Information Technology (Noida, Uttar Pradesh, India)
Le Groupe Arcop

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photo: Eye Piece photography & design


Canada's National Ballet School Project Grand Jeté (Toronto, ON)
Kuwabara Payne McKenna Blumberg Architects & Goldsmith Borgal & Company Ltd. Architects, Architects in Joint Venture

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photo: Tom Arban


ROAR_one (Vancouver, BC)
Lang Wilson Practice in Architecture Culture Inc. and Hotson Bakker Boniface Haden Architects, Associated Architects

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photo: Nic Lehoux


House at 4a Wychwood Park (Toronto, Ontario)
Ian MacDonald Architect Inc.

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photo: Tom Arban


New Canadian War Museum (Ottawa, ON)
Moriyama & Teshima Architects, Griffiths Rankin Cook Architects: Architects in Joint Venture

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photo: Harry Foster


Gleneagles Community Centre (West Vancouver, BC)
Patkau Architects

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photo: James Dow / Patkau Architects Inc.


Winnipeg Centennial Library Addition (Winnipeg, MB)
Patkau / LM Architectural Group

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photo: James Dow / Patkau Architects Inc.


Communication, Culture and Technology Building, University of Toronto (Mississauga, ON)
Saucier + Perrotte architects

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photo: Marc Cramer


Scarborough Chinese Baptist Church (Scarborough, ON)
Teeple Architects Inc.

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photo: Shai Gil


Trent Chemical Sciences Building (Peterborough, ON)
Teeple Architects Inc. and associate architects Shore Tilbe & Irwin

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photo: Tom Arban


"The creations of the twelve recipients of the Governor General's Medal in Architecture make us appreciate the degree to which Canadian architects have transformed the places where we live, work, share culture and come together into a celebration of beauty and human genius," said Her Excellency the Right Honourable Michaelle Jean, Governor General of Canada.

"All art forms contribute to improving our quality of life and the communities we live in, but architecture has a particularly immediate and direct impact on our surroundings," said Simon Brault, Vice-Chair of the Canada Council for the Arts. "The outstanding buildings that are being honoured with this year's Governor General's Medals are a testament to the creativity, ingenuity and overall excellence of Canadian architects, and the Canada Council is proud to participate in the administration of this award."

"It is very encouraging to note that our educational, cultural and community institutions have embraced inspirational contemporary Canadian architecture," said RAIC President Kiyoshi Matsuzaki, FRAIC. "This year's winners include buildings for higher education, community and cultural centres, a church and a museum as well as two residences. The award-winning projects are indeed world-class and demonstrate that, as architects, we Canadians can create buildings that are second to none."

The Governor General's Medals in Architecture will be presented at 6 p.m. Oct. 16, 2008 at Rideau Hall by Her Excellency.

The Governor General's Medals in Architecture recognize outstanding achievement in recently built projects by Canadian architects. This program, created by the RAIC, contributes to the development of the discipline and practice of architecture, and increases public awareness of architecture as a vital cultural force in Canadian society. These awards are administered jointly with the Canada Council for the Arts, which is responsible for the adjudication process and contributes to the publication highlighting the medal winners.

Descriptions, biographies and downloadable images of the architectural firms and their winning buildings are available at http://www.raic.org and http://www.canadacouncil.ca.

The 2008 Governor General's Medals in Architecture recipients were selected by a jury of the following distinguished architects: Prof. Manfred Sabatke, (Stuttgart, Germany); Pina Petricone, MRAIC (Toronto); John McMinn (Toronto); Anne Cormier (Montréal); and Steve Christer (Reykjavik, Iceland).

Established in 1907, the Royal Architectural Institute of Canada is a voluntary national association representing almost 3,700 architects. As the leading voice of architecture in Canada, RAIC works to affirm architecture matters; to celebrate the richness and diversity of architecture in Canada; and to support architects in achieving excellence.

McGraw-Hill Construction generously sponsors the RAIC's awards programs.

The Canada Council for the Arts, in addition to its principal role of promoting and fostering the arts in Canada, administers and awards over 100 prizes and fellowships in the arts, humanities, social sciences, natural sciences, health sciences and engineering. In addition to its partnership with the RAIC in the administration of the Governor General's Medals, the Canada Council recognizes achievement in architecture through the Professional Prix de Rome in Architecture, the Prix de Rome in Architecture for Emerging Practitioners, and the Ronald J. Thom Award for Early Design Achievement.

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canada, results, award, raic
Peggy Shepard, Alexie Torres-Fleming Awarded 2008 Jane Jacobs Medals
Posted: Tuesday, May 06, 2008
May 5, 2008 –The Rockefeller Foundation announced today the two recipients of the 2008 Jane Jacobs Medal.

Peggy Shepard will be given the 2008 Jane Jacobs Medal for Lifetime Leadership, and Alexie Torres-Fleming will be given the 2008 Jane Jacobs Medal for New Ideas and Activism. Along with the Medal, Shepard and Torres-Fleming will each receive $100,000. The Medals will be awarded to Shepard and Torres-Fleming at a ceremony on September 8th at the Morgan Library and Museum.

The Rockefeller Foundation Jane Jacobs Medal was created in 2007 in honor of the author and activist who died in April 2006 at the age of 89. The Rockefeller Foundation’s relationship to Jane Jacobs dates back to the 1950s, when the Foundation launched an Urban Design Studies program that helped foster the emergence of the new discipline of urban design and theory. As part of this initiative, one of the Foundation’s first grants was to the then-obscure writer from Greenwich Village, for the research and writing of a book, The Death and Life of Great American Cities. Almost fifty years later, Jane Jacobs’ book is still one of the most celebrated and important volumes on urban planning.

“Yesterday, May 4th, was Jane Jacobs’ birthday. Today we are celebrating two individuals who follow the Jacobsean priniciple of upholding the needs of living communities in the urban, built environment,” said Judith Rodin, President of the Rockefeller Foundation. “And as we approach Mother’s Day, I’m reminded that Robert Moses dismissed Jane Jacobs and her fellow protesters of the Lower Manhattan Expressway as ‘nobody but a bunch of mothers.’ With Peggy Shepard and Alexie Torres-Fleming we have two more mothers and extraordinary citizens who, like Jane, are bold activists who have successfully taken their principles to the streets.”

Rockefeller Foundation Jane Jacobs Medal for Lifetime Leadership

Peggy ShepardPeggy Shepard, 61, is the executive director and co-founder of West Harlem Environmental Action, Inc. (WE ACT). WE ACT has been a leader in the effort to publicize and combat the historic practice of locating environmentally harmful facilities in working-class communities of color.

When Shepard co-founded WE ACT in 1988, in a classic Jane Jacobs strategy, she organized her neighborhood, the residents of Harlem, to demand a commitment from the City to repair the North River Sewage Treatment Plant, a site that had been emitting noxious pollutants. WE ACT won a $1.1 Million settlement of its lawsuit against the City, as well as a monitoring role with the Natural Resources Defense Council in the enforcement of the city-state consent agreement on a plan to fix the North River plant. Under Shepard’s direction, WE ACT also led a program to map and document the rate of air pollutants and asthma in Harlem and used this research to push the MTA to adopt system-wide diesel retrofit technology and the early use of cleaner fuels to achieve what is one of the cleanest bus fleets in the nation.

Peggy Shepard has been at the forefront of the environmental justice movement for more than twenty years. Her pioneering work has been recognized as a model for communities around the country. From January 2001 to2003, Ms Shepard served as the first female chair of the National Environmental Justice Advisory Council to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency;she currently serves as the co-chair of the Northeast Environmental Justice Network.

Rockefeller Foundation Jane Jacobs Medal for New Ideas and Activism

Alexie Torres-Fleming, 43, is the founder of Youth Ministries for Peace and Justice (YMPJ) in the South Bronx. In addition, she is the co-founder of the Southern Bronx River Watershed Alliance, a coalition of local groups that is “confronting the legacy of Robert Moses” by campaigning to replace the Sheridan Expressway with affordable housing and green spaces.

Torres-Fleming’s work exemplifies Jacobsean principles--generating creative use of the urban environment and providing neighborhood leadership to solve common problems. Her leadership in her community dates back to 1992, when she helped lead a march to protest the drug-dealing and violence plaguing the South Bronx neighborhood where she grew up. The drug dealers retaliated by burning down her parish church, a building that she and the protestors had been using as their headquarters. This attack, far from discouraging Torres-Fleming, emboldened her to become even more involved in her old neighborhood. She moved back to the South Bronx from Manhattan and founded YMPJ, a faith-based, community development organization that aims to empower local youth. Using education and community development, YMPJ has helped a generation of Bronx children discover that through advocacy, community organizing, journalism, environmentalism, and the arts, they can play an active role in shaping and improving their neighborhood. This fall, the group will open “Concrete Plant Park” on the site of an abandoned concrete plant on the Bronx River.

Alexie lives in the South Bronx with her husband and two children, a few blocks from the housing project where she grew up. Alexie remembers watching the burning of the Bronx from her bedroom window as a young girl. Thanks in part to her work, Alexie’s neighbors now have a view of a healthier and greener neighborhood.


The Rockefeller Foundation 2008 Jane Jacobs Medal Jury

The selection of the Jane Jacobs Medalists and allocation of the prize money was decided by the members of the Jane Jacobs Medal Selection Jury. The Jury is co-chaired by George Campbell Jr., president of The Cooper Union, and Agnes Gund, president emerita of the Museum of Modern Art, and includes Rockefeller Foundation trustee David Rockefeller, Jr. The complete list of jurors follows:
  • Bill Aguado
    Executive Director, Bronx Council on the Arts

  • Sayu Bhojwani
    Philanthropic Consultant to the Carnegie Corporation and
    former Commissioner of Immigrant Affairs for NYC

  • George Campbell, Jr. (Co-Chair)
    President, The Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art

  • W. Paul Farmer
    Executive Director and CEO, American Planning Association

  • Tom Finkelpearl
    Executive Director, Queens Museum of Art

  • Paul Goldberger
    Architecture Critic, The New Yorker
    Joseph Urban Professor of Design, The New School, New York

  • Agnes Gund (Co-Chair)
    President Emerita, The Museum of Modern Art

  • Christopher Kui
    Executive Director, Asian Americans for Equality (AAFE)

  • David Rockefeller, Jr.
    Director and former Chair, Rockefeller & Co., Inc.
    Trustee of The Museum of Modern Art & The Rockefeller Foundation

  • Marilyn J. Taylor
    Partner-in-Charge of Urban Design and Planning, Skidmore, Owings and Merrill

  • Alberto Vourvoulias-Bush
    Executive Editor of El Diario/La Prensa

Jane Jacobs and the Future of New York

The 2008 Jane Jacobs Medal is administered by the Municipal Art Society (MAS).

In 2007, the Rockefeller Foundation and the MAS partnered to mount an exhibit and program series entitled “Jane Jacobs and the Future of New York.” This year, through a grant from the Rockefeller Foundation, the MAS will continue to explore New York City through a Jacobsean lens in a series of walking tours in the spring and fall. The spring tours will include:
Saturday, May 17, 11:00 a.m.: Cities Are For People: Midtown with Matt Postal

Sunday, May 25, 2:00 p.m.: Brooklyn Heights: America’s First Suburb with Francis Morrone
Sunday, June 1, 2:00 p.m.: Unslumming, Urban Renewal, Gentrification: The Fates of the Lower East Side with Francis Morrone
Sunday, June 8, 11:00 a.m.: Lincoln Center Revisited with Matt Postal
Sunday, June 29, 2:00 p.m.: Forest Hills: Garden City in the City with Francis Morrone



In addition, the MAS will organize public symposia in the fall that will explore pressing issues, such as the integration of large-scale developments that are being proposed for the city today.

The Municipal Art Society of New York is a private, non-profit membership organization whose mission is to promote a more livable city. Since 1893, the MAS has worked to enrich the culture, neighborhoods and physical design of New York City. It advocates for excellence in urban design and planning, contemporary architecture, historic preservation and public art. Visit http://www.mas.org for more information on tours and programs.
The Rockefeller Foundation was established in 1913 by John D. Rockefeller, Sr., to "promote the well-being” of humanity by addressing the root causes of serious problems. The Foundation supports work around the world to expand opportunities for poor or vulnerable people and to help ensure that globalization’s benefits are more widely shared. With assets of nearly $4 billion, it is one of the few institutions to conduct such work both within the United States and internationally.

Tags for this entry:
jane jacobs, medal, activism
28 Leading International Design Galleries are set to Participate in Design Miami/ Basel 2008
Posted: Tuesday, May 06, 2008
Twenty-one Returning and Seven New Galleries Will Represent the Extraordinary Scope of Historic and Contemporary Design at Design Miami/ Basel - Basel, Switzerland / June 2 – 5, 2008

Miami, FL and Basel, Switzerland – Design Miami/ Basel, the premier global forum for collecting, exhibiting, discussing and creating limited-edition design, unites 28 of the world’s most illustrious design galleries to present the broadest scope of significant furniture and objects in the show’s three-year history. Each participating gallery has been chosen for its commitment to presenting highly curated exhibitions of historical and contemporary collectible design from an international roster of designers spanning six continents. Promising to draw an impressive audience of international collectors, critics, curators, designers and enthusiasts, the show will take place at the Markthalle, Viaduktstrasse 10, Basel, Switzerland and will be open to the public June 3-5, 2008 from 11:00am – 7:00pm. A Press Preview will take place on Tuesday, June 2 at 12:00pm.

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Each gallery presented at Design Miami/ Basel deals in the most sought after design objects that blur the boundaries of art, architecture and design. The galleries will present works in a wide variety of materials, including ceramics, glass, concrete, bronze and polymer, created using a diversity of techniques from rapid prototyping to traditional Danish cabinetmaking. Visitors to the show will see the most eclectic collection of vanguard installations the design world has to offer.

Seven galleries will make their Design Miami/ debut this June, each adding a distinctive curatorial voice to the program. First time participants include: Carpenters Workshop Gallery (London); Galerie Eric Philippe (Paris); Galerie Dewindt (Brussels); Perimeter Editions (Paris); Galerie Pierre Marie Giraud (Brussels); VIVID Gallery (Rotterdam); and Yoshii Gallery (New York).

Carpenters Workshop Gallery aims to bring a new perspective to Design Miami/ Basel by focusing solely on cutting-edge design-art from the likes of Jurgen Bey, Atelier Van Lieshout and Pablo Reinoso. Specializing in contemporary ceramic, glass and objets d’art, Galerie Pierre Marie Giraud will bring unique, museum-quality pieces from European, American and Japanese artists.

VIVID Gallery has a strong relationship with the current generation of innovative Dutch designers, such as Hella Jongerius, Jurgen Bey, Richard Hutten, Wieki Somers, Studio Job, and Ineke Hans, and will bring a selection of their most recent work to Design Miami/ Basel.

Yoshii Gallery is committed to exploring the relationship between modern masters and oriental antiques, with an emphasis on work that merges the historical and the contemporary. Exemplifying this commitment, Yoshii Gallery will exhibit the distinctive white porcelain vessels of artist Taizo Kuroda, presented in a unique booth designed by Pritzker Prize-winning architect Tadao Ando.

Galerie Eric Philippe is dedicated to European and North American handcrafted furniture from the 1920s to the 1980s and will bring rare pieces by Jean Royère, Isamu Noguchi, Preben Fabricius, Frank Lloyd Wright, and George Nakashima.

Galerie Dewindt represents modernist and constructivist artists/designers of the 1920s. For Design Miami/ Basel, the gallery will show French designer Matali Crasset’s new limited-edition pieces alongside works by Andrea Branzi and Gerrit Rietveld in an environment inspired by Nana Ditzel.

Perimeter Editions produces and promotes furniture and objects with a uniquely humanist angle, working closely with living designers of different generations—Janette Laverrière to Fíel dos Santos—to present sophisticated objects that reveal the philosopher and the artist in the designer.

Design Miami/ Basel’s returning 21 galleries exemplify, in the words of the dynamic Pearl Lam, “creativity in all forms.” Under Lam’s direction, Shanghai-based Contrasts Gallery will be returning for a third year with a collection of highly conceptual pieces by Studio Makkin & Bey, Maarten Baas and Shao Fan that are as narratively rich as they are aesthetically striking.

New York design scene veteran Murray Moss is bringing Moss Gallery to Basel for the first time. The gallery will present Studio Job’s Homework, a collection of domestic totems and tableaux consisting of common household objects magnified to heroic proportions then rendered in polished bronze and placed on aged wooden pedestals.

Specializing in 20th-century furniture and architecture, Galerie Patrick Seguin (Paris) will exhibit an exceptional selection of works by Jean Prouvé, Charlotte Perriand, Le Corbusier, Pierre Jeanneret and Jean Royère, as well as light-fixtures by Serge Mouille, ceramics by Georges Jouve, and hand-carved furniture and objets by Alexandre Noll.

Los Angeles’ Reform Gallery is the first California-based gallery to participate in Design Miami/ Basel. After debuting in December 2007 at Design Miami/, Reform will bring its distinctive roster of the best of handcrafted California Modern design to Switzerland. On view will be landmark works by J.B. Blunk, Sam Maloof and Federico Armijo, among others. Blunk’s seminal Arch 1 (1975) will return to Basel for the first time since it was exhibited there at Galerie Schreiner in 1978.

HSBC Private Bank is the Principal Sponsor of both 2008 Design Miami/ shows (Basel and Miami). The bank’s dedication to the exploration of innovative international design is an example of the bank’s “Assume Nothing” philosophy.

Audi AG is the exclusive automotive sponsor for the 2008 Design Miami/ shows.

About Design Miami/
Design Miami/ is the most prominent and substantive forum for international design, representing a convergence of commerce and culture. Its annual shows in Basel, Switzerland (June) and Miami, USA (December) bring together the most influential designers, collectors, dealers, curators and critics from around the world. For more information, please visit http://www.designmiami.com.

HSBC Private Bank

HSBC Private Bank's partnership with Design Miami/, initiated in December 2006 continues to evolve with each event. It is at the heart of HSBC Private Bank's expanding global commitment to design, which is borne of its dedication to finding new ways of doing things differently.

HSBC Private Bank is the marketing name for the private banking business conducted by the principal private banking subsidiaries of the HSBC Group worldwide. HSBC Private Bank, together with HSBC Guyerzeller and the private banking activities of HSBC Trinkaus & Burkhardt, known collectively as Group Private Banking, provides services to high net worth individuals and their families through 92 locations in some 41 countries and territories in the Americas, the Asia-Pacific region, Europe and the Middle East. At 31 December 2007, profits before tax were US$1,511 million and combined client assets under management were US$494 billion.

HSBC Private Bank draws on the strength of the HSBC Group, one of the world's largest banking and financial services organizations providing a comprehensive range of financial services to 128 million customers. For more information, visit http://www.hsbcprivatebank.com.


AUDI AG
Audi is a global company, rich in tradition and one of the three big German car manufacturers in the premium segment. Audi is active in more than 100 markets worldwide. It produces its cars not only in Germany but also in Hungary, China and Belgium.

The brand with the four rings invests more than € 2 billion each year in order to sustain the company’s technological lead embodied in its "Vorsprung durch Technik" slogan. Audi plans to nearly double the number of models in its range by 2015, from the 25 currently on offer to 40.

Audi is characterized by its special styling and design. Stefan Sielaff, head of design at AUDI AG, focuses on an interaction between tradition, innovation and engineering: "It is our philosophy to create a simple and perfect design - based on our values, to break new ground and create expressive characters, perfect in detail." For more information, visit http://www.audi.com.

Press Contact for The Americas/Asia/Middle East:
Michelle DiLello/Dan Schwartz
Susan Grant Lewin Associates
212-947-4557


High-resolution images available upon request.

Harvard University’s Tanner Fountain Wins 2008 Landmark Award
Posted: Friday, May 02, 2008
'Transformational' Fountain Sparked New Era of Water Feature Design

WASHINGTON, April 29 The American Society of Landscape Architects (ASLA) and the National Trust for Historic Preservation have announced that the Tanner Fountain at Harvard University will receive the 2008 Landmark Award during the ASLA Annual Meeting on October 6 in Philadelphia.


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Photo: Alan Ward

Designed by Peter Walker, FASLA, with The SWA Group, the creation of a fountain without a basin was an innovation that transformed fountain design. Historically, the Tanner Fountain was the first institutional project of the "Landscape as Art" movement, and it continues to prove that landscape architecture is an art, and the landscape architect an artist.


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Photo: Alan Ward

The Landmark Award recognizes a distinguished landscape architecture project completed between 15 and 50 years ago that retains its original design integrity and contributes significantly to the public realm of the community in which it is located. Previous recipients include the Museum of Modern Art in New York City, Golden Gate National Recreation Area near San Francisco, and the Charleston Waterfront Park.


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Photo: Alan Ward

The awards jury called the park "one of the first examples of a landscape architect creating public sculpture....retaining the full power of the original idea. Transformational. It lives in your memory."

More about this project on the ASLA website.


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Photo: Alan Ward

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Photo: Alan Ward

Tags for this entry:
results, fountain, landscape, water, harvard, asla
AIA/COTE Top Ten Green Building Projects of 2008
Posted: Friday, May 02, 2008
Projects showcase excellence in sustainable design principles and reduced energy consumption

Washington, D.C., April 22, 2008 The American Institute of Architects (AIA) and its Committee on the Environment (COTE) have selected the top ten examples of sustainable architecture and green design solutions that protect and enhance the environment. The projects will be honored at the AIA 2008 National Convention and Design Exposition in Boston.

The project descriptions highlight both the design innovations and sustainable strategies, along with the metrics achieved in terms of reduced carbon emissions, reduced energy consumption and improved building functionality.

“These projects were judged against a rigorous set of criteria to determine the best examples of sustainable design concepts and intentions,” said Henry Siegel, FAIA, chair of the AIA Committee on the Environment. “In addition to examining their architectural innovation, the buildings had to have shown design elements within their regional / community context, land use and site ecology that benefits surrounding ecosystems, resource conservation through bioclimatic design and the health benefits associated with improved lighting and indoor air quality.”

The 2008 COTE Top Ten Green Projects program celebrates projects that are the result of a thoroughly integrated approach to architecture, natural systems and technology. They make a positive contribution to their communities, improve comfort for building occupants and reduce environmental impacts through strategies such as reuse of existing structures, connection to transit systems, low-impact and regenerative site development, energy and water conservation, use of sustainable or renewable construction materials, and design that improves indoor air quality.

Siegel added, “All of the projects succeed in all the measures. Some projects demonstrated true innovation in one or more measures, and all of them help illustrate how much farther the design and construction community will need to go in the coming years to reach truly sustainable design.”

Members of the jury include: Glenn Murcutt, Hon. FAIA, Glenn Murcutt Architecture; Jason McLennan, AIA, CEO of the Cascadia Region Green Building Council; Susan T. Rodriguez, FAIA, Polshek Partnership Architects; Gail Brager, PhD, University of California at Berkeley; Marvin Malecha, FAIA, North Carolina State University; and Rebecca Henn, AIA, PhD candidate at the University of Michigan.

The 2008 Top Ten Green Projects (listed in alphabetical order):

Aldo Leopold Legacy Center
The Kubala Washatko Architects, Inc., Cedarburg, WI

Completed in spring, 2007, the 12,000sf building includes office and meeting spaces, interpretive hall, archive and workshop. The Center was envisioned as a small complex of structures organized around a central courtyard. This design provides flexibility in managing energy use based on program requirements, creates outdoor spaces for work and gathering, and reduces the scale of the buildings on site. The Aldo Leopold Legacy Center is the first building recognized by LEED as carbon-neutral in operation.

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Photo credit: Mark F. Heffron

Juror Marvin Malecha said, “Through its demonstrable energy conservation and reduced heating, cooling and operating costs, this is an excellent example of how a building can achieve carbon neutrality.”

Cesar Chavez Library
Line and Space, LLC, Tucson, AZ

In order to protect the outdoor and indoor space from the sun’s radiation, the building uses extensive overhangs to create a ‘hat’ in the desert. The scarcity of water led to roof top rainwater collection for irrigation, while water reducing fixtures are used indoors. Always a concern in the desert, an area of high consumption, the building was carefully cut into the site and the excavated material was used to berm the building for further thermal mass. The windows are also properly shaded to reduce solar gains.

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Photo credit: Bill Timmerman

Juror Susan T. Rodriguez said, “We saw leadership on the part of the city here, given the selection of this site for this building—it’s in a place where it can help solve a problem. There’s a 37,000 square foot roofscape that is a part of irrigating a 40-acre park. We felt this showed strong vision to solve multiple problems at once.”

Discovery Center at South Lake Union
The Miller/Hull Partnership, Seattle, WA

A primary program element for this particular center, alongside numerous other environmental goals, was to create a building and core that could provide adaptable exhibit space, capable of being reconfigured and reused for the presentation of multiple residential neighborhoods throughout the South Lake Union Region over a lengthy period of time. In addition to creating flexible interior space, the building itself was designed to be demountable, separating at three integrated joints to break into four separate modules capable of being transported along surface streets.

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Photo credit: Lara Swimmer Photography

Juror Jason McLennan said, “I really like the notion of saying, ‘This building type was supposed to be temporary, and we are going to reject that in favor of disassembly.’ This is sustainable at the elemental level.”

Pocono Environmental Education Center
Bohlin Cywinski Jackson, Wilkes-Barre, PA

The building is designed to reinforce the mission of environmental stewardship and education. Through careful site and materials selection, analysis and design of building systems, the structure outwardly expresses the principles of sustainable design. The building is a flexible, multi-purpose gathering space for dining, meetings, lectures and other environmental learning activities. As part of the site design, native grasses were planted to provide a landscape that is low maintenance and integrates the project into its natural surroundings.

Rodriguez added, “This is a dramatic transformation of a site by using the materials removed from its cleanup, to create the exterior envelope, which is exciting to see. The use of the recycled tires and the texture they produce are inventive.”

Garthwaite Center for Science and Art, Cambridge School of Weston
Architerra, Inc., Boston, MA

The facility is designed to advance sustainability, creating an exemplar and educational tool through a design process that engaged the entire community. This LEED Platinum design incorporates dozens of green features that students can view as well as measure and manipulate. The result is a compelling model for educational institutions. Fifty-five detailed sustainability goals included renewable energy, no water to be discharged to the local sewer, 100% storm water infiltration on-site, artificial lighting designed to less than one watt per square foot and minimal maintenance for 20 years.

Juror Rebecca Henn said, “There is a lot of education here; this is a true teaching tool. The students participated in the design of the building. They treat all their wastewater, and these strategies are integrated into the pedagogy. There are only three small spaces that are conditioned in this building; all other spaces are naturally ventilated.”

Lavin-Bernick Center for University Life
VJAA, Minneapolis, MN

The existing building was stripped to the concrete frame, expanded by 33% and redesigned with a variety of environmental systems. The hot and humid New Orleans climate is further tempered with strategies for expanding the comfort zone; including programming for thermal zoning, and technically innovative systems for variable shading, moving air and radiant cooling. Despite its high ambitions, the project had a modest budget and was completed for $189/SF, fourteen months after Hurricane Katrina. Since then, Tulane sees the project as a new model for sustainable design in New Orleans.

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Photo credit: Paul Crosby

Juror Glenn Murcott said, “One intriguing feature of this project was that it has a Punkah, a traditional Indian system to move air.”

Macallen Building Condominiums
Office dA Inc. and Burt Hill Inc., Boston, MA

The 140-unit condominium is a conscious and deliberate effort by both client/developer and the architectural and engineering team to incorporate sustainable design measures. It utilizes green design as a way of marketing a lifestyle and concern for the environment, while simultaneously increasing revenue from the design project as a business strategy. The building, just completed in South Boston, is striving for LEED Gold certification in sustainable design. Some of the green building features include innovative technologies that will save over 600,000 gallons of water annually while consuming 30% less electricity than a conventional building.

Malecha added, “This project was built on an environmentally challenged site that was previously unused space. So not only does in enhance the environment, but it provides valuable inner city housing and shows a certain amount of urban savvy.”

Queens Botanical Garden Visitor & Administration Center
BKSK Architects, New York, NY

In looking to the future, the Garden has propelled itself into the front ranks of its field as the first botanical garden in the country devoted to sustainable environmental stewardship. The goal has been to integrate a beautiful contemporary building into the experience of its varied gardens and landscapes, heightening the visitor experience of the natural environment and conveying the key elements of successful sustainability. A water channel surrounds the building and weaves through the garden, fed by rainwater that cascades off of the sheltering roof canopy.

Juror Gail Brager said, “I especially appreciated the focus on water—which is a critical and often overlooked aspect of sustainable design. In addition to the project’s significant attention to storm water management, rainwater collection, and a graywater system, water was also used as a strong design element to unify the building and landscape, and raise people’s awareness of the water cycle at the site and building scale.”

The Nueva School, Hillside Learning Complex
Leddy Maytum Stacy Architects, San Francisco, CA

The 33-acre campus, located in the semi-rural coastal hills of the San Francisco Peninsula, features a thriving coast live oak woodland ecosystem, a variety of dispersed structures and dramatic views of San Francisco Bay. The design is grounded in the desire to integrate straightforward, appropriate and cost-effective sustainable design solutions within the broader language of contemporary architectural expression. Through a variety of simple, observable systems and strategies, reduce site energy use by at least 65% from the national average for schools and meet the 2030 Challenge.

McLennan added, “This seemed to be a very successful project. They did a good job of balancing design and performance; they had particularly notable energy and water metrics.”

Yale University Sculpture Building and Gallery
KieranTimberlake Associates LLP, Philadelphia, PA

Situated on a former brownfield site, the new complex is comprised of three new buildings. To provide maximum daylight and exceptional energy efficiency, a wall system was designed that incorporates solar shading, a triple glazed low-e vision panel, 8-foot high operable windows and a translucent double cavity spandrel panel. Consequently, the entire skin of the building admits natural light. The green roof on the gallery and native plant landscaping, which includes mature trees, serves as a connective habitat patch for avian species moving through the urban corridor between these parks.

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Photo credit: Peter Aaron, Esto

Brager added, “The high-performance façade is impressive in the way it balances warm and cold season operation, integrating shading and alternating panels of operable windows, aerogel insulation, and ventilation aperatures in a double-skin thermal cavity.”

Honorable Mention 2008 Top Ten Green Project:

Internal Revenue Service - Kansas City Service Center
BNIM / 360 Inc., Kansas City, MO

Natural light and open views of the surrounding urban fabric were salient sustainable design features for this project. Through architectural techniques, including clerestories, skylights, atrium, and building orientation, an unprecedented 80 percent of workspaces are served by natural light. Internal courtyards provide views of vegetated environments that also serve as workday respites. From inside the IRS processing Center one gets a sense of being part of a bigger whole; one that represents equilibrium between nature and the build environment, public and private, community and government.


About the AIA Committee on the Environment Top Ten Green Awards
The AIA’s Committee on the Environment represents more than 8,700 AIA members committed to making sustainable or “green” design integral to the practice of architecture. The AIA/COTE Top Ten Green Project Awards initiative was developed by the AIA in partnership with the U.S. Department of Energy and BuildingGreen.com, publishers of Environmental Building News magazine. In 2003 The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's ENERGY STAR® Program joined as an additional sponsor.

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sustainable, aia, results, green
Next Generation Competition Winner Announced
Posted: Friday, May 02, 2008
Architect and Professor Eric Olsen Wins 2008 Metropolis Next Generation® Design Prize

San Francisco, May 2, 2008 A Bay Area architect and professor at the California College of Arts has been chosen as this year's winner of the prestigious Metropolis Next Generation® Design Prize.


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Next Generation® Design Prize winner Eric Olsen (Image: Amy MacWilliamson)


The winner, Eric Olsen, was honored by the architecture and design community at a gala awards celebration last night at the BATH+BEYOND showroom in San Francisco. The event was cohosted by competition sponsors Duravit and Geberit. Herman Miller, Inc., Maharam, and Sherwin-Williams also sponsored the competition. Olsen was presented with the $10,000 Next Generation® prize for his innovative design of an easy-to-carry device for transporting and purifying water.


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Image: Eric Olsen


Olsen's design is a Solar Water Disinfecting Tarpaulin, a flexible, adaptable vessel that can be easily filled with water and carried home, where it works to make the water potable. The pleated tarpaulin-constructed from laser-cut clear low-density polyethylene (LDPE) and dark rubberized nylon-is designed to hold up to 20 liters of water and can be rolled into a bundle or worn as a shawl-like kanga for carrying. It can be laid across a rooftop, spread on the ground or hung vertically to allow ultraviolet radiation from the sun to disinfect the water inside. This World Health Organization-approved purification method takes only five hours in hot climates. The tarpaulin is designed for use in a wide variety of settings, from urban disaster sites to remote third-world villages. Ten additional Next Generation proposals were also honored as runners-up at the awards event. (See below for details.)


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Image: Eric Olsen


"This year's winner and the very noteworthy runners-up once again confirm our belief in young designers' ability to address complex social, cultural and environmental issues with enthusiasm and a high level of creativity," said Metropolis publisher Horace Havemeyer III. "I'm also proud of them for submitting clear-headed business plans," adds Havemeyer, noting that the "competition is unique among design competitions in that it asks for entrants to submit a business plan."

"It is clear to us that the next generation of designers cares deeply about our natural resources," says Metropolis editor in chief Susan S. Szenasy. "Their inventive proposals were focused on water, an endangered resource worldwide, and serve to create a dialogue around a crucial topic. Designers, they're saying, have useful answers to offer a thirsty world."

The judges for the 2008 Next Generation Design Competition were Lance Hosey, director at William McDonough + Partners; Eric Chan, president of ECCO Design Inc.; Fiona Cousins, principal and mechanical engineer at Arup; and Pam Light, senior vice president at HOK. Szenasy moderated the deliberations.

Created by Metropolis magazine, the annual Next Generation Design Competition, now in its fifth year, recognizes outstanding ideas from young architects and designers for making our built environment better, safer and more sustainable. This year, entrants were asked to submit proposals relating to water.


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Image: Eric Olsen


2008 Next Generation Design Prize Runners-Up:

Andrea Brivio, Davide Conti and Fabio Galli (Italy): "S_M_L," a housing project designed for the city of Melaka, Malaysia, that harnesses the power of the region's daily rainfall and uses it to produce electricity and replenish gray water systems

Yuichi Watanabe, Katz Miyahara and Yoshi Ogawa (Seattle): "Polarfloat," large floating structures in the Arctic Ocean that provide places for polar bears to land as the ice melts

Joseph Cory and Eyal Malka (Israel): "WatAir," a simple unit with an integrated infrastructure for collecting dew and rainwater

Paul Giacomantonio, Vera Templeman, William Sorich and Kat Taylor (Pescadero, CA): "The Sun Curve," a self-sustaining aquaponic food growing system, powered by solar and wind energy

Charles Lee (San Francisco): "Pacific Coast Interpretive Center for Ocean Health," living systems that recycle gray water and runoff by filtering wetlands, cooling the gray water with ocean water and producing energy with tidal generators

Lars Mayer (Germany): "Sustainable Water," a surface water purification solution that is suited to the needs of developing countries and based on natural processes, using the seeds of the moringa tree

Robyn Perkins (Boston): "emergeMUMBAI," a method of rainwater harvesting that is used as a spatial backbone, a flood mitigation tool, and a water source for redeveloping public housing lands in Mumbai, India

Gerald Lindner, Jeroen Tacx, Beate Lendt, Peter Heidman, and Martin Oostenrijk (Netherlands) "Water Harvester," a double-tubed solar water distiller that is made of polyethylene film and uses a solar-powered water desalinator to make fresh water from polluted or salt water

Renata Fenton and Enrique Lomnitz (Mexico): "Isla Urbana," small, modular, inexpensive and expandable rainwater harvesting systems that can be affordably purchased by the low-income households in Mexico City most affected by the rapidly increasing water shortages

Thomas Kosbau and Tyson Gillard (New York): "Vena: Water Courses from Air," a biomimetic low-cost, low-energy solution for people in climates that lack consistent rainfall or clean ground sources to harvest vast amounts of drinking water from the atmosphere

Tags for this entry:
design, results, competitions, water, metropolis, africa
Situated Technologies RFQ
Posted: Thursday, May 01, 2008
Request for Qualifications
Situated Technologies: Toward the Sentient City

An exhibition critically exploring the evolving relationship between ubiquitous/pervasive computing and urban architecture

SUBMISSION DEADLINE: June 27, 2008

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The Architectural League of New York invites architects, artists, designers, technologists,engineers, urbanists, or teams thereof, to submit qualifications for an exhibition that will critically explore the evolving relationship between ubiquitous/pervasive computing and urban architecture. The League will commission five to seven teams to develop urban interventions–to be installed in and around New York City in spring 2009–that will imagine alternative trajectories for how various mobile, embedded, networked, and distributed forms of media, information and communication systems might inform the architecture of urban space and/or influence our behavior within it. Commissioned projects will receive support ranging from $5,000 to $25,000.

The exhibition continues the League’s commitment to supporting original research into the implications of ubiquitous/pervasive computing for architecture and urbanism. In fall2006, the League, along with the Center for Virtual Architecture and the Institute for Distributed Creativity [iDC], presented “Architecture and Situated Technologies,” a 3-day symposium organized by Omar Khan, Trebor Scholz, and Mark Shepard, that brought together researchers and practitioners from art, architecture, technology and sociology to explore the emerging role of Situated Technologies in the design and inhabitation of the contemporary city. The project continued in winter 2007 with the publication “Urban Computing and Its Discontents,” the first of nine pamphlets to be published over the next three years that explores how our experience of the city and the choices we make in it are affected by mobile communications, pervasive media, ambient informatics and other Situated Technologies.

http://www.situatedtechnologies.net/

Tags for this entry:
competitions, rfq
2008-09 Rome Prize Winners
Posted: Monday, April 28, 2008
This year's winners of the Rome Prize, for Architecture, include MATTHEW HURAL (Arnold W. Brunner Rome Prize) and URSULA EMERY McCLURE & MICHAEL A. McCLURE (Gorham P. Stevens Rome Prize)...

Arnold W. Brunner Rome Prize
MATTHEW HURAL
Lecturer, Department of Architecture, University of Virginia
Designer, Nelson Byrd Woltz Landscape Architects
Between Inside and Out. Aurelian Gates

Using the circumlocution of the walk, the axial view of the perspective, the interconnected meanings of the fragment, and the techniques of hybrid drawing and the collage, this project seeks to define a construction that builds upon the cleared spaces and extant constructions at the former locations of the Aurelian gates. By understanding the wall as a circumambulatory founding of a city through drawing, and the gates as the pivot points for a series of topographical transects, I will investigate the contingent place wherein both external and internal begin. At the end of my stay, interventions within the city, viewing apparatuses that celebrate the conditional awareness of both nomad and urban dweller, will be designed and implemented as an exhibit.


Gorham P. Stevens Rome Prize
URSULA EMERY McCLURE & MICHAEL A. McCLURE
Principals, emerymcclure architecture
Terra Viscus: Hybrid Tectonic Precedent.
For 8 years we have been research practicing in Southern Louisiana, an environment we define as the terra viscus. The terra viscus is a super-saturated condition, never completely solid or liquid. It consists of geological, economical, cultural, and ecological conditions that interweave and overlap. This physical description of our present site also serves as our analytical methodology. The terra viscus condition allows us to vivify, to analyze, and to create relevant building strategies in the phenomenal identity that is Southern Louisiana. Ancient Rome’s ability to focus on communicative tectonics over pragmatic safety offers unique counter-lessons to the Gulf Coast’s current fixation of solely pragmatic solutions.We propose to apply the analytical methodology of terra viscus to Rome focusing on its hydro-tectonic development. The end product will be a pamphlet of graphic, written, and design proposal studies: a continuation and (post) precedent study for our existing research, terra viscus.

http://www.aarome.org/

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Other winners include...

DESIGN

Cynthia Hazen Polsky and Leon Polsky Rome Prize
ROBERT HAMMOND
Co-Founder & President, Friends of the Highline
Designing the TiberI propose to address the rehabilitation of the Tiber riverfront by instigating a dynamic urban design process. In many ways this will be a continuation of and companion piece to my work on the High Line in New York City over the past decade. I propose to foster the same multi-disciplinary involvement by the Roman community as I did in New York. The goal of this project is not to produce a final plan for the riverfront, but to achieve a heightened sense of creative activity, awareness and enthusiasm and provide realistic options for the transformation of forgotten spaces through design.

Katherine Edwards Gordon Rome Prize
CATHY LANG HO
Independent Writer and Editor
Broadband Architecture: A study of how new media outlets are challenging the authority of print publicationsDesign websites are proliferating, challenging the authority of print publications and diversifying the coverage of the design fields. Like the independent little magazines of the 1960s and 1970s that so enlivened architectural discourse, many of today’s web ‘zines and blogs offer immediate and impassioned perspectives that are engaging new categories of readers. But while the Internet is expanding the conversation about architecture and design, the questions remains, is it improving it? I propose to study how new media architecture “channels” are shaping the way the design fields are communicated and understood.


HISTORIC PRESERVATION AND CONSERVATION

National Endowment for the Arts Rome Prize
ANDREW J. KRANIS
Decor Project Manager, Whole Foods Market
Green Piazza: Community Ecology in the CityWhat if the piazze and civic spaces of Rome– the “white space” of Nolli’s Pianta Grande – were also the very source of the community’s fresh water, the sites where its waste was turned to nourishment for plants and trees, and the silent generator of its electrical power? Sharing resources for water, energy, and even food production at the local level was the basis upon which pre-imperial Rome was formed; it may also be the most intelligent means of developing and preserving the city without placing undue strain on its centuries-old infrastructure. I will re-imagine the Roman piazza and water fountain as the poetic and functional heart of an “off-the-grid” neighborhood, using green design to express a sense of community, both local and global. Rome’s open spaces have always celebrated the complex, unpredictable choreography of urban life – they may attain still deeper meaning as the loci of sustainable, decentralized community ecosystems.

Booth Family Rome Prize
ROSA LOWINGER
Conservator of Sculpture and Architecture, Los Angeles, CA
Art Vandalism: A Comprehensive Study of its Causes and Effects, With an Emphasis on Conservation of Contemporary Public ArtMy proposal for the Rome Prize is to examine the causes and effects of art vandalism from a number of different perspectives—historical, sociological, political, and technical— in order to create a theoretical model that would inform the conservation of contemporary public art.


LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE

Prince Charitable Trusts Rome Prize
CHRIS COUNTS
Senior Associate, Michael Van Valkenburgh Associates Inc., Landscape Architects
Painting and Drawing as a Means to Study the Spatial Registration, Appropriated Use, and Movement of Masterpieces of the Italian Urban LandscapeI propose to study Italian urban landscape masterpieces through drawing and painting. These studies will explore basic principles of composition, scale, and proportion with a particular emphasis on the spatiality of landscape, movement, and experience. As ordinary as this might seem to some, it remains the essence of what landscape architects do, whether in the year 2010 or 1650. Despite my own accomplishments with digital representation, I remain fundamentally interested in timeless questions, such as: What are the effects of movement and use on landscape spatiality and how does the form and material of interstitial space influence experience and social behavior? My work would focus on traditional en plein aire drawings that would be expanded within studio and would include works on paper and canvas created through various media.

Garden Club of America Rome Prize
HOPE H. HASBROUCK
Assistant Professor, School of Architecture, The University of Texas at Austin

Interpreting Cultural Territories Through Prospect and PassageThis study seeks to inventory the devices of interpretation for the reading of cultural sites and territories. In making this inventory I intend to reveal the form making and management criteria that determine the assembly of prospect and passage in archeological sites and their cultural landscapes, as that assembly relates to the fostering of historical imagination and the experience of place. My interpretative inventory will focus on about four large cultural-archeological sites within the urban, middle, and rural landscapes surrounding Rome. It is Rome’s enumerable historic strata in which multiple periods of occupation are revealed and interpreted through scholarship that make Rome ideal for this investigation. It is through the lens of design practice that the inventory—and all the prospects and passages in the sites -- at a range of scales from site-based material to urban design and regional planning, will target the devices of design that affect the individual or private spatial experience.


LITERATURE

John Guare Writer’s Fund Rome Prize, a gift of Dorothy and Lewis B. Cullman
BRAD  KESSLER
Writer
Editing The Goat Diaries and starting a new novelOne of the themes in this new book is the ancient tradition of the transhumance--walking animals to high pasture in the summer and back to low lands in winter. As it happens, transhumance--transumanza--is still widely practiced in the Apennines and the Italian Alps. Being in Rome would offer me the wonderful possibility of reseaching Italy's transhumance and its attendant "shepherd's roads." My Goat Diaries draws inspiration from the pastoral poem, which also happens to have its birth in Italy: first with Theocrititus' Sicilian shepherds and later with Virgil's Eclogues. All these confluences greatly excite me. This year in Rome will give me time to complete The Goat Diaries and possibly start work on a series of novellas.

Joseph Brodsky Rome Prize, a gift of the Drue Heinz Trust/American Academy of Arts and Letters
DANA SPIOTTA
Writer
Unnamed NovelI don't work at a university, so i don't interact much with people from other disciplines. This year at the Academy in Rome will be an exciting opportunity to broaden my interests and writerly obsessions. I am a research-intensive fiction writer; the resources of the Academy will not be lost on me. I will be a full participant in the life of the Academy. Leaving the United States for a time will be great for my writing at this point in my life. I am well into my third novel. I know how to work. i need to keep pushing hard against the familiar and the easy. Every writer needs what James Joyce described as "silence, exile, and cunning". As a writer with (so far) distinctly American subjects, exile will serve me well, allowing me some distance at which to contemplate the culture that has preoccupied my work. My writing will also benefit from the personal distance the Academy would offer. I will be able to concentrate more deeply on my novel. This year in Rome will give me both community and exile--a unique and wonderful situation for me.


MUSICAL COMPOSITION

Luciano Berio Rome Prize
KEERIL MAKAN        
Assistant Professor of Music, Music and Theater Arts Section, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Three new works: Hover for electric guitar and orchestra; a trio for flute, viola, and harp; and Tracker, a chamber operaThe work that I propose to create while at the American Academy in Rome will be a large-scale chamber opera. This work questions the assumption that if systems of nature can be technologically replicated the result will be positive universal progress, independent of the cultural and political climate in which the technology was conceived. The unexpected impact (both positive and negative) of technology's actual relationship to contemporary society is the focus of this work.

Elliott Carter Rome Prize
KURT ROHDE
Assistant Professor, Composition/Theory, Department of Music, University of California, Davis
Co-director, The Empyrean Ensemble
Artistic Director, The Left Coast Chamber Ensemble
Composition of Two New Works: A Violin Concertino for violinist Axel Strauss, and a puppet opera entitled “A Shadow Opera”
During my time at the American Academy in Rome, I plan to compose two new works:
1. A Violin Concertino for violinist Axel Strauss.
2. A puppet opera entitled A Shadow Opera for Adorno Ensemble, with librettist Robert Glick, choreographer Alison Salzinger, bass clarinetist Laura Carmichael, and percussionist Chris Froh.


VISUAL ARTS

John Armstrong Chaloner/Jacob H. Lazarus-Metropolitan Museum of Art Rome Prize
HISHAM M. BIZRI
Filmmaker and Assistant Professor of Film, Department of Cultural Studies and Comparative Literature, University of Minnesota
Screenplay: The Last Day of Summer
Cairo Psalm is the story of one man’s obsessive pursuit of his alienated wife and his equally passionate search for a son he once, but only briefly, knew. On another level, Cairo Psalm dramatizes, in a single day, the contemporary Cairene experience of exile within Cairo itself. The drama unfolds when Yusuf, a young Muslim actor, leaves his lodgings after a confrontation with his two roommates. Yusuf dreams of ancient Egypt as his ships sinks leaving him alone. Yacoub, the main protagonist, a former Roman Jew, now a Copt who has seen his riches decline, is like Yusuf, forced to leave his house, having learned that his wife Hélène, a famous opera singer, plans to bring another man into their bed later that day.

Yacoub and Yusuf undergo many trails and tribulations on that day before they return home together to their own actively re-interpreted reality, most triumphant in a climatic scene in which the wife accepts and affirms who she is as a woman. The lost and captive city is allegorically redeemed through the power of her love.

Harold M. English Rome Prize
DAVID HUMPHREY
Artist and Instructor, School of Art, Yale University
Blind HandshakeI am interested in the way modes of depiction bear the idiosyncratic marks of historic circumstance and individual sensibility while performing their picture labors. My enthusiasms range from Roman and early Christian mosaics to Renaissance painting and Italian art of the nineteen twenties and thirties. My paintings and sculpture usually respond to what I call the rhetorical solicitations of a source, whereby my work acts out a skewed response to what I imagine the work “wants”. I plan to make new artworks developed from observational drawings of selected historic artworks in Rome. I will also be finishing a book I’m doing with Periscope Publishing called Blind Handshake, which is an attempt to flush out, from both sides of the artist/critic relation, a variety of rhetorical strategies while celebrating those idiosyncratic personal and historic traces.

Joseph H. Hazen Rome Prize
MARIE LORENZ
Artist, Brooklyn, NY
Tiber River NavigationI want to make a series of artworks and interventions that focus on the Tiber River in Rome. Throughout the year, I will make drawings and woodblock carvings that explore the history of the river and its relationship to the city. More specifically; how it has transformed the city as a conduit of information, how it endured as a site of ritual and myth, and how it exists now as an ‘edge zone’. I will conclude the project by making a boat and traveling from Rome to the sea.

Abigail Cohen Rome Prize
MATTHEW MONTEITH
Artist/Photographer, Brooklyn, NY
Living City, Living ArtMy interest in the American Academy of Rome derives from the premise that all artists benefit from an awareness of history. Making work at the American Academy would give me a unique opportunity to study art across the disciplines in a manner that would immediately impact my work. My year at the American Academy would be spent making photographs informed by the wealth of art surrounding me in Rome using the backdrop of the American Academy to investigate how institutions have influenced art making over time and how perceptions of art and history shift. I intend to make images of scholars, artists, conservators, institutions and street scenes of daily Roman life alongside tourists coming in direct contact with many of the most influential works of art ever created.


HUMANITIES

ANCIENT STUDIES

Emeline Hill Richardson/Samuel H. Kress Foundation Pre-Doctoral Rome Prize
(year one of a two-year fellowship)
SCOTT CRAVER
McIntire Department of Art, University of Virginia
Patterns of Complexity: An Index and Analysis of Urban Property Investment at PompeiiUsing evidence from the physical remains of the city as well as from excavation archives, scholarly publications, and ancient legal texts, the project, which comprises my doctoral dissertation, is the first to index, quantify, and analyze urban property investment at Pompeii on a city-wide scale. It is simultaneously investigating the related phenomenon of complexity, a term here used to characterize the increasing regularization and interrelatedness in the built environment of Pompeii. The central question under investigation is: Was urban property investment at Pompeii a side-lined, opportunistic endeavor bound-up with subordinate social relationships, or was it a primary, strategic economic concern, and if so, to whom?

Dorothy and Lewis B. Cullman Pre-Doctoral Rome Prize
SUSAN A. CURRY
Department of Classical Studies, Indiana University
Human Identities and Animal Others in the Second Century C.E.Latin and Greek texts, relief sculptures, and mosaics from the 2nd c. CE are rich in images of animals that are both reflections of actual human encounters with non-human animals and projections of what humans thought about animals. My dissertation explores the variety of ways in which human animals in the 2nd c. CE conceptualized non-human animals. When one begins to explore this discourse about animals, questions concerning what it means to be human inevitably emerge. The animal is often the "other" against which human identity is posited. When one assigns another human being to the category of "animal," s/he often places that individual outside the scope of ethical consideration. Ultimately, I hope this dissertation will show that the field of Classical Studies has much to contribute to the history of human/animal relationships and to on-going investigations into how and why we construct boundaries between humans and other animals.

Frances Barker Tracy/Samuel H. Kress Foundation/ Helen M. Woodruff Fellowship of the Archaeological Institute of America Pre-Doctoral Rome Prize
(year two of a two-year fellowship)
JOHN N. N. HOPKINS
Department of Art and Art History, The University of Texas at Austin
The Topographical Transformation of Archaic Rome: A New Interpretation of Architecture and Geography in the Early CityBetween the mid-seventh and early-fifth centuries B.C. Romans created the vast central plain that would become the Forum Romanum; they founded the first roads, drainage systems and most enduring temples in their city’s history; they altered Rome’s very geography and began employing enduring tectonics, effectively setting the foundations and the standard for the city’s subsequent building programs. My project will be to complete my dissertation, in which I assemble archeological and literary evidence for this topographical transformation and consider why at this time Romans wanted and were able to so transform their city.

Andrew Heiskell Post-Doctoral Rome Prize
PATRICIA LARASH
Assistant Professor, Department of Classical Studies, Boston University
Martial's Readers, Rome's AudiencesMy monograph, Martial's Readers, Rome's Audiences, examines Martial's use of figures for audiences in the epigrams. Martial’s abstract concept of the general reader is shaped by concrete topographical and social functions of the city of Rome. While at the Academy, I plan to finish existing chapters on public entertainment, epigrams "in the wild" (e.g., graffiti), Saturnalia, and women readers, especially with a view to topographical context. I also plan to complete a chapter on Martial's use of epitaphs as a model for his reading and the ways in which they suggest strategies to Martial for the challenges facing an author who wants to address an anonymous general public. To do this, I would like to be able to walk among extant monuments, both in situ and in museums, and emulate the experience of the average, anonymous Roman passer-by confronted by tombstones competing for his or her attention.

Arthur Ross Pre-Doctoral Rome Prize
MATTHEW NOTARIAN
Department of Classics, University at Buffalo
Civic Transformation in Early Imperial Latium: An Archaeological and Social History of Praeneste, Tibur and TusculumThis project is a comprehensive account of the development of three urban communities in Latium Vetus, Praeneste (modern Palestrina), Tibur (Tivoli) and Tusculum, between the 2nd century BC and the 2nd century AD. Using a combination of archaeological, historical and epigraphical evidence, I will investigate the continuity and adaptation of communities at the fringe of the Roman suburbium. Examinations of these outer towns have been neglected in consideration of the social and economic system of Rome’s hinterland. This study is innovative because it approaches them collectively as functional communities, considering their social, economic and political qualities, as well as their association with the city of Rome and its suburbium. By examining the relationship between material culture in the towns and their territories and the social history of these communities, this study will demonstrate how suburban civic life survived and adapted to the political and economic system of the imperial era.

National Endowment for the Humanities/Andrew Heiskell Post-Doctoral Rome Prize
HÉRICA VALLADARES
Assistant Professor, Department of Classics, Johns Hopkins University
On Tenderness: The Semantics of Love in Roman Painting and PoetryMy book analyzes representations of tender love in Roman wall painting and Latin poetry between the late first century B.C.E. (ca. 30s B.C.E.) and the mid-first century C.E. (ca. 60s C.E.). More specifically, it investigates depictions of lovers that evoke affection and desire, yet stop short of representing the sexual act. A close study of Latin elegiac poetry of the early Augustan age is central to my analysis of these painted love scenes. Through close consideration of the dialogue between media, I delineate a symbolic vocabulary, or semantics of love, through which Romans imagined, visualized and communicated amorous feeling. In Roman amatory representations, tenderness is both a subject and a mode that inflects images and texts, turning sex into romance. By situating the development of a Roman semantics of love in a broader historical context, I offer new insights into individual works of art and literature and on a much-overlooked facet of early imperial culture.


MEDIEVAL STUDIES

Andrew W. Mellon Foundation Post-Doctoral Rome Prize
CARRIE BENEŠ
Assistant Professor of Medieval and Renaissance History, New College of Florida
SPQR Transformed: Post-Classical Fortunes of a Classical AcronymCompletion of a book manuscript exploring the diverse uses and interpretations of the SPQR acronym in the politics, ideology, and iconography of medieval and early modern Italy (c. 600-1600). In the classical period, SPQR was a conventional abbreviation for the formulaic senatus populusque Romanus, referring to the Roman state; by contrast, its contemporary incarnation as Rome’s municipal coat of arms—gold lettering on scarlet—is chiefly a visual, civic symbol. This shift of both form and meaning took place in the Middle Ages, during which the acronym in various forms was used in turn to support imperial, populist, oligarchic, and papal sovereignties over the city. My project on the post-classical afterlife of one of the world’s most famous acronyms will reveal not only the important role played by Roman history in medieval and early modern culture, but also the dense semiotic webs within which that exchange took place.

Samuel H. Kress Foundation Pre-Doctoral Rome Prize
(year two of a two-year fellowship)
ERIK GUSTAFSON
Institute of Fine Arts, New York University
Tradition and Renewal in the Thirteenth-Century Franciscan Architecture of TuscanyMy project deals with the “origins” of 13th-century Franciscan architecture in Tuscany, looking to two 11th-century Gregorian Reform monastic orders – the Vallombrosans and Camldolese – as spiritual and architectural models. My hypothesis is that the Franciscan movement is a renewal of the earlier Gregorian monastic spiritual ideals, expanding and adjusting the spiritual aims of ‘caring for souls’ and service to the community to fit a new range of devotional and cultural needs. While previous scholarship has seen Franciscan architecture as simplistic, vernacular halls for preaching, I argue that the friars’ churches are better understood as spaces designed to both house and express the devotional practices of the friars and of the laity.

Phyllis G. Gordan/Samuel H. Kress Foundation Pre-Doctoral Rome Prize
(year one of a two-year fellowship)
ANNIE MONTGOMERY LABATT
History of Art, Yale University
In Search of the “Eastern” Image:  Sacred Painting in Eighth and Ninth Century RomeSpecific images and types in medieval Roman imagery express meanings that do not fit into the traditional academic divide between East and West. Some types—such as the Transfiguration, the Deesis, and the Anastasis—appear to stand out amidst Roman imagery as belonging to the so-called “Byzantine” tradition because these forms became notable parts of a canonized Eastern tradition at a later date. But in the eighth and ninth century these forms did not necessarily connote division or difference. Rather, these medieval images reveal inventiveness, experimentation, and hybridity. Some images in Rome called attention to “Greeks” as different, and some images belonged to a more generalizing Roman idiom. By studying the way specific examples of iconographical types functioned in specific Roman churches, this project will be an attempt to clarify what role the East did or did not play in the imagery of early medieval Rome.

National Endowment for the Humanities/Andrew W. Mellon Foundation Post-Doctoral Rome Prize
JOHN PARKER
Associate Professor, Department of English, Macalester College
Drama and the Death of God, or The Gospel of SenecaThis project crosses two related boundaries in the history of theater: the one between classical and Christian culture, the other between late medieval and Renaissance drama. I want to ease both divisions by stressing the common ground between Christianity and Seneca. When Renaissance dramatists claimed to revive antiquity by way of his drama, they did not return to that drama as something opposed or alterior to Christian revelation. The gospels, the liturgy, and the acts of the martyrs (the project's first half will show) had been as much a product of, and meditation on, pagan violence as was his drama. Seneca thus served (the second half will argue) as an ironic preservative of drama's medieval heritage at a moment in England when Protestant forces worked hard to extirpate Catholic "paganism" by suppressing the Latin liturgy and the vernacular plays that took the gospels and saints lives as their chief models.

MODERN ITALIAN STUDIES

Paul Mellon Post-Doctoral Rome Prize
MARGARET FISHER
Video Director and Publisher, Second Evening Art / BMI
Through the eyes of children: a re-assessment of the role of futurism in the development of early Italian Radio under FascismItalian futurists who broadcast and theorized about radio from 1929 to 1941 are often credited with an historic role in shaping the style and character of early Italian Radio. Children's programs offer a stunning view of the progressive agenda of early Italian Radio before futurist involvement with broadcasting, and an excellent vantage point from which to open new lines of inquiry into futurist radio activity and writing. To establish the condition of Italian Radio before the futurists, I will examine Italian Radio's pioneering phase (1925-1928) which partnered children with technology. I will compile a data base of broadcast activities and texts related to both groups, children and futurists, and publish a bi-lingual sourcebook of previously unavailable texts and scripts. With this foundation in place, I will continue with a critical overview and essays on special topics: child protagonists in futurist radio dramas; government policy and futurism; the global vision of early Italian Radio as one prototype for the Internet; and a survey of the embrace of futurism by early Italian Radio to the present day.

Donald and Maria Cox Pre-Doctoral Rome Prize
GREGORY TENTLER
History of Art, University of Pennsylvania
Made in Italy: Piero Manzoni and the Birth of the International Avant-Garde 1954-1963In the nearly half century since his death, the Italian artist Piero Manzoni (1933-1963) has become a key figure in the postwar revival of Marcel Duchamp and one of the principle antecedents of the international movements of Body Art and Conceptual Art. This characterization, however, examines Manzoni’s art only through the concerns of wider tendencies of postwar art and ignores the cultural genesis of his work in Milan and Rome. As a consequence, Manzoni is presented as a fragmented and often contradictory figure. My dissertation seeks to correct this portrayal and situate Manzoni’s work in the context of postwar Italy, rather than solely in a European milieu. Doing so reveals that the artist’s immense contributions to postwar art were equally indebted to his dialog with an Italian tradition of Modernism, which has been neglected in broader surveys of the avant-garde.

RENAISSANCE AND EARLY MODERN STUDIES

Marian and Andrew Heiskell Pre-Doctoral Rome Prize
ERIC BIANCHI
Department of Music, Yale University
Center of the World:  Athanasius Kircher at the Jesuit Colleges of RomeAthanasius Kircher's Musurgia universalis (Rome, 1650) was the largest, most influential music treatise of the seventeenth century. Kircher was a Jesuit polymath who spent nearly 50 years as a professor at the Collegio Romano. This project examines Musurgia as a document of intellectual history, and reconstructs the larger scholarly context from which it arose. In Rome, I will consult the principal holdings of Jesuit materials: the Archivio della Pontificia Universita Gregoriana, and Fondo Gesuitico of the Bibliotheca Nazionale, where Kircher's manuscripts and correspondence are preserved, as well as the Archivium Romanum Societatis Iesu, which holds censors' files and other important administrative materials. In addition to Jesuit archives, I will also consult the papers and published writings of Kircher's colleagues and adversaries, such as Leone Allacci and Melchior Inchofer, in smaller archives throughout the city.

Millicent Mercer Johnsen Post-Doctoral Rome Prize
ELIZABETH McCAHILL
Assistant Professor, Department of History, University of the South
Reinventing Rome: 1400-1450My project is a study of the papal Curia and the impoverished city to which it returned in 1420. It will begin by exploring some of the internal dynamics of the Curia with special attention to the efforts of classicizing scholars, or humanists, to carve out a distinctive niche for themselves in the agonistic atmosphere of the papal court. Drawing on archival documents and humanist social commentary, it will then offer a précis of the social and economic concerns of Rome’s unruly populace. Finally, the various players will be brought together, if not in harmony then in creative cacophony, as they sought to turn the city into something more than her dingy early Quattrocento self. The book will thus illuminate an urban environment in transition and parse the ways in which curialists and Roman citizens collaborated and competed to develop the city’s ancient legacy into a potent cultural myth.


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Designs for Iconic Structure in Dubai Sought
Posted: Friday, April 25, 2008
ThyssenKrupp Elevator, one of the world's largest elevator manufacturing companies, announced the opening and registration for the 11th edition of the prestigious Architecture Award.

Held in collaboration with Dubai Municipality, this unique competition aims to foster creative, yet pragmatic new visions, for developing a tall emblem structure, within a dedicated site in Dubai.

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Za'abeel Park, Dubai


The Award is being organized under the auspices of the prestigious International Union of Architects.

'The creation of an emblem building will symbolize the new face of Dubai, as well as promote tourism, recreational, and cultural activities', said Eng. Hussain Nasser Lootah, Acting Director General of Dubai Municipality.

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Javier del Pozo, CEO ThyssenKrupp Elevator, Eng. Hussain Nasser Lootah, Acting Director General of Dubai Municipality.
'Dubai has one of the most impressive skylines in the world and is already an extraordinary destination for global business, commerce and travel', said Javier del Pozo, CEO of ThyssenKrupp Elevator Southern Europe, Africa & Middle East.

'To catalyze its image and energy, the unparalleled concentration and attraction of talents and resources, we have invited Dubai to play host to our international Architecture Award competition. Our goal is to promote and reveal the potency of new work' he said.

'The Architecture Award was launched by ThyssenKrupp Elevator, as a way to engage professionals in producing outstanding ideas for major cities undergoing important transformations. The project theme ranges from institutional buildings, sports and transportation facilities, to urban planning projects and community spaces,' said del Pozo.

A jury of recognized architects from seven countries and business professionals will review the submissions and select winning projects for awards. 'We look forward to receiving and honoring the broad range of concepts for the emblem structure. We are seeking state of the art unique designs that provide a 'return on investment' to the public good by attending to issues of green building and local climate; are responsive to townscape and scenic aspects; include facilities for recreation, entertainment and conferencing,' concluded del Pozo.

In addition to these, there are specific criteria and requirements competition participants need to consider, such as:
  • The proposed structure shall be a tall and unique landmark. The maximum total height of the structure shall not exceed 170m DMD
  • The designer may consider any appropriate innovative forms, construction technique, and materials; and consider the green building principles where appropriate
  • The proposed structure shall contain up to 2 storey podium for cultural and conference facilities. The latter shall include local children library; and a conference space for a total of 100 persons that can be divided into 3 conference rooms where required. The total floor area for such facilities shall be approximately 800 sq.m. A basement parking for 30 cars may be considered as well
  • The proposed structure shall contain a café (total floor area 150 sq.m) at higher appropriate altitude with additional viewing outdoor platforms as per the designer suggestion. The café can be on 2 levels
  • The Structure shall not include commercial offices and residential premises
  • The design proposal shall be conceptual at this stage
'This is the 11th edition of the event ThyssenKrupp Elevator established in 1988, and it is held for the first time in the Middle East, previous editions were hosted in major cities in Europe. The Architecture Award contributes greatly to the overview of the current direction of today's commercial, corporate, institutional, and community architecture work at international scale, in addition to bringing insights into contemporary directions of architecture and design relative to environment, ecology and sustainability,' said del Pozo.

Related Links:
ThyssenKrupp Elevator Architecture Award
Dubai Municipality Portal (English Version)
ThyssenKrupp Elevator Business Unit Southern Europe/Africa/Middle East

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Europe 40 Under 40
Posted: Tuesday, April 22, 2008
EUROPE'S MOST IMPORTANT AND EMERGING YOUNG ARCHITECTS AND DESIGNERS NAMED AS "EUROPE 40 UNDER 40"

The European Centre for Architecture Art Design and Urban Studies and The Chicago Athenaeum: Museum of Architecture and Design are pleased to announce the selection of this year’s most promising and emerging design talent in Europe for 2008.

Thirty-two architects and architecture firms and eight industrial designers were selected by a jury of architecture and design practitioners that convened in New York at the end of 2007.

Geographically, the selected young recipients for the 2008 “Europe 40 Under 40®” hail from across 14 European nations : Belgium, Croatia, Denmark, France, Germany, Great Britain, Greece, Italy, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Russia, Turkey, Spain—the best of the young best of Europe.

The 2008 “Europe 40 Under 40” Laureates are:

3RW Architects: Ingfeld, Bennet, Henning Frohsdal, Henning Fronsdal, Jakob Rostvik, Susanne Puchberger, Sixten Rahliff, and Haakon Rasmussen (Architects , Norway)
A-lab: Odd Klev and Mattias Ekman (Architects, Norway)
Nikita Barinov (Architect, Russia)

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Nikita Barinov: Architecture Museum of Yakov Chernikhov

Sasa Begovic (Architect, Croatia)
Marc Botineau (France)
Cécile Brisac (Architect, Great Britain)

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Cécile Brisac: Museum of World Culture in Gothenburg, Sweden


Bita Azimi-Calori (Architect, France)
Stephene Cottrell/ Jérôme Michelangeli (Architects, Spain)

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Group IAD (Stephene Cottrell/ Jérôme Michelangeli): United Office Building, Jeddah, Saudi Arabia


Jan-Hendrik De Groote (Designer, Belgium)
Julien De Smedt (Architect, Denmark)
Patricia Sabin Diaz/Enrique M. Blanco Lorenzo (Architects, Spain)

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Patricia Sabin Diaz/Enrique M. Blanco Lorenzo: Cioros Soccer Field


Marc Eggert (Architect, Germany)
Paul Flowers (Designer, Germany)
Raphael Gabrion (Architect, France)
Bjarke Ingels (Architect, Denmark)

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Bjarke Ingels: Norwegian Ski Hotel


Aysin Ipekci (Architect, Germany)
Robert Konieczny (Architect, Poland)
Tomasz M. Konior (Architect, Poland)
Marc Krusin (Designer, Italy)
Gabriele Lelli (Architect, Italy)

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Gabriele Lelli: Tower of Imola, Italy


Marianthi Liapi (Architect, Greece)
Elodie Nourrigat (Architect, France)
Marianthi Liapi (Architect, Greece)
Elodie Nourrigat (Architect, France)
Kostis Oungrinis (Architect, Greece)
Luke Pearson (Designer, Great Britain)
Niccolo Poggi (Designer, Italy)
Wolfram Putz (Architect, Germany)

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Wolfram Putz (GRAFT): Dalian Daily, Dalian, China


Kristof Pycke (Designer, Belgium)
Roberto Ragazzi Architect, (Portugal)
Amir Sanei (Architect, Great Britain)
Matthias Schmidt (Architect, Germany)
Thomas Stein (Designer, Germany)
Oliver Schweizer (Designer, Germany)
Melkan Gürsel Tabanliouglu (Architect, Turkey)

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Melkan Gürsel Tabanliouglu: Levent Loft, Istanbul, Turkey


Amin Taha (Architect, Great Britain)
Andrew Todd (Architect, Great Britain)
Alberto Veiga (Architect, Spain)

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Alberto Veiga: headquarters of Ribera del Duero Wine in Roa near Burgos, Spain


Thomas Willemeit (Architect, Germany)

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Thomas Willemeit (GRAFT): Church at Wuensdorf, Germany


Gerhardt Wittfeld (Architect, Germany)
Cem Yurtsever (Architect, Turkey)(Click here for portrait and project images of all winners.)


The “Europe 40 Under 40” program was initiated by The European Center as an annual program to spotlight and identify the next generation of architects and designers who will impact future living and working environments, cities, and rural areas.

Presented annually, the program is open to all young architects, landscape architects, urban planners, industrial designers, graphic designers, and fashion and textile designers who are under the age of 40 who are working independently or in a firm or on a specific project where they are the lead designer.

In 2007, hundreds of architecture and industrial design submissions were received by The European Centre from across Europe. “The jury selection and process was extremely difficult,” states Ioannis Karlias, Museum Vice President, The Chicago Athenaeum. “The jury was presented with hundreds of excellent projects and designs from skyscrapers and large —scale urban planning projects to the highest quality industrial designs for commercial and consumer use. It was difficult to narrow the number down to just 40.“

In the category of architecture, projects by the selected architects included: corporate architecture, skyscrapers, institutional projects, religious buildings, civic and political structures, planning projects, urban renewal, restoration/renovation, residential architecture for single family and multi-family dwellings, stores, residential or commercial interiors, sports and transportation centers, institutions, parks, monuments, and public environments.

In the category of industrial design: the latest office and home furniture, household items, and bathroom fixtures.

Projects were judged on the merit of design innovation with the emphasis on pushing the envelope on conventional methods and exploring new theories, ideas, and approaches to contemporary design.

The New York jury of distinguished architecture, education, and design practitioners included: <