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Michigan's Historic Preservation Plan
Michigan’s state historic Preservation Plan 2014–2019 Michigan’s state historic Preservation Plan 2014–2019 Governor Rick Snyder Kevin Elsenheimer, Executive Director, Michigan State Housing Development Authority Brian D. Conway, State Historic Preservation Officer Written by Amy L. Arnold, Preservation Planner, Michigan State Historic Preservation Office with assistance from Alan Levy and Kristine Kidorf Goaltrac, Inc. For more information on Michigan’s historic preservation programs visit michigan.gov/SHPo. The National Park Service (NPS), U. S. Department of the Interior, requires each State Historic Preservation Office to develop and publish a statewide historic preservation plan every five years. (Historic Preservation Fund Grants Manual, Chapter 6, Section G) As required by NPS, Michigan’s Five-Year Historic Preservation Plan was developed with public input. The contents do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the Michigan State Housing Development Authority. The activity that is the subject of this project has been financed in part with Federal funds from the National Park Service, U.S. Department of the Interior, through the Michigan State Housing Development Authority. However, the contents and opinions herein do not necessarily reflect the views or policies of the Department of the Interior or the Michigan State Housing Development Authority, nor does the mention of trade names or commercial products herein constitute endorsement or recommendation by the Department of the Interior or the Michigan State Housing Development Authority. This program receives Federal financial assistance for identification and protection of historic properties. Under Title VI of the Civil Rights Acts of 1964, Section 504 of the Rehabilita- tion Act of 1973 and the Age Discrimination Act of 1975, as amended, the U.S. -
Architecture, Design and Engineering
COLLECTIONS OVERVIEWS ARCHITECTURE, DESIGN AND ENGINEERING I. SCOPE The subjects of architecture, design, and engineering occur across all formats and can be found throughout the General Collections and in various Special Format and Area Studies divisions in the Library, including Geography and Map, Manuscript, Rare Books & Special Collections, the American Folklife Center, Recorded Sound, Performing Arts (stage and set design), and Motion Picture & Television. However, the primary custodian of special format materials in these subject areas at the Library of Congress is the Prints and Photographs (P&P) Division. P&P collections in these subject areas further intersect with nearly every Library of Congress collecting area, including American History, European, African, Middle Eastern, Portuguese, Hispanic and Hispanic American Studies, Decorative Arts, Fine Arts, Science and Technology, Business, and Local History and Genealogy. This overview focuses on the subjects of architecture, design, and engineering in the Prints and Photographs Division, and includes both documentary materials and those produced as the original creative works of practicioners in these fields, as well as photography and printmaking. Included are measured drawings and field notes and drawings; original, theoretical, design, working, and construction drawings; job files, correspondence, photographs and documents; record, documentary, journalistic, commercial and master photographic prints, negatives, and transparencies; posters, fine and historical prints, master drawings, cartoon and caricature, illustration, and graphic design; and written historical and descriptive data. P&P’s substantial holdings of Photography and Graphic Arts are covered in separate Collection Overviews. II. SIZE Over 2,000,000 items, including multiple formats (based upon the P&P Stewardship Report) III. -
Defining Architectural Design Excellence Columbus Indiana
Defining Architectural Design Excellence Columbus Indiana 1 Searching for Definitions of Architectural Design Excellence in a Measuring World Defining Architectural Design Excellence 2012 AIA Committee on Design Conference Columbus, Indiana | April 12-15, 2012 “Great architecture is...a triple achievement. It is the solving of a concrete problem. It is the free expression of the architect himself. And it is an inspired and intuitive expression of the client.” J. Irwin Miller “Mediocrity is expensive.” J. Irwin Miller “I won’t try to define architectural design excellence, but I can discuss its value and strategy in Columbus, Indiana.” Will Miller Defining Architectural Design Excellence..............................................Columbus, Indiana 2012 AIA Committee on Design The AIA Committee on Design would like to acknowledge the following sponsors for their generous support of the 2012 AIA COD domestic conference in Columbus, Indiana. DIAMOND PARTNER GOLD PARTNER SILVER PARTNER PATRON DUNLAP & Company, Inc. AIA Indianapolis FORCE DESIGN, Inc. Jim Childress & Ann Thompson FORCE CONSTRUCTION Columbus Indiana Company, Inc. Architectural Archives www.columbusarchives.org REPP & MUNDT, Inc. General Contractors Costello Family Fund to Support the AIAS Chapter at Ball State University TAYLOR BROS. Construction Co., Inc. CSO Architects, Inc. www.csoinc.net Pentzer Printing, Inc. INDIANA UNIVERSITY CENTER for ART + DESIGN 3 Table of Contents Remarks from CONFERENCE SCHEDULE SITE VISITS DOWNTOWN FOOD/DINING Mike Mense, FAIA OPTIONAL TOURS/SITES -
Architecture
February 8 OTHER WAYS OF DOING THINGS: ARCHITECTURE AND URBAN ACTIVISM Architecture: Shaping Buildings, Shaping Us Anya Sirota “We shape our buildings, and afterwards our buildings shape us.” Winston Churchill’s Anya Sirota is an Assistant Professor at the University of Michigan’s Taubman College of well-known quote is the starting point for our look at the relationship between architecture Architecture and Urban Planning. Her interdisciplinary research focuses on contemporary and our way of living. We start with the early 20th Century, when modern technology and cultural production and its relationship to architecture and urbanism. Sirota is principal of changing social/political relationships in Western Europe led to new thinking about the forms the award-winning design studio Akoaki and director of the Detroit-based Michigan and shapes of the built environment. WWII brought many of the most innovative European Architecture Prep program. She holds a Master in Architecture from Harvard’s Graduate designers to the United States. Michigan played a large, and underappreciated, role in the School of Design and a B.A. in Modern Culture and Media from Brown University. development of “Mid-Century Modern.” Stimulated by the auto industry, Scandinavian Speaker’s Synopsis: In the aftermath of Modernism’s perceived urban failures, a cadre of architects, and Americans like Frank Lloyd Wright, Michigan became the center for an organic architects is becoming increasingly aware that a building might not always be the best design philosophy that rejected the classical forms from ancient Greece and Rome. New solution to a spatial problem. The lecture will explore how certain practices are reinventing thinking in the design of furniture, buildings, and cities both reflected and encouraged the the architectural profession, replacing the model of the heroic visionary with a more changes in lifestyle that persist today. -
Annual Report 2015-2016
Annual Report 2015-2016 UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN TAUBMAN COLLEGE OF ARCHITECTURE AND URBAN PLANNING Table of Contents 02 Building Addition Update 04 Feature: National Museum of African American History and Culture 06 Faculty News 10 New and Noteworthy Scholarships 16 2016 Venice Architecture Biennale 23 Distinguished Alumna Award 26 Career Support 30 In Memoriam 2016 Fall Calendar September 9 Taubman College at the 2016 Venice October 22 Taubman College Homecoming & Architecture Biennale: U.S. Pavilion Alumni Reunion Presentations by Dean Robert Fishman, October 24-26 ACADIA 2016: Workshops Ellie Abrons, Adam Fure, and Mitch McEwen (Registration Required) September 12 Flint Water Crisis: Fixing It October 27-29 ACADIA 2016: Conference Presentation by Marty Kaufman followed by (Registration Required) a panel discussion October 27 ACADIA Conference Keynote Lecture: September 16 Taubman College at the 2016 Venice Iris van Herpen in conversation with Architecture Biennale: Canadian and Philip Beesley Kuwaiti Pavilions October 27 ACADIA 2016: Exhibition Presentations by Architecture Chair Exhibition runs October 27 - November 4 Sharon Haar, Geoffrey Thün, Kathy Velikov, October 28 ACADIA Conference Keynote Lecture: and El Hadi Jazairy Elizabeth Diller September 20 Booth Fellowship Exhibition Presentation October 29 ACADIA Conference Keynote Lecture: and Opening Reception: James Wilson, Mario Carpo “Hygge: Dwelling Poetically” Exhibition runs through October 5 November 11 Distinguished University Professor Lecture: September 22 Lecture: Anne Spirn June Thomas November 12 Exhibition Opening Brunch: Terry Sargent October 4 The Case for Regional Transit Retrospective, “TRIPTYCHS” Presentation by Dr. Catherine Ross followed Exhibition runs through December 18 by a panel discussion November 18 Lecture: Gary Bates October 7 Practice Session No. -
John Comazzi: Cv 2018
JOHN COMAZZI: CV 2018 Associate Professor of Architecture University of Virginia – School of Architecture Partial appointments in Curry School of Education and School of Nursing Office: Campbell Hall, Office 318, 110 Bayly Drive, Charlottesville VA, 22903 [email protected] work: 434-243-4322 1.00_BIOGRAPHICAL INFORMATION 1.01_EDUCATION University of Michigan: Taubman College of Architecture and Urban Planning Master of Science in Architectural History and Theory, 1999 Thesis: (re)Moving History – The Statue Park of Socialist Statuary in Budapest, Hungary University of Michigan: Taubman College of Architecture and Urban Planning Master of Architecture, 1998 Thesis: From Site to (In)sight – Architecture as Optical Device University of Virginia: School of Architecture B.S. in Architecture, 1993 1.02_ACACEMIC EXPERIENCE University of Virginia: School of Architecture 2017-Present: Associate Professor of Architecture Director of Design Thinking Program, 2017 - present Appointments in the Curry School of Education and the School of Nursing University of Minnesota: College of Design – School of Architecture 2012-2017: Associate Professor of Architecture Director of B.S. Degree Program (Architecture), 2012-15 2006-2012: Assistant Professor of Architecture College Readiness Consortium, Faculty Fellow, 2010 Metropolitan Design Center, Dayton-Hudson Fellow, 2007-08 2009-2017: Affiliate Faculty of Landscape Architecture University of Michigan: Taubman College of Architecture and Urban Planning 2001-2006: Lecturer -
ARCHIVES Saarinen-Swanson Reunion Records, 1995-2001 2.5 Linear Ft. Acquisition Number
ARCHIVES Saarinen-Swanson Reunion Records, 1995-2001 2.5 linear ft. Acquisition Number: 2001-14 Acquisition: Records were generated by Cranbrook Archives. Access: Access to the collection is unrestricted. Copyright: Copyright to this collection is held by the Cranbrook Educational Community. Preferred Citation: Saarinen-Swanson Reunion Records, Cranbrook Archives, Bloomfield Hills, Michigan. Photographs: Moved to Photograph Special File; Negatives moved to CEC Negatives. Audiotapes: Moved to Audio Cassette Tape Collection (1990-09). Videotapes: Moved to Videotape Collection (1990-35). Index: See end of finding aid. Processing: Isabel S. Hansen, April 2004 History Eliel Saarinen, along with his wife Loja, son Eero, daughter Pipsan, and son-in-law J. Robert F. Swanson, founded a creative tradition at Cranbrook that endures to this day. The Saarinens' fame and design philosophies attracted many of the brightest talents in the architectural, design, and planning fields to study at Cranbrook or to work for their businesses --- known variously as Saarinen and Swanson; Saarinen and Saarinen; Saarinen, Swanson, and Saarinen; Swanson Associates; and Eero Saarinen & Associates, depending upon the shifting union of the principals. Recognizing that these associates possessed a wealth of information about the architectural practices of Eliel and Eero Saarinen and the Swansons, the Cranbrook Archives, under the direction of Mark Coir, organized a reunion of more than fifty architects, model makers, draftsmen, and other members of the Saarinen circle at Cranbrook. The reunion, held over the weekend of August 11-13, 1995, was the first concerted attempt to capture recollections in a unified way, and it produced more than eight hours of recorded reminiscences. -
Photography Matters: Balthazar Korab's Legacy in the Saarinen
from his attic window in 1827. Niépce was a French-born Photography Matters: physicist who devoted much of his life to the invention and design of various mechanical devices and research Balthazar Korab’s Legacy in experiments in chemistry and lithography.5 the Saarinen Office At the same time that Daguerre and Niépce were ______________________ developing their efforts to fix illuminated images, in England there were parallel experiments in early John Comazzi, University of photographic techniques undertaken by, among others, William Henry Fox Talbot, who is credited with one of the Minnesota earliest and most-successful developments of a “paper negative.” This technique had the distinct advantage, over ABSTRACT the daguerreotype, of producing multiple “positive-print” This paper begins with the premise that architecture is reproductions using the “paper negative” image. Talbot (re)created through photography, as photographers play a was trained as a mathematician and physicist with a crucial role in the public dissemination and critical reception “kaleidoscopic play” of interests ranging from the science of of architecture. While designers, educators, historians and light, phosphorescence, flame-colors, and, of course, consumers of architecture often ascribe a calculated photographic imagery. 6 In the case of Talbot, much of the objectivity to the photographic images thereof, it is motivation for his experiments in “fixing” the illuminated undeniable that any representations of original sources images produced within his camera obscura and camera (buildings, landscapes, cities) are inflected by the lucida came from a frustration with his own inability to approaches, sensibilities and practices that photographers actually draw the images projected within those devices. -
Modernism in Bartholomew County, Indiana, from 1942
NPS Form 10-900 USDI/NPS NRHP Registration Form (Rev. 8-86) OMB No. 1024-0018 MODERNISM IN BARTHOLOMEW COUNTY, INDIANA, FROM 1942 Page 1 United States Department of the Interior, National Park Service National Register of Historic Places Registration Form E. STATEMENT OF HISTORIC CONTEXTS INTRODUCTION This National Historic Landmark Theme Study, entitled “Modernism in Architecture, Landscape Architecture, Design and Art in Bartholomew County, Indiana from 1942,” is a revision of an earlier study, “Modernism in Architecture, Landscape Architecture, Design and Art in Bartholomew County, Indiana, 1942-1999.” The initial documentation was completed in 1999 and endorsed by the Landmarks Committee at its April 2000 meeting. It led to the designation of six Bartholomew County buildings as National Historic Landmarks in 2000 and 2001 First Christian Church (Eliel Saarinen, 1942; NHL, 2001), the Irwin Union Bank and Trust (Eero Saarinen, 1954; NHL, 2000), the Miller House (Eero Saarinen, 1955; NHL, 2000), the Mabel McDowell School (John Carl Warnecke, 1960; NHL, 2001), North Christian Church (Eero Saarinen, 1964; NHL, 2000) and First Baptist Church (Harry Weese, 1965; NHL, 2000). No fewer than ninety-five other built works of architecture or landscape architecture by major American architects in Columbus and greater Bartholomew County were included in the study, plus many renovations and an extensive number of unbuilt projects. In 2007, a request to lengthen the period of significance for the theme study as it specifically relates to the registration requirements for properties, from 1965 to 1973, was accepted by the NHL program and the original study was revised to define a more natural cut-off date with regard to both Modern design trends and the pace of Bartholomew County’s cycles of new construction. -
2019 AIA Ohio Gold Medal Award Submission Robert Maschke, FAIA
2019 AIA Ohio Gold Medal Award Submission Robert Maschke, FAIA AIA Cleveland Chapter, Letter of Support 1 Nomination | Biography 2 Substantial Achievements Selected Honors 3 Significant Work 4 Exhibits Arcadian Food & Drink 6 little _ BIG house 7 Student Enrollment Services 8 Brahler Residence 9 Brunswick University Center 10 Bus Shelter 11 Testing, Tutoring, Career Center 12 Media Arts 13 C-house 14 Emsheimer Residence 15 Lectures | Juries | Exhibitions 16 Selected Publications 17 Leadership | Service 19 Letters of Support Robert S. Livesey, FAIA | Columbus, Ohio 20 Marc Manack, AIA | Charlotte, North Carolina 20 Hal Mungar, FAIA | Toledo, Ohio 21 Michael Schuster, FAIA | Cincinnati, Ohio 21 Bruce Sekanick, FAIA | Warren, Ohio 22 Terry Welker, FAIA | Kettering, Ohio 22 1 “Over the past two decades, Robert Maschke’s work, simultaneously maintains the expectation of high Nomination | Biography quality, while being conversant with contemporary problems in architecture.” 2019 AIA Ohio Gold Medal Award Submission Robert Maschke, FAIA Michael Abrahamson, PHD, Editor, Marcel Breuer: Building Global Institutions, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah Robert Maschke, FAIA, founded his eponymous firm in 1997 with the belief that a regional practice based in Cleveland, Ohio could contribute to global architectural culture. Maschke’s civic, cultural, higher education, and residential projects have contributed to Cleveland’s built environment. Evidenced by the AIA Ohio Gold Medal Firm Award, the Cleveland Arts Prize for design, and national honor awards from the American Institute of Architects, Maschke demonstrates a persistent commitment to advancing Architecture beyond his community. The work has been featured in international publications from Asia, Australia, Europe, and the Americas, challenging the cliché that Architecture must be expensive and exclusive, instead proposing that contemporary architectural practice must embrace resourcefulness to maintain relevance. -
Gunnar Birkerts Metaphoric Modernist
Gunnar Birkerts Metaphoric Modernist Introductory essay Sven Birkerts Architectural comments Martin Schwartz Edition Axel Menges 7 Gunnar Birkerts: Preface Columbus, Indiana 220 - Anchorage Library, An 8 Sven Birkerts: Modernism and timeless form chorage, Alaska 226 - Minnesota History Center, St. Paul, Minnesota 230 - Schembechler Hall, 28 Expressive minimalism University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan 232 Cultural center in Leopoldville, Belgian Con- Papal altar and furniture, Pontiac Superdome, go 30 - Technical University, Ankara, Turkey 34 Pontiac, Michigan 238 - United States Embassy Schwartz Summer Residence, Northville, Michi office building, Caracas, Venezuela 240 - Kemper gan 36 - University Reformed Church, Ann Arbor, Museum of Contemporary Art and Design, Kan Michigan 38 - Lincoln Elementary School, Colum sas City, Missouri 242 - Marge Monaghan House, bus, Indiana 42 - Duluth Public Library, Duluth, Drummond Island, Michigan 248 - Grasis Resi Minnesota 48 - IBM Corporate Computer Center, dence, Vail, Colorado 250 - Latvian National Li Sterling Forest, New York 52 - Contemporary Arts brary, Riga, Latvia 254 Museum Houston, Houston, Texas 56 - Ford Visi tors Reception Center, Dearborn, Michigan 60 260 Late Modernism Municipal Fire Station, Corning, New York 62 Domino's Pizza, Inc., corporate headquarters, Calvary Baptist Church, Detroit, Michigan 66 Ann Arbor, Michigan 262 - Domino's special pro IBM office building, Southfield, Michigan 70 jects, interior design and fittings 266 - Domino's Tower, Ann Arbor, -
Portico 5 Features 16 College Update 20 Faculty Update 29 Honor Roll 40 Class Notes 47 in Memoriam 48 Student Update 53 Calendar
university of michigan taubman college of architecture and urban planning fall 2010 portico 5 features 16 college update 20 faculty update 29 honor roll 40 class notes 47 in memoriam 48 student update 53 calendar Cover image: Exterior rear, house of Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Metcalf, 1952, Ann Arbor, MI. Photograph courtesy of the Bentley Historical Library, University of Michigan. ii Figure 1. Macallen Project Before becoming dean at Taubman College of Architecture Constructing Green: and Urban Planning, I was a professor of architecture at Harvard University were I taught design studios; lecture and seminar courses on topics, including digital technology Sustainability and the and the history of design; and an introductory course on the environmental impact of material selection and application. Places We Inhabit I am also a practicing architect and as such, I have dealt with the struggle to do the right thing on real projects, in real time, A paper presented by Dean Monica Ponce de Leon at UM with real budgets and real constraints. As someone who has Ross School of Business for the Erb Institute for Global and a foot firmly planted in academia, and a foot firmly planted Sustainable Enterprise’s conference in practice, through this essay, I wanted to address the design 1 10000 be dependent on access to innovation and information so that 9000 designers, owners and users can make informed choices. 8000 Today many designers see third-party certification systems 7000 as the only viable solution to the environmental impact of 6000 buildings. Third-party certification systems and organizations 5000 have become increasingly streamlined, recognized and 4000 respected.