Texas Architect Architecture Interiors Planning Design November · December 1989 Six Dol Lars

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Texas Architect Architecture Interiors Planning Design November · December 1989 Six Dol Lars TEXAS ARCHITECT ARCHITECTURE INTERIORS PLANNING DESIGN NOVEMBER · DECEMBER 1989 SIX DOL LARS ) I <. I I l LIL \\II I l I I 1 I l I I I r r c I ( l I l I l ( l ( ( ~ I ) ) A T E X A S F I F T Y Aesthetic departure. After 16 years, TXI Buff still passes with flying colors. The builders of Dallas/Fort Worth Airport. wanted a concrete made with the natural wannth and consistency of buff cements-and the durability to stand up to over 700,000 aircra.fl operations and 50,000,000 passengers a year. The solution was simple: TXI Buff cemenL TXI Buff cement enhances the beauty-and creates a wann, aesthetic environment with consistent, nat.ural color. For more information, call TXI al 1-800-366-4894. Tex.aslndustries, Inc. 7610 Stemmons Dallas, TX 75247 f OI mow /11/11111wt1m1, v11111 us 111 booth #430 In Fort Worth , m , irr.Jn II tn.• 1111 11111 u,, 1d1•r lnr,11/ry Cord Did you know you could heat water with a cooling system? You can, with an electric heat pump or a waste The energy efficienr hear pump can defh ,er up w heat recovery sysrem. Air condi1ioning and heal­ six rimes 1/,e e11e1g)' it consumes. Use the heat and ing are usually a business' largest energy expense. enjoy lhe savings. What if you could use energy captured from the cooling system to heat water? You"d save a pol of How do you make hot water from your cooling. money every month. refrigeration or other waste heal producing sys- 1em? Easi ly. wilh electricity. Contact us and we" ll Cooling systems and other equipment produce a get you in LOuch with your local energy expert. lot of heat. The waste heat can be recycled simply with a heat pump or heat recovery system. This hcHI. typically 120 10 220 degrees F.. may be used for space heating, water heating or for process hca1111g such ac; s1eam presses, sanitation equ ip­ ment. food processing and other thermal requirements. Electricity. The better energy choice. Write to: EEAC • P.O. Box 7428 • Beaumont, TX TT726-7428 Circle I on Reader Inquiry Card On the Cover I r, ll11 I,, 1usL"' ,uul ,du 11 11, 111 ehurd1L-., :ind , ,Ilk,· 1"'' cis. I ro111 l.11 <: cdccu L to 111odcrn rn ATEXAS FIFTY p11,111 11 nl..: rn. !rum "n•· 111:1 11 11 rtin:s 11 1 tho11 ,,md-p.:r,011 lin11,. /nm lr,/,11,·, t l•cldmuc, NOVEMBER · DECEMBER 1989 li:,.1, an hi1cltUrl' , inl'l' l'lt'l Editor's Note 7 FlFTY YEARS OF TEXAS ARCHITECTURE 34 I h.111 l , tu il ll' ,,ritc:r,. cdil,1r-., .1111 1uth ••r, """ \ lo lil- 1111 1 l 11 11 d 1111.- 11 .tr k, li 11~ 1)1 lite , talc'-. 1111M ,ignili­ 11,11h: 1hi, , pcl'i,11 i,,11c l'""ililL·. l·.1111 .1tdt1 tl't' ll1tl· lir111, th.11 lt il\ c pr.1cttl·cd d1 1m1g- lhc Ja,t ltl't} \e,tr, 111 , 111 1hc1r 111:µ1 1111 111µ, Io n!-! l1ef11re the 11/ll/ <TL-:1111111 of the li:xa, Soc1e1v ol \ rd111.el'L~ through lhl· !-1 '"" 1h ;111d ch;inir1.: the) h;l\ c 1.:~ pl·ricnc:•·d 1hr1111i,rh- 1111 1 Ih e I.,~, Ii, e ,h.:(.':hlc, . A TEXAS SO Fil"1y ,ig-11ilic:111 t 11 rclrnccts rr11111 rit e lasr 50 years \d11 111, & \ il:1111 , ...... ...... -1.: \ l;ir k Lcmm11n ................ (,11 \t Ice H. ~ R, ,hcrt ,\ I I k rmon E l.loy,I ........... J , I NEWS 8 \) rt."' ............................ -11 \ h1d ,il' & K11 11r.1d1 ....... J,2 \ 111lllCrt h.111 rc,111111d, 111 m\l:, in l>ull.1s, S,111 I lt,\\,tr1I ll:1m,11 111 c .......... -1 I Ruth , ,11111g \ k{ ;1 ,11igh: .Ji\ \111 1111111, \ 1.qc,tll ·11,c.ttrc 1, rc,1urc1l 11, the l),111.,ld ll:tnhd111e ........... -H I t, l\, .lrll It \ \c}Cf ........... <,-! ,t,11 t ,,1 ,111 \1,, D Mr11·1. Sc,1p111·cmc11111.tl P.,rl. Rulph C.11 11~1·011 ..............-1 -1 N c11 h1111, + lti~l, ,r ............ 6, 1111<·11, 11111, 11 i-1u 11 ; C.:1j11L11I pr, ,grc-..w, 111 \11, 1111 Carroll ~ l)ucublc .......... -1, rl1c l)tdcshy Cro11 p ........ Mi \\i lli:11 11 C:indill ...... ........ -I r, 1':iµc '-,11111hcrl:1nil l'ni:l.' .. f,:;- bi.uo Focu s 33 Joh n S. ( h.hl' .................. -I i \111lrc" l'crc, 111 ............ J,7 \ I,,,,, , 11 lnr I'S ,·, lii'tk th .111 11hcrs.tr) \\i l1.:) C, . C l:1rl.-011 .......... -Ill P r,111 & B11~ ..................... fill ll.111lc11 C.11: k l' ................. -Ill R, 1l.1ml Ci R11c"11cr ........ f>'' ( ;,:urge L. lhhl .............. .-11/ \ lih 1111 \ . Ry:111 ................ r.•, ( lurk, ~. 1), 11 ... <'k .......... ·;cJ 1 lttr\\'uod k . S11111h .......... 7!1 l•chr ~ Cnmµc r .....- ........ 50 Jo hn ~t:111b ....................... 71 \ lt'rcd (. Fin n ................. " 1 lcnn J. !-i tcml,omcr ....... -1 J,, ,,,,111:c & ( :lwck ........... ,,:? ',11111 l & Pin, ................... ., 2 O ',c,I F111 tl .................... , I \ rd1 I!. S,1,111k .J1 ........... ., l l, c11m:th Fr,111 1hc 11 11 ........ ,-1 f:tfl \ rdlllCl'" ................. "'-I l'r1... 10 11 \I. ( ;crcn. ~r. ..... ,, \ Ltt1 \ . ·1:111 ig111lt i ............ "', ( :1L-..clkl· ~ I l.1 rri, .......... 'i<, ',:1 11111c l \ 11, 111.: r ................. - , , I l.1 rrcll + I lamilu 111 ......... 5(1 R. 1'.cwcll \\atcN ............ 'Tli INTERIORS 86 I l.1 r11 ,· II I l:1111ili 1111 1·1~1111.. \\clch \" 11c1;itc, .. -- I 111111111µh,111 1 \ rdutcl·h· I'"'' Lr '1 1111,c; 1.,1\\ ­ 11:i rri, .......................... , :;- l);tl'id R. \\'illi;1111, ........... "'H ll'IH ,. C:1111111111~ \ I''"" 111111-c; .1111 1 D :I\ i, \\ ~ .11 t C llcdrid.. ........... ,H C:corgc \\'ill i, ................. 'T() ',p1111kk, prn l h1111w l<nhl.'rl l I.I I. 11 11g11 1.111 .... 'ill \\'i l"111 & \1 11r11, ............ Htl .Jc,,c11 ~ ,l l.'"c11 ................ , ,, John C, . \ 11rk ................... 11 1 CAD User Reports 90 \ 11ru·, ul prntlucts !or cwnp11tc1' ,11tlc1I de ,1~•11 l l'l ll'\ICtl Ii) lc,;1, n1d 111c•·L, CONFIRMATION OF CONTEXT 82 L'.T A11M in h:1, rcnmatctl :111tl c'l: p:mdu l the School of SURVEY 98 \ rd ,itccnirc\ ( ;old~11 1id1 I l:1 II . Th1: .1rC'h i1 cct~ rc<:l:t i111 1:d ( 1 llj! h.11 1111•·1 11 .1d.. , drn, 11 1m, 11 F1111 \ \'unh: .11111 c., lcndcd 1hc h11i ldinJ,!\ 11 1ulcr-,1,Hcd \ kdilct-r.111 c.111 - I I 111< 111111, 11 , l1r, 1 di•·n1 inll'l'\IC\\ : l..1r, ,1ylc ck!:',lllCc , hu1 i, tl flhl :1 lc~,011 111 rc,pct·l fnl dc~ig-11, ,1.,11tfq ,·,pl11re, lltL 11.1111rL o,{ , 1cd •• ind a m .111 (1r .m 111, p1r:1L1011 al cd11c111 ion:d en, iro11111 1:n1: 111 I 111.1~1 l{,1thtr, l11rh1 1hruu![h l.1 lwiL roof, . N,·w Pr-oducts 11 2 \ 1 I I \\ ,t th, , ll1h \11n11.1I 1·s \ Pr111 hlll' l ltllti111111 11 111, \1111111 1 \ln li11g. Ou • .! i- .:?H. In the Next Issue Mu~ no• 118 l'he I ()8 1) r~ \ Dc:,i1,rn \\\ .1n 6 j11'11J,rrJ111 honors the hcst 111 ll111lt11 11 1h1111 l l.11,·\\dl ,111d , llll!!'-1I work by· 1cx as :1r d1itcl'L!>. Our portti 1lio "ill dcscrilu: and I ,, 111111111 l1u1 •l tl11, 111 111111· 1111 .11,. illu~ll~Hc 1hc winnin!! project:-. lEXA S ARCH ITE CT 11· 12 89 3 .. .. Compere the subtle design vVhen_you select new Soft.one™ Cashmere TM Ceilings elega1'108 ol Cashm819 with 0/'dlhary mechenlcally fi SStJred from Celotex, you can have the best of both - design - eelllng me. choice and size flexibility. Aesthetically, Cashmere Ceilings are characterized by a unique surlace treatn1cnt tfy:lt gives the look of fine designer linens, making Cashmere ideal for today's applications where subtle elegance is desired. NewGashmere Actual 51zo ordinary mechanically From Celotex. llsspred Illa. And Cashn1ere Ceilings achieve excellent sound absorption without the need for conventional pin perforations or mechanical fissuring. A full range of sizes, choice o( edge details and five face-scored styles make Cashn1crc Ceilings highly versatile for modular fl exibility. And when the n.eed forcolor~ misc,s in your design, Cashn1crc Ceilings can be specified in cmy ofei~1tdesignPrcolors - llPa11wrCroy, Rahm, HC'ccl, Sage, White, Haze, AdohP and Vanilla. Cashu tt'rc C('ilings arc also available in Plutccfo1u.·~ wh<'l'P Iin 1<' rah\d assen1bJics are requjred. • When you consider all t11e adv~tages ow- new Softone Casfun.eoo Qilhtgs afforcl, the choice is obvious. No Other Mineral Acoustiral Ceilmg Gives You More Desi~ And More Sires, All With The Wok @£Fine Rmric. L24 x-1e·x..-.·L LL. LL , ' - . Today's b.Jlhroom h,1s t·volvc:d into ilJ1 c:m~ronr,wnt l h.Jt I eflrct!'> ymn pcrson.1I style: A h,\~cn lh.Jl c-,m Sldrt your day \~1lh 1nsp1rabon­ cmd md it wilh a soothing ·good nrghL" Eljcr can m.ikl! il h.1ppcn ror }'OU This Eljcr bath rcalurcs lhc C.mlcrbury"' collection or rLX:turcs in Du:.ty Rose with Alvera'" filtings m polished brass. Pc1~on,1Uzt·d cleganc<.' for lcxJ.:iy's b.1th From El1cr. of course. CupturE c the legance Dallas Sherman Apex Supply Co. Johnson-Burks Supply Texas 2 14n41-s463 2 14/892-6 I 48 San Antonio Groff Plumbing Supply Distribzttors Mesquite Pharr 5 I 2/225-0278 Moore Supply Co.
Recommended publications
  • Raiford Stripling Honored by Texas A&M
    Cite Fall 1983 3 Citelines ffi Big Cite Beat Raiford Stripling High-rise m- Speculation on what might have caused the damage that Hurricane Alicia inflicted on the curtain walls of two of downtown Honored by Texas A&M Apartment Planned Houston's flashier new buildings is rife. One for San Antonio's Houston architect is confident that he knows Raiford Stripling, the 72-year-old San Augustine ar- the answer, however; "That's just what hap- chitect best known for his restoration and preservation pens when you put a green one next to a work, was honored at a symposium held in San An- RiverWalk pink one." tonio on 10 September called "Texas: A Sense of Place, A Spirit of Independence." The symposium m- Helmut J arm kicked off the Houston De- was sponsored by Texas A&M University, the Uni- Arrow Associates, the architecture and urban-design sign Center's series of public lectures by versity of Texas Institute of Texan Cultures, the Texas firm organized by Cyrus Wagner, currently has in celebrated designers on 23 August before a Committee for the Humanities, and the National En- design a 19-slory condominium apartment tower, to packed house in Greenway Plaza. Climaxing dowment for the Humanities. be called The Riverton. for downtown San Antonio. the talk was J a h n ' s presentation of the mul- Located at West Market and Navarro streets, the tiple alternatives he developed for the design Stripling, who is registered as Texas Architect No. building will also face the RiverWalk just across the of the Southwest Center, which, like the Hous- 198, directed the restoration of Mission Espiritu Santo San Antonio River from La Villita.
    [Show full text]
  • DALLAS + ARCHITECTURE + CULTURE Winter 2018 Vol. 35 No. 1
    DALLAS + ARCHITECTURE + CULTURE Winter 2018 Vol. 35 No. 1 strip COLUMNS // aiadallas.org 1 ARCHITECTURAL LIGHTING IS COMPLICATED NOW. Our professional lighting consultants know the latest in lighting and can make it simple for you. P LIGHTS R FANTASTIC O P LIGHTS R FANTASTIC O LIGHTSFANTASTICPRO.COM P 2525 E. STATE HWY. 121LIGHTS • BLDG. B, SUITE 200 • LEWISVILLE,R TX 75056 • 469.568.1111 FANTASTIC O 2 COLUMNS // aiadallas.org P LIGHTS R FANTASTIC O AIA Dallas Columns Winter 2018 + Vol. 35, No. 1 strip “Doing more with less” seems to be a mantra for the 21st Century. Design work, however, doesn’t need to be either prudish or garish to be smart. Are we slowly stripping away history, meaning, and character in our community? STRIP EXPLORATION 14 The Evolution of Place What does “character” refer to when describing Dallas architecture? 18 Fixing “Strip-urbia” Are the commercial byproducts of sprawl outdated? 22 At Our Wit’s End Can a sense of humor in strip malls be the recipe for success? 28 A Strip of Pavement that Changed Texas Forever How did our nation’s first highway system transform the Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex? 33 The Politics of Stripping Should public art be stripped of its historic and political meaning? Cover Illustration: Frances Yllana COLUMNS // aiadallas.org 1 Prairie View A&M University Agriculture & Business Multipurpose Building architect Overland Partners, San Antonio general contractor Linbeck, Houston Building Connections In Brick masonry contractor Camarata Masonry Systems, Houston At Prairie View A&M University’s historical gathering “We worked with Prairie View place, a clock tower now marks a center of academic A&M to design a central campus as well as social convergence.
    [Show full text]
  • Meeting 535 + , +, Oo, ! '
    151 OCT t.' 4 1953 + ' , * ,+ i +?, "+| I + I , , ., , ' % +" +, '+ ' " i i , i+ Austin, Texas, October 2~, 1953 No. Meeting 535 + , +, Oo, ! '. !~ ,, ,+ , • ','+ The Board of Regents of The University of Texas met in regular session in the Regents' Room of The University of Texas at i0:00 a.m., October 2~, 1953, with the following present: Regents Sealy (Chairman), ~i i ' ' , / . "+ Warren (Vice-Chairman), Jeffers, Sates, Sorrell, Tobin, Voyles, and Wood- '+ • ! ward; Chancellor Hart; Assistant to the Chancellor Granberry; Comptroller + /, , , i ' ' . ' ' ' '+ " ,, Sparenberg; Endowment Officer Taylor; President Wilson; President Elkins; . "/ ,,- , + :r. Blocker; Consulting Architect Lemmon; and Secretary Stewart. Mr. ,r ' '+°' i Lockwood was unable to attend the meeting. • '' • / • ', ' '+ '+ ;2i : . i ! UNIVERSITY DEVELOPMENT BOARD AUTHORIZED TO SECURE MONEY TO PUR- CHASE THOMAS GILCRE~E COLLECTlON.-~Chairman Sealy introduced to the Board Mr. Lester Whipple of San Antonio, Attorney for the Gilcrease Foundation, who reported to the Board that Mr. Thomas Gilcrease would sell the Thomas Gilcrease Collection to The University of Texas for $2,200,000. Mr. Sealy +, reported that it was the unanimous feeling of the Board that this collection ',@+ ,I + was one of the ~st outstanding and remarkable collections of its kind in the world, and that the Board was most enthusiastic to acquire this collec- tion for the University. Mr. Sealy explained to Mr. Whipple that the University did not have the funds to purchase the Collection at this time, and that the only way in which it could be purchased was through contribu- tions from the people of Texas. Mr. Sealy further stated that the Director °, %.. of the University Development Board, Mr.
    [Show full text]
  • A Life in Context: Finding Form in Lewis T. May
    A LIFE IN CONTEXT: FINDING FORM IN LEWIS T. MAY by NATALIE A. STACKABLE Presented to the Faculty of the Graduate School of The University of Texas at Arlington in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of MASTER OF LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS AT ARLINGTON May 2006 Copyright © by Natalie A. Stackable 2006 All Rights Reserved ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS Lewis T. May so thoughtfully provided his time, project materials and insights which have enabled the creation of this thesis. I would also like to thank Ken Bailey, his studio manager for working with me to schedule visits and interviews and ensuring that I received the necessary information to complete this thesis. I also need to thank his associates who gave of their time: Nancy Fleshman, Verrick Walker, Sandy Lynch, Richard Rome, Van Cox, and M. David Low. Without these folks, it would not have been possible to obtain a full and complete understanding of the many roles and contributions May has made to the field. Additionally, I would like to thank my committee chair, Gary O. Robinette and the other committee members, Dr. Pat Taylor and David Hopman for having faith in my ability to complete the thesis while I resided three hundred miles away from their expertise and guidance. Last, but certainly not least, my husband, Phil, for encouraging me to remain focused and helping me overcome the obstacles I encountered during this process. This exegesis would not have been possible without his support and faith in allowing me to attend the MLA program at the University of Texas at Arlington while he remained back at the homestead in Houston.
    [Show full text]
  • The Architecture of Mark Lemmon
    Crafting Traditions: The Architecture of Mark Lemmon (Hardback) < Kindle \\ CORVNRA1IR Crafting Traditions: Th e A rch itecture of Mark Lemmon (Hardback) By - Southern Methodist University Press,U.S., United States, 2005. Hardback. Condition: New. New.. Language: English . Brand New Book. This is the first work to document the life and career of Dallas architect Mark Lemmon, a pre-eminent American historicist. It is an illustrated testament to Lemmon s ideas of architectural civility, solidity, and classicism - considered retrograde by many architectural historians, though taking on a renewed relevance after the post-modernist revisionism of the 1970s. Having completed his architectural education at MIT and a tour of duty as a military engineer in Europe during World War I, Lemmon, a Texas native, moved to Dallas and began a distinguished career spanning forty years from the 1920s to the 1960s. Lemmon s greatest contributions to Texas architecture were his designs for educational and religious institutions. His most important clients were the Dallas Independent School District, Southern Methodist University (for which he designed eighteen Georgian style buildings), the Port Arthur School District, and the University of Texas at Austin. In styles that vary from Romanesque to Moderne, these buildings define their neighborhoods and place their users in a system of civilized architectural allusions that raises the level of urban culture. Few Texas architects matched the range... READ ONLINE [ 5.42 MB ] Reviews This book may be worth purchasing. It typically fails to expense excessive. It is extremely diicult to leave it before concluding, once you begin to read the book. -- Ken Watsica I just started o reading this article publication.
    [Show full text]
  • Dallas Landmark Commission Landmark Nomination Form 1
    Dallas Landmark Commission Landmark Nomination Form 1. Name Historic: Sunset High School and/or common: n/a Date: 1925 2. Location Address: 2120 West Jefferson Blvd. Location/neighborhood: Dallas, 75208 Block and lot: Block A/3320, lot 1 land survey: n/a tract size: 11.384 Acres 3. Current Zoning current zoning: PD 409 4. Classification Category Ownership Status Present Use museum district x public x occupied agricultural park x building(s) private unoccupied commercial residence x structure both work in progress x educational religious x site Public Accessibility entertainment scientific object Acquisition x yes: restricted government transportation in progress yes: unrestricted industrial other, specify being consider’d no military _______________ 5. Ownership Current Owner: Dallas Independent School District Contact: Orlando Alameda, Real Estate and Leasing Services Ph: 972/925-5142 Address: 3700 Ross Avenue City: Dallas State: TX Zip: 75204 4. Form Preparation Date: February 14, 2014 Name & Title: Marcel Quimby, Designation Committee, assisted by Cindy W. Billman Organization: Sunset High School Alumni Association Contact: Mitch Womble: 214/675-2843 (cell) 7. Representation on Existing Surveys Alexander Survey (citywide): local state national National Register no H.P.L. Survey (CBD) A B C D Recorded TX Historic Ldmk Oak Cliff TX Archaeological Ldmk Victorian Survey Dallas Historic Resources Survey, Phase high medium low For Office Use Only Date Rec'd: Survey Verified: Y N by: Field Check by: Petitions Needed: Y N Nomination: Archaeological Site Structure(s) Structure & Site District Sunset High School Dallas Landmark Nomination / February 14, 2014 Page 1 8. Historic Ownership Original owner: City of Dallas Public Schools (now known as Dallas Independent School District) Significant later owner(s): none 9.
    [Show full text]
  • Spence Junior High School Landmark Nomination Form
    Dallas Landmark Commission Landmark Nomination Form Ii. Name historic: Alex W. Spence Junior High School and/pr common: Alex W. Spence Middle School Academy date: 1939.’66.’88 I 2. Location address: 4001 Capitol Avenue location/neighborhood: blocks: 25/986 (2006) survey: John Cole tract size: I 3. Current Zoning 1 ~. Classification Category Ownership Status Present Use ing(s) structure in x educational site progress — entertainment object Public transportation Acquisition Accessibility progress restricted considered I 5. Ownership Current Owner: DISD Contact: Phone: Address: I 6. Form Preparation Date: March. 1996 Name & Title: Kate Singleton Organization: City of Dallas Contact: Kate Singleton Phone: 670-5200 I ~. Representation on Existing Surveys Alexander Survey (citywide) local state_ national Register H.P.L. Survey (CBD) A B C D TX Historic Ldmk Oak Cliff — Archaeological Ldmk Victorian Survey — Dallas Historic Resources Survey, Phase — high medium low For Office Use Only Date Rec ‘d:_____ Survey Verified: Y N by:______ Field Check by:______ Petitions Needed: Y N Nomination: Archaeological Site Structure(s) Structure & Site District _____excellent_____fair ______unexposed______deteriorated ______unaltered ~origina1 site [8. Historic Ownership I original qwner: DISD significant later owner(s): 1 9. Construction Dates I original: 1939 alterations/additions: 1966. 1988 I 10. Architect I original construction: Mark Lemmon alterations/additions: Clutts and Parker. Dale Seizer I ii. Site Features I natural: urban design: I 12. Physical Description I Condition. check one: Check one: _x_good _____ruins x_altered _____moved (date ) Describe present and original (if known) physical appearance. Include style(s) of architecture, current condition and relationship to surrounding fabric (structures, objects, etc.) elaborate on pertinent materials used and style(s) of architectural detailing, embellishments and site details.
    [Show full text]
  • BIBLIOGRAPHY Aeck, Richard L, "Use of Structural
    BIBLIOGRAPHY Aeck, Richard L, "Use of Structural Steel in the Georgia School System," American Institute of Steel Construction, Inc., Structural Steel for Schools-A Symposium, 1959:1-4. Agostini, Edward J., "Facilities Planning and the Management Process." Building Research: Journal of the BRAB Building Research Institute, July 1972. ———, "Pre-Design Programming: Some Do's and Don'ts," Kliment's Reports-Feature Reprint, 1975. ———, "Programming: Demanding Specialty in a Complex World," Architectural Record, September 1968. Architectural Research at Texas A&M College Engineering Experiment Station. Research Reports. Caudill, William Wayne. "A Bibliography on School Architecture," No. 1, July 1948:20. CRS Center Archives, College Station, Texas. ———. Research Reports. Department of Architecture, The Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas. "Building for Learning," No. 3, July 1948:37. CRS Center Archives, College Station, Texas. ———. Research Reports. Vezey, E.E. "The Feasibility of Using Models for Predetermining Natural Lighting," No. 21, January 1951:33. CRS Center Archives, College Station, Texas. ———. Research Reports. Caudill, William Wayne, Sherman E. Crites, and Elmer G. Smith. "Some General Considerations in the Natural Ventilation of Buildings," No. 22, February 1951:43. CRS Center Archives, College Station, Texas. ———. Research Reports. Smith, Elmer G., Robert H. Reed, and H. Darwin Hodges. "Measurement of Low Air Speeds by the Use of Titanium Tetrachloride," No. 25, May 1951:22. CRS Center Archives, College Station, Texas. ———. Research Reports. McCutchan, Gordon, and William Wayne Caudill. "An Experiment in Architectural Education Through Research," No. 32, November 1951:64. CRS Center Archives, College Station, Texas. ———. Research Reports. Holleman, Theo R. "Air Flow Through Conventional Window Openings," No.
    [Show full text]
  • RESUME August 2011 LAWRENCE W. SPECK, FAIA W. L. Moody
    RESUME August 2011 LAWRENCE W. SPECK, FAIA W. L. Moody Centennial Professor in Architecture University Distinguished Teaching Professor Education Master of Architecture, M.I.T. Bachelor of Science in Art and Design, M.I.T. Bachelor of Science in Management, M.I.T. Academic Experience Professor of Architecture, The University of Texas at Austin, 1984-present; Associate Professor of Architecture, 1979-84; Assistant Professor of Architecture, 1975- 79 Dean, School of Architecture, The University of Texas at Austin, 1992-2001 Associate Dean, School of Architecture, The University of Texas at Austin, l990-92 Instructor, M.I.T., 1972-75 Teaching Assistant, M.I.T., 1971-72 Professional Experience and Registrations Registered Architect, State of Texas, Commonwealth of Virginia Principal, Page Southerland Page, Austin, Texas, 1999-present Principal, Lawrence W. Speck Associates, Austin, Texas, 1975-99 List of Major Works Visitor Center, University of Texas at Dallas, Dallas, Texas Buffalo Bayou Park, Sabine to Sheppard Project, Houston, Texas WJE Office Building, Austin, Texas Performing Arts Center, University of Texas Pan American, Edinburgh, Texas Torcasso House, Santa Fe, New Mexico Immigration and Customs Enforcement Building, Albuquerque, New Mexico Wooldridge Student Housing, Austin, Texas East Avenue Mixed-Use Development, Austin, Texas U.S. Federal Courthouse, Alpine, Texas Chickasaw Health Center, Ada, Oklahoma Discovery Green Park, Houston, Texas The Grove Restaurant, Houston, Texas AMLI Residential Tower, Austin, Texas Waterstone Condominiums, Lake Travis, Texas Christ Church Cathedral Expansion, Houston, Texas Prothro House, Dallas, Texas FBI Regional Headquarters, Houston, Texas 2 Seton Medical Center Expansion, Austin, Texas Austin City Lofts Wabash Garage, Austin, Texas Driskill Children’s Clinic, McAllen, Texas Austin Convention Center Expansion Computer Science Corporation Offices, Austin, Texas Barbara Jordan Terminal, Austin Bergstrom International Airport Robert E.
    [Show full text]
  • Family Tree Maker
    My Earliest Texas Ancestor Felix Benedict Dixon A San Augustine County, Texas Pioneer and a Republic of Texas Citizen www.dasharpe.com/geneology/Dixon_Family.pdf by Dwight Albert Sharpe Aurora, Texas www.dasharpe.com August 17, 2007 Table of Contents Dedication & Special Recognition ........................................................................................................................2 Copyright...............................................................................................................................................................5 Introduction ...........................................................................................................................................................7 Sons of the Republic of Texas Certificate .............................................................................................................9 Register Report for John Dixon, Father of Felix B. Dixon..................................................................................11 Descendants of Elisha Benedict.........................................................................................................................145 What is a Half Cousin, Twice Removed?..........................................................................................................147 Kinship Report for Felix Benedict Dixon..........................................................................................................151 Family Group Sheet of Felix Benedict Dixon....................................................................................................155
    [Show full text]
  • Building for Learning in Postwar American Elementary Schools Author(S): Amy F
    Building for Learning in Postwar American Elementary Schools Author(s): Amy F. Ogata Source: Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians, Vol. 67, No. 4 (December 2008), pp. 562-591 Published by: University of California Press on behalf of the Society of Architectural Historians Stable URL: https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.1525/jsah.2008.67.4.562 Accessed: 28-07-2018 06:58 UTC JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected]. Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at https://about.jstor.org/terms Society of Architectural Historians, University of California Press are collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians This content downloaded from 138.25.4.79 on Sat, 28 Jul 2018 06:58:30 UTC All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms 04 Ogata 10/24/08 4:23 PM Page 562 Building for Learning in Postwar American Elementary Schools amy f. ogata The Bard Graduate Center for Studies in the Decorative Arts, Design, and Culture n 1955, editors at the Architectural Forum worried, cations of public education gained increased significance “every 15 minutes enough babies are born to fill with the rising birthrate and the growing specter of a Com- another classroom and we are already 250,000 class- munist threat.
    [Show full text]
  • Woodrow Wilson High School Landmark Nomination Form
    Dallas Landmark Commission Landmark Nomination Form I1.Name historic: Woodrow Wilson High School and/or common: same date: 1928 12. Location address: 100 S. Glasgow Drive. Dallas Texas 75214 location/neighborhood: East Dallas block: 1672 lot: all of land survey: Robert Moore tact size: approx. 6.5 acres 13. Current Zoning R-7.5(A) 14. Classification Category Ownership Status Present Use ..........w urn ~..~public ~occupied ..._private Sid~Ee both work in progress ...L.educational ..Xsite Public Accessibility ._Scientific Acquisition ...yes reswicted progress ..X~es:wresthcLed ...jndustrial specify ~nsidered n ~ 15. Ownership Current Owner: Dallas Independent School District Contact: Willian~ Cotton Phone: 824-1620 ext 205 Address: 3700 Ross Avenue City: Dalias State: Texas Zip: 75204 [6. Form Preparation Date: February 1990 ~ ?‘j~,p e~ Title N~ghborhood Designation Task Force Organization: Department of Planning and Development Contact: Beth Hennessy Phone: 670-4151 17. Representation on Existing Surveys Alexander Survey (citywide)_ locaL.., state national ~._National Register H.P.L. Survey (CBD) C.....J) DC Historic Lrimk Oak Cliff — Archaeological Ldmk Victorian Survey — ..XTexas Historical Marker Dallas Historic Resources Survey, Phase I ~Jiigh — low For Office Liz. Only Date Rec’d:: Survey Verified: Y N by:____ Field Check by: TN Nomination: Archaeological Site Structure(s) District __fafr _unexPosed (date:___ 18. Historic Ownership I original owner: Dallas Independent School District significant later owner(s): 19. Construction Dates original: 1928 alterations/additions: 1953, 1979 110. Architect I original construction: Roscoe P. DeWitt and Mark Lemmon alterations/additions: 1953: Witchell, White & Edwards with Mark Lemmon consulting Ill. Site Features I natural: urban design: Set on broad lawn in residential neighborhood 112.
    [Show full text]