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Sixteen projects waltzed away with design awards at the
AIA Tennessee's 2005 annual meeting and convention in Nashville. The
international jury, chaired by Brian Ambroziak, and including Salvatore
Canciello, AIA, Sasaki Associates, Boston; Jon Coddington, AIA, Ball State
University, Muncie, Ind.; and Sigismund Sliwinski, Sliwinski Lenschow
Architekten, Berlin, Germany, deliberated over 80 submittals, recognizing
the following projects for their outstanding design.
Awards of Excellence
Woodson Gilchrist Residence, by Woodson
Gilchrist Architects This design combines established
neighborhood patterns with contemporary features that reflect the
architect-owners' lifestyle and history. They call it a "bungaloft”a loft
with a great front porch. "The massing references the neighboring
foursquare house and becomes an interpretation of it, not a stripped-down
copy," the jury noted. "The nicely disciplined plan of well-orchestrated
layers of public-to-private spaces results in a beautiful mixture of
openness and privacy." Photo © Michael Lewis.
Middle Tennessee State University
Sports Hall of Fame, Murfreesboro, Tenn., by Tuck Hinton Architects,
Nashville This multipurpose building houses the school's Sports
Hall of Fame and exhibits to showcase athletic history and programs of a
growing state university. A generous alumnus provided funding for the new
facility. The jury said they found it easy to imagine the spaces of the
MTSU Sports Hall of Fame filled with alumni and sports enthusiasts.
"Within the simplicity of the overall composition there is a complexity
and vibrancy in the execution of the interior spaces," they noted. "The
layers provide additional richness and subtlety. The architect tastefully
addresses the design of the hall of fame without too much emphasis on
school colors or logos, as is typically seen." Photo © Michael Lewis.
Akhriev Hefferlin Williams Street
Studio, Chattanooga, by Hefferlin + Kronenberg Architects
PLLC The Akhriev-Hefferlin Studio is a mixed-use project
combining an art gallery, painting studio, and residence on a mid-block
property in Chattanooga's reemerging Southside District. The architects
organized it around a central courtyard; built it with combinations of
steel frame, heavy timber, and conventional framing; and clad it with zinc
and stone. The interior colors reflect the artist's palette. "Working with
an informed client to develop a sophisticated live/work program, the
architect contrasts the spatial qualities of the narrow site with a design
that explodes with light, resulting in a surprisingly open and welcoming
solution," the jury remarked. "The project seems to fit effortlessly in a
tight urban space, with emphasis on the courtyard that works beautifully
with the phased program." Photo © Tim Street Porter.
Restoration of the Historic Tennessee
Theatre, Knoxville, by McCarty Holsaple McCarty Architects Inc., in
association with van Dijk Westlake Reed Leskosky The architects
restored, renovated, and expanded the Historic Tennessee Theatre, long a
landmark in downtown Knoxville, to serve as a performing-arts venue
upgraded to meet current life-safety and accessibility codes. The
architects expanded the stagehouse in depth and height to allow
Broadway-style shows and supplied an array of new support spaces. "The
design of the Historic Tennessee Theatre is a magnificent restoration that
brings back the vibrancy and dignity of the original building," said the
jury. "The theatre promises to be a great contribution to the life of
downtown and the city's main street." Photo © Nels Akerlund
Photography.
Red Deluxe, Memphis, by
archimania The architects strove to design a 4,000-square-foot
new office space for a progressive advertising agency, a design that is
"tough, refined, subtle, and yet not so subtle." The result is an
interactive and engaging space that focuses on five diverse zones:
conference room facing the street, "concept room," private offices,
semiprivate workstations, and the "engine room." The honesty of the design
coupled with creative value engineering enable this space to become what
it is: Red Deluxe. "The project offers clear spatial relationships
complemented by a rich material palette and integrated lighting," the jury
said. "The interior deals with space and form, not just surface and
color." Photo © Jeffrey Jacobs.
Hunter Museum of American Art,
Chattanooga, Tenn., by Randall Stout Architecture Inc. and Derthick,
Henley & Wilkerson Architects Drawing from the site's
natural setting, this museum embodies a contemporary interpretation of
rock outcroppings and strata within the cliff below, while undulating roof
forms reflect dynamic movements of the neighboring river. Contributing to
this composition is a materials palette consisting of glass, oxidized
zinc, and stainless steel. Within the museum, the design solves
longstanding staff and art circulation problems by creating
state-of-the-art receiving, storage, and work areas. The design
consolidates the permanent collection onto a single floor, with convenient
access to new public areas, including the lobby, auditorium, education
studios, café, museum shop, and the 1905 mansion. "The Hunter Museum of
American Art is a logical progression of the architecture of the existing
structures, adding to the city's repertoire of spatial typologies," the
jury said. "The floating roof planes accentuate the natural rock
outcropping, grounding the building and organizing the public spaces with
exploding views down the river." Photo © Tim Griffith.
Shelby Street Bridge Lighting,
Nashville, by Frederic Schwartz Architects, and Barge Waggoner Sumner
& Cannon Inc., with Domingo Gonzalez Associates, lighting
consultant The preservation of the historic Shelby Street
Bridge, one of the longest pedestrian bridges in the world, provides an
important revitalized recreational transit corridor and a popular
destination. Its dramatic new lighting enhances the structure of the
bridge and has created an instant icon for the city and a beloved place
for an evening stroll and weekend events. The implementation of this
design literally brings to light the positive results of place-making in
the city and the celebration of historic urban infrastructure. "The bridge
reinvigorates the river experience, emphasizing the pedestrian nature of
the city and its interest in creating neighborhood linkages," the jury
enthused. "The stunning lighting design highlights the structural elements
and many connections that make up the old riveted style bridge,
celebrating its unique historic character." Photo © Dave Anderson.
Merit Awards
Germantown Court, Nashville, by Dryden
Abernathy I Architecture Design This project's common green
space is central to the lifestyle of each resident of the eight cottages.
It encourages public interaction in an unusually tight configuration.
Residents organize gatherings and sports activities and enjoy spontaneous
happenings, supporting communal habitation. The jury believed that as an
urban design exercise, the Germantown Court successfully creates a
prototypical solution for community living while still retaining the
positive aspects of detached housing. "The project promises to be a
capable addition to the problem of neighborhood infill housing that offers
individual ownership of discreet houses while achieving density," they
remarked. Photo © Dean Dixon.
Ensworth High School, Nashville, by
Hastings Architecture Associates and GUND PARTNERSHIP INC. A
contemporary expression, grounded in the traditional roots of collegiate
architecture, gives Ensworth a striking sense of permanence and community.
The architects carefully preserved the 127-acre historic site, with
significant natural features and historic structures, including
10,000-year-old artifacts found on the site. This new independent high
school, designed to accommodate 450 9th-12th-grade students, offers
academics, arts, and athletics organized around an open-sided, quadrangle
courtyard. "The Ensworth High School is a nice collage of forms that
create convincing spaces," said the jury. "The scale of the building and
the constraints of the vocabulary, as well as how the large-volume
buildings of the sports facilities nestled into the topography, were
executed with restraint and clarity." Photo © Jeff Goldberg/Esto
Photographics.
Point: Counterpoint a Conversation with
Haviland, Philadelphia, by Tricia Stuth and Ted Shelton Point:
Counterpoint is an architectural installation at Eastern State
Penitentiary National Historic Landmark in Philadelphia. Through a series
of screens, scrims, and thresholds, the architects say, the underlying
logic of the building's plan is called into question, and issues of
surveillance and privacy are raised. Large mirrors hidden within the
framework of the project interrupt and bend axial views, capturing the
vision of the "guard" while that of the "prisoners" is linked and
extended. "The project demonstrates a clear critique of the original
sight-line concept of the prison and reverses it," said the jury. They
selected the project for merit because it demonstrates the application of
a fundamental architectural language. Photo © C Frank Iaquinta /Halkin
Photography.
Restoration and Additions to Sacred
Heart Cathedral, Rochester, N.Y., by Williamson Ponders Architects
PC The jury felt that this project's attention to light, craft,
and detail in the project was remarkable. It brings the 75-year-old Gothic
Revival cathedral into full conformance with contemporary Roman Catholic
liturgical standards and provides major new spaces for social gatherings,
meetings, and administration. "The design of the Sacred Heart Cathedral is
an elegant renovation with a sensitive narthex addition that enhances and
improves the composition of the overall design," the jury said. "The
language of the addition honors and celebrates the existing structure."
Photo © Tim Wilkes Photography
University of Tennessee Institute of
Agriculture Biotechnology Research Center, Knoxville, by Bullock, Smith
& Partners Inc., and Barber McMurry Architects The
$22.5-million Biotechnology Research Center, completed in 2003 on the
Knoxville Campus of the University of Tennessee, constitutes 143,000
square feet. A requirement for internal modular labs flanking mechanical
chases set the order of the building, with additional labs and other
spaces designed in a deliberately picturesque composition. "We recognize
that the architects were asked to design a complicated and expensive
building type on a relatively restrained budget," the jury noted. "Their
response was competently executed with maximum value." Photo © Eric
Oxendorf.
Camp Fish Lips, Norris Lake, Tenn., by
Johnson Architecture Inc. The architects conceived the new
retreat home for a family of four in the concept of a summer "fishing
camp." Located on a rock bluff overlooking Tennessee's Norris Lake, the
complex consists of a "main house" connected to separate "bunk houses"
with a covered deck. Jury members said they were especially drawn to the
design for Camp Fish Lips because of what they described as its "beautiful
and consistent use of materials and craft" and its nostalgic reference to
the vernacular fishing retreat. "The architect has demonstrated a
wonderfully sensitive approach to the scale of the elements, their
material, texture, and lighting that will enhance the experience of the
visitor's stay," they opined. Photo © Peter Montanti, Mountain
Photographics Inc.
Scott Avenue Townhomes, East Nashville,
Tenn., by Everton Oglesby Architects Scott Avenue Townhomes, a
small-scale mixed-use development nestled in the heart of East Nashville,
consists of 10 two-story, single-family units and a 1,800-square-foot
corner commercial building. An L-shaped site plan not only creates a
consistent street edge with the development's existing neighbors but also
adds privacy and secure parking for the residents. The design for the
Scott Avenue Townhomes is an excellent response to its surroundings, the
jury said, giving an observer a good sense of context and precedent
without copying. "The overall composition offers a good variety of types,
including a commercial building at the corner, that together create a nice
sense of community," they said. Photo © Tom Gatlin Photography.
Knoxville Convention Center, by McCarty
Holsaple McCarty Architects Inc., and Thompson Ventulett & Stainback
& Assoc. Siting of the new center city convention center for
Knoxville overlooking the redesigned World's Fair Park takes advantage of
the existing area's rich landscape and topographic form and establishes a
new gateway into the park. Unlike most large-footprint convention centers,
which require access on at least one side, the Knoxville Convention Center
has four separate positive facades, each addressing a different view to
its surroundings. The jury felt that this project should be considered for
an award because of its innovative organization, scale, proportion, and
integration with site topography and visual axes. "It demonstrates a
strong, inventive solution that allows conventioneers to be exposed to the
city and its major park," they said. Photo © Robert Batey.
Civil Rights Collection, Nashville
Public Library, by Tuck Hinton Architects The architects altered
a corner space in a large city library to become the location of materials
on the Civil Rights Movement. A table symbolic of downtown lunch counters,
the primary target of civil rights protests, serves as the centerpiece of
the space. A comprehensive timeline on this radial, egalitarian element
contrasts local and national events. Ten "rules of nonviolent conduct"
carried by the young demonstrators are engraved on the glass surface, and
visitors are invited to read the timeline and recite the compelling
guidelines. Words etched on an adjacent new translucent wall were spoken
after Martin Luther King witnessed the impact of the successful
demonstrations. "The Civil Rights Collection of the Nashville Public
Library is a simple yet elegant design that brings a powerful moment in
Nashville's history back into the public realm," the jury remarked. Photo
© Gary Layda.
Copyright 2006 The American Institute of Architects.
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