Friday, January 26, 2007

VisMasters Design Modeling & Visualization Conference

The VisMasters Design Modeling & Visualization Conference is a one day event focused on the business, art and technology of design visualization. Featuring speakers from some of the most prestigious and well known architectural and visualization firms, participants from all facets of the industry will find a new found appreciation for the art and insights into what lies ahead.

VisMasters has partnered with IMAGINA to bring you the first ever European Design Modeling and Visualization Conference. This year there are three days dedicated solely to Design Visualization. The third and final day is being hosted by VisMasters. VisMasters is offering two exclusive packages: 1day VisMasters DMVC Pass or 3day IMAGINA + VisMasters DMVC Pass.

Focused Program
An unprecedented opportunity to learn, to network and to evolve the industry, VisMasters Design Modeling and Visualization Conference is an intensely programmed event with highly targeted programs and opportunities to network with peers. The program is designed to ensure that everyones takes away valuable industry insight, practical skills, and information that benefits your profession and your firm.

Exclusive Opportunity
One of the hottest tickets in the Design Modeling and Visualization industry this past August, the North America conference featured an attendee list that included 39 of the Top 50 Architectural firms, in addition to industry leading product manufacturers and entertainment companies, like Whirlpool, Disney, Ford Motor Company and Renault. Hundreds of like-minded professionals will gather in Monaco to focus topics that impact the direction of the industry and ultimately affect your bottom line. Make your plans now to attend!

Connect with Industry Leaders.
VisMasters DMVC provides you an ideal environment to establish and build productive personal and professional relationships with colleagues and other industry leaders.

from http://dmvc.vismasters.com/index.cfm

Thursday, January 25, 2007

First Green Convention Center in Pittsburgh

by Emily form inhabitat.com


In a city that’s seen a remarkable urban resurgence in the past decade, Pittsburgh’s David Lawrence Convention Center stands along the Allegheny River as a beacon of both beautiful architecture and innovative green design. Designed by architect Rafael Viñoly, the waterfront building is certified with a Gold LEED rating, and is both the largest “green” building and first “green” convention center. Aside from its eye-catching aesthetic, Viñoly’s design boasts an impressive list of green architectural elements and high-tech systems, from large glass curtain walls that admit consistent daylight (over 75% of the center’s exhibition spaces are naturally lit) to a state-of-the-art water reclamation system that reduces potable water usage by almost sixty percent. And the list goes on…



Green in its form and architecture, the design of the center takes full advantage of its context, using the natural airflow from the river to ventilate the entire complex. This architectural solution, combined with other energy-saving tactics, results in annual energy savings of over 35 percent. In terms of materials, the structure integrates a slew of green components including low- and no-VOC paints and non-toxic carpeting. The center has also put into effect an extensive recycling program that both recognizes and mitigates the wasteful and ephemeral nature of the exhibitions and trade shows it houses. The convention center serves as a new model of a hyper-functional, aesthetically-stunning green building, proving that large-scale, utilititarian buildings need not sacrifice function or aesthetic to be environmentally responsible.

+ David Lawrence Convention Center
+ Rafael Viñoly Architects







Sunday, January 21, 2007

Barnes Gold Medal


by ArchitectureWeek

Only five times in the 100-year history of the American Institute of Architects (AIA) Gold Medal has the AIA's highest honor been awarded posthumously. Renowned 20th-century architect Edward Larrabee Barnes, FAIA has now joined the ranks of the others — Thomas Jefferson, Eero Saarinen, Richard Neutra, William Caudill, and Samuel Mockbee — who did not live long enough to enjoy this well deserved symbol of professional recognition.

Barnes is perhaps best remembered for fusing American modernism with vernacular architecture. In describing him, Henry N. Cobb, FAIA, founding partner with Pei Cobb Freed & Partners, remarked: "With characteristically quiet determination, Edward Barnes produced a large body of distinguished built work — some of them too-little celebrated — during his more than 40 years of practice. Although Barnes was modest, perhaps to a fault, and often seemed to operate 'below the radar' of critical acclaim, his influence has nonetheless been broad and deep."

In nominating Barnes for the 2007 AIA Gold Medal, Toshiko Mori, FAIA, chair of the Department of Architecture, Harvard Graduate School of Design, observed, "Barnes's work is held in high regard among architects internationally and is influential in reassessing both the contemporary and future models of architecture. It has a generous sense of proportion spatially which is very different from precedent European models."

Barnes was born in Chicago in 1915 and attended the Harvard Graduate School of design. There he was influenced by architects Walter Gropius and Marcel Breuer and the design style that emerged in the 1930s. To their European modernism, Barnes applied an American touch — "an architecture of restraint that was sensitive both to locality and to materials" according to the Times of London, November 17, 2004

He established his own firm in New York in 1949 and taught at the Pratt Institute in New York and Yale University in Connecticut. He designed a wide range of projects including civic, commercial, educational, and ecclesiastical buildings. Some of the best known are the Walker Art Center (1971) in Minneapolis, Minnesota; 590 Madison Avenue, formerly the IBM Building, in New York City; and the Haystack Mountain School of Crafts on Deer Isle, Maine, for which he won the AIA Twenty-five Year Award in 1994.

In the words of Muriel Emmanuel in her book, Contemporary Architects, Barnes created primarily "monumental buildings which avoid the appearance of coldness or formality. In his work, he exhibits sensitivity to both site and materials."

Emmanuel continues: "He used geometry to order his spaces without restricting them. He meticulously detailed his buildings and simplified complex programs with dominant shapes and homogeneous materials. To further simplify and organize his designs, Barnes used modules. Precast concrete panels, cut stone and glass frequent his designs and help impose modular restrictions."

One reason his design work was so compelling lies, perhaps, in its geometric clarity. He once explained: "A building must have a strong idea that is architectural rather than sculptural or painterly — one that is related to the activity in the building. The idea should be something that can be drawn on a napkin or an envelope. When one architect says to another: 'What kind of a building are you doing?' one should immediately be able to draw an abstraction, or a diagram, of the architectural idea."

Edward Larrabee Barnes died on September 21, 2004. He will be commemorated at the American Architectural Foundation Accent on Architecture Gala, February 9, 2007, at the National Building Museum in Washington, DC.

Nemetschek NA Releases VectorWorks v12.5.1


COLUMBIA, Maryland, January 10, 2007 - Nemetschek North America announced today the release of VectorWorks version 12.5.1, a maintenance update for VectorWorks Designer, VectorWorks Architect, VectorWorks Landmark, VectorWorks Spotlight, VectorWorks Machine Design, VectorWorks Fundamentals, and RenderWorks.

"As with any major VectorWorks release, it is our goal to improve the stability and performance of that release, as well as respond to our users and address any problems they may encounter," says Paul Pharr, Nemetschek North America's chief technology officer. "With VectorWorks 12.5.1, we've worked to resolve our users' most frequently reported issues with VectorWorks 12.5."

VectorWorks 12.5.1 contains important fixes that improve the program's stability and robustness, particularly when opening and saving files over a Macintosh network. Memory and other issues when working with viewports, as well as stacked layers, have been improved. In addition, 3D snapping accuracy when working with symbols, groups, and other objects has been improved.

For complete information on new and enhanced features in VectorWorks 12.5.1, go to www.nemetschek.net/upgrade/index.php.

For more information and to download the 12.5.1 update at no charge, visit www.nemetschek.net/downloads/fundamentals/version12/12.5.1.php.

Nemetschek North America is a wholly-owned subsidiary of European software giant Nemetschek AG. A global leader in design technologies, Nemetschek N.A. has been developing CAD software for the AEC, entertainment, landscape design, and manufacturing fields since 1985. VectorWorks, its flagship product, is one of the world's best-selling cross-platform CAD applications. An all-in-one solution that's easier to learn and use and more cost-effective than most other CAD programs, VectorWorks is ideal for firms that don't have unlimited IT budgets. For more information, visit www.nemetschek.net.

The National Art Center - Japan’s Newest and Biggest Art Museum



TOKYO, JAPAN - The National Art Center, Japan’s newest and biggest art museum, opens with the exhibition Living in the Material World – 'Things' in Art of the 20th Century and Beyond, on view through March 19, 2007. The 20th century was an age of materialistic civilization centered on cities. The experience of living in a world surrounded by abounding material 'things,' huge quantities of manufactured goods and commercial products, was something completely new to human beings. Artists who sensitively responded to this new situation began to incorporate material 'things' into their artistic expression in various forms.

This exhibition introduces diverse forms of 20th century art expressed through bold experiments of artists with spirit of adventure. It explores the fields of design, craft, and architecture as well as the fine arts. In addition to the works of art in the collection of the national art institutions, this exhibition brings together more than 500 valuable works of art from all parts of the world, with the generous support from major museums in Japan and abroad.

Large-scale installations will be created by seven important artists from Japan and overseas, who pursue cutting-edge contemporary forms of artistic expression. This unprecedentedly ambitious and comprehensive exhibition, presented in a huge exhibition space measuring 6,000 square meters, will attract art communities both domestically and internationally.

With its striking facade of waves of glass, The National Art Center, Tokyo, need not beg to differ. A bold move to Roppongi away from the cluster of national and metropolitan-run institutions in Ueno, the new museum encompasses an astounding 48,000m2, making it the largest in Japan.

With no collection of its own, the National Art Center, Tokyo’s 12 exhibition rooms will be divided between shows organized by nationally recognized art associations (ten rooms) and those used for curated exhibitions (two rooms). Alongside the state-of-the-art exhibition spaces are a restaurant and three cafés, a shop, an auditorium, three lecture rooms and a public art library containing 50,000 publications, largely art exhibition catalogues. Also, as part of their “outreach to the public,” the museum will offer educational programs, lectures, gallery talks, internships and volunteer programs. For 2007, the 43 volunteers and ten graduate-students and museum-professional interns have already been selected.

The building is a work of art in itself. The eye-catching design by Kisho Kurokawa is best appreciated from the Roppongi Hills observatory. With a “mori no naka” (in the middle of the woods) theme, the architect based the curved frontage on computer-rendered rhythmic images formed by mountains and the seashore.

Inside, the atrium blends two huge conical pods with natural wood flooring, andon-style lights that illuminate a bank of slatted walls, and leafy views of Aoyama Cemetery. It’s a breathtaking welcome that befits the museum’s original concept as a hirakareta bijutsukan—a museum opened to all.

With more than 30 million residents, this is the most populous metropolis in the world—and its pockets are deep. In 2005, the three most-attended museum exhibitions in the world were all in Tokyo, according to Art Newspaper’s annual survey, with the Hokusai exhibition at Tokyo National Museum attracting more than 9,400 visitors a day, the largest number on record.

Since the national museums were semi-privatized in 2001 to make them responsible for generating a profit, there has been an effort to offer crowd-pleasing shows. The museum’s target is 1.5 million visitors in 2007.

And don’t forget the more than 240 art associations in Tokyo alone vying for rental space to exhibit their members’ works. In fact, The National Art Center, Tokyo is already booked-up for the next five years. From April 2007 through March 2008, 69 art associations will exhibit there, among them—in a coup for the new museum—the coveted Nitten Exhibition, the largest in Japan, until now held at the Tokyo Metropolitan Art Museum in Ueno. The museum is also another development in the corporate effort to reinvent Roppongi as something more than a nightlife district. It’s within walking distance of both the Mori Art Museum at Roppongi Hills and the newly rebuilt Suntory Art Museum at Tokyo Midtown, which will open on March 30, and the three have formed an alliance called Art Triangle Roppongi, through which they hope to coordinate future events. It’s a smart collaborative move promoting the area as a “cultural hub.”



The new museum’s inaugural exhibition, “Living in the Material World: ‘Things’ in Art of the 20th Century and Beyond,” will run January 21 to March 19 and is a practical compilation of more than 500 works from about 280 artists, borrowed from several museum collections in Japan and abroad, including The Museum of Modern Art in New York. The show explores our material world, a timely commentary on the way art has reflected our insatiable desire for “things” and the rise of “global hyper-capitalism.” It includes well-known works like Marcel Duchamp’s Bicycle Wheel (orig. 1913) and Tom Wesselmann’s Bathtub Collage #2 (1963).

In tandem will be the tenth anniversary exhibition of the Bunkacho (Agency for Cultural Affairs) Media Arts Festival, titled “The Power of Expression, Japan” with works of manga, anime and entertainment art (Jan 21-Feb 4). This will be followed by an exhibition of works borrowed from the Centre Pompidou in Paris, titled “Paris du Monde entier: Artistes étrangers à Paris 1900-2005” (Feb 7-May 7).

Brand new and cool, but old, wise and resourceful, The National Art Center, Tokyo looks like a big wave about to make quite a splash.

The National Art Center, Tokyo, 7-22-2 Roppongi, Minato-ku. Tel: 03-5777-8600. Open 10am-6pm (until 8pm on Fridays), closed Tuesday. See exhibition listings for details. Visit : www.nact.jp

Foster + Partners submits plans for the Clarence Hotel in Dublin

Report From Archiseek



Foster + Partners are due to submit proposals to Dublin City Council for a dramatic redevelopment and expansion of the Clarence Hotel. Combining the restoration of the existing quayside facade as well as the sensitive insertion of new additions, the hotel will be a bold new landmark for the city.

At the heart of the project is a sculptural “sky catcher” which embraces the main public spaces and pulls daylight deep into the base of the hotel. It emerges at roof level and incorporates a ‘skyroom’ and viewing terrace, uniting and complementing the existing buildings.

Creating a new urban destination, the scheme will regenerate the lively street environment of Temple Bar. A publicly accessible ground floor incorporates restaurants, shops, cafés and bars facing both the riverfront on Wellington Quay and Essex Street East to the South.

The redevelopment of the hotel will incorporate a number of progressive sustainability strategies, including the maximisation of natural light and ventilation, to ensure an energy efficient and environmentally sensitive mixed-use hotel, spa and conference facility. Only the quayside facades of the existing hotel and adjoining buildings - all of which are protected structures - would be retained, although the oak panelling from the Clarence's Octagon Bar is to be salvaged for re-use.





Norman Foster said of the new development, "The redevelopment of the Clarence Hotel is an ambitious project – architecturally and structurally – with a confident yet sympathetic civic presence. It presents an exciting opportunity to regenerate Temple Bar’s river frontage, while also creating a bold new addition to Dublin’s skyline."

Thursday, January 18, 2007

Winner of Affordable, Sustainable Housing Competition in New York City

New York City Department of Housing Preservation and Development (HPD) Commissioner Shaun Donovan and Mark Ginsberg, FAIA, 2004 President of New York Chapter of the American Institute of Architects (AIANY), today announced Phipps-Rose-Dattner-Grimshaw (PRDG) as the winning architect-developer team of New York City’s first juried design competition for affordable and sustainable housing. The competition, known as the New Housing New York (NHNY) Legacy Project, emerged from a collaboration between the NHNY Steering Committee, HPD, AIANY, the New York State Energy Research and Development Authority (NYSERDA) and the Enterprise Community Partners to encourage the integration of sustainability and design excellence with affordable housing. Located in the South Bronx, the competition site was a 60,000 square foot vacant lot that consists of City-owned property and a legally abandoned rail right-of-way. Currently valued at $4 million, the site will be sold by the City to PRDG for a nominal fee in exchange for the design and construction of a mixed-use development that includes affordable housing for New Yorkers of low-, middle-, and moderate-incomes. An exhibition of the winning team’s proposal will be on view March 22 – June 16, 2007 at the Center for Architecture. The exhibition will highlight how the project functions as a replicable model for sustainable affordable housing in New York City and other urban communities.

AutoCAD announces MAYA 8.5

Product Information

Award-winning Autodesk® Maya® software is a powerful, integrated 3D modeling, animation, effects and rendering solution. Because Maya is based on an open architecture, all your work can be scripted or programmed using a well-documented and comprehensive API (Application Program Interface), or one of two integrated scripting languages. This, combined with an industry-leading suite of 3D tools, means Maya enables you to realize your creative ideas.

What Version of Maya is Right for You?
Not sure what version of Maya will best empower your vision? Choose from Maya Complete 8.5 or Maya Unlimited 8.5 software.

Click-VR Visualizer

Overview

Click-VR Visualizer is a next generation realtime rendering plugin for 3ds Max. Max users can instantly explore their scenes in realtime and create interactive 3D presentations and visualizations by bringing their projects to life with animations, sounds, videos and user interactions.


Interactively Walk Through Your 3ds Max Scenes


Click-VR Visualizer is completely integrated in 3dsmax. You do not need to waste time exporting data or learning a new 3D software. With just a few simple mouse clicks from inside of 3dsmax you can naturally walk through your 3D scene in realtime.

Reduce Rendering Times

With the ability to explore your scene immidiatly in realtime you will be able to drastically reduce rendering times. You will get a good look at the inside of your scenes and detect problems early in the design process.

Realtime Rendering Performance

Click-VR has been originally designed and used for next-generation games. Outperforming existing real-time solutions in terms of rendering performance and quality - Click-VR is the most comprehensive rendering system available for 3ds Max users. [More...]


Create Amazing Interactive Presentations

Bring your project to life with animations, sounds, videos and user interactions. You can easily add new exciting functionality to your 3D scene. Let doors swing open as you approach them, let radios play music. All elements of the presentation can react to the user - no programming skills required. You will knock your audience off their feet in amezement! [More...]

Publish your work

Finally you can publish your work. You can easily send exported scenes to your customer or audience by creating single file, interactive, distributable 3D scenes without the need for any separate client application.

Available file types:

  • Self Installer
  • Screensaver
  • Standalone executable
  • Zip Archive

Requirements

  • Pentium III 600 MHz or better
  • 256Mb or more RAM
  • About 40Mb free hard drive space
  • Windows 98/NT/2000/ME/XP/2003 operating system
  • 3ds Max 5, 6, 7, 8 or 9
  • DirectX 9.0 Runtime or higher. Note: you can freely download the lastest DirectX Runtime from the Microsoft website.
  • A DirectX 9 compliant (Pixel shader 2.0) graphics card

Download trial

The final trial version will be available in februar 2007. However you can already freely download a pre-release BETA demo. [Download trial version...]

Tuesday, January 16, 2007

Dubai night


Those are soldiers who guarding the desert.

Monday, January 15, 2007

Architect Gets Respect in Tough Profession

Source: San Diego Business Journal
Publication date: November 13, 2006

By Broderick, Pat

Architecture is a harsh mistress.

So says Norman Barrett, senior project architect for San Diego- based Smith Consulting Architects.

"You love to hate it and hate to love it," he observed. "But I can't think of anything I'd rather be in. It's artist as martyr."

These days, Barrett rides herd on a variety of projects, including grocery stores, shopping centers and mixeduse developments. His portfolio includes the San Marcos Civic Center Market Place, the Gerald Ford Business Park in Palm Desert, 990 Hope Plaza in Rancho Mirage, the Pavilion at La Quinta, Lake Elsinore Marketplace and the Forum in Carlsbad.

"When it comes down to it, it's a huge balancing act, with clients, budgets, cities and economic restraints," said Barrett. "The architect becomes the fall guy, or the point man. It's a very tough profession to get respect within the profession itself. But I enjoy it. My philosophy is, do the best job you can."

According to some of Barrett's mentors and former associates, that has always been his personal credo.

Medley Of Mentors

Architect Linda Moreland, now retired, first met Barrett at what was then Brown Leary Oremen Architecture and Planning in Sorrento Valley back in the '70s, before he went off to study architecture.

"He was doing drafting," said Moreland, the first woman to have served as president of the American Institute of Architects' local chapter. "Norman was pretty green."

She encouraged him to discover his own style - and make sure that it actually worked.

"I am a firm believer that form should follow function," said Moreland. "Work out the floor plan and then design, not the other way around. A lot of times architects have an ego thing, and are building monuments to themselves. They lose touch that the client wants it to work first."

Well-Rounded Professional

Barrett has learned this lesson well, she said.

"He is a wonderful designer, and he has grown well as an architect and a human being," said Moreland.

Ian Kay, an assistant professor of architecture and interior design at Mesa College, and an adjunct instructor at Woodbury University in San Diego, also knew Barrett from the early days at Brown Leary.

"He came to work part-time, and we made him do everything," said Kay. "That's how most of us start out. He did delivery, ran prints."

But Barrett impressed the staff so much that they moved him into some "real work," said Kay.

"He was always up on all the computer stuff," he said.

As for Barrett's artistic talents, said Kay, "He did everything, from incredibly beautiful ink drawings, in the days when they were still doing them, to hard-core construction drawings."

Another Brown Leary alumnus is Michael Comulada, senior project architect at Smith Consulting, who has known Barrett since he was "a young lad."

"He is a very, very bright person," said Comulada. "He's now one of our main designers in the office here. I have watched him grow from the very bottom to a good position as one of the chief designers here. He's come a long way."

Copyright San Diego Business Journal Nov 13, 2006

(c) 2006 San Diego Business Journal. Provided by ProQuest Information and Learning. All rights Reserved.

Carlisle Corp. Names Design, Sales Teams for One Beale Mixed-Use Development

Source: The Commercial Appeal
Publication date: January 4, 2007

By Amos Maki, The Commercial Appeal, Memphis, Tenn.

Jan. 4--The Carlisle Corp. has named the design, sales and marketing teams for One Beale, a sign that the $175 million mixed-use development located at the foot of Beale Street is moving forward.

"One Beale will set a new pace for the development of Downtown Memphis and the announcement of our project team symbolizes a significant moment in the life of this project," said Gene Carlisle, founder of Carlisle Corp.

Memphis-based Hnedak Bobo Group is the architectural firm on the project, while Memphis-based John Harrison Jones Architects will handle custom residential designs.

"This is an important project for the city of Memphis," said Janet Smith-Haltom, a principal with HBG. "It combines a healthy respect for our city's past with an optimism for the future."

Memphis-based Martin Group Realty will handle the sales effort of the luxury condos and penthouses.

Memphis-based Paradigm Productions will handle marketing. Paradigm specializes in using 3d illustrations, virtual tours, video production, and interactive multimedia.

Seigenthaler Public Relations, a Nashville-based communications firm, will handle communications and public relations.

One Beale is scheduled to break ground at the end of 2007 and is scheduled for completion in 2010.

The first phase will be a 30-story luxury high-rise with a soon-to-be announced four-star hotel anchoring the base of the building. At 435 feet, the north tower would be one of the city's tallest buildings.

The towers will feature 250 hotel rooms and about 150 luxury condominiums. Prices will start at $550,000.

In addition to the hotel and residential components, the building will also feature 70,000 square feet of class A office space, a conference facility, an upscale restaurant, a luxury spa and an underground parking facility.

The City Council approved the project in October.

-----

To see more of The Commercial Appeal, or to subscribe to the newspaper, go to http://www.commercialappeal.com.

Copyright (c) 2007, The Commercial Appeal, Memphis, Tenn.

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Business News.

For reprints, email tmsreprints@permissionsgroup.com, call 800-374-7985 or 847-635-6550, send a fax to 847-635-6968, or write to The Permissions Group Inc., 1247 Milwaukee Ave., Suite 303, Glenview, IL 60025, USA.

High Times for San Fran Skyline

Source: USA TODAY
Publication date: January 3, 2007
By John Ritter

Aesthetic and practical concerns spur the city

to consider a project with a pair of 1,200-ft. towers

SAN FRANCISCO -- This city's skyline, with its distinctive Transamerica Pyramid and pastel-colored buildings, juts out on a peninsula like a surfer hanging 10. From above the Golden Gate Bridge, sunset views can be postcard spectacular.

But a growing number of city officials and planners believe the skyline's form, a product of decades-old height restrictions, needs a shot of adrenaline.

"What you're struck by is how flat our skyline is," says Dean Macris, the city's planning director. "So we think it could be visibly enhanced if we had some peaking."

By that, Macris means height, and more height is clearly on the horizon. Last month, developers submitted a proposal to build four connected towers, two of which would be 1,200 feet tall. Only two other buildings in the USA are taller: New York City's Empire State Building and Chicago's Sears Tower.

The shorter towers in the plan, at 900 feet, would be taller than any other building in the city, including the Pyramid and Bank of America Center.

Tall seems to be in vogue as cities try to make bold architectural statements and create density in tight spaces. Boston, an old city whose tallest building is 792 feet, is considering a 1,000-foot tower that would dominate its skyline.

The 1,362-foot Freedom Tower at Ground Zero in New York would surpass the Empire State Building. The Trump tower in Chicago, now under construction, would be shorter than the Sears Tower, currently the USA's tallest skyscraper.

Work is expected to begin this year on Chicago Spire on the Lake Michigan shore, which at 2,000 feet would be the new height king.

Residential space needed

In San Francisco, with its chronic housing shortage, more height downtown is seen as a way to add badly needed residential units. The four towers, designed by Italian architect Renzo Piano, would be built in the booming South of Market area across from a proposed $1billion transit center, which itself would have a nearly 900-foot tower above a train station.

The eminent Spanish architect Santiago Calatrava, who designed the 150-story Chicago Spire, is competing in an international competition for the transit-tower design. Piano, whose work includes the Pompidou Center in Paris and Atlanta's High Museum expansion, is designing the California Academy of Sciences' new home here in Golden Gate Park. He also designed Shard London Bridge, which when completed will be Britain's tallest structure.

Piano's four-towers plan first will undergo environmental review, then face at least two years of design review.

"If the wind is at our back the whole way, which it won't be, we'll be fortunate to start building in 2010," says developer Mark Solit. The proposal submitted Dec. 21 is more of a concept than a floor plan, he says. The buildings will contain a mix of residential, office and retail space, he says.

Engineering studies will determine whether the towers could withstand earthquakes, always a concern in one of the world's most seismically active regions. Macris doesn't see a problem.

"Seismic experts regard tall buildings as functioning very well" in earthquakes, because their foundations are built on deep pilings sunk in bedrock, he says.

Still, the towers are likely to attract critics. John King, urban design writer for the San Francisco Chronicle, called Piano's concept "provocative and elegant" but "too much of a good thing."

King wrote that the scheme is "too tall for the site and too tall as a precedent for what might follow nearby." Better, he wrote, "if scaled at more modest heights."

City planners are studying how height should be incorporated downtown and may not approve buildings as tall as those conceived by Piano, Macris says. But 1,200 feet hasn't been ruled out, he says.

"Tall should not be equated with either good or bad,

says Henry Urbach, curator of architecture and design at San Francisco's Museum of Modern Art. "The skyline in a city like San Francisco is never fixed once and for all. For a city to evolve, it needs to be willing to risk its skyline."

Thin is in

The towers would be skinny by the standards of skyscraper construction over the past 50 years. Tall and slender is an urban-design trend that has taken hold in Europe and, most prominently in North America, in Vancouver, British Columbia.

Piano has compared his towers to a cluster of bamboo shoots, with different shoots growing to different heights. Picture a pipe organ, Macris says.

Slender buildings block less light on the street. They don't restrict views as blockier buildings do. Their impact on pedestrians and traffic is lessened. Outside light reaches more of the interior space. And they simply look nice.

"Slender in the sky is a great aesthetic advantage. We're very conscious of that," Macris says.

In the 1920s and 1930s, before air conditioning, many slender skyscrapers were built, particularly in New York and Chicago, because windows could be closer to the core of a building. "When air-conditioning technology improved after World War II, we got a lot of pretty thick building in the sky," Macris says. "We'd like to return to some of that slenderness."

Since Piano's concept was unveiled, there have been concerns over its similarity to the World Trade Center towers in New York that collapsed in the Sept. 11 attacks.

Chris Daly, a San Francisco supervisor whose district includes South of Market, says Piano's towers are shaped differently and represent more of a "Chicago look," although from one vantage point they do appear to be similar, side-by-side towers.

"It's probably not a coincidence," Daly says. "Piano probably did it on purpose. He's always trying to make his mark." (c) Copyright 2005 USA TODAY, a division of Gannett Co. Inc.

New Federal Courthouse Will Begin Going Up Soon

Source: Las Cruces Sun-News
Publication date: January 4, 2007

By Steve Ramirez, Las Cruces Sun-News, N.M.

Jan. 4--LAS CRUCES -- Ceremonies to break ground on a new five-story federal courthouse in Las Cruces are planned for Feb. 21 but it will be months before full-scale construction of the building begins.

At a Wednesday luncheon of the Rotary Club of Las Cruces, representatives of White Construction Co. of Austin, Texas, and Carter and Burgess Inc., a Fort Worth, Texas, architectural firm, said the new building is about to become a reality.

Chip Pierpont, project manager for the General Services Administration, said his agency is expected to issue a notice to proceed on Jan. 15 to White Construction, who is the contractor for the $81 million project.

But Bill Farnum, vice president of White Construction Co., said Las Crucens shouldn't expect to immediately see large construction equipment.

"Most likely, you will not see any heavy construction until late summer, early fall," Farnum said. "We understand that parking lot (where the new federal building will be located) is pretty important to you. Until we're ready let's leave it completely intact." The new federal building will be built on land owned by the city that was sold earlier this year to the federal government for $400,000. The parcel is located just south of City Hall and is bordered by Campo Street to the east, Church Street to the west, Griggs Avenue to the south and Organ Avenue to the north.

It became a public parking lot in the 1970s, and has been used by employees and people who have had business at City Hall, the Harold Runnels Federal Building and, more recently, Magistrate Court.

When construction starts, the lot will be closed and those who regularly use it for parking will have to find another lot. But Pierpont said the GSA and city are working together to implement a downtown shuttle system that will transport people to and from parking areas.

"With the help of the city we've committed to formulating a shuttle service," Pierpont said. "It will be free, and worth noting is that it should not be more than a five-minute wait to catch a shuttle.

"We're trying to be very proactive in mitigating any potential parking problems and hopefully getting people to come downtown." Bryan Flough, lead architect for Carter and Burgess, said the new federal building will consist of two five-story towers that will be connected by glass bridges. It will also include a basement with an underground parking garage.

"Because of increased costs in construction and materials several changes have been made from the original design," Flough said. "It has been changed from a steel to concrete building. The height of the building has also dropped 14 to 16 feet from the original design." Farnum said the rising cost of steel and uncertainties about getting enough of it were the primary factors why the change to concrete were made. Flough added concrete will work well.

"You have a more stable building with concrete instead of steel," he said.

Mayor Bill Mattiace, who attended Wednesday's luncheon, said he knew it would be several months before construction started, but was unaware of a date for groundbreaking.

"No, I didn't know until they said that," Mattiace said. "It's going to be a nice project and a very nice addition, very complementary, to our city." City officials are tentatively planning a Jan. 17 ceremony to break ground on a new three-story, 120,000-square-foot City Hall building to be built just south of Branigan Memorial Library.

White Construction Co. will have 1,095 days -- or three years -- to complete the project. Farnum said major subcontractors have already been selected for the project, but local laborers will be needed.

"We will have a job fair and have people come in," Farnum said. "I don't know exactly how many people will be needed. We'll have to wait until the contractors get in here and start the work. But we would still like to use local labor and local people because it makes good sense." Farnum added he doesn't foresee problems with meeting a three-year deadline to finish construction.

"We've never finished a job late and we've always finished on budget," he said.

--Size: 230,000 square feet

--Price: $81 million

--Groundbreaking: Feb. 21

--Time: Will take three years to build

--Features: Eight courtrooms, underground parking garage

--Contractor: White Construction Co. of Austin, Texas

--Architect: Carter and Burgess Inc. of Fort Worth, Texas

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Copyright (c) 2007, Las Cruces Sun-News, N.M.

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Business News.

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Keeping the Area Green: A New Chesterfield Building is an Example of a Regional Trend

Source: Richmond Times-Dispatch
Publication date: January 8, 2007

By Joe Macenka, Richmond Times-Dispatch

Jan. 8--In its quest to be a good environmental steward, Chesterfield County has turned to such decidedly unsexy tools as waterless urinals, porous pavement and high-efficiency lighting.

Taken individually, some of the features of the county's new community development service center might not seem like show-stoppers. But it's the collective effect Chesterfield is focusing on in its bid to produce another success story for the movement of so-called green building.

"A lot of people are looking for the home run," said Jay Stegmaier, deputy county administrator for management services. "And you do get a home run sometimes. But a lot of times, in a big organization, if you focus on the base hits, over time they can add up to home runs."

The three-story, 90,000- square-foot service center at the government complex off Iron Bridge Road is one of the latest examples of how green building -- construction designed to be environmentally friendly -- is gaining momentum among governments in the Richmond area.

In November, about 300 Chesterfield employees moved into the new building, whose interior features a number of energy-saving applications. Outside, the pavement used in the parking lots and various landscaping elements are designed to filter stormwater runoff to reduce pollution.

"We, in essence, used this new building as a test case," Steg- maier said, "and we're evaluating the results on that. The plan is to incorporate the things that worked for us in future buildings."

Chesterfield's stewardship efforts don't end there. The county is considering adding hybrids to its vehicle fleet and using biodiesel fuels.

County employees also addressed the heavy volume of cans of aerosol paint used to line the ballfields throughout Chesterfield. Employees designed a battery-powered paint sprayer that uses a water-based latex paint, resulting in a product that not only costs less but reduces emissions and hazardous aerosol-can wastes.

Environmental initiatives are not unique to Chesterfield.

The Virginia Department of Environmental Quality is developing a scorecard for other state agencies to use to earn recognition for environmental awareness. Green building would be a part of the campaign.

The Virginia Housing Development Authority has a low-income housing tax-credit program where applicants get points for meeting certain green-building standards.

Henrico County has long made it a practice in its construction-approval process to focus on green spaces, landscaping and tree preservation.

And Hanover County last fall opened Kersey Creek Elementary School, which in addition to employing a number of green-building elements also uses environmentally friendly cleaning products.

The Richmond Redevelopment and Housing Authority incorporates green-building methods in its new construction projects, and the Richmond City Council passed a resolution in November to establish a green-building advisory commission.

Councilman Chris A. Hilbert, 3rd District, said he wants the city to do more.

"The main thing the government can do, in my opinion, is lead by example," he said.

Hilbert wants the city to establish policies for green building and better environmental stewardship, and to look at creating incentive programs for the private sector.

"Green building is not just for tree huggers anymore," he said. "It really is an issue that, in my opinion, relates to national security. We really need to not depend so much on regions of the world that are unstable in terms of their resources. And part of the equation is green building."

Contact staff writer Joe Macenka at jmacenka@timesdispatch.com or (804) 649-6804.

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Copyright (c) 2007, Richmond Times-Dispatch

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Business News.

For reprints, email tmsreprints@permissionsgroup.com, call 800-374-7985 or 847-635-6550, send a fax to 847-635-6968, or write to The Permissions Group Inc., 1247 Milwaukee Ave., Suite 303, Glenview, IL 60025, USA.

UNESCO Says Tower of London Threatened

Source: Associated Press/AP Online
Publication date: January 8, 2007
By RAPHAEL G. SATTER

LONDON - The 900-year-old Tower of London, one of Britain's top tourist attractions, will be added to the list of endangered world heritage sites unless the threat from encroaching skyscrapers is resolved, the U.N.'s cultural body said Monday.

Local planners had not done enough to ensure that views of and from the fortress would not be obstructed by surrounding development, including a 1,016-foot building known as the "Shard of Glass" that would be Britain's tallest when completed in 2010, according to a UNESCO interim report.

"It's a question of visual integrity - and that's a problem in all major cities," World Heritage Center spokeswoman Gina Doubleday said.

Although being listed as an endangered heritage site can help secure additional funding and support, citing the Tower would be an embarrassment for Britain. The only site in the developed world currently listed as endangered is Everglades National Park in Florida, which made the list in 1993.

But the government's Department of Culture, Media, and Sport dismissed the concerns, saying it was confident the Tower would not be placed on the list.

"In this country, we have a development control commission that demands very extensive consultations on public matters," department spokesman Toby Sargent said. "In the developments they've had their attention drawn to, the role of the Tower and its place was properly taken into consideration."

The department would be submitting its own report to UNESCO detailing the efforts made to protect the fortress's turreted skyline, he said.

The Tower, built by William the Conqueror in the 11th century, was made a World Heritage site in 1988, one of 830 such sites throughout the world.

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On the Net:

Tower of London web site: http://www.hrp.org.uk/webcode/tower-home.asp

UNESCO World Heritage: http://whc.unesco.org

Shard London Bridge: http://www.shardlondonbridge.com