Project Specs Cofra Group/Good Energies New York, New York Perkins+Will << Return to article the People Architect Perkins+Will 215 Park Avenue South, 4th Floor New York, New York t. 212.251.7000 f. 212.251.7111 Joan Blumenfeld, FAIA, LEED, Design Principal Steven South, LEED, Project Designer Milot Shala, Technical Coordinator Lulua Khambaty, LEED, Strategic Planning/Sustainability Dawn Pappas, FF+E Steven Danielpour, AIA, LEED, Specifications Interior designer: Perkins+Will Engineer(s): WB Engineers (MEP) KPFF (Structural) Consultant(s) Lighting: Horton Lees Brogden Acoustical: Shen Milsom Wilke Other: TM Technology (AV/IT) Design 360 (Graphics) General contractor: Cauldwell Wingate Photographer(s) Eduard Hueber ArchPhoto 212.941.9294 CAD system, project management, or other
Project Specs Dallas Center for Architecture Dallas, Texas Peter Doncaster, AIA, Booziotis & Co. << Return to article the People Architect Competition Winners and Design Architects: Peter Doncaster, AIA, of Booziotis & Co Architects, Dallas Nicholas Marshall, AIA, LEED AP, of nodesign, New Orleans Gabriel Smith, AIA of Thomas Phifer & Partners, New York Architect of record Booziotis & Co. Architects Aaron L. Farmer, AIA, LEED AP Peter Doncaster, AIA Donald Roberts, AIA Associate architect(s) Project Management Assistance was donated by: Ted Kollaja of Gensler Interior Design Assistance was donated by: Ted Kollaja of Gensler Kelly Warfield of Gensler Vida
When asked to sharpen the corporate image of the Spanish furniture manufacturer Ofita for visiting designers, architects, and specifiers, the Milan-based design and architecture firm King & Miranda transformed the company’s Madrid offices and showroom—located on two adjacent floors—into an integrated sales tool using a spare vocabulary of textural elements, colors, and lighting strategies.
With a new structure, the architects responded to their client’s passion for barns by incorporating into the design traditional qualities of barns—generous spaces, repetitive timber frame—while creating a complex interior for modern living.
You can almost hear the “Pomp and Circumstance March” as you stroll Rice University’s bucolic, 285-acre campus nestled in the heart of Houston, shielded from the hubbub of the city’s six-lane freeways and endless strip development.
Until his death in 1707, the parson poet Petter Dass wrote prolifically from the medieval church of the small shoreline farming community of Alstahaug—hard by the western slopes of Norway’s dramatic Seven Sisters mountain range.