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Design Vault Ep. 28 55 Brighton with Rob Clocker
ABOUT THE ARCHITECT:
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Rob joined Hacin in 2014 and assumed the role of Vice President and Managing Principal in 2023, bringing 30 years of experience in award-winning renovation and new construction projects. During his time at Hacin, he has completed The Whitney Hotel in Beacon Hill, the IIDA New England award-winning IDEO Cambridge, Public Garden Townhouse, and Chestnut Townhouse 2. He is also managing the ongoing mixed-use development at 41 Berkeley Street. Previously a Senior Associate at Perkins+Will in San Francisco, Rob led the revitalization of a 26-story Art Deco office tower, the transformation of a historic hospital to apartments in the Presidio of San Francisco, and the P/A award-winning design for the Calexico Land Port of Entry. As an advocate for stewardship of the built environment, he has spoken publicly on adaptive re-use and sustainable design. Rob is a registered architect, LEED Accredited Professional, and member of the Ipswich Zoning Board of Appeals. He holds a Master of Architecture degree from MIT and an undergraduate degree in Architecture from the University of Virginia. In his spare time, Rob enjoys carpentry, travel and photography. |
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ABOUT THE PROJECT:
55 Brighton, a mixed-use commercial project located in the Allston, marks the completion of Packard Crossing, a multi-phase residential development from the Hamilton Company which provides new-build housing options in a densely populated area of the city. Completed in the spring of 2023, this project transforms a once-underutilized site that previously housed an Auto Zone and parking lots into a vibrant and sustainable addition to the community. Spanning nearly 100,000 square feet of finished space, with an additional 70,000 square feet allocated to structured parking, 55 Brighton seamlessly integrates with the surrounding context while addressing the community’s needs.
The project’s architectural concept embraces the reinterpretation of the rhythms and scale of the surrounding block while paying homage to the area's automotive heritage. The façade, with its distinctive fanned design, draws nostalgic inspiration from the winged tails of iconic 1950s automobiles, prompted by the adjacent historic Packard manufacturing facility. The brick detailing, meticulously designed to tie into the fabric of the neighborhood, adds a touch of warmth and familiarity while metal paneling on the top floor creates a dynamic visual contrast to further enhance the depth and character of the building's exterior. The façade design provides different visual experiences depending on the direction of approach along Brighton Avenue.
From the project's inception in 2015, the design team aimed to create a through-block connection, linking 55 Brighton with 83 Gardner, the initial phase of the development (completed by Hacin in 2020). Working in collaboration with Ground, Inc., the team created a pedestrian link through the block that promotes walkability and enhances the area's overall connectivity. By reinforcing the primary street edge with active retail, 55 Brighton contributes to the neighborhood’s bustling environment; the inclusion of 78 rental units contributes much-needed housing, particularly for the area’s large population of college students.
The Packard Crossing complex embraces sustainable design strategies and materials such as low-flow fixtures, solar panels, and ground water recharge, and 55 Brighton has targeted LEED Gold certification. The project's commitment to sustainability is further emphasized by the inclusion of newly planted trees, leaving the site with far more green space than previously existed. By replacing surface lots with 175 covered spaces, the project addresses the parking needs of the community and offers a visually appealing solution to the needs of future development opportunities.
Mirroring the architectural concept, the interior design of 55 Brighton was also carefully crafted to reflect vibrant streetscape patterns and automotive shapes and forms. The team selected materials and finishes that embody the project's goals and create a harmonious blend of functionality and aesthetics. The inclusion of Packard-inspired details honors the area's history and adds a unique touch to the living areas, grounding the space with its specific context and past.
55 Brighton
Featuring Oyster Grey Wirecut
See MoreTRANSCRIPT
00;00;00;02 - 00;00;05;13
Doug Pat (DP)
Let's go inside the vault. The design vault.
00;00;05;15 - 00;00;36;09
Rob Clocker (RC)
This collection of blocks has several landscaped alleys to help connect people from front to back. So having pedestrian connections through the block were an important part of the planning of the project. The project itself is a fairly typical four and five stories of housing overtop of a parking podium kind of housing project, which you see all over the country.
But we had hoped to blend it in with the neighborhood, of course, and so had to find ways to tie it together.
00;00;36;11 - 00;03;34;04
DP
This is my guest, Rob Clocker. I'll share more about him shortly in this episode from The Design Vault. We highlight Rob's project, 55 Brighton Avenue in Boston, Massachusetts. 55 Brighton is a mixed use commercial project that marks the completion of the Packard Crossing housing development in the Allston neighborhood of Boston. The building transforms a once underutilized site that previously housed retail and parking lots.
Transform the site into a vibrant and sustainable addition to the community. The architecture pays homage to the area's manufacturing heritage. The design concept reflects the vibrant streetscape patterns and automotive detailing. The building contains nearly 100,000 square feet of finished space, with an additional 70,000 square feet allocated to structured parking. The project reinterprets the rhythms and scale of the surrounding block, while paying homage to the area's automotive heritage.
The facade, with its distinctive folded fan like design, draws nostalgic inspiration from the wing tails of iconic 1950s automobiles. This design move prompted by the adjacent historic Packard Manufacturing facility. The brick details tie into the fabric of the neighborhood and add warmth and familiarity. While metal panels at the top floor create a dynamic visual contrast to the brick facade.
The complex embraces sustainable design strategies and materials such as low flow fixtures, solar panels and groundwater recharge. Hi, I'm Doug Pat and this is Design Vault. Hi. Rob Clocker holds a master of architecture degree from MIT and an undergraduate degree in architecture from the University of Virginia. Previously a senior associate at Perkins and Will in San Francisco. He's now a vice president and managing principal at Hacin, an award winning interdisciplinary architecture and design firm in Boston.
With 30 years of experience and award winning renovation and new construction projects. Rob's worked on buildings from office towers to land ports of entry. During his time in Hacin, he completed the Whitney Hotel in Beacon Hill, The IIDA New England award winning ideas. Cambridge Public Garden Townhouse and 55 Brighton Avenue. He's also managing the ongoing mixed use development at 41 Berkeley Street.
As an advocate for stewardship of the built environment, he's spoken on adaptive reuse and sustainable design. Rob is a registered architect, LEED accredited professional and member of the Ipswich Zoning Board of Appeals. So welcome, Rob. It's nice to have you with us today. So tell us a little bit about Hacin Architecture and Design firm in Boston. So where are you guys located in the city?
What's the size of the firm? How long have you been around and what type of architectural and design work do you do?
00;03;34;07 - 00;04;42;16
RC
Thank you, Doug. It's really great to be here with you. Hacin is, as you mentioned, an interdisciplinary design firm where 35 people we take the word interdisciplinary pretty seriously. We have architects, we have interior designers, we have visual and graphic designers. And we think of that because as a concept driven firm, we like to take the idea of the design all the way from the outside of the architecture to the inside and throughout to the entire experience.
The firm is located in the south end of Boston, which is one of Boston's many historic neighborhoods. It was founded 30 years ago by our founding principal. David Hacin started at his dining room table and gradually built up to the 35 people we have today. And all that time has been in the South end. So in some sense, we're a neighborhood architecture firm.
In another sense, we think we've learned how to build buildings and do design in places that people love in ways that they recognize. We like to joke that the buildings we build are ones we ourselves are going to have to live with ten, 20, 30 years from now.
00;04;42;19 - 00;04;47;03
DP
So you were at Perkins and well, for a little while and then ultimately found Hacin.
00;04;47;05 - 00;05;36;12
RC
It's a little bit of a convoluted story but yes, those are the facts. My career trajectory had me moving across the country four times to California and back to Boston, and I did each of those moves twice. But the last time when I was in California, I worked with Perkins and Will, and that experience was quite formative in terms of some of the things we may be talking about today because we were an outgrowth of another local firm in San Francisco, which did a lot of adaptive reuse work.
And in that role, I was able to learn surprisingly quite a bit about Brick, even though we were in San Francisco, where you don't think of that as a building material. And there's quite a bit of historic architecture out there, as you might imagine. So learning to work in that context set the stage for some of the projects I do today.
00;05;36;15 - 00;05;47;25
DP
So you've been Hacin how seen relative to all of the other things that you've done in the practice of architecture?
00;05;47;27 - 00;06;31;12
RC
My current role, which is relatively new one, starting as of last year, I'm managing principal of the firm, our founding principal, after 30 years, and a lot of growth, decided that it would be a good idea to get a new batch of principals. So we have five of us now, in addition to David Hacin and as the managing principal.
My job, of course, is to try to help us stay focused on the business side of the practice, which, as you may know, as an architect, isn't the most fun part. However, it does matter tremendously, and I like to think of it as fundamental to helping us do the great design work we do, because ultimately, if we don't do good business work, we're not going to be able to do great design work.
00;06;31;15 - 00;06;37;25
DP
So true. So let's dig in here and talk a little bit about the project. How did you guys get the work?
00;06;37;27 - 00;07;38;12
RC
Sure. As with many projects in Boston, it's a very much relationship based city. This owner, the Hamilton Company, is old company and one of the largest landlords in Boston founded by Harold Brown. And in that very neighborhood that the project exists, we developed a relationship with them and they reached out to us specifically because they understood that we knew how to fit new buildings into existing neighborhoods, as well as to help owners like this company navigate the sometimes complex approvals process, which you find in many East Coast cities.
And Boston is certainly one that has its web of interested parties in every project. The Hamilton Company, however, because of being a longstanding company, has very good relationships with the neighborhood, with neighborhood association owns as well as the city. And so it was a good partnership in coming up with a design that would appeal to a lot of different factions.
00;07;38;14 - 00;07;45;19
DP
So tell us a little bit about the site, the history of the location, what was there and what you guys ultimately built.
00;07;45;21 - 00;08;45;14
RC
This site, which is an area called Packard's Crossing, which is so named because originally it was a location of a Packard car manufacturing plant, is a mixed use site. It has a lot of Boston rowhouses that go further down the street from our location. But the location of the particular project did have some of those more industrial uses.
And in the more recent years it had been transformed somewhat into parking lots and some low rise retail in ways that weren't necessarily sensitive to the neighborhood. As it happens, one of those buildings was the owners primary headquarters, and so it was a very near and dear to them that they do something on this site, which was good.
And because this was their headquarters, they owned numerous properties that adjoins. So they undertook a master planning process with us to think about how they could not only develop a 55 Brighton but 83 Gardiner, which is nearby and tie it all together in a sensitive way.
00;08;45;17 - 00;08;51;19
DP
So what was the ultimate scope and what were the programmatic requirements for the project? The building you designed.
00;08;51;21 - 00;09;52;29
RC
The program for 55 Brighton, on the face of it, is a fairly straightforward program. It's 77 rental units, a housing and parking garage for that housing as well as retail that would line Brighton Avenue, which is a mixed use street. The more interesting or maybe effective overlay of that program is that this collection of blocks has several landscaped alleys to help connect people from front to back.
The streets in this neighborhood aren't necessarily as frequent as some city streets are. And so having pedestrian connections through the block were an important part of the planning of the project, as well as part of the approvals for the project. And the project itself is a fairly typical four and five stories of housing overtop of a parking podium kind of housing project, which you see all over the country.
But we had hoped to blend it in with the neighborhood, of course, and so had to find ways to tie it together.
00;09;53;01 - 00;10;20;18
DP
Yeah, it's an interesting building. So you guys had to do a bunch of things with the architect. Sure. You used a lot of masonry out there, various colors, but the brick patterning and specifically stylistically the building facade as it sort of peels away in a number of locations. Very interesting. So the building's contemporary, particularly the cantilevered folding panels, and yet you utilize brick and various traditional patterns and colors.
So tell us a little bit about that.
00;10;20;21 - 00;12;26;05
RC
Sure. Our approach to the design of the facade, especially on Brighton Avenue, was the kind we take to many of our projects, which is to look carefully at the context. We look at not only what's built today, but what was built in the neighborhood previously and of course, like many of these traditional neighborhoods, there's a strong rhythm of bays and of brick along the street, which on one hand we wanted to pick up some kind of rhythm, but on the other hand, we certainly didn't want to just mimic it.
That's always the challenge we have as designers is how do we build something for today in a neighborhood from yesterday? So what we chose to do in this case, as you mentioned, is we peel the brick facade back in a regular rhythm of bays, which echoes those bays further down the street. But we do it in a way that isn't just your traditional symmetrical bay.
It lifts the facade apart in a sense. So when you're looking at it from one direction, you see a rhythm of brick bays. When you look at it from the other direction, it looks like a number of vertical metal turrets that are more reflective of what you see beyond because in that direction you're looking towards downtown, where you see a lot of the towers of downtown Boston.
So that was an important design aspect as well that you had a different experience of this building from one direction than you do from the other. And then one other aspect of that design choice has to do with how brick is used today. We no longer build load bearing brick walls. There's a lot of reasons for that, as much as we love them, but there are many, many load bearing brick walls in Boston.
So when we peel these elements back, we're just using face brick cavity wall construction like you see on all contemporary construction. But we wrapped it around, so it's the thickness of a load bearing wall, but you can still see that it's suspended in there. It's a little bit of a tongue in cheek acknowledgment of it's both symbolic of a load bearing material, but also it's being used in a way that's contemporary as a way to clad the building and give it a sense of identity.
00;12;26;08 - 00;12;37;26
DP
So let's back up just for a second. I always like to ask the architects about the project restrictions they had in regard to zoning or historical requirements. Could you talk a little bit about that?
00;12;37;28 - 00;12;45;19
RC
This project, like everywhere in Boston, as I mentioned, we have a robust approvals process for any larger projects.
00;12;45;19 - 00;12;50;06
DP
I like the word robust, it's very respectful.
00;12;50;13 - 00;13;49;06
RC
All the intentions are good. Sometimes it can become complex. Of course, this project is larger than would have normally been allowed by the underlying zoning, so it went through this process to approve a larger building and part of those approvals then have a lot to do with review of the design to make sure that the design is going to mitigate the scale of the building fit into the neighborhood in ways that we hope we've been able to be successful here, and that also there are elements to the design which contribute to the neighborhood, which gets back to some of those connections in the landscaping that I mentioned.
And as it happens on top of the rear of the building on one level, up on the parking is an extensively landscaped courtyard which is made for the residents of the building. So to this approval, we of course, had to meet with neighborhood groups. We had to go through numerous public hearings and we think we reached a place where all parties felt like there was a good compromise with this building.
00;13;49;08 - 00;13;51;14
DP
So was there a historical review.
00;13;51;20 - 00;14;02;26
RC
In this particular neighborhood? Interestingly enough, there was not a historic district review. This piece of Boston, although it has a lot of buildings from long ago, is not a designated landmark district.
00;14;02;28 - 00;14;27;09
DP
Interesting. Yeah, I thought the notion of showing this facade as it peels away as a thick masonry wall, this kind of tongue in cheek reference to historic architecture is really interesting. A great idea. Tell us a little bit about the building and plan. It looks like a giant rectangle, and yet you've done an awful lot with the facade and the undulations in the forms.
00;14;27;11 - 00;16;39;13
RC
That's one simple thing about the building is that the site is a rectangle, which we don't get a lot of those in Boston. So we were excited about that. But the housing portion component is an L-shape because as you know, with multifamily housing, there's a dimension which plays itself out really well. The rectangle of the footprint of the building has to do with the parking.
So the front of that is lined with retail on the building lobby. And then above that is the two lengths of the L-shaped housing. What we did with that then is to articulate those different volumes. That's also where we turn to the brick patterning to identify the different areas of the building. And we had to do this though, within some constraints of course, because this is a rental building and the owners wanted to keep the housing reasonably affordable.
So all of the brick we use is actually just standard modular brick, which means it's the kind of brick that we love because it's easy to lay out. It creates an eight inch by eight inch grid on the building and to be creative with modular brick, we had to do things like turn the brick on its side, create soldier courses and find ways to push the brick inward and outwards to create shadow lines.
And one of the aspects of these fins on the front of the building that we've been talking about is that they actually curve outward from the main facade. But we wanted to achieve this curve without buying any special bricks. And when the contractors did their mock up and brought it out in the sun, everybody to our horror, recognized that it was creating all kinds of jagged shadows because the bricks were rectangular and they were trying to create a curve in order to help them with that.
We actually went back to our drawings. We laid out the coursing of those brick courses and created them some full sized brick causing diagrams, which the Masons then used. They relayed out the mockups and it came out looking smooth. And this was one of those cases where what we love about Brick is it depends so much on the Masons and their desire and skill to make things work.
And that back and forth really, I think made the building much better.
00;16;39;16 - 00;17;04;29
DP
So let's start with the parameters for building materials. When you guys got rolling, did you just decide, Well, Boston's got a lot of bricks, so that's what we're going to use for the majority of the building. And then talk a little bit more about some of these coursing tapes that you use, because I did see some soldier coursing.
I saw some regular type of courses. And then, of course, there are all kinds of strategies to create shadow lines in the facade underneath the windows, etc..
00;17;05;01 - 00;18;17;23
RC
Yeah, the decision to use brick, as you say, dug was a pretty foregone conclusion. We were working in a block where all of the existing buildings, the historic buildings were brick, and it's the kind of material that really helps bring identity to the building in a way that people feel like fits with Boston. This was an idea that sometimes we fight as designers, we think we want to do something new in this city that's all made out of bricks.
But I think over time we've come to recognize that the fact of Brick in Boston is one that's time tested. It's one that brings identity to the place. And so we accepted it fairly quickly and then set out to figure out, well, how do we create different proportions, different forms, and articulate the building with these bricks as well as bring different colors to it.
So it's not all just red brick. We did use a much darker brick for the base of the building, which helps ground the building helps those bays feel like they're floating up above. And then in the courtyard we use some yellow brick, which is not what you see from the street. It gives you some variation for the expression of the building and also brightens up that space.
00;18;17;25 - 00;18;24;20
DP
Could you tell us a little bit more about the coursing types and the strategies to create shadow lines in the facade?
00;18;24;23 - 00;19;10;10
RC
Yes, we were constrained to using just regular shaped bricks. One of the coursing techniques we used was to help with the rhythm of the windows of the building. With housing, you get repetitive windows because we want to use the same kind of windows and we have repetitive apartment units. However, we wanted to create some different scale to those windows, and we use this by creating brick panels which frame some of the windows and help the windows appear to create larger patterns on the facade.
And in these brick patterns, we simply stacked the bricks and then pushed every other brick inward by about an inch, which created this nice textured shadow line, which gave it a little bit of depth similar to the depth the window had. That was one of the techniques we used to help give the building some life.
00;19;10;12 - 00;19;28;08
DP
So it's also interesting you guys ended up doing mock ups, which we all as architects end up seeing in the field an awful lot of times when we're using a lot of masonry or when things get complex. How did you do the drawings? The architectural drawings, were there 3D, was it BIM modeling, was it 2D?
00;19;28;10 - 00;20;38;26
RC
On this project, like many of our projects, we have both a design model and then a construction model. So early on we built the building and sketch up that lets us study forms colors fairly quickly and do variations to help dial in some of the aspects of the building which are going to be most conducive to the design as well as lets us be flexible with some of the city approvals processes when different requirements are brought up around the design development phase, though, we certainly built the same model in Revit and that becomes the actual construction model and Revit is where we really get into the brick detailing.
We don't draw every single brick, although we sometimes like our clients to think we're doing that. We use a combination of patterns on the surface of the model, which are very accurate to the brick module with certain areas where we will go in and manually layout the coursing because we know it needs to work in a certain way.
And so we do love using these tools. They really help us make sure that what we draw is what the Masons are going to be able to build.
00;20;38;28 - 00;21;01;25
DP
Yeah, I was really surprised when I was looking at the photographs, the peeling facade, if you will, these fan like projections. There was one photograph I looked at and you can actually start to see the curve the way the brick is manipulated in the facade. So it's not a hard line. I did not expect that when I saw that photograph.
That must have been really interesting to see worked out in the field.
00;21;01;27 - 00;22;01;22
RC
It was very interesting to see worked out in the field. That curve, however simple it seemed to us, was actually somewhat difficult for the Masons to achieve. They did do a mock up of that curve, which was not successful initially because when they laid out that mock up and put it in the sun, we saw immediately that the corners of the bricks were shadowing over top of each other, that they were struggling to make sure the crossing was smooth.
And so we went back to our drawings and we laid out each course a brick for them and printed a full sized drawing of that, causing to have them give that a try because we use the geometry of the curve to lay out where the corners should fall. Then when the Masons used that template and rebuilt the mockup, it actually came out quite smooth, which is the result you see today.
And we're actually kind of excited because that's a 20 degree change in plain between the face of the building and those projections, and it's achieved in two and a half courses of brick.
00;22;01;25 - 00;22;03;16
DP
My gosh, that's incredible.
00;22;03;19 - 00;22;08;04
RC
Flat bricks too. So we didn't have to buy curved bricks, which nobody likes to do.
00;22;08;06 - 00;22;16;15
DP
Did you do that by making the radius larger for that curve rather than having a smaller radius? Am I understanding that correctly?
00;22;16;17 - 00;22;37;28
RC
It was almost simpler than that. The radius didn't change. It's just which parts of the brick touched the radius needed to be adjusted because the Masons were having the corners and the flats of the bricks that were of course with each other overlapping in a way that cast shadows. And if we just moved those back, the shadows faded away.
00;22;38;04 - 00;22;44;01
DP
Very cool. So how many people were on the team working on the building over time?
00;22;44;03 - 00;23;10;16
RC
From the start of the project, we had just a couple of people. We had our project manager, Jeff Brown, as well as a couple of junior designers helping with the various models and presentations. By the time we got to CDs, there were five of us putting the drawings together and then for construction it was down back to just two of us getting through the various needs of the construction site.
00;23;10;18 - 00;23;14;23
DP
And how long was the process start to finish, including reviews.
00;23;14;25 - 00;23;42;12
RC
These kind of projects, tt's always interesting to answer that question because we've been working on this site with this owner for over ten years. This project was in the queue to it's the biggest one on the site, but it was one of the last ones we did with them. So the early ideas for it were probably seven or eight years ago.
But by the time we started the actual design, that took a little over a year and a half, then the construction took about two and a half years.
00;23;42;14 - 00;23;51;03
DP
So I love to ask architects if there was anything interesting through the design and construction process that you guys learned that was kind of new to you?
00;23;51;05 - 00;24;55;27
RC
Yeah, I think this project probably one of the more interesting and challenging but creative aspects of the project is that this client is their own developer and their own contractor. They are the ones who both financed the building and built the building, but they did hire us to design the building and of course hired the subcontractors to build the building with them.
But there were many times when you're working with a client who is building their own buildings that they are in a hurry because they figured they know what they're doing and they want to move forward and so very often we would find ourselves kind of rushing to stay, keep up with them. And what I think was an important lesson for us or something we were glad about is that we did take the time to do a really strong set of drawings during the design phase so that every time the client tried to get ahead of us, we had a good set of documents to help them not get into trouble.
That's not always the case. Sometimes clients will hurry you through the design with the thought that during construction you can figure out some more of the details.
00;24;56;00 - 00;25;00;24
DP
So the project wasn't bid out then to a contractor or it was?
00;25;00;27 - 00;25;11;02
RC
The project was not bid out to a general contractor because the general contractor was the client. However, they did bid out all of the different trades, including the masonry trades.
00;25;11;04 - 00;25;15;01
DP
So it was an extraordinarily thorough set by the time you guys were done.
00;25;15;08 - 00;25;19;17
RC
We did have a very strong set of drawings which always makes us happy and protects us.
00;25;19;19 - 00;25;32;24
DP
Makes things a little easier down the road. So, Rob, you've been an architect for a while. Based on what you know today about being an architect, do you have any words of advice for your younger self or even young architects coming down the pike?
00;25;32;27 - 00;25;56;13
RC
Sure. I think one of the pieces of advice I have learned over the career is it really matters to trust in the simplicity of design and to keep things basic. You may think, as I did as a young designer, that you need to add a lot of ideas and things like Brick are boring. But actually if you just stick with the basics, you can come up with quite an elegant solution.
00;25;56;15 - 00;26;33;06
DP
Yeah, I always find that interesting, this idea that when you have limitations or parameters, many times young people think, Well, I'm not going to be able to do anything creative inside of this notion that things should be simple or minimal in some way. And yet I think that is the key to creating things that have never been done before.
Perhaps I love this idea that when I'm given lots of restrictions, I still have to be, I still want to be creative. So I think that ties a little bit into what you just said.
00;26;33;09 - 00;26;54;11
RC
I completely agree. I think something else we find about trying to stick with the basics is very often when you're trying to tell a story and come up with a concept which other people can understand, you really have to stick to the story and stick to the basics. And so these rules were made for a reason and they're really great to flex and learn from.
00;26;54;14 - 00;27;03;24
DP
Well, Rob, thank you very much for being with us today. And thanks for your time. Where can people go to learn more about Hacin Architecture and Design and yourself?
00;27;03;26 - 00;27;21;20
RC
Thank you, Doug. It's been a great pleasure to be here today. And you can go to www.Hacin.com to learn about us or come to Boston's South End. And we're always happy to give people a tour of both our projects and a lot of the great historic architecture in Boston.
00;27;21;22 - 00;27;27;28
DP
Well, thanks again, Rob. Beautiful project. Congratulations. And we'll see you around Boston.
00;27;28;01 - 00;27;31;10
RC
Thank you, Doug.
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Design Vault Ep. 27 389 Weirfield with Tom Loftus
ABOUT THE ARCHITECT:
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Tom’s first exposure to working in the architectural field came from working in wood-frame construction. His passion for the industry grew, and he soon realized that as an architect he would be afforded more creative license to design structures that would have a lasting impact on the community. Tom brings over 14 years of project management experience to the team at Aufgang. Prior to joining the firm, he spent several years at various other firms in the city and Westchester County, where he gained experience leading the development of projects ranging from single family residential units to multi-family mid-rise structures and interiors. As Studio Director at Aufgang, Tom is a leader in all aspects of project development – from designing the beginning concept, to overseeing the project through the construction process to completion. He has extensive knowledge and experience in project management, schematic design, project design development, construction drawings, design quality, and project construction. He is also a leader in building and maintaining client relationships, managing team’s workloads, and client and consultant coordination. Tom is a firm believer in the powerful role that technology plays in design, and avidly follows the latest technology trends as inspiration for efficient and innovative designs. |
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ABOUT THE PROJECT:
389 Weirfield Street is a 12-story, 50,100 GSF rental project consisting of 66 residential units with 66 parking spaces, with 46 market rate and 20 affordable rate units, and including a common roof deck, library, half court, exterior seating, huddle rooms, café, and amenity room. This building was constructed along with 378 Weirfield St., located across the street. The amenities of both buildings are available to both buildings’ residents.

TRANSCRIPT
00;00;00;02 - 00;00;05;13
Doug Pat (DP)
Let's go inside the vault. The design vault.
00;00;05;16 - 00;00;27;11
Tom Loftus (TL)
So we really had to be mindful of availability of product and the budget. So this is what started driving us to start playing with different bonding patterns. If we stack the brick one way versus another way, if we do a running bond versus a stack bond versus a Flemish bond, how can we play around with our stacking patterns and try to make something unique?
00;00;27;13 - 00;02;46;23
DP
This is my guest, Tom Loftus. I'll share more about him shortly. In this episode from the Design Vault, we highlight Tom's 389 Weirfield Project in Brooklyn, New York. 389 Weirfield in Brooklyn is a 12 story 50,000 square foot rental project consisting of 66 residential units, a common roof deck, library and cafe. The building was constructed along with a second at 378 Weirfield just across the street.
The building features a very unique singular masonry facade we'll discuss today. The sole decorative facade is done in undulating rail like bricks, which is in a creative vertical design. The bricks are dark and called Ebonite Smooth. They protrude in patterns at equally spaced cadence as the facade climbs. The windows are set apart from the vertical masonry bands with frames of varying height, which capture the windows between the horizontal spans. The singular brick facade was a unique way of setting apart a building that might otherwise be much like any other.
Hi, I'm Doug Pat and this is Design Vault. Tom Loftus has a bachelor degree in architecture from New York Institute of Technology. He also has a certificate in business management from Cornell University and is a licensed architect in New York.
Tom's first exposure to working in the architectural field came from a job in wood frame construction. After a number of years working in Westchester County, he brings over 20 years of project management experience to outgoing architects. As studio director, he has extensive knowledge and experience in project management, schematic design, design, development, construction drawings, design quality and project construction.
He's also a leader in building and maintaining client relationships, managing teams’ workloads, plus client and consultant coordination. So welcome, Tom. It's nice to have you with us today. So tell us a little bit about Aufgang Architects in Suffern New York. So where are you guys located in Suffern? What's the size of the firm? How long has it been around and what kind of work do you guys do?
00;02;47;01 - 00;03;37;20
TL
Great, first and foremost. Thanks a lot, Doug, for having me on the podcast today. I'm really excited to be here. So we're located here in downtown Suffern, right down the street from the train station pretty close to central Manhattan. So our firm is about 50 people right now. We primarily do residential work. I'd say about 90% of our work is in the residential field.
We do everything from low rise to high rise buildings, primarily in the five boroughs. But we also have projects in the tri state area and a few scattered around the country as well. A lot of those projects are mixed use with commercial on the first, second or few floors and then residential apartments above. The residential work that we do ranges in everything from luxury condos all the way to homeless shelters and really a range of everything in between.
00;03;37;22 - 00;03;39;28
DP
So how long has Aufgang Architects been around?
00;03;40;05 - 00;04;19;22
TL
Outgoing has been around. I think we're going about 50 years now. Ari is the third owner of the company, and when I started, I worked together with Ari and our former principal, Hugo, and they partnered for a while and he had also taken over the firm from someone else. So probably in the early seventies, if I have my history of the firm correct.
We started in Rockland County doing small scale residential rehab work and grew in time and in size with our clients and our work type from one partner to the next, and really have kept our foot in our roots in residential and then grown laterally in the industry.
00;04;19;25 - 00;04;27;22
DP
Tom, tell us a little bit about yourself. How long have you been practicing architecture and your role as studio director?
00;04;27;25 - 00;05;16;29
TL
Sure. It feels like forever. Honestly, every once in a while I wonder, am I still really doing this? But I've been in the architecture field now just a little over 20 years, and I started working in Westchester County. Small scale wood frame, residential. It was a natural stepping stone for me. After I got out of high school, I thought I want to be a framer.
And after getting really tired of carrying three quarter inch plywood up a ladder, I said, Nope, time to go back to school and study architecture. And from there I worked at a variety of firms in Manhattan, in Westchester County, doing a variety of different work. And when I found this firm, the scale work that we were doing, the residential work, it tied into something I loved with my single family housing experience.
It kind of stuck and I ended up staying here for quite a while.
00;05;17;01 - 00;05;23;25
DP
It's a long time practicing as an architect. I kind of say the same thing about or to myself about how long it's been.
00;05;23;27 - 00;06;23;12
TL
Sure, I've really grown in the company here. It's been a fantastic partnership with Ari. When I started, I came in really as an assistant project manager. A lot of my experience was not relative to the scale of the projects we were doing, although in other firms I was working in a bit of a leadership role running point on smaller scale projects, so it took a little time to learn the ropes, if you will, in the different construction types.
And I've moved up into the role of studio director now, so I work very closely with our senior management and the rest of our senior staff looking at our workload, our resource management, project proposals, client relationships and really stay involved with the team from the very start of the project until close out to handle the day to day operations of the office as a whole.
Ari, myself and our controller meet frequently to talk about some of the more boring business side of things and then the more fun happens working with the architects on the day to day and the projects.
00;06;23;15 - 00;06;33;19
DP
So let's dig in here and talk about this very interesting facade of yours. How did your office get the project, or is this a project that the office created?
00;06;33;21 - 00;07;57;02
TL
Yeah, this was actually an interesting project that came at a time when everything started shutting down right at the start of the COVID pandemic. And we had a really good recommendation from a long time client that we had worked with, and we had met a new client remotely who was involved on the construction side of things, and we hit it off.
We started talking and it was the first time ever that I met someone virtually and had meetings like this on screens, and we were trying to build a new professional working relationship. So it was very unique in the way that the project started. And again, we do a lot of our work really based on recommendations. We really pride ourselves in building good relationships with our client base, and that's really how the project got started.
They had this unique property in Bushwick and if you know the area in Brooklyn at all, it's a lot of small scale row housing, if you will, maybe 3 to 4 storeys and there really aren't too many open lots. And in this particular project it was unique. There was a large portion of the lot that had an easement that couldn't be built on it, and it provided a good amount of air rights which allowed us to follow the zoning path to do a much taller building than you usually would see in this neighborhood.
Most of the buildings were very close together, and that's really how it started and how the project grew and how we ended up with a 12 storey building in the middle of Bushwick.
00;07;57;05 - 00;08;04;19
DP
So did you guys know right away that you were going to be able to make a tall building there, or did it take a little bit of examination first?
00;08;04;21 - 00;08;48;13
TL
It took a little bit of examination. Usually what we do as architects is we really try to help guide our clients to bring their projects to fruition. This is the property I have. What can you build? How much can you build? There are two different zoning parts you can follow, primarily three different zoning parts in New York City that will help you establish the bulk, the height, the size of the building.
So we'll study that first and foremost with our clients and present them the different options. And based on the geometry of this lot, when we saw the potential to get a little height on this building, be separated from the other surrounding residential buildings, it gave them a nice opportunity to have a building with some great potential for views in an otherwise low height area.
00;08;48;15 - 00;08;53;12
DP
So what was the scope and the programmatic requirements for the project once you got rolling?
00;08;53;14 - 00;09;32;03
TL
Typically and specifically to this project, our scope was everything from working with the development team to help them flush out the parameters of their funding program. So when you work with different agencies in New York City and in the state and you're following certain guidelines to provide certain square footages and distribution of units, we work right at the very beginning with them to help them find the right mix and size of units, right with the development team.
From there, we work through design and construction administration all the way until the close of the project. So we really gave soup to nuts services here. Full scope on the building.
00;09;32;05 - 00;09;48;24
DP
So let's talk a little bit about the building design stylistically. So you guys designed quite a unique facade, while the other three facades, from what I can tell from the photos, are relatively subdued. Tell us about the main idea behind this.
00;09;48;26 - 00;11;17;22
TL
First and foremost, we love Brick. Brick as an architect, for us, it's really a timeless material and it's a durable material and it fits in really well to so many different urban fabrics in so many different places. In my opinion, what made 389 unique was the timing that this project was happening. It was happening at a time where the future was uncertain.
We didn't know what was going to come of this pandemic. We had to be incredibly mindful of the budget. Many times we like to create building facades that are two different materials having a nice dialog or different color bricks. So we really had to be mindful of availability of product and the economics, the budget, and really try to come up with something that would be unique but be something that the client could achieve.
So this is what started driving us to start playing with different bonding patterns if we stacked the brick one way versus another way, if we do a running bond versus a stack bond versus a Flemish bond, how can we play around with our stack in patterns and try to make something unique? So that was really what started pushing us in this direction of going with a single color brick and then really focusing on how to find a challenge enough for the mason that they don't hate us and say these are architects of the worst.
Have something be achievable for them. But that also will give a nice unique context to the neighborhood.
00;11;17;25 - 00;11;24;28
DP
Were there any aesthetic reviews of the building before you guys got rolling with the city?
00;11;24;28 - 00;11;49;21
TL
With the city for this particular project, there were no agencies on the city or state side that had any reason to opine on the design. We were not going for any variances. We didn't really have to go to the community board, although we did not need their aesthetic approvals. It is something that we're always mindful of working within the urban fabric and how it's going to lend itself to the context of the neighborhood is always an important consideration of ours.
00;11;49;23 - 00;12;01;09
DP
So let's back up just a little bit. So the building plan, are we talking rectangle, square, relatively straightforward. Then of course, there's parking on the site. You had said that there was a portion of the site that you could not build on.
00;12;01;11 - 00;13;07;01
TL
That's correct. So for this particular massing to make this building work, the footprint was rather small. It actually made a very efficient floor plate with a very tight core of stairs, elevator and corridor, and then apartments around all sides of that. So it really became a very compact, high efficiency floor plate with very little loss factor. And it was something that we were able to just work all the way up the building.
So there were quite a bit of revisions back and forth, variations that we had worked on to find the right mix and balance of that to fit within the envelope. The same thing then translated to the facade a bit earlier we were talking about what did the design iterations look like there, through the whole process of finding the right solution and the facade design that we felt was the right match for this building.
We did digital 3D models, plenty of sketches and even on site mockups working together with the Masons saying, We know you can do this, we believe in you, please don't kill us. And did plenty of mock ups there to really work it out.
00;13;07;03 - 00;13;11;25
DP
Was it a challenge finding a good mason, or did you guys have somebody lined up right off the bat?
00;13;11;27 - 00;14;04;09
TL
I think that's really one of the keys. You have to have really good subs. So whatever the type of work you're doing in this case, the Masons, you need to have a good working relationship with them. And often it's the architect working directly with the general contractor. But in these cases we invited the Masons into the architecture meetings, we invited them into the AOC meetings towards the end and said, Look, let's work through some of these details.
Let's talk through it. How is this going to work? It wasn't incredibly complex or challenging, but we wanted to make sure that the person who was directing their team to install the Brick really felt confident that they could achieve what we were looking for. We never wanted to come out on site and say, This is all wrong. That's not what we want to do.
And I really think engaging with those professionals early on is important to try to get the end result that you're looking for.
00;14;04;12 - 00;14;16;20
DP
Yeah, we try to bring in a contractor at schematic design. Once we wrap up schematic design, we have them price the project. This is in high and residential work that I do. So single family homes.
00;14;16;22 - 00;14;33;09
TL
Right? And in this case we didn't have a mason lined up. We didn't have a recommendation. The developer slash contractor, they were one and the same here. They had already had an existing relationship with this Mason and we started just working with them early on in the process.
00;14;33;11 - 00;14;54;17
DP
So could you do your best to describe the evolution of the design of that facade and then try to describe the facade? I'm going to encourage our listeners to go to the Glen-Gery site and take a look at some of these photographs because it's really striking. I've never seen anything like it. It's a great idea. The clients must have been thrilled when you presented the drawings.
00;14;54;19 - 00;17;33;18
TL
Thank you very much for that. We've seen a lot of example of brick facade that has quite a bit of movement in it, and these brick facades more often than not, are panelized prefab, and that's a way that you can achieve quite a bit of movement with brick using this idea of this undulation and this movement in the brick as an inspiration.
That's what triggered us to start thinking about how a brick pattern, the stacking pattern, really might help us achieve what we wanted to do here. So if our listeners are familiar with Brick parents, which I hope they are, we're in a brick podcast, we utilized a Flemish bond pattern and a running bond pattern. So the Flemish bond pattern has a standard brick with the long face.
The following brick is then rotated 90 degrees with the short face and the pattern is repeated. Taking this idea of combining a Flemish bond pattern with a running bond pattern, we now have these bricks that are half size, if you will, square proportion to create the movement and the undulation throughout the facade. We detailed a Flemish bond pattern with a large number of running bond, then a increasing increment of Flemish bond and a decreasing increment to running bond.
So we took the pattern and as you got closer to the center of the pattern we created, you had a higher frequency of Flemish bond. And as you moved away towards the end of the pattern that moved vertically up the building, it was stretched out with more running bond. So that's a lot of back and forth with different bond patterns.
Ultimately, by having that Flemish bond brick, we then protruded it out from the facade in the center of the pattern where the Flemish bond patterns are stacked very closely together. The bricks protruded the largest amount. And then as that pattern was separated and pulled apart from top to bottom, the brick became closer and closer to the facade.
So we basically created a formula that the mason can follow. For every increment, the brick would step out a half inch further, and this is what gave the facade that undulation, as you move up the bricks, steps out and back in by using this bonding pattern. It also created a really dynamic shadow which was something that we really loved.
When the sun hits the building the right way, you get a really fantastic shadow where you have that brick and it just really, in my opinion, created a beautiful cadence that worked through that pattern.
00;17;33;21 - 00;17;41;27
DP
So it really does remind one of Braille. So how far what's the furthest protrusion for one brick?
00;17;42;00 - 00;18;01;07
TL
I do like that description of Braille. You instantly have an image in your mind of these protruding points that they create the pattern. The furthest protrusion is about two and a half inches at the center of the pattern. And then as it works its way down in half inch increments, it goes back down to zero and the pattern becomes flush.
00;18;01;10 - 00;18;20;02
DP
So you guys said that you worked on this in 2D and in 3D. I would imagine if you did some sun studies, you got a better sense for how much shade and shadow was going to be produced by these protruding bricks? Did you do the project in BIM? Is it Revit? Because I saw 2D drawings of this?
00;18;20;04 - 00;18;42;25
TL
Yes. It isn't Revit. It is a BIM project. While we were in the design phase, we actually used a few different softwares SketchUp and Enscape and Revit along with AutoCAD, and we really did a series of 2D sketches, 2D drawings and 3D studies, partial facade studies. Just to get a sense of how this all might look.
00;18;42;28 - 00;18;49;26
DP
And how many iterations ultimately did you go through? I mean, big iterations, like is it two or three or ten or?
00;18;49;28 - 00;19;42;12
TL
Once we just came to the conclusion that we need to stick with a singular color brick here in the front, I'd say we probably had about ten different versions. It's a slim, tall building with very large windows, really trying to maintain a nice modulation of those windows in that spacing, but also then maintain a standardized brick dimension. So for a long time we were playing around with the inches of the bricks so that we were at a half size brick or full size brick.
Should we use a stack bond and emphasize the verticality of the building? How often should we introduce a horizontal element so that it's not looking like a stack of pancakes, for lack of a better expression? So really, we had a good amount of iterations here until we got to the point where we really like the running bond, Flemish bonds.
00;19;42;14 - 00;19;58;19
DP
I like the way you describe that. From what I remember looking at these photos, the windows are framed out differently. So you have a series of windows which have an individual frame, and then at one point in the building, that frame actually wraps a few stories of windows, right? So you break up the facade that way, too.
00;19;58;19 - 00;20;26;03
TL
Exactly. Playing with the verticality of the building, we did group a series of windows, two windows stacked vertically, three windows stacked vertically and created a frame around those windows. And this helped take that 12 story building and just give it a little bit of scale as it moved up the building. So these groups have two vertical windows that are now framed together.
Then also had the movement of the undulating brick happening between them.
00;20;26;05 - 00;20;28;28
DP
You guys really thought through it. It's a real beautiful facade.
00;20;29;04 - 00;20;29;29
TL
Thank you.
00;20;30;01 - 00;20;34;06
DP
So how big was the team that worked on the project? Just a few people?
00;20;34;08 - 00;21;17;08
TL
Every project is staffed with a dedicated associate director who are all registered architects, a project manager, and then the support staff. When we were in the design phase, we had the project manager working together with one of our designers. So we really had a team of to playing around with this and then bouncing the idea back off of the associate on the project.
Then once we really ramped it up into production, we would stack two or three people on the project. As you get closer to submission deadlines and trying to get into the Department of Buildings to get permits done, we would build the team up. Usually there was always at least two people on the project that were always there from day one.
They haven't left the project and they stayed on from beginning to end.
00;21;17;10 - 00;21;26;09
DP
So how long did it take to build the building? I would imagine it was pretty cool watching that facade go up. First couple stories. You must have been thinking, Wow, man, this is going to be something.
00;21;26;12 - 00;21;51;29
TL
You know, the construction team, they did a fantastic job. They had a really good crew out there. And around 24 months, the building went up and then all the fine details coming out of the pandemic. It was interesting. There were certain trades that just took longer because of materiality, distribution chain, supply chain, availability of product, which threw little curveballs here and there.
But all in all, the sequence and timing was fairly smooth.
00;21;52;01 - 00;22;01;13
DP
So it seems like I learned something new every project. Was there anything that you guys learned while you were out in the field or doing these drawings or dealing with the client?
00;22;01;16 - 00;22;48;06
TL
There certainly was. You know, I had spoken about the Mason earlier on, and that was certainly a good lesson. Building a good relationship with your Mason early in the project is really important and I joke about it. Sometimes they look at the architect's details and think, Are these guys crazy? We're not going to build this. There's going to be a better way to do it.
And I think that was really the big lesson we took here, establishing that good relationship and also giving the tradesmen the respect that they deserve. They're installing the work. They know some of the nuances of how this gets installed and taking that into consideration, finding that common ground so that you don't bring your ego into the conversation and giving them that professional respect and you're going to get it back.
That was definitely a good lesson here.
00;22;48;08 - 00;23;16;16
DP
That seems like a lesson I've learned over and over again throughout my career. When you're young, you go out there and you think you know everything and you've got an answer for everything, or you're going to fake your way through it, or however you choose to deal with it. But as you get older, you realize that these people that you're working with, many of them have an awful lot of experience, and it would be a good idea to sit and listen to them and actually ask them questions rather than tell them what to do.
00;23;16;18 - 00;23;38;10
TL
That's right. And I always find that working with our up and coming project managers and our younger staff, it's always those lessons that you try to instill in them. It helps them understand how to build those relationships because this industry is built on relationships and if we can do that, we're going to navigate successfully through any project.
00;23;38;13 - 00;23;58;03
DP
Well, you guys have been around a long time, 50 years. Goodness gracious. That's incredible. Congratulations, Tom. You've been an architect for over two decades. Based on what you know today about being an architect, do you have any words of advice for your younger self or maybe some young architects working their way up the ranks?
00;23;58;05 - 00;24;13;16
TL
Yes, don't worry. It's going to work out, if you love it, stick with it. It's a long road. And just when you think maybe you should change your major, you might still be out of college 20 years and asking yourself, Should I change my major? If you love it, stick with it. It's rewarding.
00;24;13;19 - 00;24;28;05
DP
That's really funny. I feel like I've changed my major all the time.
My goodness. So, Tom, it's been great to have you here. Thanks for your time. Where can people go to learn more about Wolfgang Architects and yourself?
00;24;28;07 - 00;24;38;19
TL
They can go right to our web site at Aufgang.com and they can find all the information about us there. They can follow us on LinkedIn and Twitter and all the different platforms.
00;24;38;21 - 00;24;45;21
DP
Well, thank you very much, Tom. It's been great. And I encourage people to go to the site and take a look at this very interesting building. Thank you.
00;24;45;29 - 00;24;50;18
TL
Doug. I really appreciate it. It was great chatting with you here today. I had a great time.
00;24;50;21 - 00;25;18;12
DP
Awesome. Thank you.
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Design Vault Ep. 26 1 Java with Jeremy Iannucci
ABOUT THE ARCHITECT:
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Born and raised in New York City, architect Jeremy Iannucci brings a design perspective that is deeply influenced by the city's ever-changing landscape. His architectural philosophy, founded on the potential of every effort he contributes to, is intricately woven with each site's narrative and heritage.
In addition to working at Marvel, Jeremy serves as a respected design critic at The City College of New York and Pratt Institute. Here, he seeks to both nurture emerging talent and build a larger, more informed design community.
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ABOUT THE PROJECT:
Goals / Project / Sustainability:
1 Java is a mixed-use residential building located in Greenpoint, Brooklyn, Marvel serves as the project’s design architect and master planner. The project responds to NYC housing market and owners needs, addressing: sustainability, constructability, risk mitigation, tax incentives, and marketability. The development investment strategy requires net-zero ready design and maximization of floor area, the project also includes the largest geothermal array in New York State. The building will participate in the 421a Affordable New York and Inclusionary Housing program, providing up to 261 affordable housing units out 871 total units. This project replaces the former two-story Jerome Motel, which had been used for supportive services. The S:US team offered relocation to current residents, while more than tripling the former site's capacity, responding to the city's housing needs.
Background:
The full city-block site incorporates the only privately-owned pier in NYC. Given the size of the development and the uniqueness of the site on Greenpoint’s East River, Marvel assessed the project from an urban design perspective and a street-level/local point of view. Marvel sought a cohesive design that also broke down the massing into more relatable elements and a more active street front. Unlike most of Brooklyn’s brownstone neighborhoods, Greenpoint housing was created for those who worked there. This is a neighborhood of workers - people who built and sustained the industries that thrived on the docks and in its industrial areas. Marvel’s approach to design involves a research-based process based on information gathering, analysis, engagement and outreach, to arrive at the best design solutions. Our process ensures that design responds to current issues, client, stakeholder, and community priorities, follows best practices while promoting innovation. Our multi-disciplinary team enables open conversations among the team and stakeholders, ensuring collaboration and consensus on design solutions. The research and analysis phase informs the Project Goals and Objectives, which are used as guidelines throughout the design process.
Features / Qualities:
• Acoustical separation (from exterior and between interior spaces)
• Enterprise Green Communities (sustainable initiative)
• LEED Gold
• Fitwel certified
• Net-zero ready
• Geothermal (ground-sourced heat pump)
• Thermally broken façade systems including brick, metal and concrete panel, and glazing systems
• Amenity spaces include lounges, fitness areas, Planted outdoor terraces, recreation areas, rooftop pool
• Landscaped rooftops
• Landscaped, publicly accessible waterfront park (designed by JCFO with MARVEL collaboration)
• Landscaped streetscapes with integrated resiliency (site is within the flood plain)
• Mixed-use with retail, townhomes, food and beverage offerings at grade
Finished Project:
The building rises from Greenpoint into two distinct towers which vary in plan and elevation (355’ and 205’) to maximize light, views, and openness as they mitigate the impact of tower height on the surrounding streets. Terraces on the east and west faces of the tower modulate the Greenpoint-facing and East River-facing elevations while creating private terraces for units and amenity spaces. Retail, food & beverage, live-work spaces and other community facing spaces are consolidated along West and India Streets. The existing circulation and commuter route reinforced by the India Street ferry service make locating the primary pedestrian residential entrance on India St. a natural choice. The pier, already an attractor, can be programmed as an extension of India St. and Waterfront Plaza experiences and increase 1 Java’s ability to become a year- round destination. Townhomes share setback stoops and a small secondary convenience lobby for the low-rise along Java Street. Java St will be marked by a quieter more private character leading from West St. to the waterfront. Services and vehicular access are oriented towards Java Street and reinforce India Street’s pedestrian character.


TRANSCRIPT
00;00;00;02 - 00;00;05;14
Doug Pat (DP)
Let's go inside the vault. The design vault.
00;00;05;17 - 00;00;30;22
Jeremy Iannucci (JI)
We like to think that the entire project comes from the community around it. We looked at a series of precedents in the Greenpoint neighborhood, historically in Greenpoint, specifically on the waterfront, to inspire the way that we detail these facades. We have a collection of different brick styles that help to break up the massing of the building, different articulations, as well as material breaks with the two precast towers.
00;00;30;25 - 00;03;22;21
DP
This is my guest, Jeremy Iannucci. I'll share more about him shortly. In this episode from The Design Vault, we highlight Marvel’s Project 1 Java in Greenpoint, Brooklyn. 1 Java is a mixed use residential series of buildings located in Greenpoint, Brooklyn. The project responds to the New York City housing market and owners' needs addressing sustainability, constructability, risk mitigation, tax incentives and marketability.
The Development Investment Strategy required a net zero ready design and maximization of floor area. The project includes the largest geothermal array in New York State. The building will participate in the 421A affordable New York and inclusionary housing program, which provides up to 261 affordable housing units out of a total of 871. The new architecture consists of two towers, of prefabricated concrete sheet panels and three lower buildings varying from 6 to 10 storeys with brick masonry facades.
All five buildings rise from Greenpoint in a U-shape plan to maximize light views and open space. Terraces on the east and west. Facades of the towers modulate the elevation while creating private terraces for units and amenity spaces. Retail, food and beverage and live workspaces are consolidated along West and India streets. Townhomes share setback stoops, and a small secondary convenience lobby for the low rise along Java Street.
Hi, I'm Doug Pat and this is Design Vault. Jeremy Iannucci is a registered architect at Marvel in New York City. He has a Bachelor of Architecture from City College's Spitzer School of Architecture. His portfolio encompasses a number of challenging endeavors at Marvel, including a mixed use project located in Brooklyn's Waterfront, which we will discuss today. Jeremy enjoys taking part in international design competitions, one of which was recently shortlisted in a competition to design a children's hospice center, and another was awarded an honorary mention in which he designed a house relying exclusively on daylighting for organizing spaces and form making.
Jeremy also serves as a design critic at the City College of New York and Pratt Institute. So welcome, Jeremy. It's nice to have you with us today. So tell us a little bit about Marvel in New York City. So where in the city are you located? What's the size of the firm? How long has it been around and what type of work do you guys do?
00;03;22;23 - 00;03;52;02
JI
Thank you so much for having me on. We are a New York firm. We also have offices in Puerto Rico, Richmond, Virginia, more recently, Barcelona. We're currently located in New York, in Tribeca, and around 200 people at this point. As far as projects that we take on, we like to say design everywhere for everyone. We don't try to limit ourselves to typology.
We take whatever comes at us. We measure everything against the values of the firm and we really just enjoy design.
00;03;52;05 - 00;03;58;21
DP
So tell us a little bit about yourself. How long have you been working as an architect and what's your role in the office?
00;03;58;23 - 00;04;08;27
JI
So in the office I really work through all stages of the project, through design, working on developing proposals, project delivery and currently in construction to administration.
00;04;08;29 - 00;04;13;06
DP
So this is a really beautiful project and it's extraordinarily large.
00;04;13;12 - 00;04;14;13
JI
Yes, it is.
00;04;14;15 - 00;04;17;06
DP
So how did your office get the project?
00;04;17;08 - 00;04;33;02
JI
So we were invited to participate in the RFP back in fall of 2020. So there was a few other notable firms in the competition. We were lucky enough to be awarded the project, and we've been working hand in hand with Lendlease in bringing it to fruition ever since.
00;04;33;05 - 00;04;37;27
DP
Did you know the clients before you entered the competition?
00;04;37;29 - 00;04;47;23
JI
We had some previous relations with the clients as a contractor, but they've recently started opening a development wing in the United States. This is our first project, working with them in that capacity.
00;04;47;27 - 00;04;53;19
DP
So this site is really large. Could you give us a little history of the location?
00;04;53;21 - 00;05;23;07
JI
The site is 200 feet in the north south and then between West Street and the East River. Around 600 feet with 40 feet reserved for a waterfront esplanade. We actually pulled back even a little bit further from that. And it's located right on the waterfront in Greenpoint. There was recently a rezoning that allowed for a whole redesign of the waterfront, and our project is one of the earlier projects in that redevelopment.
00;05;23;09 - 00;05;29;05
DP
So could you give us an idea of what the scope of the project is and the programmatic requirements?
00;05;29;07 - 00;05;49;14
JI
So it's a residential project, around 834 units, encompassing a total of around 800,000 square feet. This also comes with a series of amenity spaces, a series of retail spaces, as well as that waterfront park, and also a collection of rooftop amenities and green space.
00;05;49;17 - 00;05;56;11
DP
So let's talk about the building design stylistically. Were you guys borrowing from anything locally?
00;05;56;14 - 00;06;21;16
JI
We like to think that the entire project comes from the community around it. We looked at a series of precedents in the Greenpoint neighborhood, historically in Greenpoint, specifically on the waterfront, to inspire the way that we detail these facades. We have a collection of different brick styles that help to break up the massing of the building, different articulations, as well as material breaks with the two precast towers.
00;06;21;18 - 00;06;26;20
DP
So what was on the site before you guys ended up building the new architecture?
00;06;26;23 - 00;06;51;02
JI
Previously, there was a two story warehouse on the site and it really was kind of a beautiful space in its own right before we got the chance to tour around, before it was demolished. And I think walking around really inspired us just with these qualities of light and materials and things that were really native to the waterfront before all of this redevelopment.
00;06;51;05 - 00;07;00;18
DP
And the project, as I said, very large. Could you tell me a little bit about the zoning requirements and any challenges you guys had in terms of planning?
00;07;00;21 - 00;08;03;15
JI
So the project is as of right, it follows the zoning guidelines, the lot itself is actually split up into two different zones. So towards the inland it's mostly low rise. We had a height cap of 65 feet with portions that were allowable to go up to 100. And then towards the waterfront, the zoning actually got a little more complicated where there were a few different conditions that you could meet.
It opened up these different paths for how the building could be formed. One path was a one tower scheme, which would bring you up to 360 feet. And then the other was actually a two tower scheme where if one tower made it to 200 feet, the other would be allowed up to 400 feet. We took advantage of that in order to move more of the mass to the waterfront.
It helped gradually declined the building back into the fabric of the community and it provided more waterfront views overall, just a better experience and connection of the building, both to the water and to the community.
00;08;03;17 - 00;08;06;02
DP
So were there any floodplain restrictions?
00;08;06;05 - 00;08;49;21
JI
Yes. The floodplain has actually set one foot above the highest point of the site, which is the most inland. And then the site gradually slopes down another 6 to 7 feet towards the water. So much of the initial design strategy of the project was finding ways to transition from the ground to above that floodplain elevation. And we accomplished this a number of ways.
We actually set the building back the distance from the lot line as we get closer to the water, and this allows us to use landscaping as a way to gradually transition back up to that flood elevation, as well as moving all of our program spaces above and then moving more utilitarian spaces such as bike rooms down below the flood elevation.
00;08;49;24 - 00;09;12;26
DP
So I'm thinking about our listeners, how to describe the site because we have a series of buildings here. Is there a simple way for you to explain the building plans on the site? So first we describe the shape of the site and plan, and then if you could give us an idea about how those buildings are organized on the site.
00;09;12;29 - 00;09;40;18
JI
So the site's essentially just a rectangle. It's the size of a full city block and on three sides, on the north, the east and the south, we have streets and then the west side is the waterfront. It's the East River. So the way that we've organized the buildings around the site is in this U-shape, where they start up in the northwest corner, move around down West Street and then below, creating a view that opens up towards the water.
00;09;40;20 - 00;09;43;19
DP
So it's really all about the views, which it should be.
00;09;43;21 - 00;09;58;19
JI
Yes, it's something that it needs to be on the waterfront as well as it is about the views back into the neighborhood. We try to open up the view corridors from the building and leave as much view towards the water and towards the horizon from the rest of Greenpoint as we can.
00;09;58;22 - 00;10;08;12
DP
So tell us a little bit about the material choices. You've got a series of different materials and colors there. What were the decisions behind that?
00;10;08;15 - 00;11;00;05
JI
The building massing itself is broken up into five unique buildings and out of those we have two towers that are precast, and those are the buildings on the waterfront and then inland. There are three different buildings that range from ten stories to six stories. And those three buildings are brick. And that we really wanted to draw back from a lot of our inspirations in the Greenpoint community.
There's no shortage of brick precedents there. There's beautiful buildings such as the Astral, which is this Queen Ann red brick Terracotta building. There's St Anthony's Church, which is red brick and limestone trim. It's really beautiful, striking building. We looked towards kind of the history of the waterfront, those manufacturing, industrial buildings, and used that precedent to define these brick colors, these three different brick buildings.
00;11;00;08 - 00;11;28;28
DP
So interestingly, the facades. So we've got the shorter, or we've got the less tall architecture, which are brick buildings, and the facades are a series of what I'll call punctures with spandrel, it looks like spandrel brick in between each one of these vertically in between each one of the window openings, correct? Yes. So how many studies did you guys end up doing to decide what these facades looked like?
00;11;29;00 - 00;12;07;13
JI
Everything kind of melded together at some point. It's hard to break it down into a number because it was just this completely iterative process where we'd look at something, we'd make a model, we draw it, we'd look at it again, we'd make another model, we draw it. And this evolved from the concept schematic designs all the way through to the construction document development.
This idea of the different brick details that actually came from wanting to streamline the project. So we used the same details on each of the brick buildings, but we remixed them in each one. We use them in a different order to create a different identity for each of these.
00;12;07;20 - 00;12;25;01
DP
I think what's really interesting about these facades too, so you separate the facade these into squares or rectangles, and then they have this very, well, it looks subtle in elevation from far away, but it's actually a very large construction joint in between each one of these square rectangular panels, correct?
00;12;25;03 - 00;12;40;03
JI
Yes. We use that construction joint and we overemphasize it. We use this double soldier coursing reveal as a way to further break up the massing and kind of imply this subdivisions within the buildings.
00;12;40;06 - 00;12;43;17
DP
And how deep is that? Is that one brick thickness?
00;12;43;22 - 00;12;44;20
JI
It's two inches.
00;12;44;20 - 00;12;55;11
DP
Two inches. It's nice because when you look at the facade, I mean, it looks quite homogenous. But if you look at it a little bit more deeply, it's separated in these squares and rectangles. Very pretty.
00;12;55;16 - 00;13;14;27
JI
Yeah, that's the effect that we really want to go for in terms of how this fits into the fabric of Greenpoint. We like the idea of there being this large scale massing that breaks down and continues to break down the closer you get and it relates to more your scale relative to the way that you're viewing it.
00;13;15;00 - 00;13;22;07
DP
It really does scale the architecture nicely. So how about the building review with the city? Was that time consuming?
00;13;22;09 - 00;13;34;17
JI
Not at all. As I said, we were as of right building. So working through the construction documents, we were also working through permitting at the same time. It was a very easy flow from one stage to the next.
00;13;34;19 - 00;13;37;18
DP
Now, did you guys work in 2D and in 3D?
00;13;37;26 - 00;13;46;28
JI
Yes. 2D, 3D, physical models, sketches. Things were being passed around the office for a year and a half related to this.
00;13;47;01 - 00;13;51;00
DP
Do you work in Revit or AutoCAD or ArchiCAD?
00;13;51;02 - 00;13;58;26
JI
We're primarily a Revit office. We use Revit for our project delivery. We also do a bit of work in AutoCAD and in Rhino.
00;13;59;02 - 00;14;03;24
DP
So when you did presentation with the clients, did you show them three dimensional images and models?
00;14;04;01 - 00;14;31;01
JI
Yes, there is a lot of modeling. We actually very early on in the project, we built this eight foot long model of the Greenpoint waterfront, and we were working through just several dozens of iterations of the massing, the two towers, a one tower option, and we were all just spread out around the table, around this model, flipping through the different massings and trying to figure out what worked best with what else we were seeing on the waterfront.
00;14;31;04 - 00;14;33;00
DP
I bet the client really enjoyed that.
00;14;33;00 - 00;14;36;26
JI
It was a blast. Every office meeting was always a mini party.
00;14;36;28 - 00;14;57;08
DP
Yeah, clients love models. I mean, they love 3D images. I'm sure when you showed them these three dimensional images, particularly the towers, which are really quite beautiful, the way the facades step back and move forward. And they're just, the architecture is very interesting. So I'm sure they really enjoyed it, especially when they saw the first renderings.
00;14;57;10 - 00;15;12;11
JI
Yeah, again, it was a lot of fun and all these models were tactile and interactive, so it gave us a chance to move some of these blocks and figure out the correct portion, the correct distance that we'd want things to overhang to shift and slide past each other.
00;15;12;14 - 00;15;17;06
DP
So how many people worked on the project? How many people were involved in the office on the team?
00;15;17;11 - 00;15;44;07
JI
It fluctuated throughout phase. I think at the height of it we had around 12 people total, and that's assembling the full construction package, Through concept the team was a bit smaller, we maybe 4 to 6 and this is also spread out between a few of the different locations of our offices. So we had a team in our San Juan, Puerto Rico office and a team at our New York office, both working hand in hand on this.
00;15;44;09 - 00;16;06;15
DP
You know, as an aside, what's really pretty, the red brick that you guys use there, there are a lot of lighter bricks in that facade. And so it makes it look almost pink in color. But you get up close to it and you can see a lot of variations in these colors, in the red colored brick, a lot of like I'll call it value, but it's light and dark red brick.
00;16;06;18 - 00;17;10;16
JI
For that facade we're using a blended brick and we wanted that to echo some of the red brick buildings that you already see on West Street on the waterfront. That was kind of our launching point for coming up with this brick palette. We knew that there was going to be a red brick building. We knew that it was going to be relative to those warehouses and then the other two bricks were kind of an offshoot, based on how we wanted to frame this story of the building as you move around the site.
So to the north, there's a lighter brick. It's something that we see as a little more modern. We try to keep the tones of the brick and mortar and the sills and other materials a little more homogenous and then on the flip side of that, on the southern street of the building Java Street, we wanted to use something with a bit more variation.
We wanted a higher contrast between the grout and the brick, a higher variability within the bricks. And that's something that we saw as a little more nostalgic to some of those worker housings and the smaller buildings that you begin to see as you move more inland.
00;17;10;18 - 00;17;16;27
DP
Now the colors work very nicely together. So where are you guys in the construction phase on this? Forgive me for not knowing.
00;17;16;29 - 00;17;33;05
JI
Where currently pouring the concrete structure. We're up to the sixth floor now, I believe. We have gotten all of the brick pallets finalized. We've gotten all the precast facades cast. It's really kind of a game of assembly at this point.
00;17;33;07 - 00;17;41;28
DP
So, Jeremy, you're a young architect. I'm sure you're learning a lot. As you go along here, anything memorable so far?
00;17;42;01 - 00;18;01;06
JI
It's so hard to pick one thing. This entire project has just been an incredible learning experience. Admittedly, early in my career, there's so many different conditions, so much to consider with a project of this size that I really feel like I got a good breadth of exposure to so many facets of the industry now.
00;18;01;06 - 00;18;03;18
DP
Do you get to be out in the field a lot?
00;18;03;21 - 00;18;27;22
JI
Yes. Every week we have our owner and constructor meetings. We have bank walks on the side and really get to see the progress and it's moving so quickly, month by month. And also I live not too far from the site, so every week I try to make it out there and just see what's going on, see what's changed, and it's kind of humbling just seeing something come to life.
00;18;27;25 - 00;18;46;27
DP
I would imagine something this large, I've never worked on a project that's larger than a residential home. I mean, I've worked on schools early on, but working on a job that's this big has got to be humbling and profound and extraordinarily interesting all at the same time.
00;18;46;29 - 00;19;07;27
JI
Yeah, it's been challenging, but I think throughout all of it I've been extremely lucky just having in the support of a firm like Marvel as well as just an incredibly talented team of consultants, of engineers and clients who have really just been supportive and on board and actively participating in every step of the design.
00;19;08;00 - 00;19;12;29
DP
So I'd like to ask most of our guests, did you guys have any challenges finding a mason?
00;19;13;02 - 00;19;27;21
JI
No, actually, the mason that we've gone with bundling, we've worked on a few of our projects with them before, and the second that they came on board with the project, our confidence kind of skyrocketed. Just because we've had such a good experience with them previously.
00;19;27;23 - 00;19;37;24
DP
For all those young architects out there looking for work at a firm that they admire, how might you recommend young people find the right job?
00;19;37;26 - 00;20;22;06
JI
Well, the right job is kind of a hard thing to qualify. I think the best advice I could give on that is to just put your name out there wherever you can. Don't be shy in asking people for connections and asking people to kind of put you in a position that you think would be beneficial to you. With Marvel, actually, I had a friend from school who knew someone, and through them I was able to get my resume and I actually don't think Marvel was actively hiring. But I got the interview and it went very well. I loved everyone on the team and they loved me and I think I really landed in my right place. But I encourage everyone to really put yourself out to as many places as you can so you can see what fits for you and what works for you.
00;20;22;08 - 00;20;41;12
DP
I always kind of wonder is an older guy working in this field now to social media have a benefit in terms of finding work today? That is, is it easier to reach out to people that you simply don't know with your resume and thoughts about, hey, I'd love to work with your firm?
00;20;41;15 - 00;21;14;24
JI
Yeah, I think it plays a big part. It's playing an increasing part to Instagram as a way that I see a lot of firms work, a lot of firms putting out calls for applications for either positions or internships. It really increases the amount of exposure and it puts everything in one place where people might just passively see it.
And then there's also LinkedIn, where I get so many people messaging me about my experience at Marvel and kind of things that they're looking for, things that they would want to know about if they were to apply for a position or an internship.
00;21;14;27 - 00;22;17;12
DP
It's interesting, just as an aside, I never really thought about this, but when you said it puts things in one place, the web really does help them. It sounds really dumb, but to a guy like me who's 55 years old when I was young, you either have to see an architect work in a magazine, you visit their office and you get to see all the photos of all of their work.
But the web really does an amazing job of putting absolutely everything in one location, right? So you go, especially an app like Instagram, where you simply open it up, go to a page and you can see all 400 projects or 30 projects or whatever it is, and contact people at the firm in 2 minutes. It really has changed the paradigm for employment or simply for marketing and all these other things.
I know it all sounds very obvious, but as I sit here with a young architect, it makes me think that your world is simply very different than what mine used to be.
00;22;17;19 - 00;22;30;19
JI
I also think it's democratized in a way. It's given smaller firms a greater opportunity and platform to put their work out that it could be on the same level with the kind of content that you see from much larger firms.
00;22;30;22 - 00;22;40;06
DP
I love that. That makes a lot of sense. So, Jeremy, it's been great to have you here. Thank you so much for your time. Where can people go to learn more about Marvel and yourself?
00;22;40;06 - 00;22;50;03
JI
Yeah, thank you, Doug. You can visit our website, MarvelDesign.com or also please follow us on Instagram at @Marvel_is_design.
00;22;50;05 - 00;22;55;28
DP
All right well, Jeremy, thank you very much again for being here. It's been great to have you as a guest.
00;22;55;29 - 00;22;59;28
JI
Yeah. Thank you so much, Doug.
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Design Vault Ep. 13 Smart Design Studio with William Smart
ABOUT THE ARCHITECT:
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William Smart is the Founder and Creative Director of Smart Design Studio, established in 1998. His approach to design is holistic, combining both architectural and interior design with passionate attention to detail. Over the past 23 years, Smart Design Studio has delivered a wide range of projects ranging from large-scale master planning, cultural buildings, offices, workplaces to private houses and product design. Although varied in scale, the projects are united by an ethos of “Architecture from the Inside Out”. |
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Smart Design Studio
Smart Design
View ProjectTRANSCRIPT
00;00;00;02 - 00;00;05;17
Doug Pat (DP)
Let's go inside the vault. The design vault.
00;00;05;19 - 00;00;30;25
William Smart (WS)
The approval authority wants us to respect how it looks from the outside and how it integrates with the streetscape, with the materials of the area, which is predominantly brick with sawtooth roofs. And they also want you to kind of reinforce and retain the great character of the precinct. So to keep these big, large, open plan offices with sawtooth roofs, I feel as a designer, we nailed it. We really got the design exactly right.
00;00;30;27 - 00;03;09;28
DP
This is my guest, William Smart. I'll share more about him shortly. In this episode from the Design Vault will highlight William’s new Smart Design Studio building. The new Smart Design Studio is an innovative, sustainable and sculptural building with both new and renovated facades that sit within an inner city conservation area of brick warehouses. The design relates to the industrial buildings from the precinct.
While it makes a departure with a modern facade of tiles, galvanized sheeting, steel frame windows and dynamic forms of curling and curving brick. Structurally, a large portion of the building feels industrial with precast concrete slabs, structural brick roof vaults and steel. Environmentally, the naturally lit and ventilated studio collects its own water and generates its own power, creating a carbon neutral building.
In addition, large full length clear story windows enable natural light to enter the single industrial scale workspace. The Sawtooth roof trusses and a portion of the facades were retained with the exception of the offices on the western street frontage. That's where a narrow, highly designed apartment runs atop the length of the building. The apartment features four self-supporting offset brick, catenary vaults that allow light into the apartment.
Hi, I'm Doug Pat and this is Design Vault. William Smart is a fellow of the Australian Institute of Architects. He's also the founder and creative director of Smart Design Studio, established in 1998. The Office is a multi-disciplined design studio offering professional services and architecture, interior architecture and design. Over the past 23 years, Smart Design Studio has delivered a wide range of projects from large scale master planning, cultural buildings, offices, workplaces to private houses and product design.
Smart Design Studio’s buildings have received critical acclaim since its inception , SDS has received over 50 international and national awards for architecture, urban design and interior design. William was also the recipient of Indie Award’s Luminary Award. Williams taught and lectured across Australia, published written work and is an active participant in the design community. So welcome, William. Nice to have you with us today.
Before we get started, tell us a little bit about Smart Design Studio. So you're coming to us from about 16,000 kilometers away. So tell us where you're located. What's the size of your firm and the type of work that you do.
00;03;09;28 - 00;04;33;03
WS
Doug It's a real pleasure to be here. Our studio is located in Sydney, which is on the east coast of Australia, and it's a temperate climate, so subtropical. So like today's the middle of winter, the maximum temperature will be 18 degrees Celsius in summer it gets quite warm, reasonably humid, but not quite tropical. It's quite a nice environment.
I'll talk about that in more detail because we've tried to do a very sustainable project for our offices, but we've been running for about 25 years now and with 50 people and we think that's just the perfect size for us because we can do some large projects that run over many years and we can do some small detail projects that allow us to be more innovative or to get a level of detail to explore and develop.
And we love integrating architecture and interiors and view it as one and through our own way of working, we've developed a methodology which we call design from the inside out or architecture from the inside out. And so we try to think of our buildings from the interior perspective. First, what is the space we're making? How do the occupants use the building?
And then we work through from that perspective toward the outside of the building and try to build an armature around it that's responsible, sustainable, complements the character of the community that we live in as well and tries to synthesize all those things together. But the approach is definitely to build it from the internal spaces.
00;04;33;06 - 00;04;34;20
DP
So form follows function.
00;04;34;20 - 00;05;25;19
WS
Absolutely form follows function. But we also think you can be really powerful with form and you can develop emotive responses to form. So just in that idea of internal spaces, we think that in a really great building, and the best of ours achieve this, you take someone to a moment when they go, Whoa, this is amazing, this is beautiful.
And sometimes that's more than the functionality. It can be just an internal space where there's a staircase or a vista or place you go to that's a surprising experience. And I'm often in my mind imagining how an occupant or a user of the building will circulate through it, how they will walk into a room, what the transition of light is from outside, inside and from one room to another.
And how they go to this place and think, Wow, I wasn't expecting this at all.
00;05;25;21 - 00;05;27;03
DP
That's a beautiful description.
00;05;27;10 - 00;05;27;22
WS
Thank you.
00;05;27;29 - 00;05;33;06
DP
Absolutely. So I was on your website, pretty extensive. What type of projects do you guys take?
00;05;33;12 - 00;06;56;17
WS
Well, we've been running for 25 years now, and that means we've really grown the company into a place where we can be careful about the projects we take. So we are looking for projects where we can design the architecture and the interiors as one. And that's borne out of our philosophy of how we work. And we're also looking for projects where we can achieve a lot of detail, and that doesn't necessarily mean we need to use expensive materials.
We actually quite like inexpensive materials, things like the everyday brick is something we're in love with and how we use that is probably where the innovation starts. But we like to do architecture and interiors has one a lot of detail and work on projects from start to end so we can really achieve the details and in that we prefer to have a range of projects.
So at least half of our work are residential projects and they can vary from large apartment buildings where there's more complex of buildings down to small houses and everything in between. And then we also do a few commercial projects, cultural projects such as art galleries, or recently we finished Science Gallery in Melbourne, which is about the fusion of art and science in this new space.
And we use architecture to bring the two together and then we also tend to end up working on a few product design projects as well. So door handles, grip rails, other things going down into there. Very fine detail is something that we love doing concurrently.
00;06;56;24 - 00;07;04;18
DP
That's really cool. I have a lot of questions. We'll get to them in just a minute. So tell us a little bit about yourself. So how did you start Smart Design Studio?
00;07;04;24 - 00;08;50;03
WS
I started my own design studio in ‘98, so 25 years ago. And after graduating, I worked in France for a year and a half and learned about traditional ways of building. Following that, I worked for just over three years at Foster and Partners in London, which is a very big commercial practice and has built a number of buildings in the US.
And then I came back to Australia in ‘96 for the Olympics and I wanted to work on an Olympic project and I wanted to try living in Sydney because I grew up in the country, in Western Australia, in the outback, and I moved to Sydney to work on the railway station at the Olympic site. So I've gone from working on large projects and as that last project was nearing to an end, I felt this need to set up my own studio and do my own projects.
And I chose that name without having any projects in mind or in place. I thought I had something to say and I didn't know what it was, but I just felt I had a voice and I needed to create a platform to develop my own voice. And I wasn't getting that in working for other practices because I was channeling the voice of that practice.
So that's why I set it up and it's taken really sort of 15 years to find out what that voice is. I had things I liked I was interested in. There weren't always the budgets on the first few projects to achieve those things, but over time we've developed these interests in materials who work with the details, who work with the forms, the collaborations with other architects or engineers or other consultants and contractors, and have kind of come up with some buildings that are remarkable that people think and ask us, How did you do that? How was that made? How could you do all that? It seems unbelievable, which is great. I think that's what I wanted to do when I started this practice 25 years ago.
00;08;50;09 - 00;09;02;00
DP
It's great. I have some of the same questions for you today about your building. So clearly when you got started, your office was relatively small. You've grown to 50 people. What's your role in the office now?
00;09;02;02 - 00;10;17;06
WS
How I see my role is to kind of help guide a large team of people towards the great outcome. So we need to achieve. So my favorite thing is preparing drawings or writing specifications. I like that more than the other stuff that comes with running a company of this size and often there's a lot of meetings. But this morning I just was in an early morning meeting with some contractors about trying to nut out some key details that we couldn't let go of on a new commercial building we're doing.
And then the project architect that's running that's doing an amazing job, but at this moment needs me to come in and say to the contractors, this is the way it's going to be. We've got to document and develop in that way. So that's kind of how I end up steering things. And I work four days a week from Sydney and then one or two days a week out of town and on that day I try to sit down on the drawing board and not our new projects or complex projects, but I love that drawing time.
So I'm kind of like a person in the team that's almost like a coach that tries to help everybody get to the right place and at times I'll step in and lend a hand and at times I'll be working in the background, checking things and reviewing things and trying to help develop the direction of projects. But it's sort of like this really strong helping role that I've developed over time.
00;10;17;09 - 00;10;23;05
DP
I'm sure this varies, but how many projects do you typically have in the office running at the same time?
00;10;23;05 - 00;11;21;10
WS
I would say there's probably about 20 active projects at the moment and from that we would have three or four that are going through planning approval processes. And in Australia that's very slow. It takes probably a year for us to get planning consent on a project and they don't take a lot of work, but they take sporadic pieces of work.
So accounts who might come back and say change this time or work on that for a short while. So maybe five or six projects in those stages. We've always got a couple in preparing for planning. We've normally got a few in the documentation stage and then we’ve normally got half a dozen or even more at the moment that are under construction.
And some of those are very large projects that go over three or four years and then some of them are smaller ones. It might be a year or a year and a half, but it just naturally works out that somehow it's all fairly evenly spread between all the different stages, and it means that we can resource it well and improve on our systems and ways of documenting from the work we're building on site all the time.
00;11;21;13 - 00;11;41;15
DP
Well, it certainly sounds interesting for you because you get to bounce around on a lot of different projects at different stages in the process, so it sounds like a lot of fun. So let's dig in here and talk about our building. Tell us about the new Smart Design Studio. So how long have you guys been in your current location and before that, what was your original location?
00;11;41;18 - 00;14;32;23
WS
Before this, we were in an area in Sydney called Surry Hills, which is kind of a beautiful, quite central, historic part of town. And we moved to this new industrial area that's being transformed at the moment, halfway between the center of Sydney and the airport. And that means we're actually only four kilometers from the city center because our main airports very close to town.
What attracted us to this particular area was that we could get a very large piece of land at a relatively inexpensive price and build a studio where the whole of the team could work on one floor. And linked into that is a desire to not grow anymore. We've sort of arrived at 50, for us that’s the perfect size. We can do some large projects, some small ones, and control all of the stage as well.
So we do want to grow anymore. But we did recognize that from our last project and our last office that we needed to all be in one room and work from that space. So we bought an old warehouse building in a conservation area. And for us that means that it's not a heritage listed item, so you can make changes to it.
And quite extensive changes, but you've got to work within the character of the area and the approval authority wants us to respect how it looks from the outside and how it integrates with the streetscape, with the materials of the area, which is predominantly brick with sorted roofs. And I also want you to kind of reinforce and retain the great character of the precinct and to do that internally.
So to keep these big, large, open plan offices with sorted roofs. And that just worked perfectly for how we wanted to use that particular space. So we have an office of about 800 square meters just over. So it's almost 20 square meters per person. It's like a lot of room because we've had our own office before. We've understood what it is that we need and how we work and what the best range would be.
And I feel as a designer, we nailed it. We really got the design exactly right. So it's one big room which is about 20 by 20 meters. And then on the outside of that, we have four separate rooms, one for model making. One is a kind of breakout space, what we call the canteen. One is a materials library, and then the last one is the front of house and meeting room area.
And so the activities that need to be segregated from the main working space are on the outside of that, but within the same volume and then the central space is flooded with natural light and has a beautiful acoustic to it. So you can hear the sound of people talking, but you actually can't hear what they're saying. So it doesn't take your attention away from what you're doing.
It's a really great space to work in. And one of the interesting things is we make a lot of models, we do a lot of hand drawings. All the walls are pinned up with work, and then there's maybe more than 100 models in various states of completion or degradation, over time through the studio space. So you feel like you've walked into this creative space where work is being developed and being designed on the run.
00;14;33;00 - 00;14;51;25
DP
So I've always found that it's really hard to be my own client. And I'm kind of wondering, so you first lay out the programmatic requirements and as you start designing, did that evolve? Did the program change a little bit for you? What was a client like? Just kidding. And did you know right away what you wanted?
00;14;51;28 - 00;16;06;23
WS
I've done a few projects for myself now and I'm designing a couple more and I love working for myself. I don't find it hard being my own client. The only sticking point every time is budget. Actually, I always run over budget dramatically and have to find a way of making that work. But I love designing for myself and the main studio spaces who are designing it.
And in fact the whole building almost felt like it designed itself. I didn't even feel like I was designing it. It just felt like it all fell into place quite easily for us. Those projects are rare, certainly the minority, but this one felt like as soon as we drew something, it felt right. And then you just made minor adjustments along the way and it kind of sold together quite beautifully.
And I feel like in just about every area, we got it really right because we put so much thought into what is it we need and how much space do we need for these kinds of materials? And you know, when we have all the models, what do you want the clients to see when they walk around the studio?
We even thought about that tour through the studio and how we would walk prospective clients and consultants through the space and tell the story of how we work and who we are. There's so many layers to the design and we had time to think about it properly and do a good job. So I feel like we've got it right.
00;16;06;23 - 00;16;11;29
DP
The final design included an apartment. Tell us a little bit about that.
00;16;12;01 - 00;17;59;16
WS
This conservation area in Sydney, what the city wants is for this to be a hub of activity and for that to not be where people live. They want businesses here, they want makers, they want microbreweries, they want art galleries, they want live music. So they're kind of trying to develop that in this particular area. So they have prohibited housing, including apartments in this area except for a caretaker's residence they allow.
So we were able to get an approval to build a caretaker's residence on this site. And that's why it's called the caretaker's residence, because it was permitted under the planning consent. And it's where I live with my partner and my dog and these catenary shaped and structural brick vaults. And there's two big ones and two small ones and the big ones are about seven meters wide and 4.2 meters high.
And the small ones are about five meters wide and 2.7 meters high. And in between these vaults, they're offset from each other, we have these large sheets of glass, and it allows light to flood into the space. I think what we were trying to do with the project on many levels is to be something that was very responsive to this precinct.
So it was a positive contribution to the heritage area that we work in. And also we wanted to just have a bit of fun with the project and do some things we didn't know how. I've been dreaming of doing beautiful vaulted brick structures like you might see in Barcelona. I've been dreaming of them for a long time and I couldn't find a client that wanted to do it because we generally get to a sticking point, which would be a conversation a bit like, Tell us about your experience in doing this.
So I haven't done it before, but I know how I can work it out and then a clients would just get to a point where that's how I want to be your guinea pig. I don't want to test this for you. So we were able to do that with ourselves and it's actually a beautiful space to be in.
00;17;59;18 - 00;18;18;17
DP
It looks really wonderful. I'm going to stop you right there because we're going to come back to the vaults. Let's talk about the building design and we'll start with the basics. So tell us a little bit about the site now. It didn't look like there were any unique topographic features. Seemed pretty straightforward and there was a building on the property already. Tell us a little bit about that.
00;18;18;19 - 00;19;35;27
WS
So there's an existing warehouse here and the front strip of that building, which was where the offices and meetings had been adjusted so many times over the past 60 years that it had lost all its integrity. And we demolished that front seven meters and rebuilt that. And then we kept the rest of the warehouse, which was about 80% of the footprint, and restored that.
And that's where that big room is in our studio. And the front strip, which is seven meters wide, has a beautiful brick vaulted facade that almost looks as though it's peeling open the brick kind of curves outwards and leans downwards. And we worked out a way to lay bricks facing downward direction and peels up again the other way.
And at the top of that three story structure, we have this apartment building which is got the four votes that we spoke of before. And so what we tried to do with the project was to use everyday ordinary materials like galvanized roof sheeting and galvanized steel windows and a very simple brick. But to take these materials and do something extraordinary with them.
So my kind of beautiful sculptural shapes or to make beautiful load bearing brick vaults. So that was one of the primary objectives and that talks to the history of the area and really relates back in a very sympathetic way to the context.
00;19;36;04 - 00;19;45;16
DP
So you'd said it was a conservation area. Were the zoning restrictions challenging for you guys? And then was the building ultimately reviewed by a review board?
00;19;45;22 - 00;21;11;18
WS
Totally. It was very well received and mostly it complies with the planning controls that the biggest challenge for us was getting this caretaker's residence approved. But one of the great initiatives of the project also was we wanted to make all our own power, collect our own water, and reuse that on onsite to be a carbon neutral building.
And the city responded very well to that. And because Sydney's quite a hot climate in summer, we need some way of controlling the climate and really stopping the sun from coming into the spaces. So we designed this sustainable building where we don't have any air conditioning in the studio or the apartment spaces and it's just naturally ventilated. And we have underfloor heating which has got hydraulic pipes that extend and wrap around through the floor and in summer they work in reverse and I call the floor and that chill the space.
And in Sydney, which has relatively high humidity, we have to manage that carefully so you don't get condensation on the floor surface. But we do all that through a building management system, which is like a computer that opens, it controls the windows, it also controls blinds, it controls the fans, it controls how much water goes through the floor and what temperature and so forth.
And tomorrow is thinking about today. And it's managing all that quite beautifully, actually. It all works extremely well. And it's a real milestone. There aren't many buildings in Sydney that are comfortable to be in without air conditioning in summer. It's just so hot here in the summer months and humid that it's a real challenge to make that work.
00;21;11;20 - 00;21;24;00
DP
Yeah, I don't understand that. So it's natural ventilation, meaning windows or open air is flowing through the building. You've got to control the humidity on the interior. How is that done?
00;21;24;03 - 00;23;32;14
WS
So how it works is the building sets up about five different climate times of the year. One of those is extremely hot and extremely cold. So they're two different times of the year. And then you have temperate and then warm and cool and then the perfect temperature. So this time of the year is a cool time of the year.
And what happens now is the windows will stay closed all day and then around midday they'll open for an hour and change the air and they'll close again. So they have little motors that open and control them. They're called actuators. And at nighttime, the building opens up all year round for either two or 5 hours, depending on whether it needs to cool down or heat up or how much air we need to change.
So big volume space, you can do this because there's so much air for the number of occupants that you don't need to have the windows open all day long. If you had a regular office building, you've got to rethink that because you run out of oxygen and people start to feel sleepy and tired. So what the building does is it kind of breathes in a way and lets the oxygen in at nighttime and fills up the space with the fresh air.
And in the daytime, if it's moderate like springtime, the windows just stay open all day long and they don't open a lot. They only open about an inch. So you're not getting air running through at high velocity. You're just getting a trickle of breeze running through the space. And what often happens is the high level windows are normally open a lot to let the hot air out.
So we have an overheating problem more than a problem of being too cold and we've got to warm up the space. But today it would be all the windows would be closed. Now, as I mentioned before, we're trying to hold on to the heat. And then what we're going to try and do is just block some of the heat load to stop, particularly the eastern and western sun from coming into the space and overcooking the space.
The building design has less glass on the east and the west than you would normally see in most office buildings. And then our design thinking is about what you do with the light when it comes into the space. How do you reflect and bounce it and make a beautiful private atmosphere to be in without having a huge amount of glass that would lose a lot of heat in winter and gain a lot of heat in summer?
00;23;32;17 - 00;23;37;25
DP
Very interesting, very different than what we're used to here in the US for the most part.
00;23;37;28 - 00;24;32;03
WS
Yeah. So glass is sort of interesting, isn't it? Because you think of it as the way of bringing light into the space and it absolutely does that. But in another way it's a poorly insulated material compared to others. So if you think of it as a very thin sheet of plastic or cling film or something like that, then even if it's not getting sun directly on it, it's going to let the heat out or the heat in whichever one you don't want.
It's just going to allow the temperature to move towards what's on the outside, even if you don't want it to. So a principle that we have is to reduce the amount of glass in buildings. We try not to do buildings that are mostly glass, you know, in an office building to get at least 30% of the facade is solid, but we're targeting more like 50% solid.
And you have to be very thoughtful about the occupants of the building and the desire of the tenants to have a lot of glass in the spaces and how you're going to be really responsible with that as well.
00;24;32;10 - 00;24;57;21
DP
So let's go back to the building plan for a second so our listeners can imagine this. So you've got, as far as I understand it would be like a large square. The front end is a long rectangle, the series of stories and then the leftover, much larger rectangle is the workspaces. And then along that long front facing rectangle atop that is the apartment, am I correct?
00;24;57;27 - 00;24;58;16
WS
That's exactly right/
00;24;58;16 - 00;25;12;29
DP
Okay. So let's talk a little bit about the style choice now. So when you're walking in the alley in the back, you see one facade and you're walking along the main road in the front, you see a very esthetically different facade. Tell us a little bit about those.
00;25;13;02 - 00;27;58;20
WS
Yeah. So the laneway at the back, which is called Balaclava Lane, is the original facade of the building. And it's interesting when you walk through this precinct because what you see is the laneways are almost exactly as they were built in the 1950s. So you see rusty old windows, old timber, rickety doors, original brickwork that's never been painted.
And they're beautiful, they're just gorgeous to look at. And people who find them think they're incredible. And this is a little bit of an undiscovered area right in the center of Sydney. It's kind of remarkable. And then on the front street faces of the building, all of the people have gone and renovated them, I guess, every ten years and modernized them.
And so there's no good buildings left behind. They've done them cheaply, badly. They've kind of destroyed the integrity of the streetscape. So we saw an opportunity with our building was to leave the back as it was because it's so beautiful. And our work there was to make it durable, waterproof, more environmentally responsible, but not stylistically too different. And then on the front streetscape, we had an opportunity there to be quite expressive.
So we tried to do a modern version of the building opposite ours, which is the only one in our street that hasn't been renovated. And it's a classic sort of modernist style where you have very long horizontal steel frame windows, a kind of beautiful ribbons of glass in between those in a bit of a tower at the end.
And we almost mimic that design. But we did that in a way that was more nuanced to keeping that hot sun out in particular and giving the views out from the internal rooms that we wanted to see. So in the main meeting rooms, we needed to have solid walls in the spaces so we could pin up our work and control the light.
And then we have high level windows to let light into the meeting rooms and low level windows to look out to a garden that's on the street below. So when we worked from that idea of what the internal spaces needed to be, and then we married that with what the environment needed to do and then thought about the context, it led to a new building from the outside, which looks like very long strip windows.
And the positioning of those relates to the internal functions of the space. And then we tried to be creative and inventive and to take that everyday material being a brick and just to kind of push it to do things no one had done with it before in our minds. I mean, you have some amazing architects in America, like Frank Gehry, who's done incredible things with brick as well.
But we sort of thought there's an opportunity here to represent this era of technology and to be a design that came from the 2020s, for example, rather than something from the 1950s.
00;27;58;22 - 00;28;05;25
DP
So tell us a little bit more about this peeling brick facade. How did you guys make these partial vaults?
00;28;05;27 - 00;30;54;05
WS
All of the work is in sections and cross section, not in plan. So when you look at the building as a floor plan, they're all rectangular rooms on the inside. But in section we have a part of the facade that peels outwards at the top and sort of leans outwards. And we worked out a way to lay the bricks on top of each other almost at 45 degrees.
And we're able to do that with creating a small jig to lay them on. And then we laid up to three courses at once and then we'd have to leave it for overnight and then lay another three courses the next day. So it dried and then on the bottom part, we lay them over a steel frame and on that steel frame we had a curved sheet of metal, so they were laid onto that curve sheet of metal and then tied back using brick ties to that other element that that projected outwards.
So that's sort of what was done in construction. How we came up with that was to work collaboratively with our bricklayers and our engineers and just sit down at the table. And we knew who we wanted to build the project before we'd finished all the documentation. And so we were able to sit down with them at a meeting table.
And I kind of said, here's the vision, this is what we want to do, and this is how I thought you might make it. But I don't really know how to lay a brick. Can you help us with this process? And the builders we chose I experts in heritage construction and they also know a lot about engineering. So they were able to sit down with their bricklayers and myself and our structure engineer and we workshopped it together.
And in a few hours we worked out how to do that. And then they went away and did on their own. And what I've learned over the last 25 years of doing my business is that sometimes you need to monitor something very closely and sometimes you actually just have to let it go. And these bricklayers were so good and so careful.
And they loved this job so much that they just wanted to be let go. And I hardly had to do any supervision work at all in the project. It was just developed by them. And one day I remember they turned up on site and they said, William, we think we have to change your brick causing dimension, which I'd set at 51.3 millimeters.
They said, we need to change it to 51.4 millimeters. So that's the height at which each brick goes from one to an x one. And it kind of came out with this big bit of paper that looked at all the maps and showed me how that would work and how many bricks it would be. And then I just thought, if we're talking about 0.1 of a millimeter, then you guys don't let me at all, you are there, you really embrace the project.
So it was 100% a really strong collaboration project where they would come along and say, We thought we'd like to change this part. And this is our suggestion. And most of the time it just made it better. That's the best part of collaboration, I think, is when you enjoy the process and other people make the project even better.
00;30;54;07 - 00;31;12;01
DP
Yeah, for sure. I think I've asked every single guest we've had so far if they had trouble finding a mason, almost every one of them, I think every one of them so far said they did not have a difficult time. I know we've had some challenges over the years finding really talented Masons. It's a dying breed.
00;31;12;03 - 00;32;08;01
WS
This project was a wonderful opportunity for some of those bricklayers to really show their skills and to be proud of what they did, and they're really proud of it. The two bricklayers we had here related that was Gareth, who is over 70 years old, lies drick six days a week, loves doing it, and his son in law, Harvey, Harvey, married Gareth daughter and they've been laying bricks together for like 30 years or something incredible.
And they just really love this project. And I realized that as architects we actually have an opportunity to create buildings where the tradesmen can really shine. And what I believe is that if you kind of create the vision and the project, the people will come to it. You'll find the people to make it. There'll be someone who just loves the challenge of doing something that's not square and upright and the standard thing. They want to kind of do some experimental parts of the project as well.
00;32;08;04 - 00;32;17;03
DP
You said that you were thinking, Well, there's a lot of brick out here. I'd love to use brick. Were there any restrictions because it was a conservation area.
00;32;17;05 - 00;33;57;08
WS
Not explicit. I mean, the cities, it's quite merit based in its assessment, I suppose, because what they're saying is we want you to make a positive contribution to this area. I think if you went in, proposed something like an aluminum clad building, they would reject the plans, but you probably could do concrete or concrete block or maybe stone as well.
But it seems so logical in this area that it'd be made from brick. I've had quite a lot of experience in working with brick site over the years. I've started to understand how to do mortar joints really well, how to make it kind of work gymnastics so it can do more expressive forms and it felt like the right material.
And then for us it came down to the point of choosing exactly the right brick. And we have two types of brick in our building. One is called a dry press brick, and that's made about 60 kilometers from Sydney, so very local. And they're beautiful. They're white, they're in the space that I mean, now they're chalky, they chip easily, they have incredible material quality to them.
And because they're on the inside, we can afford to use these more softer bricks and look after them. Well, and then on the outside of the building, we used a very durable brick called La Paloma, which is made in Spain, actually. And we wanted to use a black brick on the outside of the building for a bunch of different reasons.
But in Australia we don't have the really good clays that make good black bricks, so we had to use the Spanish brick and I made a special profile for us. So they were able to customize it and they're just incredibly strong and durable and look beautiful with the trees and the landscaping that's in this area and marry perfectly with the building opposite that I mentioned.
00;33;57;10 - 00;34;16;12
DP
So let's get back to these unique vaults in the apartment. How did you build these? There's a series of them. I saw some photos. They looked like they were built in one location or perhaps moved or were they built at the spot they ended up in and also really unique shape, right? They're elliptical.
00;34;16;15 - 00;36;58;22
WS
Yes. They're all built in situ. And how we built them was pretty close to what we imagined at the start. So we made a catenary shaped false work curve. So like a hollow boat sitting upside down, we made a timber plywood form and then we literally put the brakes top of that form so that the mortar didn't leak out in between.
We didn't use regular mortar. We use two terracotta tile glue and we glued the bricks together so that there's no mortar joints. And if you’re laying them up down, that's a good way to do it, because you don't have that problem of the mortar leaking out in an uncontrolled way towards the inside face. We made the timber false work that was all CNC cut was put together without using nails.
We worked out that you could make this CNC machine work very hard for you and accented cutting is incredible force work because you can make it a perfect shape and it's really fast. They were all cut overnight, delivered in one day, all assembled within one week. So a very fast process. We laid the bricks across the top and then we put a thin layer of reinforcing mesh over the top of that and we sprayed it with 60 nostics of concrete.
Now, in that process, with all the bricks glued together and you have this concrete on the outside, the brick itself, in this catenary shape doesn't need any support. It will hold itself up. It is the perfect structural shape. And that shape can also be described by or represented by taking a chain and hold it at the two ends that slumps to a catenary shape in tension.
When you invert that and put that up the other way, it stays true to its shape, but it's all in compression and brick has a great material for compression. It's strong when the forces are loaded on top of it. And the person that made that famous is the Sagrada Familia Building in Barcelona uses catenary vaults everywhere. And Antonio Gaudí is the master of how those elements come together.
We laid bricks on top. We spread it with a thin layer of concrete, but we call shock crete. In Australia, it's a similar way to how you build swimming pools. They trialed that off and they left it to drive for a month and then after that we took it away. So the concrete in that system provides provide stability because you could imagine if you make this brick vault, then it's a bit vulnerable when you have kind of a strong sideways force, like a very large wind or a branch or a tree falling on it, it could all fall sideways and topple over and then take it away.
And it stands up beautifully in this place is kind of fun to do all that. We worked collaboratively with one of the local universities who helped with the CNC cutting. They wanted a project where they could talk about real life building within education programs, and they linked that into the software and how you would shape and develop it and how even patterned the bricks internally. It was all done through parametric software as well.
00;36;58;28 - 00;37;01;27
DP
So I'm curious, do the walls have to be insulated?
00;37;01;29 - 00;37;22;02
WS
So in that construction, we have brick on the inside, then we have this thin layer of concrete on the outside of that, we have a 100 millimeters thick insulation that you might only see in a courtroom. So it's rigid insulation, it's got silver socking it, it's very strong. And then outside of that, we have plywood and standing same galvanized roof sheeting.
00;37;22;08 - 00;37;23;04
DP
So you had to curve the plywood?
00;37;23;06 - 00;38;39;22
WS
Yeah, we curved the plywood and they were laid in strips that ran the length of the catenary except for in parts of it where we wanted to see this very thin edge. We use seven millimeters thick plywood and laid them in two different directions and glued them together. Gluing sounds like a horrible word, isn't it? Sounds like you're cheating in a way.
But if you think of it as adhesives, there's a lot of technology that's developed with very strong and durable adhesives now, so they can work well together and as I mentioned earlier, this space we're in now has no air conditioning in the space. It's a beautiful climate. There's a lot of thermal mass. So there's brick walls, stone floors, brick ceilings, effectively relatively small amount of windows.
So maybe 10% of the wall area is window. But it's a bright space because we carefully think about how the light comes into the space. So it is very comfortable all year round. We'll go through that week of very hot weather in the middle of summer where the temperatures soared to over 40 degrees and the humidity is up over 80%.
We go through that week of the year with a maximum temperature in the space would peak at 26 degrees. It's really comfortable. It works very well. It's a good illustration of that concept that a well insulated environment that has a lot of exposed thermal mass will be very resilient in hot weather as long as you keep it well insulated.
00;38;39;24 - 00;38;46;03
DP
It sounds like it. So how long did the process take then from design to completion for the whole project?
00;38;46;06 - 00;40;35;20
WS
The whole project was three years. So it was a year and a half to design and document and get planning consent. So while it was chugging its way through the consent authority, which is a very slow process in Sydney in particular, we were documenting the project and then it took us a year and a half to build. It was a wonderful experience.
I thought to myself at the outset of the project, here’s three years of my life and I've got to keep working at the same time to keep my business running. I really want to enjoy this and make it a special experience that I won't ever forget. So in doing that, I came to site with my dog every Saturday morning from seven and left at about two in the afternoon and spent a lot of time with the builders working through things, thinking about things, making sure we're prepared for the next week, and then did two site meetings a week on Tuesday mornings and Thursday mornings came down for a few hours each time and I got know every single person that was on the building site really well. So to that level where you knew where they lived, you knew what their family was like and developed a really strong kind of bond in the process. And many of these people have gone on to work on other projects, but we all know each other now, so friendships form in that process and I look back on it as a really wonderful time in my life where I kind of immersed myself in construction and it gave back more than I had to give it.
It taught me so much about building, about design, about opportunities with projects, about just if you have a vision, put it out there and just let the people come to it and let them do their magic. That doesn't always work perfectly for everybody because some people just don't want to do the hard stuff. They want to do the easy stuff.
But I feel like if you put it out there in the right way, then you will attract the people who want to do the really good projects.
00;40;35;22 - 00;41;04;18
DP
Yeah, it's my favorite part of the job is the people part. Actually, I love to draw, but I love going out into the field and meeting people and listening to them and asking them questions and really feeling out early on how they would solve a problem before I tell them how it's going to be solved because I'm always going to learn something.
So I completely agree with you. You had said that you loved to draw. Who did the drawing for this building? Was it you and a series of other people or and did you do the drawings in 2D and 3D?
00;41;04;20 - 00;43;25;05
WS
I led the team. For me, it was a personal project and that was my opportunity to have very strong and close leadership on every aspect of it, from the architecture to the interior design. In that interior design sort of realm, we custom designed about 13 new products for the project, from chairs to stools to grab rails to door handles to lighting fixtures.
For us, the product design stuff takes a lot of time, but it's very rewarding and we couldn't develop new product for it. But we went down to custom designing a whole lot of special things. We did the architecture and the interiors, and I led the design team. At its peak it was about five or six people working on the project during the documentation phase where in construction we had a full time architect plus myself and I was working actually about 40 hours a week on the project to kind of do all this, meetings and make sure everything was done properly. So I was probably not just a project architect, but a little bit of a developer, manager and managing the consultant to the council and other people in that process as well. And we drew it all in 2D software called Micro Station, and that was one of the last projects we did with that software.
We now use Revit for most of our documentation and we also used a little bit of software called Rhino, and we did a little bit of scripting for laying out pick patterns with that software, able to very quickly change the shape of the catenary and check the light coming into the space and very quickly change all that brick patterning, which is quite unique, sort of the bricks aren't light in a normal brick bound configuration.
They're laid where the offset is very close to the end of the brick. You get this beautiful rifling pattern of the vertical brick joints through the room. And so we used a bit of software for that, and then we made five cardboard models for the space. There was the early version which didn't have a catenary vault. It had a barrel vault in its roof.
And we made two other models of the apartment space and a few test models for the facade of the. So I've come to realize that the CGIs will kind of give you a perspective view on the space. A cardboard model will give you a three dimensional, very fast feeling of what the volumes are like. You see the light coming in.
It's a very different experience and we find that preparing a cardboard model with a CGI is the perfect way to describe a project to our clients. They love them.
00;43;25;12 - 00;43;38;10
DP
Before we move on to one or two other questions, I wanted to go back to sustainability for a second. We talked a little bit about the lack of HVAC system there. Tell us a little bit about the water savings system.
00;43;38;12 - 00;46;18;07
WS
So in an old warehouse building, we have a large proportion of roof to the floorplan. So the building here is just over a thousand square meters in its footprint on the land and more than 80% of that is a sawtooth roof which has tall windows facing south. That's our kind of not sunny side and then the inclined roofs facing pitching towards the north which is our sunny side in the southern hemisphere.
From that we collect all the water and push it into large rainwater tanks and then that's filtered and used for flushing toilets and for irrigating the property. So we have some irrigation pipes in the ground that drip feed the plants in the area in summer, able to harvest all the water and use that to be honest, we could have put much bigger tanks in because it collects so much water in heavy downpours, a subtropical area, you would kind of go through a month where there isn't any rain or two and then quite often have a big downpour where sometimes it will rain for a week without stopping.
So having bigger tanks is the next stage of the project. Actually, we're going to do the next stage, which is another building a few years on from now, and that building will have really big rainwater tanks in there because we can save it up even more for the future. That roof also allowed us to install 260 solar panels, which is about a 95 kilowatt solar farm system, and that generates in its own right more than twice the power that we need in our office.
And so we've set up a little network where we export the power to one of our neighbors and we sell them the power at the rate that they would buy it from the normal supplier. We just have a meter on it and we use that money to start to pay down some of the investment on this very large solar array system.
We also have a backup battery. So every day we fill up the battery and draw down that in the evening and some of that battery is reserved for backup power. If we were to have a power failure, it will help to run our server to shut down slowly and or things like that. We have a stage two for the project and a few years on from now we're going to build an even larger building on a neighboring site, which we also own, and that building will even be more sustained.
We're going to push this even harder. We've just launched our plans to the city to see if we can get approval for it, and it's being favorably received at the moment. But we believe there's a market in Sydney for spaces without air conditioning, with a lot of natural light, with natural ventilation and kind of a unique character that's not your average copper tiled ceiling tiled, sealed office building. I don't think people want that anymore, but we'll find out in the future.
00;46;18;09 - 00;46;33;14
DP
It sounds profoundly unique and profoundly valuable. I mean, that is incredible. So because you're not spending all this money on energy, you're generating enough power to run not only your building, but you're selling it the energy as well. That’s amazing.
00;46;33;17 - 00;47;54;14
WS
Our sort of energy system is quite advanced in allowing many different roofs of buildings in cities to have solar panels and then to blend that power with the power system of the city. So a lot of people have their own solar array systems. And if there's an excess, so a day like today, it's beautiful and sunny in Sydney and right now we would be making more power than we're using without doubt.
And what would be happening is the surplus power would be used to fill up the batteries and once they're filled up, that goes back into the grid for the city and the blend of power is distributed to other buildings in the area. We thought rather than doing that, we could firstly push it to our neighbors and then any top up power comes from the grid and any surplus power goes back into the great.
So it's the network set up to have these blended power sources and that makes a lot of sense because you really are producing the energy at the same place that you're using it. And a roof, for example, isn't a redundant asset in our mind. A roof should be used for, in addition to its performance to keep water out, it should be used to collect energy or to make green spaces for people and other animals like birds and bees to live in, in those spaces as well.
So we see that as an incredibly valuable asset to every building project.
00;47;54;21 - 00;48;07;14
DP
Very forward thinking, really interesting. So one of the last questions got for you, give me one or two things that you guys learned during the design, drawing and construction process on this job. What was new to you?
00;48;07;16 - 00;50;43;16
WS
One thing that I had thought about for a long time that this project absolutely cemented in my mind was this idea of bringing people to the table. So I spoke earlier about having our bricklayers and our engineers and the builder and myself come to the table and just say, Here's the vision of the project. I don't know how to lay bricks, but this is what I thought they might be like.
And they would say, Yes, it works like this, you don't know that. That was really successful. And we did that almost in every single building element. So we would do the same process for the windows, for laying the floor tiles, for laying the roof shading. I kind of lay out here, here all the drawings. This is what I thought about.
This is what we're working towards. Do you think this is the right way of working? And in that process, I got a lot of respect from particularly the tradesmen doing the work because that really happens within they often get told what to do and they don't get asked what their ideas are. And I also realized that it gave them an opportunity to be engaged with the project mentally.
So they felt invested. And for that the reward that we had was we got a higher standard of construction than you would normally see. We got people bringing their ideas to the project and we got friendly, smiling faces on a building site. So it kind of had this great energy about it. So that was kind of good. I've been trying to roll that idea out in our practice where we call them briefing meetings.
We sit down with a contractor before they start preparing their detailed drawings of how to build what they're going to make. And we tell them about the vision. And people are very, very receptive to that. So that's kind of one thing that I learned in the process. I suppose it ignited this idea that I have now that a part of our role is that we could create opportunities for people to shine like tradesmen, to really show their ways and rather than bricklayers as being borderline ordinary bricks in unremarkable buildings, you could do special things.
And the other one I've touched on as well as just I think if you have a vision, then you probably just can just go after that, go looking for the people to collaborate with you and find them and bring them all together so that it's been kind of really invaluable. And I feel like in that process and in collaborating, this always works this way, you need to get to say this is what we're going to try to get out of the project. And in other times you've got to be loose about it and let the collaboration evolve. The design I hate that is not what I want, but you've actually got to back off a little bit from that and listen to them and hear what they're trying to say, because that's what collaboration is.
It's two minds coming together to make something better than what one person could do on their own.
00;50;43;19 - 00;51;37;06
DP
Yeah, I always find when I ask somebody to give me their opinion or to tell me what they think the solution to a particular challenge is even if the idea they give me isn't something that I'd prefer. I always go back and think about it. And sometimes there are parts of that idea that I end up really falling in love with or liking a lot more than I did or incorporating somewhere else.
So I think as architects, we forget. We don't move beyond design all the time. We forget that this is a people business as much as it is about design and it's about money. So, you know, when we get out there in the field, we're working with human beings and to involve them in our jobs and make them invested in the thing that they're making, it ultimately makes a much better product.
So I think that's all very insightful.
00;51;37;06 - 00;51;40;25
WS
The process is way more enjoyable if you do that as well.
00;51;40;28 - 00;51;43;00
DP
Absolutely. My goodness.
00;51;43;03 - 00;52;28;13
WS
The part that comes to mind really for the project is longevity is something I really believe in and we've spoken a bit about sustainability in terms of energy consumption or collecting water, but another layer of sustainability is if you design things to last a long time, then you can make really big gains in projects. So we won quite a few sustainability awards, principally based on this idea of making way more energy than we use and not having air conditioning, which is a real hurdle to sell over in our environment.
The other thing I think is just if you make buildings last for 50, 100 years, then you know, all the embodied energy that goes into making them is really amortized over a long lifespan and becomes much less significant.
00;52;28;15 - 00;52;51;03
DP
Yeah, in college we hear a lot about timeless architecture, right? That's our goal is to make architecture timeless and it's so incredibly challenging to do just that. So I commend you guys on the building out there. It's really wonderful. So after all these years of being an architect or running a firm, if you could give your younger self some career advice, what would you say? What have you learned?
00;52;51;06 - 00;54;23;16
WS
What I think in architecture is that it's a very broad spectrum of opportunities. You could be really good at detailing or you could be really good at design, or you could be really great with clients and consultants and approval, in a way you’re so good with words. What I feel like is that there aren't many people who can do all of those things extremely well.
People tend to have an area that they're good at for people to excel. I feel like you kind of got to go with what you're naturally good and develop and grow that skill and become amazing at that. That's probably what there is to do now that can be architectural detailing, or it could be a type of building that you're interested, or it could be a place you get excited.
Like I get excited about incredible internal spaces. That's my favorite thing to design and that's sort of what I try to build is opportunities with our projects. How do we build these amazing interiors? For me, the outside is secondary to that. I always do the insides first and then come to the outside afterwards. That's my favorite thing. And then I kind of work on the things that I'm not very good at.
I find conceptual design really hard. It exhausts me. I put a lot of time into it. I set my standards very high, so I do it again and again and again. So I get it right. But once I've got the foundation right, it feels like a lot of our projects, everything falls into place. So the second part's much easier.
Okay. I guess in my advice, you don't leave the parts you're not so good alone, but you probably have to recognize where your strengths are and also play to those as well.
00;54;23;18 - 00;54;38;12
DP
Yeah, I always heard in business pick one thing and do it really well and ultimately you'll be successful. So that's a part of it for sure. So, William, it's been great to have you here. Thank you very much for your time. Where can people go to learn more about this Smart Design studio?
00;54;38;18 - 00;55;04;16
WS
Now Website SmartDesignStudio.com has a lot of information about the projects we've completed and our team. And then also just on Instagram, we kind of put a lot of work in to updating people on what's happening, what's currently happening. So that's @Smart.Design.Studio. There's a lot of updates on that side about who we are and how we're working on all the very current information. It's been a great pleasure to be on the podcast again. Thank you for inviting me.
00;55;04;18 - 00;55;24;12
DP
It was great to have you here, William, I learned an awful lot. The building's beautiful and the architecture your firm does is really quite wonderful. So check out the website.
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Design Vault Ep. 11 Surf Avenue with Jay Valgora
ABOUT THE ARCHITECT:
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Inspired by the industrial architecture in his hometown of Buffalo, from the grain elevators to the steel mills where his father worked, Mr. Valgora pursued his passion for architecture. Receiving degrees from Cornell University, Harvard University GSD, and a Fulbright Fellow to the United Kingdom, he gained valuable experience in firms from Boston to London. Finally arriving in New York City, he honed his experience at classic firms before founding STUDIO V Architecture, a practice dedicated to the reinvention of the city. Mr. Valgora’s work is defined by an extraordinary range of projects and scales, encompassing new construction, adaptive re-use, renovation, and interiors. His designs have been internationally recognized for engaging history, culture and context with innovative contemporary design: creating inspirational public spaces, encouraging diversity, restoring historic artifacts, and bringing new life to the edges and interstices of our city while reconnecting communities. |
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Surf Avenue
Studio V
View ProjectTRANSCRIPT
00;00;00;02 - 00;00;05;12
Doug Patt (DP)
Let's go inside the vault. The design vault.
00;00;05;14 - 00;00;33;10
Jay Valgora (JV)
So, it's very complex. It's two residential towers and it's mixed use. It has retail at the base with a series of astonishing amenities and public spaces that link them together, including a fantastic pool deck overlooking the ocean, overlooking the roller coaster, and a whole series of public spaces. Because, you know, there's a social life to a building, too.
00;00;33;17 - 00;02;02;09
DP
This is my guest, Jay Valgora. I'll share more about him shortly. In this episode of The Design Vault, we highlight Jay's project 1515 Surf Avenue. It is a two tower, 26 and 16 story residential building complex in Coney Island, Brooklyn, designed by Studio V Architecture. This street corner project will span 470,000 square feet and yield 461 units 139 designated for affordable housing and 11,000 square feet of ground floor retail.
The building facade is variegated white to cream colored brick, with the main building podium facing Surf Avenue, featuring a soaring ground floor elevation with several diagonal columns, its sloped roofline is further defined by a stepped series of wooden platforms the design team calls the vertical boardwalk. The building features curved glass lined balconies and amenity deck heated pool and green roof.
Residents have panoramic views of Coney Island Amusement Park and the Atlantic Ocean. The total outdoor space will span over 20,000 square feet. The building includes a fitness center, lounges, co-working spaces, indoor basketball court, handball court and accessory off street parking. When completed in 2024, the property will be the largest geothermal heated and cooled building in New York City.
00;02;02;12 - 00;03;17;08
DP
Hi, I'm Doug Pat and this is Design Vault. Jay Valgora is the founder and principal of the architectural design firm Studio V Architecture in New York City. Jay grew up in Buffalo. He tells the story that it was the steel mills where his father worked and the historic grain elevators of Buffalo that influenced him to become an architect.
Jay received his Bachelor of Architecture at Cornell University and his master's degree at the Harvard Graduate School of Design. He was also a fellow in the Fulbright program to the United Kingdom. At Harvard, Jay studied under Pritzker Prize winning Portuguese architect Alvaro Cesar. Mr. Valdora is on the forefront of urban design with nine projects on the New York City waterfront.
He works closely with entrepreneurs to create innovative designs and programs, collaborates with government agencies to address policy infrastructure, environmental issues and approvals, and is deeply engaged with communities through innovative public space design. Welcome, Jay. Nice to have you with us today. So tell us a little bit about Studio V architecture in New York City. Where are you guys located? What's the size of your firm and what type of work do you do?
00;03;17;11 - 00;04;07;23
JV
So Studio V is right in the heart of Manhattan. You know, we're right in the middle of the island. I like to say that we live in a city of four islands and a peninsula, and we're right in the middle on 32nd Street and Park Avenue. Actually, by the time you broadcast this or soon thereafter, we've even purchased a small building, which we're currently redesigning right now, and we'll be moving to 111 East 29th Street, where we've created our own studio, which is currently under construction.
I guess the only other thing I can tell you is that Studio V is really all about the people. We have a really incredible range of people that work with us. We're about two dozen, and so we really see ourselves as a boutique architecture firm, but we handle tremendously large and complex projects because we have a really wonderful team and very diverse clients and very diverse projects. So we really pride ourselves on doing things that are a little bit different.
00;04;07;26 - 00;04;13;20
DP
So tell us a little bit about the firm. When did you get started and what's your role in the office now?
00;04;13;27 - 00;04;57;04
JV
So I began the firm and founded it in 2006. So I guess we've been around about nearly eight years and I'm the principal and the founder of the firm, but I have seven senior staff. They collaborate with me on all the projects. It's really an open atelier. I intentionally always call it a studio. It's not really an office, it's not really a firm.
It has the whole atmosphere and character of a studio. We have no offices, we have entirely open spaces. We have huge collaborative areas. So my role really is to work with and inspire the great designers and talented architects with whom I work and to provide leadership. But really they play an essential role. It's not Valgora architects, it's Studio V, and the studio really comes first.
00;04;57;08 - 00;05;10;16
DP
It's really interestingly described. I haven't heard somebody talk about their office like that. So tell me a little bit about how you get your people to pull mostly from New York City? And do people hear about your office and they want to work for you?
00;05;10;20 - 00;05;59;16
JV
We have a really diverse range of people, but there's sort of a running joke in Studio V that isn't really intentional, but somehow it proves to be true. I would say that many of the people at Studio V come from two places. It's really not intentional. It's not a policy. But many come from the heartland of America. I myself grew up in Buffalo and I consider that really secretly to be part of Ohio, not New York state.
It's completely part of a midwestern kind of ethos. And many of our talented architects come from around the American heartland in the Midwest, but the other half come from all over the world, throughout Europe, Asia, South America. And so I'm very proud of the fact that we really are part of New York City and kind of represent the diverse talents that come from New York City. And yet I think we're also grounded in certain optimistic ideals that come from my upbringing.
00;05;59;18 - 00;06;08;03
DP
Well, it's really great to hear. So let's dig in here and talk about your buildings. So tell us a little bit about 1515 Surf Avenue. So how did your office get the project?
00;06;08;05 - 00;06;58;14
JV
Well, first, we really can't do great projects without having a great client. And LCOR is our client on this. And they approached us with the building and it was really a breakthrough building for us. So Anthony Tortora, who is the partner at LCOR, knew me from another firm at which he had worked before, and he decided he wanted to give us a try.
But they did a competition and they put us against some really other serious architects, and we were really proud of the fact that we were able to prevail in that. I think it's all about the power of our ideas. It's about the design concepts that we bring, but also about solving our client's problems. And I think Studio V is really about those two things.
It's about maintaining ideals and an optimism about what a great design could be, and at the same time solving our client's real problems about bringing a project in on budget and doing something creative that they can actually build and that meets their needs.
00;06;58;17 - 00;07;01;28
DP
So how many people were involved in the competition to get the job?
00;07;02;04 - 00;07;45;09
JV
There were a handful of us. I put a couple of my best designers on it. It was a paid competition, albeit a small amount. Yes. And so we were up against these other serious firms. And really, I'm sure we spent three times the amount, but I was determined to do something special for it. And also I was inspired by Coney Island.
The principal, the partner, Anthony, actually grew up near there and he really was committed to the idea of remaking this neighborhood and that also fit studio visit. Those were really interested in transforming communities, rebuilding communities. And Coney Island has an incredible history and past and yet has suffered terribly under urban renewal and other elements. And so now we see this as one of the signature projects that's helping reestablish this really important and historic neighborhood.
00;07;45;17 - 00;07;51;07
DP
So that's a great place to start. So tell us a little bit about the history of the location where this building is.
00;07;51;14 - 00;08;49;12
JV
So this is right at the corner of Surf Avenue there, these great street names in Coney Island. You know, it's between Surf and Mermaid Avenue, and it's between 15th and 16th Streets. As a matter of fact, it's right across the street from a roller coaster and sits right on the beach with stunning views of the iconic Coney Island Beach and boardwalk.
So to me, I don't know if I'll ever get to work on a site again that is next to a roller coaster overlooking the Atlantic Ocean with stunning views of the historic parachute drop. It looks diagonally right down at Nathan's Hot Dogs. And it's catty corner to the iconic cyclone. So really, it's a fantastic site. Historically, all of these elements that I just described were part of it.
And historically it was part of the whole Coney Island landscape. But by the time we got there, it was a parking lot. There was nothing there. And so really it's an opportunity on this major avenue that had so much historic importance in Coney Island to really help rebuild one of the essential centers of this community.
00;08;49;19 - 00;08;55;18
DP
Yeah, you must have been amazed when you got out there and stood on that property and looked out, thought, wow, this is going to be really cool.
00;08;55;25 - 00;09;17;26
JV
Even now that construction is going along very well and it's fully tapped out and they're adding all the facade elements as we climb up through the building. It's stunning the relationship it has to the Manhattan skyline, to the ocean, to these iconic architectural rides and amusements and buildings. It really sits in the landscape and kind of draws these elements into it in a way like no other site I've ever had.
00;09;17;28 - 00;09;21;24
DP
So what was the scope of the project? What were the client's programmatic requirements?
00;09;21;27 - 00;10;02;00
JV
So it's very complex. It's two residential towers and it's mixed use. It has retail at the base and one of the towers is market rate and the other is affordable. And yet they wanted us to treat them both with the highest degree of quality, with a series of kind of astonishing amenities and public spaces that link them together, including a fantastic pool deck overlooking the ocean, overlooking the roller coaster, and a whole series of public spaces.
Public spaces, meaning spaces for the residents to share because, you know, there's a social life to a building, too. And I think this is one of the key elements of the building that we were inspired by the social life of residential buildings in New York and how we could create spaces that would bring people together.
00;10;02;07 - 00;10;14;15
DP
So let's talk a little bit about the building design. So we already discussed the site. There weren't any unique topographic features raised, just a giant flat parking lot. Was it a parking deck or was it just a giant lot?
00;10;14;21 - 00;11;14;17
JV
It was an open parking lot, and I guess the geographic features would just be these iconic buildings and structures that surrounded it and the ocean itself. The ocean is one of the key elements that did really influence the project, though, because there's a topography to the project, even though the site was flat that responds to the ocean. And that, of course, is resiliency.
You'd mentioned earlier, Doug, that we do a lot of waterfront projects. And one of the things for me is that this sits in the middle of a vast floodplain and we're creating 461 new residences, and we're really at the forefront of dealing with resiliency and climate change. We're very proud of the work we do there, including pro-bono work.
So one of the things we had to do is elevate the entire building and yet still really engage the streetscape. So as a matter of fact, this led to the main design concept, the vertical boardwalk, the idea of elevating the building with a series of step platforms that protects it, and major storm events such as Sandy, and yet also creates a series of spiraling public spaces that work their way up through the building and create these stunning views of the surrounding landscape.
00;11;14;24 - 00;11;23;13
DP
So that's a good way to segue. Tell us a little bit about the project restrictions, the zoning codes, how far off the ground to the building have to be raised?
00;11;23;16 - 00;12;56;02
JV
Sure. So of course, like most buildings in New York City, it's an as of right building. So we worked within the existing zoning ordinance. And so in a sense, some of the massing of the towers was pre-established city planning had done a rezoning of this community a few years before, and that actually led to this development and has helped catalyze the transformation of Coney Island.
But then within that, there are certain requirements from FEMA and from flood requirements. But I'll tell you also that the client was very supportive of this. We exceeded those requirements. We didn't just meet the code, we added additional feet of elevation. We did three feet of free board. On top of that, we really pride ourselves on exceeding the code requirements.
As a matter of fact, after we finished the initial permitting of the building, the city amended the code partly in response to advocating that we had done in order to allow buildings to increase their height, to allow extra elevation for climate change and have that not count against the development because it's a positive thing to lift the building up.
The other thing we did that was also important though, is not just lifting it up, it's still engaging the street. So for example, at the corner of 15th Street and Surf Avenue, we created this great porch as the client had this idea that we really need to bring back the streetscape, the retail streetscape, and that would be a fantastic site for a restaurant.
So we created this wonderful porch that has multiple levels that actually allows it to engage the street instead of being too far elevated seven or eight feet up. That's only three feet up. And we allow that to flood in a storm event. But it doesn't go into the building. And that way we can have these series of stepped platforms and public spaces that activate the streetscape and bring Surf Avenue back to life.
00;12;56;05 - 00;13;01;23
DP
So how do you do that? How do you make these objects that can flood and yet they're still functional?
00;13;01;29 - 00;13;53;26
JV
So we really worked with a great team of people, the overall residential levels and all the habitable levels are well above the floodplain. So they're really up to about elevation 13, which is three feet of freeboard above. These are NAVD 88, which is the datum that's used in New York City. And then for the lower areas, really the lobby is accessible.
So we're using flood barriers there to protect one tiny small area, which is a grade which allows the full lobby to be accessible. But all the areas are elevated and then the retail spaces are also elevated. But we stepped it down with this outdoor porch, and that's designed very specifically so that the floodwaters can come in, but they won't enter the building.
They just enter this kind of lower porch level that really engages the street. There's also a parking garage and that does go a bit below grade, and that is allowed to flood. But it has special vents and special technical requirements for the materials that allow it to be flooded and to drain out. And that's the right way to do it.
00;13;53;29 - 00;13;57;10
DP
So tell us about the building plans. We've got two buildings out there.
00;13;57;13 - 00;15;41;24
JV
So the building plans were really interesting. And this is one of the things we did in the competition. It's a little hard to describe, but there are the kind of inside corners of buildings where it's difficult to put residences, the kind of the reentrant in corners when you have large, complex residential buildings, it's difficult because you can't put windows there.
And so we came up with a really, I think, creative scheme, and that's actually what helped us win the competition. What we did is we took the left over the dead spaces where you could put windows and we created double height amenity spaces, public spaces for the residents, and we created the coolest, craziest collection of these spaces. There's a media library with a basketball court overlooking it and an elaborate kitchen and a pool deck and a gym.
All these different elements weave together and overlook one another. So we took the kind of hidden corners and places that you normally can't use in the development. And we created instead vast, soaring two story spaces overlooking one another, creating this almost voyeuristic experience where one space in one activity overlooks another. We find today, too, in a post-COVID environment or whatever environment we're in now, that more people are living and working in more creative ways, sometimes they're working from home, sometimes they're going to work.
And we think the idea of having this fantastic residence right on the Coney Island beach, but then you can work within the building. We created many different spaces for people to interact socially, for co-working, for living, for entertaining. And so these staggered multilevel spaces work their way all the way up through the plan. And it's even kind of telegraphed under the facade with this series of folded plans that you referred to earlier that really bring you all the way up to the rooftop and to the pool deck. And so this was really the big move on the plan. And the client was so excited about that that they awarded us the project.
00;15;41;27 - 00;15;45;04
DP
So how long was the design process then?
00;15;45;04 - 00;16;36;15
JV
Overall to do a building of this complexity, the complete design probably takes about a year. One reason why I think this was also a great client is we really collaborated from the beginning. We didn't just do a design and then hope it would work out. We worked with them at every step with their marketing people, their technical people, their construction people.
We did budgeting throughout, which is really important to me. As a matter of fact, it's critical that if we're going to do a creative design, we have to work with the client in order to figure out how we're going to hit their budget exactly, which I'm very proud of with this project. For example, we have a whole series of highly sculptural elements that are made of GFRC, glass fiber reinforced concrete, and they really wrap around the brick elements, which we'll talk about a little bit later and kind of create these wonderful transitions.
These are very complex forms, and we really had to work closely from the beginning to make sure we could meet budgets. Same thing on the brick. We're using some really unusual and more expensive and more fine forms of brick and custom brick that we'll talk about. And we had to make sure that we could really work within budgets and yet maximize the impact and create something that would be really special that hadn't really been done in this neighborhood before.
00;16;51;25 - 00;17;02;12
DP
So that's a good segway to style choice and the style that your office works within and the style that you chose for this building. Can you tell us a little bit about that?
00;17;02;18 - 00;17;58;10
JV
Well, I believe I'm an unrepentant modernist. I believe that we live in an astonishing time in the 21st century when we're redefining so many things technologically, socially. So I believe very much in creating works that are of our time and that are contemporary. But I love to combine that with traditional understandings of urbanism, of the way people live within cities and materials.
So, for example, a project like this really combines both of those where we're really using first we're creating very unusual forms, complex shapes. We're working with special computer technology in order to model these. We're working with computer numerically controlled bills and robots to actually build components of the building. And on the other hand, we're working with Brick, which is one of the most ancient materials that we have, one of the most enduring and beautiful materials.
And I love the idea that we're combining these different elements together to create something that is both timeless and of our time.
00;17;58;12 - 00;18;06;26
DP
So you said design was about a year long after that. What about city review? And then ultimately it's still under construction right?
00;18;06;28 - 00;18;59;24
JV
So I would say the total design process to complete all the technical documents and we did this project in Revit, we did it to the highest technical standards and construction documents, which is really helpful to figure out the different components takes about a year overall for the full design, but really at the same time as we're doing that, we're working on the permitting.
And so the permitting was really ready to go right at the conclusion of that. And because the project was as of right as we were developing the final technical documents, we were already going through the process of doing permits and then obtaining the foundation permit and then moving directly into constructions that really allowed us to facilitate the schedule and go quickly.
I would say one of the challenges on the design, which is really one of its greatest features, is the geothermal, because that required a lot of planning up ahead and doing a geothermal project of this scale in New York was very difficult in the construction because it required coordinating all of the geothermal wells with the foundation elements and doing that right from the beginning.
00;18;59;27 - 00;19;02;25
DP
So whose idea was it to do geothermal?
00;19;02;28 - 00;20;13;23
JV
I have to give the client credit again, like we really do a lot of projects that address sustainability, and I was very excited to do the largest geothermal project in New York, but it really required the commitment of the client and they had a great partner in Eco Save who was the engineering and geothermal firm that actually helped develop the geothermal systems and also work out the financial models that would allow it to work.
So this was really a terrific thing, but the client gets the credit and that's really also due to the changing codes in New York City, which are so stringent that the client felt it was worth the investment in new sustainable technologies. Well, actually, geothermal is a very old technology, but applying it in new ways, in ways that aren't typically done.
One of the things I'm most proud of is the second largest geothermal project in New York today, after this one's finished, is called St Patrick's Cathedral. So really doing geothermal on this scale for a residential rental building is the bread and butter of New York City, that kind of makes up the fabric of neighborhoods for me as groundbreaking. And also one of the buildings is an affordable building.
So the fact that we could do that level of sustainable design and help combat some of the future issues we're dealing with energy and climate change with this kind of building, I think is the extraordinary thing.
00;20;13;25 - 00;20;33;07
DP
So you said that you brought in the contractor early, so as a high end residential architect, we typically bring a contractor in right after schematic design to take a look at the project and help us determine whether or not we're going to be even close in terms of price, did that help you guys working with the contractor early on?
00;20;33;14 - 00;21;24;10
JV
Absolutely. And again, L Corps had a partnership with LRC Construction, So they're the construction manager doing the job. And really we worked with them on a pre-construction basis closely with the client. You know, often it's described as sort of a three legged stool with architects, you know, the architect, the owner and the contractor and really if one leg of the stool doesn't hold up, you know, it falls down.
And so really all three of us worked together intensely from the beginning. And this was critical, for example, with some of the brick elements, because we wanted to work with this beautiful format called Roman Maximus, very unusual format. We really found that very compelling. It was something we wanted to do from the beginning of the job and we had to work out how would we meet budgets, what would the cost of that be, how would we integrate that with the other elements, how much of it would we use? And so we really worked out those elements of the pricing very early in the schematic phases of the design. Instead of waiting till the end.
00;21;24;13 - 00;21;28;01
DP
Did you ever think about using another material rather than rrick?
00;21;28;03 - 00;21;56;05
JV
You know, we looked at different things for the building and we looked at GFRC at first for the whole building. But I love the idea of brick because I think it's such a classic material and in the end we ended up doing a hybrid where the brick is the majority material for the building, which I think works very well.
And the GFRC elements, these kind of sculptural concrete pieces are sort of the transitional pieces around the front entries and around the main amenity spaces and public spaces of the building. So I think it's very balanced by having both of them, although brick is the main material.
00;21;56;07 - 00;21;58;20
DP
So how did you end up dealing with Glen Gary.
00;21;58;22 - 00;23;19;27
JV
So Glen Gary really was very special for the project because they had this really unique product we've been looking for actually for years before I'd even heard of Glen Gary, I loved Roman Brick for my own studies. Even as a student at Cornell and at Harvard, I would travel extensively around the world. I would travel through Europe, and I loved the old Roman brick, which of course is a longer thinner brick.
And I saw in contemporary brick manufacturing they were starting to return to that. As a matter of fact, for years I tried to use it and so few manufacturers would really work with it. Then we found Glen Gary was doing something even more special. It was a longer thinner brick, what they call Roman Maximus, if you will. It's even more elongated and there's something special about that proportion.
It doesn't just stack up in the way that regular bricks do, which is fine too, but it almost creates a beautiful surface. And then we also did the detailing which was very important, where we created deep reveals along the horizontal edges of the brick. It's an old trick that Frank Lloyd Wright used to use. And so by creating a raked joint at the horizontals, it kind of creates this beautiful texture, almost like corduroy, and that along with the long, thin proportions of the brick, gives it a kind of a beautiful surface quality that's much more monolithic and much more beautiful.
And so we use this material all around the base of the building in order to really accentuate that and create a very strong presence to the street.
00;23;20;00 - 00;23;22;05
DP
So you had a good mason from the get go.
00;23;22;11 - 00;23;33;08
JV
We had to work very closely with our Mason and work out all of the details. Let's just say that there were a lot of mockups and a lot of reviews in order to make sure that we would maintain the quality of the project.
00;23;33;10 - 00;23;40;07
DP
So did you do drawings in house? First of combinations of brick or colors or you worked most of that out in the field?
00;23;40;09 - 00;24;06;17
JV
We actually worked extensively on all of that, so we had to work out special brick shapes. We did do curved bricks because they're a series of curves throughout the project, which were critical and we had to do specials for that. We work closely with the technicians at Glen-Gery as well as with the masons in order to work out how to do the specials.
We also had a great facade consultant, Frank Seta & Associates who were really integral to helping us work out the different components of the brick, the attachment, the waterproofing. They're really terrific.
00;24;06;24 - 00;24;16;10
DP
Interesting. We had talked a little bit about geothermal and sustainability. Was that a larger issue for some of the wall systems, insulation, etc.?
00;24;16;14 - 00;24;30;23
JV
Absolutely. I mean, the building has a very, very robust energy envelope and again, as I say, helped us with that as well as we did full energy modeling with IMG Engineering of the building in order to make sure that it met and exceeded really all the sustainability standards. Absolutely.
00;24;30;26 - 00;24;34;23
DP
So you talked a little bit about Revit. How long has your office been on Revit?
00;24;34;25 - 00;25;44;26
JV
That is a great question, Doug. So really, I guess we probably did our first Revit project ten years ago, and it was pretty early for us. We've always embraced new forms of technology and always embraced tools that help us be better designers. But I would say in the last several years, we've really moved towards using Revit on all of our larger projects.
We don't use it on every project yet, but more and more, even in our own office building, even on our own studio building that we're building out now for ourselves, we're doing the project and Revit, so we're moving towards using it now on smaller projects as well as definitely on all of our larger ones. I have to tell you what I like about it, in addition to the technical aspects, the way it helps you with construction takeoffs, integrating different components in real time of the architectural drawings, having them refer to each other, updating drawings. But I love it as a design tool. And in this project where we had this whole series of really interesting, complex spaces, Revit was terrific for actually allowing us to really make cuts through the building and understand the relationship of all the different components, relationship of inside to outside, relationship of one space to another, relationship of one material and how it meets another. Revit was fantastic as a design tool and really helped us do this building in particular.
00;25;45;04 - 00;25;57;23
DP
Yeah, I would imagine clients. Well, I already know this. I mean, clients love looking at three dimensional renderings. They come in and or you send them drawings by email and they're blown away right? I mean, it's like the building's already done.
00;25;57;25 - 00;26;53;19
JV
Renderings are a big part of what we do. And it's interesting here we were talking a little bit earlier because to me, one of the things I'm impressed by is we work really hard to make the renderings reflect the final design, but it's almost impossible to convey ideas of color and lighting and in renderings. People often think they represent reality, but you can manipulate it.
One of the things we did in the renderings for this project was we really tried to convey the color and character of the brick, where you could really sense the warmth of it when the light hit it and how it changes color and becomes a little bit more neutral and shadow. And it creates a real modeling for the building in sunlight, which I think is really critical.
And something I'm proud of with the renderings that we did is I'm amazed as the brick goes on now, I can see that it really reflects exactly how the brick is operating and how it takes on different colors and textures in changing patterns of light. It's especially important on a site like this, which is open and facing south directly overlooking the ocean. So it really gets tremendous light.
00;26;53;21 - 00;26;58;00
DP
Did you guys end up with any masonry on the interior? Any brick on the interior?
00;26;58;02 - 00;27;51;25
JV
So I love the idea of bringing inside and outside together. And so there are a few key places where we brought the brick into the interior. Actually, in the lobby we're doing something very special where I brought the brick right into the inside and actually made it a major feature right behind the front desk, kind of the entry point and I even pushed and pulled that great Roman Maximus brick to give it fantastic texture.
And we lit it beautifully. We're working with Susanne Tillotson, a remarkable lighting designer who's going to light up the texture of that. We're going to put artwork there too, and we brought brick into a few other places in the interior. Also, it's at the rooftop space that we call the Skydeck, where it folds in and becomes the base for some of the seating.
There's an area that we call the living room with the kitchen that overlooks a giant garden over the parking garage. And we pulled the brick in there too. It's in a few places in the entry sequence, going up to the gardens from the lobby. So I like the idea of referring to the brick. It's mostly on the outside, but there's a couple of key places where it makes its appearance on the interior.
00;27;52;02 - 00;28;10;29
DP
Might be a dumb question. You do a lot of projects along the water. Of course it affects the materials and the choices you make, but is it a large consideration for you in most of the buildings that you do? I see a lot of wood on the interior at the front entryway here. What are you guys doing? Are you treating those materials differently?
00;28;11;01 - 00;28;42;01
JV
Absolutely. So it's very important when doing projects on the water that we have to address that it really probably affects other things more. It certainly affects our window specifications. It affects the coatings used on the windows, which have to be to a higher standard. Again, this is where FSA was a great help to us. Brick is a great material for the waterfront because it's really a rain screen.
Brick doesn't really stop the water. The water barriers are behind the brick, but the brick itself is so durable that it does really well in, you know, difficult environments such as Coney Island where we really have a maritime environment and a lot of salt in the air.
00;28;42;03 - 00;28;44;22
DP
So how big was the team that worked on the job?
00;28;44;24 - 00;28;51;07
JV
Gosh, it's hard to say because there were so many different people. I would say, you know, a dozen people. And then, of course, there's a really wonderful team of consultants that we worked with. So a very large number, probably 12 or 15 consultants who really played a key role. And then the client too. It was really a tremendous team and a really great group effort.
00;29;06;26 - 00;29;16;01
DP
So did your office or you in specific learn anything unusual or interesting along this journey of making these two buildings?
00;29;16;07 - 00;30;10;16
JV
You know, I learned things from every project. My favorite thing about my job today is that I feel like I'm certainly teaching a great deal and hopefully working hard too, if I can lead and inspire. But I find my younger staff are teaching me every day. They're showing me how they're using the technology, they're showing me better ways of doing things.
So I learned a tremendous amount in this. I certainly learned a lot about and I thought I knew quite a lot about brick detailing, doing special bricks, some of the special fabrication we're doing, the robotic fabrication with the GFRC. And to me, every project is really an opportunity to figure out how can we do that even better? How can we apply to the next job, how can we build our body of knowledge?
I also love the fact that all of our projects are different. Our real signature at Studio V is that each design is really unique to that site, that client. So for example, we're doing another building with this client now on a different site in New Rochelle, and it's a completely different look and feel, even if the program is somewhat similar.
00;30;10;22 - 00;30;23;20
DP
It must be reassuring for the client, right? Because they feel a lot more special because the building you're designing every time the program changes and the site changes, you change with that, right? So that must be great for them.
00;30;23;25 - 00;31;20;04
JV
Exactly. Doug I don't believe in the idea of like the architect as an agent where they kind of put their name on it even. That's why I said it's not Valgora Architects, it's Studio V, it's a collective of people. And to me what's really important is that we find a solution for each project. We definitely have obsessions and themes that I think work through our work.
For example, we were just in the Venice Biennale early this year and we're still up actually, it's up through November and we showcase this project along with four other projects. And so one of the themes of that show was called On Edge, where we talked about all of our work, which is about edges, gaps, interstices, kind of repairing the frayed edges of our cities.
And Coney Island is one of them, both literally and figuratively as a community, as well as an oceanfront site. And so to me, the idea of instilling a series of social spaces within that and yet kind of repairing the edge of this community, remaking Surf Avenue and really helping be an agent for transformation is really what our work is about.
00;31;20;07 - 00;31;28;17
DP
So you've been an architect for some time. If you could give your younger self some career advice, can you think of something you'd tell yourself many years ago?
00;31;28;19 - 00;32;50;11
JV
I guess I've certainly made many mistakes in my career, and although those have been things that I've learned greatly from. But the other thing that's driven my career is optimism. Where I would often go from project to project, place to place, city to city early in my career, I actually found myself going from San Francisco to London to Toronto and eventually ending up in New York.
And really I feel lucky about that. So I guess in terms of advice, I'm wondering if there was a kind of serendipity to that kind of an unplanned nature to that, and I would almost hate to interfere with that. I think the freedom that I had in my youth to try different things, learn from different people, live different places, was actually the most transformative thing.
So I guess I would say that to myself, but I guess I was lucky enough just to fall into that. Maybe some of it came from where I grew up because I guess I couldn't really stay in Buffalo when my dad worked in the steel mills when I was part of those industrial buildings. That was just at the point when that was all failing and they were getting ready to tear it down.
Now, the mill where my father worked is no longer there, but now my greatest inspiration is to go back and try to reinvent those communities. One of the things I'm most proud of is that I'm going back to Buffalo and doing work there now to bring back my hometown and to create transformative buildings there, including at the old grain elevators at Silo City are other projects in the heart of Buffalo, like where we're doing projects over in the Elmwood District, our wonderful historic district where we're doing a new building now.
00;32;50;13 - 00;32;57;07
DP
Wow. Well Jay it's been great to have you here. Thanks for your time. Where can people go to learn more about Studio V Architects and yourself?
00;32;57;09 - 00;33;23;22
JV
Well, they can certainly find us online at StudioV.com. They can find us at our Instagram site. And most of all, you know, if you're ever in New York City, we'd encourage you to come see us. Come visit us at our studio itself, which is going to be at 111 East 29th Street. Or visit some of our projects, such as the Empire Stores, one of our most iconic projects in Brooklyn that's been very popular with people. We'd really welcome to have people get in touch with us or please come by the studio.
00;33;23;26
DP
Thank you very much.
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Design Vault Ep. 32 Best Of College Campuses
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From iconic brick facades to cutting-edge design, discover how campuses blend tradition with innovation. Don't miss the chance to hear from top architects from HDR, BCJ, and David M. Schwarz Architects on what makes these spaces both timeless and inspiring. |

TCS Hall
Carnegie Mellon

Brendan Iribe Center
University of Maryland

Vanderbilt University
TRANSCRIPT
00;00;00;00 - 00;00;05;12
Doug Pat (DP)
Let's go inside the vault. The design vault.
00;00;05;14 - 00;00;25;16
Steve Knight (SK)
It's a very faithful rendition of what's known as Collegiate Gothic. It is very much in step with this long established tradition of higher education. And that goes back to the church in Europe and then institutions like Oxford and Cambridge. And then it comes over to the states with institutions like Harvard and Yale, who are doing very much the same thing.
00;00;25;16 - 00;00;29;00
SK
They were trying to identify with this established tradition.
00;00;29;03 - 00;01;58;21
DP
In this special series we’re unlocking some of the most powerful conversations we've had so far. We're connecting the dots, revealing hidden gems, and unearthing insights that might have slipped by all to spark your next big idea with brick. Whether you're looking for fresh inspiration or innovative solutions, this series is designed to fuel your creativity. So let's dive in.
Hi, I'm Doug Pat and this is Design Vault. Today, we explore the intricate process of college campus design with insights from Steve Knight of David M. Schwartz Architects, who led the design of Nicholas Zappos College at Vanderbilt University, Kent Suhrbier of Bohlin Cywinski Jackson, who oversaw TCS Hall at Carnegie Mellon University, and Simon Trumble of HDR, the lead designer for the Brendan Iribe Center at the University of Maryland. We’ll highlight various aspects of each project, including the architectural design process, construction challenges and the thoughtful use of brick to blend modern and traditional esthetics.
When working on college campuses, you often have to find balance to respect traditional campus aesthetics while incorporating modern design elements. Steve discussed the eclectic collection of buildings, including a range from Victorian to collegiate Gothic style at Vanderbilt.
00;01;58;27 - 00;02;59;08
SK
The campus itself, it's a really beautiful green garden-like setting. It does have the classification of being an arboretum because of the number of unique specimens of trees one finds there. The architecture is quite eclectic. Like most campuses, there's a kind of a historic heart of Victorian era buildings and some collegiate gothic buildings as well. And then it sort of evolves over time.
I think what's most interesting about the site is kind of a two-sided nature to it. So on one side is West End Avenue, which is a major East-West thoroughfare that connects with downtown Nashville, is sort of the public face of Vanderbilt. So the colleges were a real opportunity, just sort of enhance the university's image to the outward community.
And then on the other side, the opposite side is a very opposite kind of condition. It's a series of very low scale residential structures that house the Greek community. So several houses, each one is a fraternity or sorority. So we had to respond to very different contexts on each side of the building.
00;02;59;10 - 00;03;04;06
DP
Simon reflected on the neo Georgian influences at the University of Maryland.
00;03;04;13 - 00;04;17;19
Simon Trumble (ST)
The campus master plan has defined certain areas as historic and historic buildings that you need to stay within context with and other areas as moving beyond that historic into a we'll call it a new historicism, for lack of a better word, because this was the new gateway and because of where it stands, it was a building that was not fully confined.
However, we put on ourselves the fact that we are in a neo Georgian campus and how do we want to think about it? We've pushed the lines on that. But the handful of elements that come together from that in these neo Georgian buildings are always the white columns. We walk through our building, it's all white columns and there and then places those white columns go from standing very simply straight up to being pulled and leaning as they face the future and the future campus growth and that's kind of how we thought about it.
The brick is used, it's on the floor, and then it turns up the walls in places and it becomes the auditorium itself. And the auditorium spins, it's almost a rock in the river and the campus and the buildings spin around it. The landscape spins off of that rock. The auditorium is the anchor from which everything works.
00;04;17;22 - 00;04;23;24
DP
At Carnegie Mellon, Kent pursued innovative, yet contextually sensitive design.
00;04;23;27 - 00;05;36;12
Kent Suhrbier (KS)
The one thing that then really influenced the design of the building was meeting a kind of very wide floor plate that could accommodate sort of larger laboratory spaces, research spaces, in addition to lots of perimeter office and workspaces. And so we did two things to make that happen. We pulled all the core services for the building kind of to the west of the site instead of locating kind of building core in the middle of the floor plate in a traditional developer building.
This is an asymmetrical core where we pull everything to one side and free up the floor plate. We then cut a big connective series of stairs and interlocking spaces through the center of the building that bring daylight into the center of the building and kind of create a heart between all these various tenants. That also gave us some ability to have a relationship between all the tenants within the building so that they can see each other, experience what's going on with each other, but not be in each other's business.
Because this is a building where you have different research groups, lots of intellectual property that needs to be kept safe between both public and academic groups. And so lots of visual transparency with controlled boundaries.
00;05;36;15 - 00;05;38;25
DP
So the site, is it rectangular?
00;05;39;02 - 00;06;21;05
KS
The site was a much larger quadrant where we master planned for both this building as a sort of phase one, this 88 or 90,000 square foot sort of phase one. And then there's an idea of a connective plaza and paseo that would connect north south through the site. And then there's a phase two project that was developed kind of through a schematic level that's about 190,000 square feet that's adjacent.
It needed to be a very efficient plan. So it starts as a rectangle and then it begins to inflect and kind of reflect some of the views on the site in terms of beginning to bend and open to some of the view corridors and solar orientation that's on site.
00;06;21;07 - 00;06;24;15
DP
Each project sought to blend the old with the new.
00;06;24;17 - 00;07;47;20
KS
One of the challenges with this building was the area that we had to build was a long, narrow strip that runs north south, which then means we have long east and west facades, which from an environmental strategy is the opposite of what you want. And so we let that then start to influence the fenestration. And that's a little bit where this folded or triangular elements came from because we began to think, Look, we need something vertical that's going to shade the windows, right?
They happen just to the south of every window and this kind of code system that we created. And then how do we make them a shape that can catch the light so that as the sun moves around the building all day, it creates shade. But it also then can just be a plane that flashes with this kind of brightness at certain times during the day?
And so we started with the idea of the just the form, and that came out of, yes, the digital models, the physical models, getting everyone to buy into that as an idea. And then to be honest, the CM and the owner wanted to do those elements out of precast. They had it in their head that that was the right answer.
So, you know, instead of being too bullish about it, we said, well, let's mock up both. So we worked with technical folks on the bricks side to get the shape right and get pieces that we can mock up. And then we mock up and precast and everybody looked at it and said, The precast is terrible, let's do the break.
00;07;47;22 - 00;07;50;28
DP
And did you use steel lintels then for those parts?
00;07;51;00 - 00;08;33;19
KS
One of the things that was a great challenge. So the building continuous, we're leaving angles that everything is sitting on and we kind of stacked the deck against the precast because the precast had to hang from additional steel, whereas we were able to get the brick shape to stack just on the regular mantle. So it wasn't meant to be manipulative, but it was meant to be economic.
And we were able to come up with a way where we could keep the same material and offset some of the cost that comes from doing a custom. And these are large brick shapes. These are 16 inches long by about 9 inches deep. And so it's one shape, but it's a lot more substantial than a modular brick. But we were able to offset some of that by just how we were holding it up.
00;08;33;22 - 00;08;47;20
DP
Again, the brick really alters the scale of the building. I mean, I would imagine precast these massive panels on the facades versus doing these very pretty finely tuned brick masonry panels.
00;08;47;22 - 00;08;50;19
KS
I'm glad it ended the way it did.
00;08;50;21 - 00;09;14;02
SK
It's a very faithful rendition of what's known as Collegiate Gothic. It is very much in step with this long established tradition of higher education that goes back to the church in Europe and then institutions like Oxford and Cambridge, and then it comes over to the States with institutions like Harvard and Yale, who were doing very much the same thing.
They were trying to identify with. This established tradition.
00;09;14;08 - 00;09;27;07
DP
Really makes perfect sense. Absolutely. So were there any specific buildings that you can recall that you guys were looking at the tower? Looks like it could have been pulled from the facade from a church in Europe, right? I mean, sure.
00;09;27;07 - 00;10;15;08
SK
We're very eclectic in our approach. We spend a lot of time looking at examples in books. We try to visit places in person, and that was a really important tool at the outset of this project is we actually took members of the client team on a little whirlwind tour of residential college examples around the country. Some examples that we look to for the tower would be the Harkness Tower at Yale.
Slightly more atypical one that we did look at. It would be the Nebraska State Capitol. And I think one feature that we quoted from that one is towards the top of the tower. As it starts to step in, you'll see what we call a little lantern, a little limestone lantern on each of the four corners. That's a common type feature in this style of architecture. When you're creating a tapered tall form like this, We thought it worked very well.
00;10;15;11 - 00;11;09;28
ST
Really. Interestingly, there was a lot of discussion early on that we would go from rhino to construction straight forward. So there are bent and curved steel tubes. There was a lot of discussion with the contractor that they would literally do almost a CAD cam type of situation just using the electronic design drawings to go and construct the building.
However, they did more of a hybrid with that. So we have curved steel studs backing up that brick and those curved steel studs are designed straight from the computer, so then they are shaped and placed a more regularized steel frame, although it has some curvatures as well, also coming straight from the computer. And so those are brought together in order to then layout the auditorium and then to provide backup for the brick and then to work from there.
00;11;10;00 - 00;11;13;04
DP
Wow, what a great way to do it. The only way to do it.
00;11;13;11 - 00;12;34;03
ST
It's doable otherwise, but the reality is the time to do it today is not the same. And you would shy away from doing certain things because it will take too long. We have 22 different curves. You might break that down to five or four and you have two different corners and work from there with the gentler bend. It doesn't make sense, but when you see it in plan, the auditorium itself warps in order to allow the courtyards to re match up from the old computer science building to the new computer science, and then to have a staircase that wraps up to a second floor terrace from which you can access the second floor of the main building.
But you also have this garden space. Again, we talk a little bit about nature and the studies looking at the screen and then being able to go outside. In nature, we have three gardens, we have the great gardens, we have the rooftop on the second floor garden, and then we actually have another garden on the very rooftop called the Reese Park.
And that was a gift, so to speak, from Brendan Irib and Andrew Reece to their buddy who had passed away. And it's got a little gallery up there as well as the garden space then gives to the campus, now, one of the greatest views that they could possibly have, and that gets used all the time for donor meetings, special guests, what have you.
00;12;34;06 - 00;13;09;27
DP
A strong emphasis on craftsmanship and detailed design work was evident across all three projects, whether it was the intricate brickwork, the carefully planned facade systems, or the custom elements within each building. Attention to detail was crucial in achieving the final architectural outcomes. So I read that approximately 30% of construction materials were sourced locally. 30% of the building materials contained recycled content and 75% of construction waste was recycled or repurposed. Is that all correct?
00;13;10;00 - 00;13;48;28
KS
That is, even though we were again trying to work fast and economically there was still a mandate to make a building that was healthy and that would achieve a LEED gold certification. And so we targeted many of these things. And then in some ways with the materials, what we would do is target a combination of what are some of the really significant things, and then can we find local sources for some of the really big pieces of the building.
So the terracotta comes from just over the border in Ohio and the brick in this building is all brick from up at the Hanley plant. So 60 miles from here, just northeast of where I'm sitting now.
00;13;49;00 - 00;14;28;13
ST
And, you know, we have another layer in that brick facade, which is a sort of design element playing up, really showing algorithmic design work in there. It's almost like as if somebody break the bricks and they pull and they fall back into the wall. They almost look like they're falling out, wind blown and in movement. This is in the auditorium and it's a little design feature, really showing off algorithmic design.
You really wouldn't notice the fact that the curvatures has had to be figured out that way or the wood paneling had to be figured out that way. That doesn't show. But that this was a way of really showing and playing with the tool, but using regular brick.
00;14;28;15 - 00;14;30;16
DP
So none of the bricks were custom.
00;14;30;18 - 00;14;32;28
ST
None of the bricks are unbelievable.
00;14;33;05 - 00;14;36;01
DP
And how many different Glen-Gery bricks did you guys use?
00;14;36;04 - 00;15;27;05
ST
The original is a mix of three different bricks, but it's a basically a neo Georgian mix and it's the campus mix that they've had on that campus. The brick was a big debate because when we started to think about this sort of rock in the landscape, we played around with a lot of different materials and we were looking at metal, we were looking at stone, we're looking at precast.
There was other ways to think about it. We started to come back to a precast brick and we came back to regular brick masonry construction. Done the original way. We have some brick lintels up there that are about 3 to 4 feet. Big. Those were if you want really custom detailing to pull that off. But in general, it's the Georgian mix for the campus and it made sense to anchor the campus in its history, so to speak.
00;15;27;07 - 00;15;58;17
SK
Southern Indiana is limestone country, Indiana limestone. It's where the stone was quarried and it's where it is still fabricated. To this day. It is grand tradition. It goes back to the mid 1800s. It had its heyday in the early 20th century with when just imagine the proliferation of limestone buildings one finds in any great city in the U.S. And then it gradually tapered off from there after the war in particular.
But there are still a few very dedicated fabricator firms that do the what they call the cutting.
00;15;58;25 - 00;16;04;27
DP
It had to have been hard to find somebody with so few people doing this kind of this level of detail work.
00;16;05;04 - 00;16;17;24
SK
Well, there's one firm we've worked with on almost all of our projects.They're stil,l this is what they do. They are perfectly set up to do it, Bybee Limestone. We know them very well. We love them and they know us and they love us too.
00;16;17;24 - 00;16;37;26
DP
Yeah, it's stunning. So did brick solve any particular design challenges for the architecture for the client? I mean, you touched a little bit on the color, on the exterior and the feel of the architecture, right? We talked about the fact that you make this building all limestone. You got a problem. I mean, it's just a monolith.
00;16;37;28 - 00;17;42;03
SK
Yeah, well, it's a very warming material. It's a very appropriate in particular, the way it's used here for what is essentially a residential place. It's a very approachable, it's a very durable material. Obviously. And sustainability is very important. We think one of the most important aspects of sustainability is building very consciously using resources very consciously and very wisely, and building something that will hopefully be around for a very long time.
This building will be around for a very long time. We always want our buildings to have a really rich palette of materials, and that's true of the interior and of course, the exterior. So here the palette is a combination of brick, carved Indiana limestone and then an accent stone, which is called Crab Orchard. It's actually a stone that's native to Tennessee.
And we thought that was very appropriate to sort of weave in a local material that one finds in and around Nashville. The brick in particular is really interesting because we knew we didn't want a stark reed of just one color, right?
00;17;42;03 - 00;17;44;09
DP
Like if the building was all limestone?
00;17;44;09 - 00;18;06;02
SK
Was all limestone, right. And even within the brick itself, it's not just one brick. It's actually a blend of three bricks. And we did lots of mock up panels with the help of a very patient Mason in a very patient local brick distributor who gave us about an acre of their brickyard to do all these different experiments.
00;18;06;02 - 00;18;07;06
DP
Wow. That's so cool.
00;18;07;06 - 00;18;41;29
SK
We tried different blends and we ultimately settled on a blend of three bricks for the college, and then we further augmented that with what we call decorative bond detailing. So if you look closely at some of the details, you'll see brick that's fashioned into basket weave patterns, sawtooth patterns. What's known in England is diapering, which is creating a sort of a diamond checkerboard pattern.
And we use different bricks for that as well. They tended to be iron spot bricks that are really beautiful because they catch and reflect light in different ways depending on how the sun is hitting them.
00;18;42;02 - 00;18;58;04
DP
All three projects faced unique challenges during construction to control costs, while ensuring the integrity of the design can explain how significant design adjustments actually benefited both the project's budget and its aesthetic coherence.
00;18;58;06 - 00;19;55;23
KS
We would price kind of really almost every 2 to 3 months during design and in some cases make some fairly dramatic shifts in terms of what we were doing, whether it was restocking, you asked about zoning, the building could have been taller and actually started off a story taller and we kind of restacked it and made it more compact specifically to create some economies.
And then that had some opportunities for us too because we were able to create the kind of think tank penthouse on the top, which isn't a full floor. And then all of our mechanicals are kind of stitched into that from a massing standpoint. So we could get a lot of both economy, but also just this is a building that you see from across the ravine.
We didn't want to weave all the mechanical equipment and all these things kind of fully exposed up on our roof. So it was a way of really stitching it into the building and making it part of the intentional mass of the building instead of an accidental, no offense to our engineers, piece on top.
00;19;55;25 - 00;20;12;04
DP
Well, it's something that happens on most pieces of architecture. I mean, that's just where do the mechanicals go? Simon reflected on the challenges and debates surrounding the unique brick curvature of the Brendan Iribe Center’s auditorium.
00;20;12;06 - 00;21;15;00
ST
The curve on the brick was a lot of debate. When we worked on this early. We looked at an egg sitting in the landscape. We were thinking of that egg. The curvature is both in the bottom as well as the top and we spoke with a lot of brick experts on doing, I'll call it the counter curve, the bottom half of that curve.
And in that discussion we would have to use seismic anchors to really hold the back. And there was a lot of discussion about whether we really have to invite quibbling into this or if we could follow the curvature of the bill. At the end of the day, I think we chickened out just a little bit. We took it, I'll call it from the belly line straight down and from the belly line above as the curve.
Our thought was within the auditorium. We could light that bottom space, so we'd put a curved light at the base and really have that belly kind of light up. And so the egg would sort of glow from the base. We do have that at the top as well. It solved a lot of other little issues, as you say.
So it took the detailing down a notch.
00;21;15;02 - 00;21;27;07
DP
An innovative construction technique was used for the Nicholas Zappos College at Vanderbilt University, where the team found a clever way to streamline the installation of the building's ornamental chimneys.
00;21;27;10 - 00;22;03;14
SK
One of the details that makes the college's really fun and interesting are these ornamental chimneys that you find on the roof. And the contractor hit on a really interesting idea because in particular after the previous college where they did not do this, they elected to construct the chimneys on the ground wall and then hoist them into place with the tower crane that allowed them to advance construction on the roof without tying up a huge amount of roof area with scaffolding and preventing them from drying in the building. It was just a much easier erection process down on the ground.
00;22;03;16 - 00;22;06;19
DP
You just have boiler flues going through these things.
00;22;06;19 - 00;22;10;29
SK
They're vents, they're flues. So they do serve a functional purpose as well.
00;22;11;02 - 00;23;54;20
DP
I think that's a wonderful touch. You wouldn't expect to see these chimney masses on a building like that. They really kind of set it apart. Reflecting on the design and construction of the Nicholas Zappos College at Vanderbilt University, TCS Hall at Carnegie Mellon University, and the Brendan Iribe Center at the University of Maryland, several key themes emerge.
Each project balances tradition and innovation, blending the historical context of the respective campuses with modern design elements. The architects Steve Knight, Kent Suhrbier and Simon Trumble emphasize the importance of collaboration through the process, working closely with clients and construction teams to navigate complex challenges and bring their vision to life. The use of brick as a primary material in various forms, whether to echo collegiate Gothic tradition, create rhythmic facade patterns or blend into a neo Georgian context, showcases how this timeless material can be reimagined to meet contemporary re needs.
The overarching takeaway from these projects is the power of architecture to create meaningful spaces that honor the past while embracing the future, ultimately enhancing the academic environments they serve. If you'd like to hear more about each individual project, you can find links to the full conversations in the show notes. If you haven't done so already, make sure to subscribe so you don't miss the rest of this series where we revisit some of the most powerful conversations and unearth insights that might have slipped by all to spark your next big idea with brick.
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Design Vault Ep. 1 H-House with Mateusz Nowacki
ABOUT THE ARCHITECT:
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Mateusz Nowacki is an architect and founder of Everyday Studio. Masteusz received his Bachelor of Architecture from Carleton University and the University of Toronto where he received his Master of Architecture. Everyday Studio is a collaborative design space dedicated to the research of domestic living prototypes and housing design. Predicated on the belief that architecture of all scales holds the potential to turn the everyday mundane into something wonderful and unpredictable, the studio devotes its efforts to creating spaces that are thoughtful, engaging, and timeless. Its work has been recognized in various architectural media including Dezeen, Dwell, Ottawa Magazine, and GOHBA Housing Design. Mateusz also has professional experience from several prominent Canadian offices, with current work ranging from multi-unit housing, multi-use recreational facilities, and post-secondary institutional buildings. |
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ABOUT THE PROJECT:
Located within a forested community known for its maple tree forest, tranquil properties, and traditional homes, the residence was designed to reference the neighbourhood typology of a ‘house with two wings’ into a form that established more intimately scaled spaces. Simultaneously, the design sought to reinterpret traditional building materials and architectural language through minimal detailing and interior spaces more directly linked to the landscape. The resulting design is organized into two volumes, with a third elevated volume stacked perpendicularly to form a central, double-height nucleus connected to exterior courtyard spaces on either side. Grounding the design within a familiar architectural language, these minimal volumes use traditional gabled forms clad in natural, tactile materials that provide a timeless character and evoke the surrounding landscape. Wood siding and brick are commonplace for the neighbourhood, yet here the textured clay brick grounds the house to the site and references the vivid maple tree foliage in the fall, while dark walnut wood battens recall traditional window shutters. The h-shape configuration allows the home to fit comfortably within the neighbouring context while offering each wing a unique relationship to the site via a sheltered lanai at grade and an upper-level cantilevered terrace facing south.

TRANSCRIPT
00;00;02;24 - 00;00;32;01
MN
We looked at references of Eastern European architecture that felt familiar to them in terms of their context. Right? So, they grew up in small villages in southern Poland, where a lot of the typical houses there are just built out of clay brick, and the clay brick is exposed. All the mortar is exposed. So, it's all load bearing. One could look at that and say, well, that's really utilitarian and reflective of the structure of the house and, you know, where's the cladding? But to me I find that really interesting. I'm like, Oh, that is the cladding. And how do we kind of represent that in a new way?
00;00;33;00 - 00;01;01;25
DP
This is my guest, Mateusz Nowacki. I'll share more about him shortly. In this episode from the Design Vault, we’ll highlight his project, The H-House. The H-House is a residential home. The name is derived from the shape of the home, in plan, with the two story central spine and flanking single story legs clad in brick. The building uses standing seam metal, a variegated red brick and large modern black windows.
00;01;02;17 - 00;01;51;10
DP
Hi, I'm Doug Pat and this is Design Vault. Today we're talking to Mateusz Nowacki, architect of the H-House in Manotick, Ontario. Mateusz is the founder of Everyday Studio. He received his Bachelor of Architecture from Carlton University and is Master of Architecture from the University of Toronto. He's been practicing architecture in Toronto for over eight years and is a licensed OAA member.
Everyday Studio’s work has been recognized in various architectural media, including Dezeen, Dwell, Ottawa Magazine and GOHB Housing Design. So, Mateusz, tell us a little bit about your firm, Everyday Studio. Where are you located? What's the size? What kind of work do you do?
00;01;51;17 - 00;03;02;00
MN
Yeah, so I founded Everyday Studio in 2019 after doing a few years of freelance work, small projects here and there. I got a kind of first larger residential project of around 3500 square feet. It felt like a good time to kind of describe the notion of a studio that looks at the practice of researching and thinking about different housing prototypes and using that first project as a case study for that.
And it was sort of a kind of deviation of the thesis that I worked on in 2015 that looked at housing prototypes as well. And so, the purpose of the studio was really to be a kind of collaborative space to work with clients or contractors or trades or researchers to kind of understand the possibilities that housing can take in alternative forms than the typical vernacular.
And those studies can be polemical or literal. So, in some cases they might just be research based or text based. In some cases, they might be full houses. So, the kind of idea being that this collaborative space is meant to bridge that gap between what's on paper and what's actually built. So, we're located in Toronto, my studio right now. So, it's usually just me, but sometimes I take on some seasonal stuff and we can kind of range from a 1 to 3-person office.
00;03;02;08 - 00;03;08;21
DP
Okay. So, tell me a little bit about how you got this current project. The H-House, and how you get work in general.
00;03;08;29 - 00;03;55;29
MN
Yeah. So as any startup office does, work comes from just networking and passing on of a name. So, one project turns into another project and into another project. So, this one came from a client that was interested in the property in Manotick, and started off as a conversation with that client. And I think he had seen some of the past projects that I had done in that area as well.
Interestingly enough, like in that rural area of Manotick outside of Ottawa, I did I think two other kind of full houses which started to breathe a little bit of attention and got this client’s attention. So, it started off as a conversation, which turned into a kind of concept design for the project and the initial sort of idea was to create a house that's better connected with the site and with nature than some of its neighbors. And I can kind of touch upon that in a little bit. But it started off from there.
00;03;56;05 - 00;04;05;00
DP
I mean, I think that's a great place to start. So, give me a little bit about the history of the place, the location, the town, the neighborhood, the buildings.
00;04;05;09 - 00;05;17;11
MN
Yeah, to that point, I think that's such an incredible and important part of the story of this project. So much of where we drive inspiration from is context. You know, where is this thing located and why is that important. In the case of this area, so, the town is called Manotick. It used to be flagged with a number of agricultural fields.
It was a really kind of agrarian farming village some 75 to 100 years ago. And it hasn't developed much since that. Manotick itself is a small little town, you know, with single family homes surrounded by kind of two rivers and the kind of external area of that, the sort of periphery is surrounded by still some farming fields and some kind of larger sort of developments for larger scale homes.
So, where this property is located, it's in a neighborhood that was developed called Rideau Forest. So, it's filled with these two-acre wooded lots. So, it's quite a heavily forested area. But interestingly enough, like there are still traces of the agrarian history of the site. So, when you kind of meander through some of the still available properties there, you can see some of the old kind of stone walls which divvied up different fields for different species of crop and things like that. So, it has this really inherent tied to farming and to that kind of nature of the site, even though it's evolved now to be this neighborhood of two acre properties in really large houses.
00;05;17;17 - 00;05;21;28
DP
Is it typical to have an architect in that neighborhood?
00;05;21;28 - 00;06;17;09
MN
I would say no. Most of the houses that are built in that neighborhood – they come from two kind of forms. They come from either the client looking to have a sort of full-fledged design build project where they contact their custom home builder, per se, or they come ready with a plan that they've found or purchased or something like that. So, although the houses are quite custom in nature, they follow a kind of similar and typical pattern. Whether these large houses with these kind of large wings and adaptations. And what happens is they get quite visually noisy, they have quite deep floor plates, and the amount of carving that has to sculpt the roof geometry becomes very intangible from a visual perspective. And the way that we wanted to approach this project was sort of an antithesis to that was how do we marry the former context in kind of a gray and sort of idea of this site and its history with the understanding of what the site is today and the kind of neighborhood context.
00;06;17;18 - 00;06;41;06
DP
It sounds to me like – I mean it's pretty challenging to get sophisticated clients and then in a neighborhood like that, to end up with a client that's really interested in making great architecture, right? And listening to an architect and working through these challenges. So that must have been a nice experience because it doesn't sound like you knew them per se, right? They found you through relationships that you had with other people.
00;06;41;06 - 00;08;00;24
MN
Well, well, wait Doug, there's more.
So, we definitely started the conversation, the cons design with this client and to kind of emphasize the story a bit further, he also contacted my father, who has a construction company in Manotick in Ottawa. So, he has basically a custom home building company. He's one of these custom home builders in this area. So, he wanted to kind of work with us together at one point or another in the project, the client kind of backed away, you know, had alternative plans and sort of wanted to go in a different direction, I think ended up moving to a different country.
And so, we had this relatively well-developed design that was at a good point, a good conceptual point, and we had already invested a lot in how to create this marriage between site history and current context of neighborhood and things like that. And so, because my father was attached to the project, he kind of inherited its journey and was like, you know, I still want to move forward with this project, whether it becomes the project that we just build as a sort of passion project and sell, or whether it becomes something that is tied to our living, then he’s game.
So, he inherited the journey of the project. And so, from then on, we started to really look at incorporating nuances of my father, my mother's kind of Eastern European history into the project and see how the context of Eastern Europe and the area that they had lived in could start to influence materiality and tectonics of the project as well. So, it had this kind of new layer that was thrust upon it afterwards.
00;08;01;04 - 00;08;04;01
DP
So, am I getting this right? This was ultimately for your mom and dad?
00;08;04;06 - 00;08;05;10
MN
Yeah. So, they live there now.
00;08;05;12 - 00;08;06;12
DP
Oh, that's so cool.
00;08;06;12 - 00;08;07;12
MN
Yeah, they live there now.
00;08;07;12 - 00;08;08;11
DP
Unbelievable.
00;08;08;11 - 00;08;23;02
MN
It was an interesting kind of story of starting off with someone else, you know, and then kind of transferring it over, but not wanting to abandon it because so much was invested in in the first place. And then, you know, starting to layer on this new level of thinking to the project as it became more about them and less about the previous clients.
00;08;23;02 - 00;08;25;05
DP
So, you get along with your mom and dad?
00;08;25;05 - 00;08;29;06
MN
I do. I mean, yeah, Eastern European stubbornness aside, you know, I do for sure. Yeah.
00;08;30;14 - 00;08;31;19
DP
Do you have brothers and sisters?
00;08;31;28 - 00;08;34;29
MN
I have one brother. He works for the company as well. He's like, Yeah.
00;08;35;02 - 00;08;38;29
DP
So, your interest in architecture was early on, right? Your dad was a builder?
00;08;39;04 - 00;09;42;03
MN
Yeah, for as long as I can remember, since I was ye tall – for the listener, I’m pointing very low to the ground. Yeah. I've been on construction sites with my dad. I fully attribute my interest in architecture to him and to kind of him putting me in a context of watching things materialize and happen. And so, I think as a child, I was just inherently interested in – what are we actually building? You know? Like, it's great that we're building it, but what does it look like? What does it form? What kind of space does it create afterwards? And so, I married that with another interest of mine, which was really kind of urban thinking. Though this project is in a rural context, I think my suburban upbringing really planted the seed in me to want to think about a kind of different way of thinking about architecture and living and urban qualities of sites and things like that.
And so, when you look at it through that scope, this project was sort of the evolution of those things of me being kind of surrounded in this type of, you know, suburban, rural kind of context as a child, being able to come back and work on a project with my dad was a sort of full circle moment.
00;09;42;06 - 00;09;51;23
DP
Yeah, it's an amazing experience. That's wonderful. You seem like a very intuitive, very curious guy. So, let's go through quickly what were the client's programmatic requirements?
00;09;52;02 - 00;11;14;12
MN
So, a kind of synthesis of space, really trying to tighten the space a lot so that there was no wasted space in terms of program. So, I mean, at its core of programs, there's a living room and a kitchen in the dining. There's no accessory spaces, there's not a secondary living or sitting room or a secondary nook for eating.
It's just a simple kitchen, dining, living space associated with that typical mudroom powder room, a small home office, a main bedroom, and then a series of bedrooms with individual on-suites upstairs, as well as a library kind of gallery space. But the idea was to kind of be able to synthesize all these into a very tight knit floorplan.
So, when you look at the plan of the project, it's actually only a bar, the kind of adaptations that come off of the ends, house a garage, kind of veranda, lanai space off of the back, another garage on the other side. We kind of broke them into two. And then the main bedroom is actually the only programed interior floor space that comes off.
So, the house is quite tight. It's all housed into kind of one bar, and that tightness allows for the program to kind of work its way around each other. So, there's this constant sort of voyeurism as people move through the house. They're seeing each other from multiple levels and multiple rooms, and it invites cross ventilation, which is really important to the way I approach projects. There's a certain depth to the floor plate, which allows you to cross ventilate the space and creates really good environments for living, quality of light wise and ventilation wise.
00;11;14;19 - 00;11;27;19
DP
Yeah, there's a lot to unpack there. I mean, I’m going to keep going and maybe we’ll come back to it. So, tell me a little bit about the site, the topographic features. Is it flat? Is there any change in elevation and how did that affect your plan?
00;11;27;25 - 00;12;03;29
MN
It's a relatively flat site. It's not a site that has really strong topography to it. It does drop off a little bit at the back. But we didn't see the design from the get go as something that could start to play with elevation because it would feel forced if we would do that, you know, if we were starting to carve out spaces out of the topography to create walkouts or things like that, we really looked at the site as something that we said, okay, this is a planar condition. It's quite nicely treed around. So really, let's emphasize the connection to the sort of natural vegetation on the site and create the sense of living within this forest condition, which is, you know, why the house is heavily glazed towards the kind of more rare private conditions.
00;12;03;29 - 00;12;11;01
DP
Yep. Not everybody is that lucky. Sometimes it's a little easier when you don't have a ton of topographic issues to deal with.
00;12;11;09 - 00;12;16;07
MN
It's certainly easier. You tend to seek out the challenges in other places… At least, I do.
00;12;16;07 - 00;12;29;28
DP
It's almost nicer, I find as an architect, to have a challenge because then it makes you really work at design, right? What about project restrictions? So, like zoning, building codes…was there anything that was challenged in regard to that?
00;12;30;09 - 00;13;58;13
MN
So, from a zoning perspective, not really, because in this area like that, the zoning is quite lenient for a neighborhood like this. Within the frame that we were building, the size that we were building, we didn't have to deal largely with zoning issues or setback issues or anything like that. From a challenge perspective, I think the biggest one is one that surrounds the way in which I approach all my projects, which is buildability.
With that I mean, I try to find a way to create really interesting and engaging architecture using really conventional methodologies. So, this is a stick frame house that limits its use of steel, and yet we see cantilevers and floor protrusions and things like that. It's like, how do we get there if you're not building a full house out of steel?
And largely like my kind of interest in that was trying to make engaging and good architecture available to both clients and contractors at a better price in a way that feels more approachable from a building standpoint. And because with this house – my father being the contractor working on it – I knew inherently how he likes to build things and what his limitations are as a builder.
I use that as a framework within which to start thinking about the design, thinking about the tectonics, thinking about really strategically, where we're using more costly steel, where we were using larger expanses of glass, but also where we were tightening them up. And so, though the house looks like it's tectonically a lot more maybe complex than it looks, if you peel all of it back to the bones, it's no different than all the neighbors, which are just typical conventional stick-built houses with wood trusses.
00;13;58;21 - 00;14;03;00
DP
Right. So, a lot of thought went into, I would imagine, how much this thing was going to cost.
00;14;03;11 - 00;14;50;19
MN
Certainly how much it was going to cost, and just the approach to how it was going to be built. So, I remember, you know, when we were working through the construction documents on the project, having weekly conversations with the contractor and with trades that were involved from the early onset of how do we want to actually make this thing materialize, how do we want to build this thing? Like, you know, how is this beam going to sit? What kind of posts is it going to sit on? And almost working through it with a really solid understanding of structural engineering without going right to the consultant and asking him what to do. Like, we had this really intimate relationship with how this thing was going to be built and in a way that sort of harkened back to the agrarian structures that it's influenced by was the individual who owns that property is going to come in and look at the timber he has and build it himself. And we're sort of creating a modern interpretation of that approach in some degree.
00;14;51;01 - 00;15;02;15
DP
So, a big question would be, in particular, if I was working with my folks, the style choice. So how did you guys end up doing a modern building? Was that something they wanted right away?
00;15;02;23 - 00;16;37;27
MN
Yeah, it started off as a contemporary project with the first client that we were working with, and they were interested in a sort of a contemporary expression of a sort of farmhouse condition, right, using sort of materials that were natural and kind of warm tone to work with the site really well. And so, we kind of kept in that vein, but certainly started to work more specifically once my father was on board with kind of continuing the journey of the project.
So, from a style perspective, the houses certainly a deviation from them like they used to kind of live in a house that was quite ornamented and detailed and things like that was a beautiful house. Right? But I think them seeing me continue to work on projects and the kind of projects I was working on, it really started to kind of have an effect on them and me coming on home at Christmas and talking about how important natural light is and that kind of stuff.
It really had an impact. So, they saw that as something that they could kind of work with themselves in terms of how to approach the house. And then on top of that, we looked at references of Eastern European architecture that felt familiar to them in terms of their context, right? So, they grew up in small villages in southern Poland where a lot of the typical houses there are just built out of like clay brick, and the clay brick is exposed, all the mortar is exposed.
So it's all load bearing. One could look at that and say, well, that's really utilitarian and reflective of the structure of the house and, you know, where's the cladding? But to me, I find that really interesting. I'm like, Oh, that is the cladding. And how do we kind of represent that in a new way? Hence where we landed with the materiality of this project, which is a kind of smoked darker tone sort of clay brick that ages really well and it has this kind of grace and it's a timeless quality. So, we looked at those precedents as a reference in terms of where the style of the house itself lands.
00;16;37;27 - 00;16;47;06
DP
So, your choice of brick masonry, really, you knew from the beginning that you were going to be using masonry there at some point, right?
00;16;47;16 - 00;17;53;28
MN
It was set out at a conceptual level, yes. Though the tone or the color or things like that were sort of up in the air. Then when my father and mother had, during the project, they kind of seemed interested in carrying on that idea. Specifically, I remember for my mother when I said, you know, we're thinking about this kind of clay colored brick and something that looks really natural.
She loved that idea. She really never understood why more houses in a kind of contemporary context didn't do that, at least in the context where they live. And to some degree because the house, you know, in its design, in its formal and massing quality, it can appear really stark compared to its neighbors. The materiality choices of it are meant to sensitize that approach.
So, this notion of really conventional brick is meant to appear familiar to kind of an onlooker or to the person that lives at that home. It has this really timeless quality to it. It's like I can understand that house because it's made of brick. It's made of a conventional thing that I know that's been around for ages and has its conventional color. That's the color that brick usually looks like. When you ask a child to draw a brick, they're going to draw a red brick, maybe with three cores, if the child is advanced enough. Right? There's this familiarity which helps make the architecture more digestible.
00;17;54;08 - 00;17;59;22
DP
So, set up the building materials in general for us because the palette isn't just brick.
00;17;59;22 - 00;18;09;04
MN
Yeah. So, the kind of two wings that ground the house at the base are a Smoked Tudor Velour modular brick. So, it has this kind of rusty sort of clay color.
00;18;09;10 - 00;18;15;10
DP
And those colors, I would use the word variegated. Right? So, we see a series of different colors in that red clay.
00;18;15;11 - 00;18;40;01
MN
Yeah. The specification of the brick itself has a variation in it. It's up to a good bricklayer to make sure they patronize it quite well. But a lot of that is just coming from like the brick looks like it's been smoked at its edges and some are more smoked than others, which is where you start to get that kind of differentiation. And we like that a lot because the house has these really monolithic large brick volumes. And so, the kind of variation, the slight variation in the tone really help to kind of break that monotony apart a little bit.
00;18;40;08 - 00;18;43;07
DP
Was it hard to find a mason?
00;18;43;07 - 00;18;44;05
MN
A good mason? Yes. It’s always hard to find a good mason.
00;18;44;06 - 00;18;45;25
DP
It is! It's crazy!
00;18;45;25 - 00;19;18;20
MN
Yeah. And so this is why, you know, as a studio, we think it's important to kind of collaborate with trades early on because they can help kind of understand or they can help kind of propose ideas about how to get the masonry right at these angles or at the cantilevers that we’re proposing, things like that. And then the other materials were using a black standing seam metal above. So conceptually the volume that hovers above these two things floats. So, metal felt more appropriate. And then we're using a composite wood system in between the windows. So that's meant to kind of be a homage to sort of old wooden shutters that kind of peel away from the window itself.
00;19;18;24 - 00;19;20;15
DP
Where did you find that?
00;19;20;15 - 00;19;35;08
MN
It’s a product – I think it's based in the States. I can't recall. It's meant to be a veneer, but it's made out of wood fibers that are infused with like fiberglass and resin. So from a durability perspective. There's no maintenance. And it retains its color over time really well.
00;19;35;12 - 00;19;41;03
DP
And you're using steel lintels over these large openings that you're then using this wood infill between the windows.
00;19;41;09 - 00;19;45;05
MN
Correct. With the main one being the cantilever at the front entry of the home.
00;19;45;14 - 00;19;47;25
DP
So how did you pull that off?
00;19;47;25 - 00;20;06;05
MN
So, you know, we're looking at brick as a simple material and it's execution that appears very traditional in the way that we're applying it. But we found moments where we could start to kind of give it a more contemporary execution, and the main one being the cantilever at the front entry, which is just upheld by steel beams that are cantilevering out and transferring their way back to kind of point loads in the house.
00;20;06;05 - 00;20;07;23
DP
So they're tied back into the walls.
00;20;08;00 - 00;20;20;19
MN
Yeah, correct. And that cantilever holds a terrace on the upper floor, so a dormer above the entry that opens out onto a south facing terrace that you can use. And even in the kind of cooler spring months, because the sun engages that terrace quite nicely.
00;20;20;25 - 00;20;23;23
DP
Right. And that's a clear glass guardrail up there.
00;20;23;23 - 00;20;24;08
MN
Just a butt joint across.
00;20;24;08 - 00;20;25;07
DP
No frames.
00;20;25;07 - 00;21;03;01
MN
No frames. Yeah. So that it just kind of appears really minimal and visually to kind of carry on the notion of this house being an antithesis, that's exemplified in this entry now. You know, just talking about it, so many of the houses in the context, you know, the entries are these large columnar conditions, you know, with very ornamented roofs and things like that meant to kind of evoke this kind of grandiosity.
And here I think we're trying to evoke a grandeur, but we're doing so in a more nuanced way, layered elements, a kind of a structural acrobatic of this cantilever, the brick kind of enveloping you, your eye moving vertically towards that dormer. It's creating that grandeur, but doing so in using kind of tectonic architectural elements.
00;21;03;11 - 00;21;08;20
DP
So, did using bricks of any particular design challenges for you or for your clients?
00;21;09;01 - 00;21;42;17
MN
From a design challenge perspective, I think you sort of touched on it before, but it was how to allow the house to bridge the gap between the history of the site, the approachability of this kind of architecture in this kind of neighborhood and this sort of nostalgia of materiality for the client's past. Right? When we looked at those three conditions, Brick felt like a very natural material to kind of start to solidify that.
So that was the challenge of how do you build something like this in this kind of neighborhood? And brick really started to provide an answer for that in terms of how to bridge those gaps and how to create an architecture that feels timeless.
00;21;42;25 - 00;21;50;11
DP
You've got these traditional gable forms and yet you have these modern flat roof forms. What are the neighbors think? Have you heard from any of them?
00;21;50;21 - 00;21;52;20
MN
From when I'm around the house and I've been there.
00;21;52;20 - 00;21;53;10
DP
Yeah.
00;21;53;10 - 00;21;59;23
MN
A lot of cars roll by very slowly, I suppose. Although, I haven't heard many words being spoken, right?
00;21;59;29 - 00;22;00;21
DP
Do your folks hear anything?
00;22;00;21 - 00;22;18;25
MN
You know, I'm sure they only hear the good things. No one's going to say their real opinions. But to me, architecture is not about pleasing everyone. It's a subjective, you know, discourse, right? So it's about creating something that feels specific to the client, but also feels like it's mindful of its context and of where it came from in a really intelligent way.
00;22;19;04 - 00;22;27;21
DP
That's well put. Besides the cantilevers with the masonry, with the brick, were there any other unique construction details that you came across as you were building this thing?
00;22;28;02 - 00;24;22;01
MN
Yeah. So I mean, you can see in one of the photos we're looking at here in the studio, the interior, we use the bricks in the interior as well on the main kind of fireplace wall. So, the interior planning is kind of regimented by these volumes. So, as I mentioned before, the kitchen dining and living spaces are sort of one holistic space and they're separated by these equal 16 foot wide, almost like objects, one being the kind of back bar of the kitchen clad in a kind of white oak, one being the sort of kitchen island, 16 foot long cloud, and of course the main one being the fireplace clad in the brick, and then the third one being a kind of double height staircase, which has these sort of steel slatted risers that link the two levels together.
So, the main rooting element was the brick on the interior. And so, from a kind of challenge perspective, we had to just understand how to reinforce that brick on a conventional concrete foundation system with two steel beams trying to look at how to do that in the most conventional and cheapest way that we can make it work from a size of a beam perspective. But in execution, we found when you lay brick inside, you have to sequence that really specifically with all the other materials that are going in the house of the all the other trades that are coming in the house. You know, when is the right time to install the brick?
And we had to perform a few acrobatics with there because there's a kind of linear expression of the fireplace that's clad in a kind of thin steel plate reveal. So, we had to kind of cantilever the brick around that as well and kind of find a meaningful way to transfer it down. And then to express the tectonics of the build – and thankfully, the good work of the trades – we have uplighting that shines up on the brick in the kind of evening moments which really help to kind of show its tactility and it's rough surfacing. This brick specifically has a really natural finish to it. It's not polished or anything like that. We really like to use materials that look like they're supposed to look what they are. Bricks should look like brick. It should feel natural, it should feel rough, it shouldn't feel metallic or shiny or things like that. And so updating it felt like a celebration of selection of the brick, too.
00;24;22;01 - 00;24;32;15
DP
So, who did all the drawing? I love to ask that question because I love to draw, and this must have been really a wonderful experience for you because you're working with people that you really know well.
00;24;32;26 - 00;25;13;12
MN
It was primarily me. Like, I was doing the drawing from kind of early concept design to the CD's – construction documents – and to the landscape design as well. We didn't touch upon that one either, but because of the H form of the house, it forms two courtyards, one at the front and one of the back of the house. You know, conventional front and back.
And then the orientation of the pool is actually perpendicular to the orientation of the house, which kind of pulls the eye out towards the backyard and then towards a kind of pool house which is not pictured on these images we're looking at. So that sort of tertiary structure, that pool house there, kind of completes the series of objects that encapsulate that rear design of the site. We looked at an execution of that as well when I was drawing this thing up.
00;25;13;21 - 00;25;20;04
DP
Did you create three dimensional renderings for your folks? So, this is 3D modeled and then what software did you use?
00;25;20;15 - 00;25;22;00
MN
A number of different software.
00;25;22;04 - 00;25;24;12
DP
Like Revit, ArchiCAD?
00;25;24;12 - 00;25;31;19
MN
Sketch paper to start. You know, trace. A lot of rolls of trace paper. And then software wise, yeah, I mean, it starts in CAD and then it moves to Revit and then--
00;25;32;00 - 00;25;33;13
DP
Revit was the main software?
00;25;33;13 - 00;25;36;24
MN
Yeah. And then some studies in Rhino and SketchUp, and some rendering--.
00;25;36;24 - 00;25;40;13
DP
So, you know your way around that whole suite of products.
00;25;40;13 - 00;25;45;04
MN
Like most things, architects know a little bit about a lot of stuff. So, I know a little bit about every program.
00;25;45;04 - 00;25;47;08
DP
That’s so well-put. It’s so true. I'm not an.
00;25;47;08 - 00;25;48;03
MN
But I’m not an expert at any of them.
00;25;48;03 - 00;26;02;19
DP
So, tell me, sustainability is something we talk a lot about and you talked a little bit about that. Could you expand on this notion, the idea that you used Brick because I guess partially because it is a sustainable material.
00;26;03;02 - 00;27;37;14
MN
Sustainability from the perspective of the material choice? Yes. That's exactly why. Like, we like that on this project, brick is long-lasting. It is a material that requires zero to no maintenance and only improves over time. The patina that it develops over time is a likable factor of the project. Thinking about, let's say in Toronto, downtown Toronto, a lot of the older buildings that were built in the late 1800s or early 1900s were built from brick that was made at Toronto factories. And it usually is just the clay brick, right? And the exterior walls are all masonry load bearing walls and the interior structure is usually heavy timber. A lot of those went down in a large fire like most projects in the Chicago, right? But the ones that are still there, which there are quite a bit of them, they're looked at as precedents of really good, timeless architecture.
And you think about why that is a big influence. That is the long lasting quality of brick. You lay it and it feels organically and naturally sustainable without having to look at other projects as a precedent, given that the manufacturing process of the brick and also have a pretty low carbon footprint. And if you're sourcing it from a plant that's close to the site itself, that all kind of engages in that sort of sustainable approach of the brick.
And then outside of that, as a piece of architecture, we talked about the tightness of the project, the tightness of the envelope, all to create forced air ventilation that feels really well rounded because the air doesn't have to move all through the house. The HVAC design of the project is really, really tight in terms of how, you know, air movement gets kind of forced into all these spaces.
And of course, in the summer months you can all but turn off all of your heating and cooling systems because the house is so naturally ventilated. So, it creates really cool environments in the hotter summer months as well.
00;27;37;27 - 00;27;51;08
DP
So, give me one thing that you guys learned. It doesn't have to be about brick, but something that you learned through this process of designing a house, having two different clients, and then getting to the finish line.
00;27;51;19 - 00;28;28;21
MN
Working with a family member can be challenging, but can also be very rewarding. It can be challenging in the sense that a family member like my father, who has years and years of experience of building houses already, right? So they're really ingrained in how they've been doing things and here comes this young’in that's trying to look at a new way of thinking about this.
So that butting of heads and that friction can be very challenging. So, it's important to kind of keep your eye on the ultimate goal that you're trying to achieve together from the outset and not lose sight of that and let cool heads prevail, essentially. Right? I think that was a big lesson learned and so much so that, you know, my father and I are still continuing to work on some projects together.
00;28;28;21 - 00;28;29;16
DP
You're still talking?
00;28;29;16 - 00;29;24;28
MN
Yeah, still talking and still doing this stuff together, which is fantastic. At the end of the day, we love and I particularly am really thankful that I get to leave this kind of legacy behind with him, you know, of doing a project together with him. It's really a great kind of thing to leave behind, you know, a physical thing.
And outside of that, we talked about it before, but getting trades involved early. You know, we had some hiccups, of course, on site, as every project does. But we did learn on this project that getting trades involved early in the process was helpful in terms of how we were able to execute exactly what we wanted because we could have those conversations and planting the seed in whoever is, you know, working on whatever the product may be that they're installing or are working on. They also feel like the project is partly theirs.
Getting good trades is a challenge from any project’s perspective, but I find when you get them excited about it, they feel like they can bring their best work, you know, in terms of trying to suffice. The challenge of presenting them and make them feel proud that they're part of the process. And I think that's a really important one.
00;29;24;28 - 00;29;49;12
DP
Yeah, it's interesting to personalize that. I always ask the clients to bring in our contractors in schematic design, right at the end of schematic design, so we can get a preliminary price on the job. But I like how you describe this as more of a kind of relationship with these people that then grows and they get excited about the job. They're in early, they get to look at the drawings and then they have something to say about the project.
00;29;49;18 - 00;30;59;03
MN
Yeah, it's a kind of evolution of the typical kind of architecture delivery methods. So, you've got your design bid build, which really can create a divide between the architect and the contractor and the client to some degree. Then you've got the design build model which tries to integrate the contractor or an architect to some degree and create a more holistic approach.
And so, this is kind of an evolution of that. It's a design build with integrated input from trades and from the clients so that everyone feels like the project belongs to each and every individual that's working on it. There's forms of that called integrated process delivery that can be really timely right? But because we're just looking at house design and house construction, we can still be really intimate and fast tracked about the process as well.
So, this project, from initial design to final conception and kind of move in was two and a half years. I've worked at offices on custom bespoke residential architecture where projects of a similar scale, but with much more rigor and structural acrobatics and things like that were 5 to 6 year process. Right? That's part of what I think is interesting to us as a studio is how do we deliver these projects in a timely manner as well and not abuse the sort of amount of time that these things take.
00;30;59;14 - 00;31;07;05
DP
Yeah, particularly important with your parents.
MN
Yeah, indeed, indeed.
DP
Well, Mateusz, thank you very much for being here.
00;31;07;05 - 00;31;08;10
MN
Yeah, thanks so much for having me.
00;31;08;10 - 00;31;10;14
DP
And tell everybody how they can find you.
00;31;10;17 - 00;31;24;22
MN
We're somewhat engaged on social media. So, our website is www.everyday-studio.ca. At Instagram where everydaystudio_ that would probably cover most of the social media, but yeah, we try to keep up to date as much as we can.
00;31;24;23 - 00;31;27;12
DP
Okay, well, Mateusz Nowacki, thank you very much.
00;31;27;12 - 00;31;28;05
MN
Yeah, thanks, Doug.
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Design Vault Ep. 2 Vanderbilt University with Steve Knight
ABOUT THE ARCHITECT:
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Steve Knight, AIA is a Principal with David M. Schwarz Architects, Inc. he studied at North Carolina State University where he received his Master of Architecture, that same year he joined David M. Schwarz Architects. Steve primarily focuses on his firm’s performing arts venue projects. He served as Project Architect for the design of Schermerhorn Symphony Center, The Palladium at the Center for the Performing Arts, the Gaillard Center, and most recently an 8,000-seat amphitheater in Huntsville, Alabama. He is currently leading the office’s team on the design of a neighborhood center for Chevy Chase Lake in Maryland and the multi-phase Residential College project at Vanderbilt University. Steve is active in preservation advocacy, serving as President of the Art Deco Society of Washington and on the board of the International Coalition of Art Deco Societies. |
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Vanderbilt University
Nicholas S. Zeppos College, Bronson Ingram Building
See MoreTRANSCRIPT
00;00;05;27 - 00;00;29;07
SN
It's a very faithful rendition of what's known as Collegiate Gothic. It is very much in step with this long-established tradition of higher education that goes back to the church in Europe and then institutions like Oxford and Cambridge. And then it comes over to the states with institutions like Harvard and Yale, who are doing very much the same thing. They were trying to identify with this established tradition.
00;00;29;14 - 00;02;24;07
DP
This is my guest, Steve Knight. I'll share more about him shortly. In this episode from the Design Vault we’ll highlight Steve's project, the Nicholas S. Zeppos College Building at Vanderbilt University.
The Nicholas S. Zeppos College Building is several thousand square feet, five stories with a large tower at one end. The building is red brick and limestone, designed in the collegiate Gothic style. The building has a slate roof, slate dormers, large brick chimney masses, limestone window frames and quoins, multi-story window bays, gable forms across the facade, and limestone gothic arches, a tall square picturesque tower with chamfered corners, polychromatic brickwork and limestone cap rounds out the building at one end.
Hi, I'm Doug Pat and this is Design Vault. Today we're talking to Steve Knight, who led the team designing the Nicholas S. Zeppos College at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tennessee. Steve is a member of the American Institute of Architects and he's a principal with David M. Schwarz Architects. He studied at North Carolina State University, where he received his Master of Architecture. That same year, he joined David M. Schwarz Architects. Steve primarily focuses on his firm's performing arts venue projects. He served as project architect for the design of the Schermerhorn Symphony Center, the Palladium at the Center for Performing Arts, the Gilliard center, and most recently, an 8000-seat amphitheater in Huntsville, Alabama.
Among other projects, he's currently leading the offices team on the design of the multiphase residential college project at Vanderbilt University. The Nicholas S. Zeppos College Building is one of four residential buildings for DMS at Vanderbilt University. So let's get into the details. Welcome, Steve.
00;02;24;14 - 00;02;25;28
SN
Greetings, Doug. Good to be here.
00;02;26;08 - 00;02;30;09
DP
So, tell us a little bit about your firm, David M. Schwarz Architects.
00;02;30;20 - 00;03;04;27
SN
Sure. We're a mid-sized design architect and planning firm. We're based in Washington, D.C. We have about 35 design architects on staff. We were started in the mid-seventies by our founder, David M. Schwarz.
It was a really interesting time to start an architecture firm in Washington and in the U.S., really. And there are two pivotal things that happened in the late seventies. The first was the district passed one of the most stringent historic preservation ordinances in the country. And on the heels of that, the federal government enacted tax credits for historic preservation.
00;03;04;27 - 00;03;06;22
DP
Really? How fortuitous.
00;03;07;00 - 00;03;43;12
SN
So, we found ourselves, the firm at the time - this is before my time there, obviously - but we found ourselves working in newly established historic districts on landmark designated buildings, and it really informed how we think about architecture that architecture is - it's very important that it responds very carefully to the context around it. Each building is part of a larger ecosystem that creates meaningful places, beautiful places to walk, live, places that are memorable. That really is a kind of a train of thought that I think we've carried through all of our work to this day.
00;03;43;20 - 00;03;54;16
DP
So, the greater majority of the work that you guys do is traditional. Has that been challenging in any era over the course of the last 50 years when people were doing more modern architecture and...
00;03;54;26 - 00;04;42;08
SN
Well, it certainly is today. We never sought out to be traditional architects in that sense. One project begets another, and like many architects, we sort of get known for our buildings and what we do. And I think in terms of that stylistic leaning, if you will, it's a bit controversial these days, I think, particularly within the architecture design community, where I think there is a tendency amongst the majority to want to look forward in sort of the past is the past, let's look to the present and let's look to the future.
I think for us, architecture is primarily about communication. And what we mean by that is that buildings in their edifices say something to people and it's really important that they engage with the communities that they serve.
00;04;42;20 - 00;04;58;02
DP
Yeah, it's interesting talking about classicism, traditional architecture, having a kind of language and speaking to the community in a certain way. Right. It's kind of understandable language for many people. You see, especially in Washington.
00;04;58;10 - 00;05;02;25
SN
It is, it's a very legible language of building and design. Absolutely.
00;05;03;03 - 00;05;05;14
DP
So, tell us about your role in the office.
00;05;05;27 - 00;05;33;12
SN
I'm a principal in the firm. I've been with the firm since I finished graduate school back in the late nineties. I started out as an intern and then, as you could imagine, sort of worked my way up through architect staff and project architect and then project manager. I spend most of my time communicating and working with teams of people in the office. Design, for us, is a very collaborative sport. The office is a very collaborative environment.
00;05;33;12 - 00;05;33;28
DP
That's great.
00;05;34;05 - 00;05;59;17
SN
I think one of the most interesting things to me is the founder, David Schwarz. I have rarely ever seen David pick up a pencil and draw something, but he commands a great deal of influence and quality oversight of the firm's body of work, largely through talking to people, getting to know each of us. And I in turn try to do the same.
00;05;59;25 - 00;06;02;08
DP
Well, you've been there a long time. It sounds like you've got a great boss.
00;06;02;14 - 00;06;07;06
SN
He is a great boss. We got a great group of people around me. I consider myself very lucky.
00;06;07;12 - 00;06;20;27
DP
Oh, that's really cool, because, I mean, architecture is challenging enough, right? It's a challenging profession. Very difficult business. We're all architects, right? So, we're all a little self-absorbed. To find somebody you enjoy working with and for is wonderful.
00;06;21;02 - 00;06;22;01
SN
Yeah, it's very important.
00;06;22;04 - 00;06;34;02
DP
Yeah, that's great. So, let's dig in here. Let's talk about the residential college project at Vanderbilt and specifically the Nicholas S. Zeppos College building. How did your office get this project?
00;06;34;15 - 00;07;25;15
SN
Well, it goes back to a master plan study that we did. Oh, at least 15 years ago, we conducted a study. The university was interested in reorganizing student life on campus, and they struck on the idea of the residential college model, which grows out of a very well-established tradition that starts on the other side of the pond by places like Oxford and Cambridge.
And then it comes to the States in the early 20th century with the Ivy League institutions like Yale and Harvard and Princeton. And what they really liked about it was this notion of breaking down the larger student community into smaller communities of a few hundred people. So, we developed this master plan that sort of provided strategic opportunity areas on where these colleges could be located.
00;07;25;21 - 00;07;28;28
DP
So, they came to you with this idea. There would be four colleges.
00;07;29;06 - 00;07;38;02
SN
They came to us with a very broad idea of, “we want to rethink student life on campus,” and through conversation, the residential college model came out of that.
00;07;38;02 - 00;07;38;21
DP
Wonderful.
00;07;38;23 - 00;08;00;27
SN
And then opportunity areas across campus. We identified sites. They then constructed what they called the freshman campus, the freshman college, if you will. That's where all first-year students go to live and there was a bit of a lull. And then we sort of came back with this more defined project of the four colleges, of which Nicholas S. Zeppos is number two.
00;08;01;08 - 00;08;07;11
DP
So, had you been hired at that point or were you working against other architects to try to get the project?
00;08;07;16 - 00;08;17;01
SN
No, we had been hired at that point. We had done other work in Nashville, most notably the Schermerhorn Symphony Center, the Nashville Symphony's concert hall.
00;08;17;01 - 00;08;18;02
DP
So, they knew of you.
00;08;18;03 - 00;08;22;19
SN
So, they knew of us. And we just developed good, strong relationships in the community.
00;08;22;20 - 00;08;31;27
DP
That's great. It's a great way to get jobs. So, can you tell me a little bit about the history of the place, the town, the neighborhood, the buildings around the site?
00;08;32;04 - 00;08;52;00
SN
Sure. In Nashville, it's a fascinating city with great heritage and history. One of its monikers is the Athens of the South. They have a full-scale replica of the Parthenon on Centennial Park campus, which is actually just across the West End Boulevard from Vanderbilt.
00;08;52;02 - 00;08;55;07
DP
I'm sure I've seen photos of this and have forgotten. That's incredible.
00;08;55;17 - 00;08;59;15
SN
It. It really is. Every detail is fully, faithfully executed.
00;08;59;16 - 00;09;02;07
DP
I'd love to talk about that some time but go ahead.
00;09;02;17 - 00;10;17;15
SN
But that's not why it's called the Athens of the South. It's called the Athens of the south because of the number of institutions of higher learning that one finds there. So, you have Fisk, you have Vanderbilt, many institutions. And it just at a sort of a per capita level. It developed this sort of bookish, erudite culture. Another thing that helped reinforced it was there's a great deal of publishing that happens there, mostly religious, and musical publications.
So anyway, so it's the Athens of the South, so that's really neat. The Vanderbilt history is really interesting because it's basically it's founded as an outgrowth of the Civil War. The institution, it was basically viewed by its namesake who endowed the starting of the university as a kind of a healing moment between the North and the South.
Cornelius Vanderbilt. And he has a statue, obviously, in the heart of campus. The campus itself is - it's a really beautiful green garden-like setting. It does have the classification of being an arboretum because of the number of unique specimens of trees one finds there. The architecture is quite eclectic. Like most campuses, there's a kind of a historic heart of Victorian era buildings and some collegiate gothic buildings as well. And then it sort of evolves over time.
00;10;17;24 - 00;10;31;07
DP
So, you touched a little bit on what these college buildings are composed of. Could you give me a little bit more information about the programmatic requirements of each of the four buildings - or let's just stick to the Zeppos College building?
00;10;31;12 - 00;12;03;17
SN
Yes. So Zeppos houses 340 students. We typically say beds. It has 340 beds. So that's the lingo in that business, if you will. And it's viewed as a really holistic living environment for students. Not only are there places to sleep, but there are also places to study, places to gather. There are places to eat. There are even accommodations for some resident faculty. Each of the colleges, or at Zeppos, has a family - faculty member and their family has an apartment within the facility. And they help provide leadership and mentorship to the student community.
So, and all of those things are fully realized programmatically with dining facilities. There's a really great dining hall in Zeppos. There's a great room, as we call it, a large living room with wood paneling, courtyards. So there's nice quality, secure, defensible outdoor space for the students to use.
On each of the floors, it was a really interesting challenge because we're dealing with a lot, even within that reduced footprint of only 300 odd beds, it's still a lot of program, a lot of footprint to have to manage. So, to create a sense of place that's navigable and somewhat homelike and approachable and familiar, we did some interesting things within the student floors. There's a lot of articulation in the building massing, and we offset the double loaded corridors to create nodes and they tend to coincide with elevators and stairs so that we create places for students to naturally bump into each other.
00;12;04;00 - 00;12;16;08
DP
Well, I'm going to actually ask you about that in just a minute. So first, let's back up and talk a little bit about the site and the topographic features, if there are any. Or are they just completely flat?
00;12;16;19 - 00;13;04;06
SN
No, there is a bit of grade change from - I have to get my compass directions right - from east to west. I think what's most interesting about the site is it has kind of a two-sided nature to it. So, on one side is West End Avenue, which is a major east west thoroughfare that connects with downtown Nashville. It's sort of the public face of Vanderbilt. So, the colleges were a real opportunity to sort of enhance the university's image to the outward community.
And then on the other side, the opposite side is a very opposite kind of condition. It's a series of very low scale residential structures that house the Greek community. So, several houses, each one is a fraternity or a sorority. So, we had to respond to two very different contexts on each side of the building.
00;13;04;17 - 00;13;08;22
DP
So, tell us a little bit more about the building plan. You started getting into that.
00;13;08;29 - 00;13;29;25
SN
Sure. So Zeppos is a figure eight with two courtyards. What makes the figure eight is what we call a double loaded bar, if you will, on the upper student room floors. You have rooms on both sides of a corridor. And again, there's interesting offsets in those corridors and bars to help break down the massing.
00;13;30;04 - 00;13;32;25
DP
Does that create these large gables?
00;13;33;00 - 00;13;48;03
SN
Yes. And then and then some of the bars, we actually punch through to create Gables to help break down and articulate the massing of the building. It's basically a city block. So, all of those moves are really important to help make the building very approachable and friendly.
00;13;48;11 - 00;13;51;14
DP
Are all four college buildings a city block.
00;13;51;26 - 00;14;14;09
SN
About. They each layout a little differently from one another. The one immediately to the east of this one, Rothschild College. That one has three courtyards. Due to the particulars of that particular site and obviously what makes the Zeppos college most special amongst the four of them is this 300-foot tower at one end of it.
00;14;14;17 - 00;14;20;03
DP
So that's a great segway. Tell us about the style of this building because it's stunning.
00;14;20;12 - 00;15;02;06
SN
It's a very faithful rendition of what's known as Collegiate Gothic. It was really very much a communication and really a marketing decision by the university in terms of we looked at lots of different vernaculars. What should these things look like? And the entire team ultimately arrived at Collegiate Gothic is the appropriate response. It is very much in step with this long-established tradition of higher education that goes back to the church in Europe and then institutions like Oxford and Cambridge, and then it comes over to the States with institutions like Harvard and Yale who are doing very much the same thing. They were trying to identify with this established tradition.
00;15;02;13 - 00;15;04;13
DP
Really? I mean, it makes perfect sense.
00;15;04;14 - 00;15;05;02
SN
Absolutely.
00;15;05;13 - 00;15;14;25
DP
So, were there any specific buildings that you can recall that you guys were looking at? The tower looks like it could have been pulled from the facade from a church in Europe. Right? I mean.
00;15;15;02 - 00;16;04;01
SN
Sure, we're very eclectic in our approach. We spend a lot of time looking at examples in books. We try to visit places in person, and that was a really important tool at the outset of this project is we actually took members of the client team on a little whirlwind tour of residential college examples around the country. Some examples that we looked to for the tower would be the Harkness Tower at Yale.
A slightly more atypical one that we did look at. It would be the Nebraska state Capitol and I think one feature that we quoted from that one is towards the top of the tower. As it starts to step in, you'll see what we call a little lantern, a little limestone lantern on each of the four corners. That's a common type feature in this style of architecture. When you're creating a tapered tall form like this, we thought it worked very well.
00;16;04;09 - 00;16;11;29
DP
And you chose brick for the majority of the material for these exterior facades? Tell me a little bit about that.
00;16;12;07 - 00;16;45;17
SN
Well, we always want our buildings to have a really rich palette of materials. And that's true of the interior and, of course, the exterior. So here the palette is a combination of brick, carved Indiana limestone, and then an accent stone, which is called Crab Orchard. It's actually a stone that's native to Tennessee. And we thought that was very appropriate to sort of weave in a local material that one finds in and around Nashville. The brick in particular is really interesting because we knew we didn't want a stark read of just one color.
00;16;45;19 - 00;16;48;08
DP
Right. Like if the building was all limestone.
00;16;48;08 - 00;17;09;26
SN
Like it was all limestone. And even within the brick itself, it's not just one brick, it's actually a blend of three bricks. And we did lots of mockup panels with the help of a very patient Mason, and a very patient local brick distributor who gave us about an acre of their brickyard to do all these different experiments.
00;17;09;27 - 00;17;10;16
DP
That's so cool.
00;17;10;16 - 00;17;46;22
SN
We tried different blends and we ultimately settled on a blend of three bricks for the college, and then we further augmented that with what we call decorative bond detailing. So, if you look closely at some of the details, you'll see brick that's fashioned into basket weave patterns, sawtooth patterns, what's known in England as diapering, which is creating a sort of a diamond checkerboard pattern. And we use different bricks for that as well. They tended to be iron spot bricks that are really beautiful because they catch and reflect light in different ways depending on how the sun is hitting them.
00;17;47;06 - 00;18;26;25
DP
Yeah, so it's interesting. We've got this polychrome going on, so you guys have the red brick and then I see these diamonds which are made from a different color brick, and then you're taking that one step further. You're backing off the changes in color perhaps, and you're changing the direction of these bricks and the patterns on the interiors.
I mean, it just takes so much time and thought to do everything you guys are doing on these facades. How much time did it take? Just doing like the design work? And who was doing that design work in the office? How were you doing these drawings and how are they being reviewed? I mean, there's a lot going on here.
00;18;27;02 - 00;19;17;26
SN
There's a lot there. I mean, the process is really key and it's a very layered process. You don't start out drawing detail. You start out with a parti and then you look at the plan and then you study the massing and then you get to a point and that's schematic design and that was probably about five months. And then we launch into design development.
We are refining the details and that was probably another six months of design development. And within both of those design phases, it's hand sketching, physical study models - we still love doing old fashioned models, just cutting out of cardboard and matte board - as well as two-dimensional drafting. And then, of course, actually three-dimensional modeling and digital modeling in the computer. That was a really key tool.
00;19;18;06 - 00;19;22;26
DP
With all these bricks and all those patterns. Must have been an unbelievable process.
00;19;22;26 - 00;19;45;28
SN
Yeah. And then it all has to be documented. It's a beautiful project. The standards were very high at the same time we did have a budget and doing cost take-offs at each of the milestone levels of completion - at schematic design and design development - were very important and they caused us to have to do some recalibrating and some adjusting to keep the thing on budget and on track.
00;19;46;09 - 00;19;52;23
DP
Yeah, I mean, you sit down with the clients and show them some of this stuff and I'm sure the first words out of their mouths is how much is this going to cost, right?
00;19;52;25 - 00;20;12;01
SN
Sure. It's interesting. In the earliest design packages, schematic design, you just can't draw all the detail. So, we actually put photos of collegiate gothic buildings in the drawings to help the contractors really get their head around, okay, this is really complex here. This is not your typical...
00;20;12;14 - 00;20;19;14
DP
And there had to have been a lot of handholding in the field too. I mean, a lot of the detail, like the variegated quoins, the quoining on the corners.
00;20;19;14 - 00;20;23;19
SN
Yeah. Every one of those stones is actually laid out in the design.
00;20;23;27 - 00;20;30;16
DP
All the dimensions, the materiality, the color. Like everything. Wow. So, there's a lot of details.
00;20;30;27 - 00;20;39;27
SN
Yes. I mean, it's a phone book level – for anybody who remembers what a phone book is – a phone book thickness level of drawing and documentation.
00;20;40;04 - 00;20;51;19
DP
Tell me a little bit about the limestone work, because, again, the level, the detail and the wonderful intricate detailing, I mean, you've got to draw and then you got to find somebody to make that.
00;20;51;28 - 00;21;24;16
SN
It's southern Indiana is limestone country. Indiana limestone. It's where the stone is quarried and it's where it is still fabricated. To this day, it is grand tradition. It goes back to the mid-1800s. It had its heyday in the early 20th century with, one just imagines, the proliferation of limestone buildings one finds in any great city in the U.S. and then it gradually tapered off from there after the war in particular. But there are still a few very dedicated fabricator firms that do the what they call the cutting.
00;21;24;23 - 00;21;30;24
DP
It had to have been hard to find somebody with so few people doing this kind of - this level of detail work.
00;21;31;07 - 00;21;44;12
SN
Well, there's one firm we've worked with on almost all of our projects. And they’re still - this is what they do. They are perfectly set up to do it, Bybee Limestone. We know them very well. We love them and they know us. And they love us too.
00;21;44;12 - 00;22;05;24
DP
Yeah, it's stunning. So back to Brick for a second. Did Brick solve any particular design challenges for the architecture for the client? I mean, you touched a little bit on the color, on the exterior and the feel of the architecture, right? We talked about the fact that you make this building all limestone. You got a problem. I mean, it's just a monolith.
00;22;06;06 - 00;22;38;17
SN
Yeah, well, it's a very warming material. It's very appropriate, in particular, the way it's used here for what is essentially a residential place. It's a very approachable, it's a very durable material, obviously. And sustainability is very important. We think one of the most important aspects of sustainability is building very consciously, using resources very consciously and very wisely. And in building something that will hopefully be around for a very long time. This building will be around for a very long time.
00;22;39;05 - 00;22;45;02
DP
That's for sure. Were there any unique construction details that you guys developed as you were working on this?
00;22;45;12 - 00;23;50;11
SN
Yeah, as I mentioned earlier, architecture is a very collaborative sport, and we didn't do this all ourselves. We had a very dedicated architect of record Hastings Architects out of Nashville. They were very faithful in working with us to realize all of the technical detailing, achieve what we're trying to achieve aesthetically, and then a really good contractor late in construction. They were very on top of things the whole way.
I'd say a couple of specifics: one of the things, the details that makes the colleges really fun and interesting are these ornamental chimneys that you find on the roof. And the contractor hit on a really interesting idea because in particular after the previous college where they did not do this, they elected to construct the chimneys on the ground, and then hoist them into place with the tower crane. That allowed them to advance construction on the roof without tying up a huge amount of roof area with scaffolding and preventing them from drying in the building. It was just a much easier erection process down on the ground.
00;23;50;21 - 00;23;53;09
DP
You just have boiler flues going through these things. I mean.
00;23;53;16 - 00;23;58;06
SN
They're vents, They're flues. Yeah. So, they do they do serve a functional purpose as well.
00;23;58;07 - 00;24;05;00
DP
I think that's a wonderful touch. You wouldn't expect to see these chimney masses on a building like that. They really kind of set it apart.
00;24;05;07 - 00;24;46;07
SN
One other quick detail is it sort of goes back to the documentation. After we get even through CDs and in construction, there's then what's known as the submittal process where shop drawings are submitted and the contractor hired one firm, an engineering firm that was sort of the central documentation point for all of the masonry. Typically, you would have separate drawings for brick and limestone, and in this case, the Crab Orchard. So, we had one firm that was weaving all of that together. It really helped the coordination and adjustments that had to be made to some of the technical details because it was all in one place. You know, it's also this is modern cavity wall construction.
00;24;47;13 - 00;24;49;03
DP
That’s a good point. Okay. So how does that work?
00;24;49;11 - 00;25;23;18
SN
So, there's a concrete superstructure between the slabs. We span metal studs. And then much like any building, we pack insulation between the studs. There's exterior rated gyp. board and then a barrier coating that goes over that and then some additional installation in some cases to get the proper R-values. And then the brick is hung off the building. It's built the way modern brick buildings are built today. Cause it really had to be, because that's just how we build - that's how people know how to build. Yet, we're trying to achieve something quite different in the aesthetics.
00;25;23;25 - 00;25;26;07
DP
Did you guys use any brick on the interior?
00;25;26;18 - 00;26;01;09
SN
So far, no. But there's one last college that's under construction and we were using brick in the dining hall of that one. It'll be a thin brick that's applied to the inside wall surface, but it's been a fun opportunity and a challenge at the same time across four colleges, because we want them all to fit within this collegiate gothic vernacular.
But yet, we want each one to be slightly different, so it's identifiable and to the community that lives there in a larger community as well. So, finding subtle, fun, different things we could do from one to the next was always one of the most interesting and challenging parts of this.
00;26;01;21 - 00;26;10;17
DP
I was thinking about while we were talking about the general contractor that you worked with. Was it a bid job or did you guys go immediately to the GC?
00;26;10;27 - 00;26;31;26
SN
They were a construction manager. So, they were brought on board early in the process during design. We like working that way because we like getting the technical expertise and input during design. We can constantly be moving forward as opposed to taking three steps back if a contractor comes on much later and says, “I wouldn't have done it that way.”
00;26;32;01 - 00;26;37;09
DP
What I was getting at was whether or not you had any challenges finding a really good mason.
00;26;37;19 - 00;26;48;06
SN
You know, it's interesting. It's lots of masons. There was a mason subcontractor, but they in turn subcontracted. It would be interesting to ask them. I know it was a challenge.
00;26;48;08 - 00;26;50;21
DP
Finding the right people to do the work.
00;26;50;21 - 00;26;51;17
SN
The right skill set.
00;26;51;23 - 00;26;57;11
DP
It's always a challenge for every architect. So, Steve, what was your favorite part of the project?
00;26;57;22 - 00;27;36;01
SN
I really enjoy the design development phase. We're really getting in and figuring out details. It's a level of problem solving that I find really interesting because in the earlier design phase, we sort of setting up the game board and making the major moves, but then to go in and make each one actually work and really figure stuff out and all the tools that we used to do that and it's a really interesting variety of tools, whether it's a half inch scale model of a corbel that's sitting on my desk or a sketch or the digital model, I just find problem solving at that level to be really, really fully engaging and satisfying.
00;27;36;10 - 00;28;02;24
DP
It's great. It takes a long time for most people to find what they really love about the profession, right? I mean, some people end up doing everything they've small offices, some people end up doing one thing one or two things inside of an office. It's a challenging business. It's a challenging profession. I think it's really nice that you're as happy as you are doing what you're doing and as good as you are at it. That's wonderful.
00;28;03;02 - 00;28;24;05
SN
I think one of the other interesting things, I use the word ownership a lot with the teams in the office and in design development. It's a really great opportunity to give individual young designers pieces of the building to figure out and design. When it's all done, they can come with me to the site and they can look at that point and yeah, I did that. That's really cool.
00;28;24;05 - 00;28;30;16
DP
Oh, that's great. So, Steve Knight, it was great to have you here. Where do people go to find you and your firm?
00;28;30;20 - 00;28;41;29
SN
Go to our web site www.dmsas.com. And if you're in Washington DC, come by and pay us a visit. 1707 L Street
00;28;43;00 - 00;28;47;09
DP
You get to meet some of our listeners. That's wonderful. Well, thank you very much, Steve Knight.
00;28;48;00 - 00;28;49;12
SN
Thank you, Doug. It's been a pleasure.
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Design Vault Ep. 3 Front + York with Michelle Wagner
ABOUT THE ARCHITECT:
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Michelle Wagner is a Project Director at MA | MorrisAdjmiArchitects. Withmore than 25 years of experience as an architect, she excels in themanagement of large-scale projects and has played a vital role in leading thedesign and delivery of some of the firm’s most ambitious assignments. Mostrecently, this includes the delivery of Front & York, a 1.2 million-square-footmixed-use multifamily complex in Brooklyn, NY. The large-scale, two-towerdevelopment occupies an entire city block and encompasses a unique blendof apartments, condos, and luxury penthouses, as well as an unparalleledpackage of indoor and outdoor amenities and more than 140,000 squarefeet of retail. Before joining MA, Michelle worked on the World Trade CenterMaster Plan and Design Guidelines with Studio Daniel Libeskind. Michellereceived a Bachelor of Environmental Design from the University of Coloradoand is a Registered Architect, licensed in New York and Colorado. |
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ABOUT THE PROJECT:
Informed by the past but designed for the future, Front & York adapts Dumbo's historic warehouse aesthetic at agrand scale with a contemporary residential reinterpretation.The Manhattan Bridge is the spine of the Dumbo Historic District. Its monumental stone anchor is as essential tolocalcharacter as brick warehouses and Belgian-block streets. Front & York is a new multifamily developmentinspired by the evolution of this post-industrial context. Like the bridge’s stone anchor, it is a bold contribution to theurban fabric that is emblematic of the neighborhood.The new1,200,000-square-foot building occupies a full city block, but thoughtful massing reduces its perceived size.All four facades are pulled back 15 feet from the property line to create a generous new pedestrian zone lined withmore than 140,000 square feet of retail.Continuing to recall the Manhattan Bridge, storefronts are framed with a highly customized system ofblue steelarches and industrial-inspired entry canopies featuring corrugated glass. Above, theresidential levels of the buildingare clad in acustom gray engobebrick, hand-laid and organizedinto a grid by a glass-fiber reinforced concrete“Superframe” that helps the facade read from afar.More than 2,500factory-style divided light windows providepanoramic views of Lower Manhattan, DowntownBrooklyn, and the multi-tiered courtyard at the building’s core—the largest private park in Dumbo.Within, every detail was considered. The building’s condos and apartments feature 10-foot ceilings,chevron-patterned white oak flooring, and custom millwork, fixtures, and finishes throughout.Offering one of New York City's largest and most comprehensive amenity collections, Front & York providesresidents with access to nearly 100,000 square feet of leisure and lifestyle spaces. To create a club-likeexperience for residents, most amenities are co-located on “Level Eight” within two wings linked by alandscaped wrap-around terrace featuring two outdoor pools, cabanas and outdoor kitchen space, anoutdoor screening area, and an outdoor fireplace.

Front + York
Michelle Wagner, Morris Adjmi Architects
See MoreTRANSCRIPT
00;00;00;00 - 00;00;05;22
Doug Patt
Let's go inside the vault. The Design Vault.
00;00;05;25 - 00;00;20;17
Michelle Wagner
One of the nice things about the site is it's next to the landmark districts. So the heights to the north are low and set, and they won't go any higher. So we knew we wanted to be tall and get as many apartments above that height for views to Manhattan.
00;00;20;20 - 00;02;15;29
DP
This is my guest, Michelle Wagner. I'll share more about her shortly. In this episode from the Design Vault we’ll highlight Michelle's project Front and York. Front and York is a 1.2 million square foot mixed use and multi-family complex in Brooklyn, New York. The large scale two tower development occupies an entire city block and encompasses a unique blend of apartments, condos, and luxury penthouses, as well as an unparalleled package of indoor and outdoor amenities, and more than 140,000 square feet of retail.
The project features a blend of more than 750 condo and rental units, as well as an interior courtyard that spans nearly one acre. Not to mention a challenging 25-foot grade change across the site. The building resembles that of a late 19th or early 20th century warehouse or factory, but significantly more luxuriant. With a glass fiber reinforced concrete frame and light gray brick infill, the building is quite beautiful and absolutely massive.
Hi, I'm Doug Pat and this is Design Vault. Today we're talking to Michelle Wagner, registered architect, LEED AP. Michelle has her Bachelor of Environmental Design from the University of Colorado and is a registered architect licensed in New York and Colorado. Michelle is a project director at Morris Adjmi Architects. Before joining Morris Adjmi, Michelle worked on the World Trade Center Master Plan and design guidelines with studio Daniel Libeskind.
With more than 25 years of experience, she excels in the management of large-scale projects and has played a vital role in leading the design and delivery of some of the firm's most ambitious assignments. So, let's get into the details. Welcome, Michelle.
00;02;16;03 - 00;02;18;08
MW
Thank you, Doug. Thanks for that introduction.
00;02;18;12 - 00;02;26;08
DP
So first, tell us a little bit about Morris Adjmi Architects. Where are they located in New York. What's the size of the firm and what type of work do you do?
00;02;26;16 - 00;02;49;29
MW
Sure. We are in lower Manhattan, downtown, really. Right near the stock exchange. It's about a 100 person firm in New York. We also have a small office in New Orleans, about maybe a dozen people now. And that's where Morris grew up, actually. So he still has a home there and family there. And that office covers a lot of our work that's in the South now as we really branched out.
00;02;49;29 - 00;02;57;23
MW
We started as a very New York based firm in 1997. Do you want me to go ahead and tell the story of Morris's origin story?
00;02;57;24 - 00;02;59;13
DP
Yeah, sure. I'd love to hear it. Absolutely.
00;02;59;15 - 00;03;25;27
MW
OK. He was working with Aldo Rossi in Italy. He speaks Italian and he became kind of Aldo Rossi's right hand man in New York when he got the commission of the Scholastic Building in Soho, which you probably know. It's kind of a very modern, but fitting into that historical context very well, right next to the Little Singer building, which is a very famous piece of architecture we all probably learned about an architectural history class.
00;03;25;27 - 00;03;36;29
MW
So Aldo was tragically killed in a car accident in the nineties, and Morris finished that project for him and kept the office going and started his office from there.
00;03;37;06 - 00;03;39;23
DP
Wow. So what kind of work do you guys do today?
00;03;40;00 - 00;04;00;04
MW
We really focused on multifamily, office, hospitality work, our core. We also have art services and interior design, so we really try to deliver all of those services whenever we can. We also have a guy that focuses on urban design, so we've got some multi parcel experience in master planning as well.
00;04;00;07 - 00;04;03;21
DP
Wow. So, a comprehensive list of services that you guys offer.
00;04;03;24 - 00;04;04;26
MW
Absolutely.
00;04;04;29 - 00;04;11;08
DP
So, tell us a little bit about yourself. How did you end up at Morris Adjmi? How long have you been there and what's your role in the office?
00;04;11;10 - 00;04;49;02
MW
I came to New York originally to work on the World Trade Center Master Plan with Daniel Libeskind, which - with my husband - which was really supposed to be a six-month contract. And we've been in New York for 20 years now. So that's the way things go. After that, I really enjoyed the experience of working on large scale master planning projects.
So, I went to another firm for a while that focused on master planning and architecture. And then through a friend that I met at that firm, I just heard about this great architect, Morris, and I started to look at the work and I got invited for an interview and that was seven years ago, and I haven't looked back.
00;04;49;04 - 00;04;51;06
DP
Oh, that's so great. So, you're clearly enjoying it.
00;04;51;06 - 00;04;52;16
MW
Very happy there. Yeah.
00;04;52;18 - 00;05;00;12
DP
So, let's dig in here and talk a little bit about our building. Tell us about the Front and York project. So how did your office get the project?
00;05;00;14 - 00;05;14;08
MW
It was an invited competition. It was LIVWRK and CIM. There were three or four architects, I think. Bjarke Ingels was one of them... ODA. So, we all had a charrette. It was paid, but you know, not a lot.
00;05;14;10 - 00;05;15;13
DP
Sure. Of course.
00;05;15;15 - 00;05;28;02
MW
It was a lot of excitement around this competition because it was a big, big block. And you just don't get projects this big in the city very often. So, a lot of effort went in, and we won. So that was great.
00;05;28;05 - 00;05;35;20
DP
So just as an aside, are there a lot of competitions like that in New York that firms like yours or firms that are your size try to get?
00;05;35;25 - 00;05;51;04
MW
We're often invited to competitions where they've already kind of pre-selected architects and asked to participate. And of course, it's optional if you want to do that, because you know when you're going in for a competition that you're going to put a lot of effort in really to win that project.
00;05;51;12 - 00;05;53;16
DP
And how many firms do you usually compete against?
00;05;53;22 - 00;06;11;09
MW
We don't always know, honestly. At the time, sometimes it's a blind, so we don't really know. And then we try to find out, with some difficulty. But, you know, three or four small group, I think if it was a large number, we'd be less interested. Yeah, because you got to feel like there's a good chance.
00;06;11;11 - 00;06;14;07
DP
That's great. And how long does that process take?
00;06;14;13 - 00;06;15;13
MW
Usually, six weeks.
00;06;15;22 - 00;06;18;27
DP
So, you have six weeks to complete the project. And then...
00;06;18;27 - 00;06;20;00
MW
A concept design.
00;06;20;00 - 00;06;29;00
DP
The concept design. Okay. And then they pick somebody. Well, that's going to be challenging to like scheduling projects in the office. Are we going to get this one or are we going to get that one?
00;06;29;02 - 00;06;42;16
MW
Oh, yeah. Well, that's a lot of what I do now as a director. A lot of the scheduling. When I worked on Front and York, I was the project manager, so it was really about the project but have been elevated to director. So, it really is more about scheduling and staffing.
00;06;42;17 - 00;06;44;17
DP
I bet, with all those people.
00;06;44;17 - 00;06;45;05
MW
Yeah.
00;06;45;07 - 00;06;54;03
DP
So, tell us a little bit about Front and York. So, tell us some of the history of the location of Front and York and then how did that impact the design?
00;06;54;05 - 00;07;03;07
MW
So, the location is a full city block in Dumbo and it was formerly a lead factory and so there was contamination on site.
00;07;03;07 - 00;07;04;09
DP
I can only imagine.
00;07;04;09 - 00;07;23;12
MW
Yeah. And I think maybe that's why it sat vacant since the eighties. I think maybe it was a private parking lot and fenced for decades. So, you know, it really needed a big development like this to afford to clean off the site because really, we remediated like 50 feet of soils in some areas.
00;07;23;12 - 00;07;24;07
DP
50 feet?!
00;07;24;09 - 00;07;38;14
MW
Yeah. So, all of the contaminated soils were dealt with, some carted away somewhere, cleaned on the site under supervision of AKRF, our environmental engineer. So, it really took a big project like this to kind of utilize that site.
00;07;38;16 - 00;07;41;08
DP
Was the area around the site already well developed or...
00;07;41;10 - 00;07;49;01
MW
It was. There were already towers around the site. 100 J Next door was a tall tower. I don't know. It's probably 20 years old at least.
00;07;49;04 - 00;07;59;09
DP
So, what were the client's programmatic requirements? You guys won the competition and they said, okay, this is what we need. Or you already knew that because you had entered the earlier competition and won it.
00;07;59;11 - 00;08;14;27
MW
Yeah, they came with a residential program, mixed use. They already knew what they wanted the program to be, of course. We weren't sure how we were going to handle the middle of the block because it is an extra-large block. So, some of our early options had a road in the middle.
00;08;14;28 - 00;08;15;16
DP
Oh, wow.
00;08;15;20 - 00;08;54;17
MW
One thing they really wanted; they wanted cars to be thought of as part of the site. Whether we drove up with a big turnaround in the middle, like the Antwerp, I think it's got a big turnaround in the middle. So, we looked at that. At the end of the day, we decided that the center of the block really should be a park and it would bring the value up for all the interior apartments as well as the street side.
One of the nice things about the site is it's next to the landmark district. So, the heights to the north are low and set and they won't go any higher. So, we knew we wanted to be tall and get as many apartments above that height for views to Manhattan.
00;08;54;19 - 00;09;03;02
DP
For those of you who are listening, should take a look at the site plan and the floor plan because it really is quite beautiful with almost like a park-like feature right in the middle.
00;09;03;06 - 00;09;22;21
MW
Yeah. As you mentioned, in the beginning, there's a massive park. It's like almost the size of a football field. It's for all the residents. We have a mixture of apartments and condos, front York, but everybody can access the park and even there's a lifetime fitness there as well. And they have some access to that park.
00;09;22;26 - 00;09;35;03
DP
Oh wow, that's so great. So, I know there's something unique about the site, right? There's a change in topography. So, when you guys first went out there and looked at that, am I correct, it was 25 feet approximately.
00;09;35;08 - 00;09;35;27
MW
About 20.
00;09;35;28 - 00;09;47;23
DP
So that's a big deal for a lot. That is as big as this one. You have to start to think about this going to be a really big building. Where do we enter? What floor we entering? How did you guys deal with that?
00;09;47;25 - 00;10;09;24
MW
It was a real challenge and of course we had to look at many iterations on how to deal with that. One thing we did know is that we wanted the condo lobbies really to see through to the park, and the condos are sited on opposite corners of the site. So, there's a big grade change from the lobby floors on each corner, like 20 feet.
00;10;09;29 - 00;10;24;04
MW
But we wanted to see that park. So, you know, eventually what we came up with was really like rolling hills in the park. I think when you go there, you'll notice it's very kind of hilly and there's a lot of winding path and it feels very organic and natural.
00;10;24;08 - 00;10;33;20
DP
Not like a city. So, tell me a little bit about the zoning ordinances there. You said you guys could be taller than buildings that were nearby. How is that even possible? And what were your restrictions.
00;10;33;23 - 00;10;57;02
MW
Actually, we are an as of right project. We did not apply for any variances. That was part of the directive from the beginning. We didn't want to wait for that. It can take months to get a ULURP or a zoning amendment here. So, we were as of right. So, we just maximized the floor area and the height limit and really didn't have to get special approvals.
00;10;57;04 - 00;10;58;24
DP
Interesting. So that's kind of nice.
00;10;59;02 - 00;10;59;22
MW
Yeah.
00;10;59;29 - 00;11;05;07
DP
Right? Walk into a project like that. So, tell us a little bit about the building plan. So, it's like a big donut.
00;11;05;12 - 00;11;31;16
MW
It's a big donut, yeah. With a large park in the middle, there's sort of a lower podium level that's about eight stories and then on opposite corners there's the towers, which are the condo apartments that are 22 stories tall, and those were sited on diagonal corners and also diagonally from another existing tower in the neighborhood, just to maximize view corridors and make sure that we weren't blocking any view corridor.
00;11;31;18 - 00;11;37;06
DP
Did you guys go through a lot of design iterations in terms of where those towers were and how tall the building was?
00;11;37;06 - 00;11;38;01
MW
Absolutely.
00;11;38;02 - 00;11;38;29
DP
A dumb question!
00;11;39;01 - 00;12;07;24
MW
Well, an interesting thing is, though, in our competition, it was similar massing with the two tall towers on the corner, but they told us, okay, that was the competition. Now we're starting over. So, we looked at every possible massing scenario again. And then of course, we ended up back with the towers on the corner. But the big changes, they were more massive. They were bigger towers, more like bars, because they really wanted to have great views in these apartments.
00;12;08;01 - 00;12;25;03
DP
So, style, I said in the intro, it looks a little bit like a factory warehouse building. I mean, it does, but it doesn't, right? I mean, it's incredibly stylistic. Talk a little bit about how you chose the particular style because it's a little traditional and it's still contemporary.
00;12;25;05 - 00;13;03;23
MW
You know, I think we were inspired by all the factory buildings in Dumbo. I mean, that is the period of significance, that early American factory building, which were very large, and they had big factory windows and were usually brick or masonry.
The storefront, you might notice we have a very tall sort of metal, blue metal storefront, and it looks very muscular, almost like structural steel. It's aluminum, but it looks like structural steel that was really inspired by the Manhattan Bridge, which you can see just down the block from both Front and York. You see the structural steel of the bridge.
00;13;03;25 - 00;13;09;05
DP
So, you guys decided from the get go that you were going to make a brick building, right?
00;13;09;07 - 00;13;48;22
MW
We did. We always wanted the brick. We actually looked at this building as precast donuts initially, just really a client directive thinking that was going to be the most economical solution. But even as precast, we wanted that gray brick. I mean, we were really trying to kind of fit into the neighborhood. There's a lot of granite, gray cobblestone in Dumbo and it was a big building, so we wanted something a little recessive and quiet, I think, in the brick color. So, we were looking for that dark gray brick, even when it was a precast building, which ultimately, it's not precast. It’s hand-laid Glen-Gery brick.
00;13;48;25 - 00;13;53;04
DP
So, what are some of the unique construction details that you guys employed here using brick?
00;13;53;25 - 00;14;37;23
MW
Well, the first thing is the brick itself. I mean, we had actually gone pretty far down the road with the precast and had a gray color in mind. But, you know, of course, economics are always a factor. And we couldn't find an economical gray brick that suited us.
So thankfully, we had a great salesperson that told us about, new at the time, custom color Glen-Gery on go clay coating, which is not like a clay coat that's very opaque and solid. It's actually more translucent and we could pick any color that we wanted and it was pretty economical. So that's what we did. We found a beautiful kind of dark, medium gray, very muted, and then a little lighter gray at the penthouse. On the kind of additions on top.
00;14;37;26 - 00;14;48;01
DP
And I'm looking at some really beautiful details here, particularly the recess in between that kind of frames out every one of those windows. Was that a detail that you guys spent a lot of time working on?
00;14;48;01 - 00;15;04;08
MW
Yes, that was actually a detail that we developed when it was precast donuts. And funny enough, we really liked it because it just gave that little bit of detail to the facade that without it, it felt a little bit flat. So that was originally there to hide the precast joint.
00;15;04;08 - 00;15;05;20
DP
Oh my gosh. So, it's a remnant of an earlier design.
00;15;05;20 - 00;15;14;01
MW
It's a remnant of an earlier design. I think at one point the client suggested maybe we should take it off. And we all said that we really like it.
00;15;14;08 - 00;15;16;15
DP
Yeah, it does an awful lot for the facades.
00;15;16;15 - 00;15;23;14
MW
We're going to use it to hide the brick control joint instead. So, that's tucked in there. And that's why you don't see them at the windows.
00;15;23;16 - 00;15;25;01
DP
So the control joints are inside.
00;15;25;03 - 00;15;26;17
MW
There in that reveal to one side.
00;15;26;26 - 00;15;32;05
DP
Oh, I'd love to see a blow-up detail on that. Tell me a little bit about the concrete structural frame.
00;15;32;07 - 00;15;34;18
MW
That's the GFRC. The white frame.
00;15;34;18 - 00;15;35;19
DP
Yes. Is that structural?
00;15;36;08 - 00;15;53;18
MW
Really beautiful. It's not structural, it's trim. This is a concrete building. So yeah, that is a device really to help modulate the scale of the building and also to help it read from a distance. I mean, you can see, actually, you can see that from a plane. I've seen it flying overhead.
00;15;53;19 - 00;15;54;22
DP
Are you serious?
00;15;54;24 - 00;16;12;15
MW
Yeah, it really does help bring down the scale because, you know, could you imagine if you didn't have that trim? I think the white color, it's really kind of neat standing on Front and York and seeing the blue and white bridge just right there and just kind of the colors just feel good. They fit into the neighborhood. There's white on the bridge.
00;16;12;22 - 00;16;17;28
DP
Had you guys looked at doing that in any other color, like gray, having it melt back into the facade?
00;16;18;05 - 00;16;34;02
MW
We study everything. We're very iterative, I think in our process. And you - we always internally look at three options. You know, we really push it and then we narrow down the options for the client usually, but lots of options.
00;16;34;04 - 00;16;38;08
DP
So, did brick solve any particular design challenges for you guys or for the client?
00;16;38;14 - 00;17;10;07
MW
I think the choice to go to brick was just feeling competitively at the time it was cost, but also just the control of knowing that you could go to different masons if you needed to. I think a lot of times there were more than one trade for - I don't know about the brick. I think that was just one mason in the end, but because it was such a big building, they wanted to make sure that there was some duplicity, I guess, of trades being able to work on things. And I think they got nervous about getting all the precast from one place.
00;17;10;14 - 00;17;20;17
DP
Did you guys have any challenges finding a good mason? I mean, I would imagine in New York it's not a big deal, but even in a Westchester County where I do a lot of work, we always have a challenge finding good masons.
00;17;20;17 - 00;17;35;25
MW
The masons were great. Everybody was great. New Line was the CM, New Line Structures. And we worked on this three years in construction. After three years, it was really hard ending construction because we were kind of a big happy family at that point. It was great.
00;17;35;27 - 00;17;44;18
DP
So, into the office I often think about how many people work on a project. How many people were on this team, and how many people did the drawing for the job?
00;17;44;25 - 00;17;50;01
MW
I'd say at least 20 at its peak, when we were in construction documents.
00;17;50;11 - 00;17;53;07
DP
Yeah. Now, did you guys do this in 3D?
00;17;53;10 - 00;18;35;11
MW
Oh, yeah. We did this in Revit. We usually start with Rhino, something very, you know, design-y and flexible and fast. But once you get into Revit, it becomes you're building a building, right. And a computer. So, becomes more cumbersome. But we absolutely did it in Revit. And actually that ended up being tremendously helpful because we use BIM in construction all the way through. That is, New Line did. That's something they like to do and always do. So, they have specialists that can really run Revit and they model in great detail all of the MEP plumbing and electrical systems throughout the building. So, we find clashes in construction on the computer before they ever happen in the field.
00;18;35;14 - 00;18;38;01
DP
How long have you guys been on Revit? Just curious.
00;18;38;03 - 00;19;04;14
MW
I think we transitioned, probably fully by 2018. When I started in 2016, I think we had one or two projects in Revit. Now we're all Revit. I think we're starting to lose people that know how to work in CAD, but we still have a few. Well, because everybody does Revit. So, we really, we can export to CAD and everything, but we just don't have many people drawing in CAD anymore - and doing the layers.
00;19;04;18 - 00;19;13;07
DP
Oh my goodness. Right. That that's how I operate right now. Well, I do both, but I'm on ArchiCAD. Are most of the people in the city on Revit?
00;19;13;14 - 00;19;21;15
MW
I think so. I'm sure there are still people working in CAD, but I think more and more people are going to Revit, especially for big projects.
00;19;21;18 - 00;19;29;18
DP
So, did sustainability ever come up as a factor in choosing brick, for example, color, texture, thermal, code compliance?
00;19;29;21 - 00;20;03;03
MW
This isn't a LEED project, so we didn't consider it for its sustainability, per se. But we did do something at Front and York, which was we qualified for Zone Green, which is a New York City zoning rule, that if you make your exterior wall thicker and heavily insulate it up to 16 inches thick, you actually get a zoning bonus for that. So, we did that. So, these are 16-inch-thick walls with lots of insulation, CMU back up. That's how this is a sustainable project in terms of the brick wall.
00;20;03;08 - 00;20;05;20
DP
So, it's an efficient veneer - it's an efficient facade.
00;20;05;21 - 00;20;22;21
MW
It's a very, yes, efficient façade. Helps with heating and cooling loads. We also won the Big Apple Brownfield Award for environmental protection for the clean-up effort I mentioned. Yeah, 2020. So, cleaning up that site was a very good move for Dumbo.
00;20;22;28 - 00;20;26;20
DP
Just curious, where does all that go? Where does all the land that they've removed...
00;20;26;26 - 00;20;38;12
MW
Sometimes they can actually treat it on site. It depends on - they test certain segments like it's a very involved process. If it's very, very bad then there are places out west that will accept it.
00;20;38;12 - 00;20;38;28
DP
Okay.
00;20;39;01 - 00;20;54;09
MW
If it's not, that can be landfill like for other projects that can be cleaned and kept local. So, the good fill was - actually like people would come, they put a call out and people would come if they needed fill for their construction projects and they'd cart it away.
00;20;54;14 - 00;20;59;09
DP
Yeah. Interesting. So, I'm thinking here, do we see any masonry on the interior?
00;20;59;13 - 00;21;08;27
MW
We do a little bit up on the eighth floor and amenities. We have some sort of indoor-outdoor fireplaces that have brick. So yeah, there's a little bit.
00;21;09;04 - 00;21;18;10
DP
That’s great. So did your team learn anything interesting through the design and construction process, something maybe that you guys hadn't been through in the past?
00;21;18;13 - 00;22;15;18
MW
I would say that one thing that we found very difficult at first was the redlining process in architecture, where the more senior architects will redline drawings and then give them to the junior staff to pick up the changes. That was very difficult with a 20-person team. So that kind of prompted us to find a tool which we eventually found Blue Beam Studio, which now we use on every project in the office where you can go in and do group markups together and highlight together. So, it's one document and you refresh the document periodically. So, we had a lot of logistical challenges like that.
We had to set certain meeting pulses internally to make sure we were communicating. So, we weren't overlapping or ignoring a corner of the building, which you can sometimes do, and it's 1.2 million square feet. I think there were a lot of things we learned internally through this process that actually help us now on some of our larger projects.
00;22;15;26 - 00;22;18;10
DP
How long was it until you guys implemented Blue Beam?
00;22;18;12 - 00;22;25;03
MW
It really like started, I think with Front and York and now the whole office is on it and we really do all of our markups that way.
00;22;25;11 - 00;22;26;08
DP
That's really cool.
00;22;26;10 - 00;22;34;23
MW
QAQC reviews and Blue Beam’s, probably the new CAD, I would say for a lot of us, because it is a very good markup and measuring tool.
00;22;34;29 - 00;22;35;24
DP
Yes.
00;22;35;26 - 00;22;39;02
MW
And it's cloud based or it can be. So, you can work in a big group.
00;22;39;03 - 00;22;40;26
DP
So, you can go in and draw in 2D.
00;22;41;02 - 00;22;41;20
MW
Yep.
00;22;41;22 - 00;22;44;21
DP
Wow, that's pretty cool. We've been using Procore.
00;22;44;28 - 00;22;50;07
MW
Yeah. We also use Procore. New Line Structures did and that was tremendously helpful.
00;22;50;07 - 00;22;53;05
DP
Yeah, for project management, it's been great. Super helpful.
00;22;53;09 - 00;23;20;08
MW
Yeah. And just the process of using Navisworks and Revit is basically - Navisworks is the software that helps you look at Revit and really find those clashes in the field. This was the easiest CA project, maybe not easy for all of the staff, but in terms of the leadership, we weren't running into big problems. It was very smooth. We were finding the problems in the model in the field. So that was great.
00;23;20;11 - 00;23;25;19
DP
How many drawings does a job like this have? Like what does a construction document set look like?
00;23;25;19 - 00;23;27;09
MW
Yeah, I think about 500 drawings.
00;23;27;09 - 00;23;28;00
DP
Oh, my goodness gracious.
00;23;28;03 - 00;23;31;27
MW
Yeah, something like that. Three or four volumes, you know. Lots of trades.
00;23;32;01 - 00;23;34;22
DP
Wow. And construction was three years.
00;23;34;25 - 00;23;35;15
MW
That’s about right.
00;23;35;20 - 00;23;37;19
DP
Wow. So how long has it been complete?
00;23;37;26 - 00;23;44;22
MW
I think it's been complete release since the summer. Last summer? I could be off by a month or two.
00;23;44;29 - 00;23;46;26
DP
Are they happy? Is it full?
00;23;46;29 - 00;23;53;06
MW
I don't know if it's full, but it's very well occupied. I do know that there's 16 penthouses are all sold.
00;23;53;09 - 00;23;54;08
DP
Wow.
00;23;54;13 - 00;24;12;23
MW
The views are spectacular all around. So, I think maybe they wish they built more larger apartments because really when this was landing, I mean, seems like the trend started to go to larger apartments. With COVID and everything. A lot of one-bedrooms, but they're really nice sized one-bedrooms, you know.
00;24;13;00 - 00;24;13;26
DP
Yeah. The photographs are beautiful.
00;24;13;29 - 00;24;28;00
MW
Yeah. And the amenities are - we've had so many developers and other people touring the amenities on the eighth floor. There's 15,000 square feet of amenities up there and they're spectacular. And a couple of swimming pools.
00;24;28;03 - 00;24;28;25
DP
Oh, my gosh.
00;24;28;26 - 00;24;31;13
MW
On the roof. I think that's a real selling point.
00;24;31;15 - 00;24;39;12
DP
So, one last question before you go. Personal question, What's your favorite part of the job and what's your least favorite part of the job as an architect?
00;24;39;14 - 00;25;01;17
MW
Well, I like to solve problems with teams. I really like large projects because you get to work with large teams and it's just really fun. We have a lot of people that we have a lunchroom at, at MA and we have people that sit around and do the New York Times crossword puzzle together every day, and we just like solving problems together. So that's my favorite part.
00;25;01;24 - 00;25;05;05
DP
Yeah, that's great. You don't have to tell me what you don't like.
00;25;05;07 - 00;25;10;04
MW
What I don't like, I think would be obvious, which is the stress and the headaches. And, you know...
00;25;10;04 - 00;25;13;09
DP
Yes. I can only imagine on projects that are this big.
00;25;13;09 - 00;25;18;24
MW
Right. Running into things that you didn't expect in the field. Those are the things that I like the least.
00;25;18;24 - 00;25;23;10
DP
Yeah. My boss used to say, “it's always the thing you don't see coming that gets you.”
00;25;23;11 - 00;25;24;03
MW
That's right.
00;25;24;03 - 00;25;37;09
DP
It really is. It's not the stuff you worry about all the time. It's the one thing you just never saw coming. Well, Michelle Wagner, thank you very much for your time today. Where can people go to find out more about you and Morris Adjmi Architects?
00;25;37;12 - 00;25;40;14
MW
I’d suggest our website, which is ma.com
00;25;40;16 - 00;25;50;01
DP
All right. You got it. Well, super simple. And thank you very much. It's been great. Front and York’s gorgeous. Thank you very much.
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Design Vault Ep. 4 Morgan Parc with Gavri Slasky
ABOUT THE ARCHITECT:
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Mr. Slasky started his career at SBJGroup as the project manager for an eleven story, 311 unit residential building in Long Island. Since then, together with Mr. Stephen Jacobs, he has designed and managed over 3 million square feet of residential new construction projects throughout New York and developed an expertise in the Building Codes of New York City and New York State.
A major focus of Mr. Slasky’s work is in Transit Oriented Development, where he seeks to strengthen historic town centers in the greater New York region with mid and high-rise multifamily and mixed-use buildings adjacent to commuter train stations. Mr. Slasky has piloted these projects from conception to completion, testifying at local municipality Zoning Boards, producing documentation for Building Department approval, overseeing construction administration and working together with the general contractor and owner in achieving building occupancy. As a testament to their success, two of these projects received the Long Island Smart Growth Award.
In New York City, Mr. Slasky has designed and managed high-rise hotel projects, and performs peer reviews on many SBJGroup projects for compliance with Building and Energy Code.
Mr. Slasky received his Masters in Architecture from Princeton University and his B.A. from Columbia University, majoring in architecture. Prior to joining SBJGroup, Gavri worked at Kohn Pedersen Fox on supertowers in Korea, megablocks in China and urban planning for the Boston Seaport and New York City’s Hudson Yards. |
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ABOUT THE PROJECT:
The design of Morgan Parc is inspired by the best traditions of late-nineteenth and early-twentieth century mercantile buildings that were widespread throughout the northeast. Their major architectural features responded directly to the needs and functional requirements of the new industrial age and thus were a precursor to the modern movement which developed in subsequent decades. Their most distinguishing features included a repetitive, structural system that was often expressed on the exterior with brick piers that permitted the introduction of large windows that would maximize the amount of daylight required for the manufacturing process. Typically the exterior walls were built of brick, which at the time was the most utilitarian and economic material available. Very often the exuberance of the builders was expressed by intricate brick detailing that helped to humanize buildings that often have a scale to them. Morgan Parc is a U-shaped building opening up the site to Second Street. The building center is a courtyard and event space in the heart of Mineola. The building is composed of a central tower at the far side of the square, flanked by two symmetrical wings, gradually stepping down from Front Street to the more pedestrian Second Street.
The approach to the building is from Second Street through the paver drive in the courtyard. Arriving at the corrugated glass and steel porte cochere, one enters the double heighted residential lobby at the center of the building. The tall first floor is occupied by retail tenants that fronts onto the arcaded courtyard and retail valet parking. The parking garage entrance and exit are on Front Street.
The masonry facades draw upon turn-of-the-century mill buildings whose architecture is expressed in their strong deep structural piers and intricate brick detailing. The building façade is composed of deep articulated masonry piers that extend the full height of the building, opening up at the ground floor to create a retail arcade that wraps the courtyard. Large industrial size window units span between the deep piers, flooding the apartments with natural light. The building is capped by glass-enclosed rooftop amenity spaces, an outdoor pool and terracing roofs overlooking Long Island’s expansive landscape below. The cascading roofs will also offer a landscaped public area for the residents, as well as private terraces adjacent to the apartments. The building’s three cellars contain parking for the building’s residents as well as attended parking for the retail valet.

Morgan Parc
Gavri Slasky, SBJ Group
See MoreTRANSCRIPT
00;00;00;00 - 00;00;05;19
Doug Patt (DP)
Let's go inside the vault. The design vault.
00;00;05;21 - 00;00;28;06
Gavri Slasky (GS)
We were given the site. Needed to build as many units as we could, but to keep the center open and accessible to the public. This courtyard, this Village Green, was intended to be used by the Village for tree lighting ceremonies or other public events. The idea was to try to incorporate the public into the building as much as possible.
00;00;28;14 - 00;02;31;27
DP
This is my guest, Gavri Slasky. I'll share more about him shortly. In this episode from the Design Vault will highlight Gavri’s project Morgan Parc. The Morgan Parc Project is comprised of 267 residential units situated above retail space. The nine story building is composed of a central tower at the far side of the square, flanked by two symmetrical wings, the masonry facades draw upon turn of the century mill buildings whose architecture is expressed in their strong, deep structural piers and intricate brick details.
The building facade is composed of masonry piers that extend the full height of the building, opening up a ground floor to create a retail arcade that wraps a courtyard. Large industrial sized window units span between the deep piers. The building is capped by glass, enclosed rooftop amenity spaces, an outdoor pool and terracing roofs, which overlook Long Island.
Hi, I'm Doug Pat and this is Design Vault.
Today we're talking to Gavri Slasky, AIA, LEED AP. Gavri received his master’s in architecture from Princeton University and his B.A. from Columbia University in Architecture. Gavri started his career at Stephen B. Jacobs Group as the project manager for an 11 story 311-unit residential building in Long Island. Since then, together with Mr. Stephen Jacobs, he has designed and managed over 3 million square feet of residential new construction throughout New York and developed an expertise in building codes of the city and state.
Gavri specializes in piloting projects from conception to completion, testifying at local zoning boards, producing documentation for building department approval, overseeing construction administration and working together with the general contractor and owner in achieving building occupancy. Today, we're going to talk to Gavri about SBJ's Morgan Parc project. So welcome, Gavri.
00;02;32;00 - 00;02;34;00
GS
Thank you, Doug. Good to see you.
00;02;34;02 - 00;02;47;26
DP
And it's great to see you. It's nice to have you with us today. So, before we get started, tell us a little bit about Stephen B. Jacobs Group. Where are they located in New York? What's the size of the firm? And what type of work too they do?
00;02;47;28 - 00;03;38;20
GS
So, we are a mid-sized firm, about 30 architects and interior designers in Manhattan, where we're on Park Avenue South and 27th Street. So just north of the side iron building there. Our firm has been around for quite a long time. The founder of the firm, Stephen Jacobs, created the firm in 1967. So, it's been over 50 years. And the amount of work that he's done in New York is uncountable. So, over this time, you go to any street in New York and there's a building by SBJ Group.
For the most part, we specialize in multifamily housing. We've done quite a number of hotels and we've diversified recently into school buildings, commercial buildings, and we do quite a range of work.
00;03;38;23 - 00;03;46;15
DP
That's pretty impressive walking around New York City. Do you ever count on how many buildings they've done? Is it like a hundred? Like 200?
00;03;46;17 - 00;03;49;09
GS
No, there's definitely thousands, for sure.
00;03;49;10 - 00;03;50;04
DP
Oh, my goodness.
00;03;50;11 - 00;04;05;00
GS
We have this old Sanborn book, and every time that we got a project, I remember one of the former principals of the firm, Herb Weber, would just shade the lot in and so he would be able to flip through and keep track of it that way.
00;04;05;06 - 00;04;30;07
DP
Those Sanborn maps are pretty incredible. When I was at Penn State. My thesis was Housing for the Homeless in Times Square, if you can believe it. But I sent away for the specific Sanborn maps for that location, and I believe they were used by firemen. Yeah, they had to have been 75, 80 years old. They were updating at one point. I don't even know what they do today. Can you even get Sanborn maps?
00;04;30;14 - 00;04;48;05
GS
You can. Now, everything is digitally available. You have digital tax maps. They're super precise and updated. You can rewind history and go back to see what this looked like a decade ago or a hundred years ago and see how the site has evolved. Just a fun site analysis.
00;04;48;07 - 00;05;11;22
DP
Yeah. The maps have a footprint of the building at that particular location at the particular time, and then they have the heights of the buildings of various heights as you move around the building so you can literally build a model from them. So, tell us a little bit about yourself. So, this interview's pretty unique because you're in Israel and we oddly enough, know one another. Why don't you tell us a little bit about that?
00;05;11;25 - 00;05;15;22
GS
Yeah. It's great to see you. It's been almost 20 years.
00;05;15;23 - 00;05;17;15
DP
Oh, my goodness gracious.
00;05;17;17 - 00;05;35;14
GS
That's hard to say. The summer of 2004, I had just graduated Columbia. My teacher, Joeb Moore, offered me a summer internship at his firm in Greenwich. My seat was actually right next to your seat. I was wondering if you would remember me. It's been a long time.
00;05;35;16 - 00;05;45;20
DP
I do. I was like Gavry Slasky. Yes! I remember the name! It was a long time ago.
00;05;45;24 - 00;05;49;10
GS
It was. And to be fair, I was only there for a summer.
00;05;49;11 - 00;06;04;04
DP
So yeah. I joined Joeb in 1999, I believe, and I worked with him for about 20 years, 15 of those as a consultant. So, it was a great experience. He's an amazing architect, one of the most talented men I've ever met in my life.
00;06;04;07 - 00;06;09;26
GS
He's an amazing architect and such a kind person. Does such beautiful work.
00;06;09;28 - 00;06;21;15
DP
He does. If you're interested, Joeb Moore, joebmoore.com. Check it out. So how long have you been with Stephen B Jacobs group? Tell us more about your role in the Office.
00;06;21;17 - 00;06;22;13
GS
So I've been.
00;06;22;13 - 00;08;06;24
GS
At group for about a decade, and the first project I worked on, which he mentioned actually was in Mineola. It's not this Morgan Parc project. It was sort of the predecessor to this. We were working on a 300 plus unit apartment building, around the corner from this Morgan Parc project, called One Third Avenue, and that was my first project working with Stephen, and with this same client, Kevin Lalezarian.
That was a new experience for me. I had previously worked on single family homes. I worked for a year at KPF, so that was completely different, working on Super Towers in Asia. This was New York. This was something that was extremely practical. It's going to get built. It was going to get built, and fast. And the people in the office, they knew what they were doing. They done that type of work for a long time. So, it was quite a learning curve for me. That was a great project.
And during construction of that project, One Third Avenue, the client decided to go ahead with the second project around the corner from that. He had faith that he wouldn't be competing with himself. He'd be able to fill up all of his units.
We started designing Morgan Parc. That was such a rewarding project for me because I was on that from day zero, going with the client and Stephen to the Planning Board meetings and really seeing how a project starts from its conception, being in every single meeting, hearing how the building gets massed out, all the different considerations of it through the years of approvals and construction. And it opened about three years ago, during the pandemic, actually.
00;08;06;26 - 00;08;39;17
DP
So, let's talk a little bit about the building. Just as an aside, so I met Isaac Daniel Astrachan a couple of weeks back. He also works for SBJ. I was a host for a panel discussion here at the Brickworks Design Studio on 5th Avenue, and Isaac was on the panel talking about the Morgan Parc project. So, I know a little bit about it, but let's get into the details. So, you just explained how your office got the project. Your client wanted to do another building with you guys. Had SBJ worked with those clients for a number of years, even before the project you came in on?
00;08;39;20 - 00;09;13;28
GS
Yes. The Lalezarians are a family of real estate developers and property owners, second generation and repeat clients for us, as are many of our clients. That's what they do. They build buildings, they hold on to the buildings, they manage them, and we try to give them the best service that we can, be as efficient as possible and make the most beautiful building that we can with the budget. And they come back to us. That is basically the goal. So, most of our clients are repeat clients like that.
00;09;14;00 - 00;09;36;04
DP
Well, it's really impressive. It's the most important thing for an architect, right, to get word of mouth business. You're not marketing your company all the time. You've got a steady stream of people that are coming back to you after they get to work with you, you know, the first time. So that's wonderful to hear. So, tell us a little bit about the history of the location of Morgan Parc and what impact that might have had on the design.
00;09;36;08 - 00;10;24;05
GS
So, Morgan Parc is on a piece of property right in the center of Mineola, which is the seat of Nassau County. The property is right across the street from the train station, so it is uniquely located for a transit-oriented development. It is right in the center of their downtown.
Prior to our client owning the property, all that existed on that property was a single Citibank building and a sea of parking. Actually, during the construction of One Third Avenue that I mentioned before, our client, when he purchased the Morgan Parc property, moved the Citibank tenants into One Third Avenue building and making way for this second development.
00;10;24;08 - 00;10;25;12
DP
That's really interesting.
00;10;25;15 - 00;11;00;26
GS
It's located at the heart of their downtown right next to the train station. NYU Langone is right across the street there as well. So, it's a busy area. And on Mineola’s master plan from a few decades ago, this site was labeled as the village green. It was their sort of center, their downtown. But that was a sort of future hope that somebody would make that a reality. Village Green was actually a working name of our project until marketing came along and made it into Morgan Parc. But that was always in the forefront of the design.
00;11;00;28 - 00;11;05;24
DP
So, that's a good segway. So, tell us a little bit about the programmatic requirements from the client.
00;11;05;27 - 00;12;00;08
GS
We were given the site. Needed to build as many units as we could, but to keep the center open and accessible to the public. This courtyard, this Village Green, was intended to be used by the Village for tree lighting ceremonies or other public events. The idea was to try to incorporate the public into the building as much as possible – or when I say the building, the site. It's a large square shaped property. While it was a parking lot for Citibank, people would use it as a cut through, as a shortcut to get to the train station. And so that also became part of the program. The client wanted to maintain access, crisscrossing through the site so people can still get to the train station without having to walk all the way around the block. So, we created these openings between the different wings of the building so people can get from one side to the other.
00;12;00;11 - 00;12;02;21
DP
Describe the building plan to us then.
00;12;02;24 - 00;12;44;18
GS
It's a U-shaped building which has its tallest portion on the tracks, which is that front street. So it’s the back of the building. So that's a nine story structure at that point. It has the two wings of the “U” that gradually step down to six stories at Second Street, which is the downtown street.
The scale of the building respectfully interacts with the existing context there. The larger buildings that I mentioned at NYU and some other buildings are situated at the train tracks in that zone. And then the historic downtown is lower scale, three- or four-story buildings.
00;12;44;20 - 00;12;47;29
DP
So, you're a little bit of an expert on zoning codes.
00;12;48;01 - 00;12;50;29
GS
I've had my share of reading-
00;12;51;01 - 00;13;04;22
DP
Right! So, it sounds to me like a project like this, you really got pretty good at what's going on with the city – what the requirements are. So, tell us a little bit about the project restrictions for this particular job, maybe a little bit about the zoning codes.
00;13;04;25 - 00;13;39;19
GS
They don't quite have a zone sort of set up for this. So, what we had to do is go in and propose what it is that we wanted to build there – look around at other developments in that area and see what would be appropriate and then open that up to discussion to the public. And that project was in front of the planning board maybe four times. These meetings, which started about 7 p.m. or so, they would go till 11 p.m. they would have standing room only of people giving comments pro and against.
00;13;39;25 - 00;13;47;25
DP
Their local people come to the meeting, and they want to say what they think of the architecture. So, this is like an architectural review board, right?
00;13;47;29 - 00;15;02;11
GS
Sorta. You know, it's interesting because the comments were less about the architecture, more about planning, traffic, and heights of buildings and schoolchildren. So those were the major concerns that they had, but it was the democratic process. So, watching it play out, seeing everybody given the opportunity to have a voice, and through that process, the building changed as well. In reaction to that, the building got smaller.
And we were given the opportunity also to present the benefits of the building and what the building would be offering the city, because as we were designing this, this wasn't a building that we were designing in isolation from far away and imposing it onto the local town, but rather with the village of Mineola in mind constantly. And so, so much of the building was being built and designed not just for the residents but for the people of the town. And I used to go out there during construction every week or two and go to the coffee shop across the street and really got to see this downtown come together where there used to be, essentially, a hole in the middle of it with this enormous parking lot. The building has so many different facets to it, but the public side of it was really rewarding.
00;15;02;13 - 00;15;10;09
DP
Well, again, a good segway. Why don't you talk a little bit about the style choice and how it reflects or relates to the buildings that are around and in the neighborhood?
00;15;10;12 - 00;16;11;05
GS
So, when Stephen conceived of the design of this building, he was thinking of historic mill buildings, turn of the century factory buildings that were made of brick, that had large openings, had repeated structural piers. They were built in an efficient way, allowing for large openings to light up the factories where the work would be taking place in. And they were often clad in brick by masons who were extremely talented. And it's hard to find people of that talent today, but that was their craft.
So that was in the back of Stephen's head and a lot of the work that he did in the early period of his career in the late sixties, early seventies was adaptive reuse. He had taken these types of buildings and turned them into lofts, but at this point he was creating this new building that based off of its old historic model.
00;16;11;08 - 00;16;28;14
DP
So, when the clients came to you guys and you talked a little bit about aesthetics, did they give you any historical precedents or did they say, hey, this building has got to match the aesthetic of what's around it? And then maybe talk a little bit about your use of brick and why you guys chose that particular brick and that color.
00;16;28;17 - 00;17;47;13
GS
I had mentioned that these were repeat clients, so we knew them very well. We knew their tastes. We knew their preferences. They came to us, and they said that they wanted a timeless building, a building that wasn't a fad that would be dated in a decade or so. They wanted something timeless. They don't build buildings and then sell them. They build them, and then they keep them and maintain them as part of their portfolio. So, they were looking to create something for the long run.
So, I think at that point, Stephen started to think about these historic buildings that are so beautiful that they become historic landmarks and get adapted for one use, changing to another, use. I brought people to see this building after it was completed and they asked me, what was this building before? It's funny to think that this is a brand-new building, but I thought that that was actually quite a compliment. We are trying to emulate historic buildings. We never thought that we would be able to fool people that this was historic. That wasn't the intent, but it just fits. And when the client asked for timeless, I feel like that type of reaction from people that visit the building didn't know the site before. I feel like that accomplished the goal that the client was looking for.
00;17;47;20 - 00;18;28;19
DP
Yeah, Issac said the same thing when he was here that people had asked how long the building had been there, you know, after the building had been constructed. So interestingly, when you go to school, when you go to architecture school, one of the first things I learned was that the architect is striving for timelessness in their work, right?
Not all architects choose to do that, but at Penn State they talked about that a lot. I found it pretty interesting. I like to ask people that come in whether or not brick solved any design challenges or design problems for you guys. And clearly it did in this aesthetic realm. But can you think of any other way that you were able to use Masonry and it solved some design challenges?
00;18;28;22 - 00;19;51;00
GS
There's a lot of different facets of this building, but I think the brick is one of the key factors that brought this whole building together. It's a large building. There could have been other approaches to take using different materials to break up the mass, and you see that quite a lot around the suburbs. What Stephen wanted to do was to embrace that this was a large building and take one material, being brick, and use it as many ways as possible and unify the building, make one unified building out of it.
We worked on a few details. We worked on them and reworked them and got feedback from masons, reworked them again. We created a couple of unique shaped bricks. We were playing with all sorts of articulation, ins and outs and we ended up with a detail for the pier and detail for the cornice, a detail for a second-floor band – it was really about three or four typical details that we worked out. And then repeated it in a rhythm and executed it. And it was wonderful working with the masons on site as well, because as architects we can draw what we want, but at the end of the day it's all about the execution of the craftsperson. We were fortunate to have a great mason on the project.
00;19;51;07 - 00;19;55;05
DP
So, did you guys build actual physical mock ups that were out there?
00;19;55;07 - 00;20;18;10
GS
Yes, we did. We built a couple of mockups and made a couple of adjustments during that period. And then they started and they were able to start low down on the building, did a few portions, and then once they got those couple of details down, they're able to run with it. And it was a long process and a lot of brick, and the client had faith in it. I was very fortunate about that and it came out great.
00;20;18;12 - 00;20;38;12
DP
So, two quick questions about how long everything took. I'd like to think about how large is the set of drawings when you're going to build a building like Morgan Parc? Did you guys draw the thing in 2D and 3D? And how long did this whole process take? Through Planning, city review, design, and then construction.
00;20;38;14 - 00;21;42;03
GS
Great question. The way that we work, we work in 3D and 2D. At the same time, we usually model the building in Revit. We’ll work out the massing, the elevations, study different details in three dimensions and color, testing out different color combinations. We had gone back and forth on whether the windowsills should be metal or cast stone or brick. And we tested out these options in three dimensions and 3D models.
The working drawings at the end of the day were all done two dimension CAD, and they were, you know, as precise as we could get. It's actually interesting. The building is a U-shaped plan, but it's two Ls that are joined at the center to make this U-shaped. So, the building is actually mirrored down that center. So, we were able to draw it, one L, and mirror it. That was part of my struggle over the years, was to try to keep it as symmetrical as possible so that we can keep on using that for efficiency.
00;21;42;06 - 00;21;45;16
DP
That's pretty cool. So, you really only had to draw half the building, right?
00;21;45;19 - 00;21;47;11
GS
For the most part.
00;21;47;13 - 00;22;13;14
DP
I'm sure there's way more that goes into it, but when you first say that, you say, Oh wow, that's pretty cool. So, the thing is simply mirrored. I'm sure there's a lot of differentiation that goes from one L to the other, but it's pretty interesting.
So, what's, kind of, top of mind for a lot of people today is sustainability. Did you guys talk about that at all in terms of using masonry, or was that a request that the client had that you guys had to keep in mind?
00;22;13;19 - 00;24;17;16
GS
Sustainability is something that's viewed in every project that we do in one sense or another. Brick buildings allowed for a cavity wall and continuous insulation on the exterior of the backup wall. And so, it allows for a beautiful finish, but a very sustainable envelope. And the amount of insulation that you put in that cavity wall is really dependent on how large of a relieving angle you can get for the brick because the more insulation you have, the further the brick has to be on the backup wall. That's sort of the only limitation.
00;22;52;09 - 00;22;54;03
DP
And what did you guys end up doing?
00;22;54;04 - 00;24;17;16
GS
Yeah, it's been a couple of years. I don't remember exactly. We put as much as we could. We put insulation on the inside as well.
This is not exactly related to brick, but one of the most interesting, sustainable anecdotes from this building that I remember is in the excavation of the building. Long Island is built on sand primarily, and it's a great site for foundations to build shallow foundations. The sand takes the load, but another advantage of it was the contractor who excavated out the sand, and I don't know how many hundreds or thousands of truckloads of sand have to go out of this building – I didn't even mention that the building has three cellars for parking – so they went down 30, 40 feet into the ground for the entire site. So maybe a million and a half cubic feet.
The contractor who was excavating that, taking that sand away, sold that sand to a construction company for concrete. So concrete is a very carbon heavy building material. But what I like to think about was that the sand in the foundations in the site for this building, actually went back into the building process. I'm sure it didn't go to our building. It probably went to someone else's, but it wasn't just shipped off to someplace and dumped somewhere.
00;24;17;24 - 00;24;39;16
DP
We always have interesting experiences, right? So, was there anything as you went through this process of building Morgan Parc, designing it and ultimately going through the various stages with the town, with the city, then getting the thing built? Was her anything that you or your team learned that was really interesting for you? It was kind of a first.
00;24;39;19 - 00;25;48;27
GS
There's so many firsts. Every building process is a learning experience. There's this one lesson learned that was interesting. It was during the brick installation, actually. I noticed that there was this one detail at the corner of the building that wasn’t correct, and I was wondering how could they make that mistake?
It doesn't have the usual frame around it. The brick checker pattern just died into the side and I looked at our drawings and then I realized that the elevation was taken with a pier, hiding a portion of the elevation behind it. And so, it looked like that was the end of the building, but it actually continued another foot or so. And the mason was looking at the elevation and they didn't see that.
So, they just continued the same pattern until the end that maybe they thought there was a dimensional mistake or something. So, every week I would go to them and say, are you going to fix that detail? And he was like, at the end. And I was thinking to myself, oh, you better fix that at the end before Stephen comes to take a look at that. But he did. And that was an interesting lesson learned – to make sure that every elevation is drawn, nothing is being hidden by any portion of the building in and of itself.
00;25;49;00 - 00;26;36;13
DP
Well, I think about that a lot, I go out on to the job site and I see something and it's not exactly the way I had drawn it. And sometimes you're just not paying attention, sometimes I didn't cover it well enough in the drawings and unless you're out there on a weekly basis, these things just completely get away from you.
So, one last question before you go. This is very interesting to me. So, you're an expert on zoning and building codes. So, this is an incredibly valuable asset for any office. I would imagine at some point you could probably become an attorney with all the knowledge that you have. Was that something that you always gravitated toward that side of the business over time, or is that just you were kind of thrown into it? It was interesting to you. You were good at it, and that's how it evolved.
00;26;36;16 - 00;28;25;23
GS
It's funny, it's not the part of architecture that people are usually interested in, and it definitely wasn't so in the beginning for me. But the more I read through these things, the zoning – New York City, or every different town has their own zoning ordinances - there are so many nuances there, and these words that are written down there were written very carefully, and they create what you're building is going to be. And so, careful reading through these documents are critical, whether it's zoning or building code. And I came to really enjoy creating it. And it is probably the dorkiest thing, but I enjoy it and I enjoy getting emails or calls from colleagues saying, “Gavri, can you check what are we allowed to do here?” I love being able to look it up and learn. Each time I look at it, I learn more and then the codes change from 2008 to 2014, New York City now 2022, and New York State has their own codes. And then to compare in New York City versus New York State and to see what's allowed in one versus the other. They don't tell you why in these things, they just tell you what's allowed or what's not allowed.
You try to think about what is a consideration, what's the difference between New York and New York City in New York State. So, New York State has larger sites. So, their stair cores are allowed to be further away from the center. They try to direct people to have their egress stairs at the edges of the building. The dead end distances are shorter than they are in New York City. In New York City, they allow you to have scissor stairs in residential buildings because you have a small footprint and you don't really have much of a choice. These rules, they end up shaping the plan. They end up shaping every aspect of the building.
00;28;26;00 - 00;28;39;28
DP
Well, Gavri, I can tell you really love this stuff. And I'm sure Stephen B. Jacobs Group is very happy to have you. So, thank you very much for spending some time with us today. Where can people go to learn more about SBJ architects?
00;28;40;01 - 00;28;49;00
GS
Yeah, you can go to our website sbjgroup.com.
We are on 27th and Park Avenue South. Looking forward to hearing from everybody.
00;28;49;07 - 00;28;51;08
DP
It's a small world, man. It’s great to see you.
00;28;51;10 - 00;28;53;12
GS
It's great to see you, Doug. Thank you so much.
00;28;53;18 - 00;29;21;00
DP
Thanks, Gavri.
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