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Brick Industry Association Announces Winners
of the 2005 Brick in Architecture Awards
Projects highlight clay brick's
performance benefits, aesthetic appeal
and ease-of-use in different applications. RESTON, Va., (October
20, 2005)
The Brick Industry Association (BIA) today announced the
recipients of its 2005 Brick in Architecture Awards,
which honor innovative use of clay brick in four
categories: commercial, institutional, residential
multi-family and "special feature" applications. Five
renowned architects from around the country
independently reviewed and scored each entry, and this
year the competition was conducted online for the
first time.
Winning projects will be recognized nationally through
publication in a special issue of Brick In
Architecture, which will be included as an insert
in the December issue of Architectural Record.
Winners will receive a Brick In Architecture Awards
plaque commemorating their participation in the 2005
awards program, and their work will be featured in the
Brick Gallery on www.gobrick.com.
"The
rich quality of responses made it difficult for the
judges to pick winners in each category," said Dick
Jennison, President & CEO of BIA. "In the end, eight
projects were chosen as the best in their field
because the jury believed they best demonstrated clay
brick's performance benefits, aesthetic appeal, and
versatility."
2005
Brick
In Architecture Award Winners:
Commercial Category:
Project: RadioShack Riverfront Campus, Fort Worth,
Texas
Architect:
HKS, Inc.
The
RadioShack Riverfront Campus, which replaced two
high-rise buildings, was developed based on the
company's desire to be responsive to its business
requirements, its employees' needs, and, especially,
the Fort Worth community. Serving as the corporate
headquarters, the Riverfront Campus is at the center
of the proposed Trinity River Project master plan
expected to invigorate the downtown Fort Worth area.
-- MORE --
Project: Riverfront Parking Deck, Wilmington Delaware
Architect:
Tevebaugh Associates.
The
Riverfront Parking Deck was conceived as a unique
design that would blend into the historic character of
Wilmington's Train Station District. The design team
was charged to create a structure that a) maintained a
low profile while allowing the 1.5 million Amtrak
passengers per year to enjoy the river view from the
train and elevated track platforms, and, b) create a
visual, architectural link between the existing
historic buildings - the Wilmington Station (now
Amtrak), built in 1907, and the picturesque Baltimore
& Ohio passenger station, built in 1888.
Institutional Category:
Project: Cornell University's Alice H. Cook House,
Ithaca, New York.
Architect:
Kieran Timberlake Associates LLP
The West
Campus Residential Initiative (WCRI), which includes
Alice H. Cook House, was developed to provide housing
for 1,250 undergraduate students in five college
houses. The design team understood that architectural
compatibility with the existing residential buildings
was of utmost importance to the University. Since
stone in the quality and color to match the existing
Collegiate Gothic residence halls was unavailable, the
design team chose a specific type of brick that
matched the Gothic stone in scale and pattern of the
units, texture, and the ranges of value and hue.
Project: Life Sciences Centre, Vancouver, British
Columbia Canada
Architect:
Diamond and Schmitt Architects, Inc.
The
University of British Columbia (UBC) Life Sciences
Centre is a 565,000 square foot research-academic
building, which complements and augments an existing
medical complex on the campus. Home to the UBC Medical
School, the Centre houses anatomy teaching labs,
faculty offices, two large auditoria and two sky lit
atria. Two of the mandates for the design team were to
ensure that the building would be sustainable and
would provide the owner high performance with a long
service life.
Residential Multi-Family Category:
Project: Kentucky Courts, Washington, D.C.
Architect: Sorg and
Associates, PC
The mandate for Kentucky
Courts' design team was to create a mixed-income
housing complex which reinvigorated a neighborhood
plagued by crime while respecting the existing
architectural vernacular of its setting's traditional
Victorian homes, historic buildings, and national
landmarks. The design is transformative, encouraging
individual, family-oriented housing that welcomes
community interaction.
Project: The Garlands at Barrington, Barrington,
Illinois
Architect:
Torti Gallas and Partners, Inc.
The design of the
Garlands at Barrington was influenced by Northern
European architecture, especially the French
Provincial and English Manor House styles. This
design style was integrated with the mission to create
a mixed-use "village within a village, serving as a
campus open to the surrounding community rather than a
simple gated enclave of senior housing. The forms and
details of the architecture were based on traditional
precedents and combined with brick to create the
traditional village character.
MORE --
Special Feature Category:
Project: >Hotel Valencia, San
Antonio, Texas
Architect:
3D/International Architects
The lounge is the center of Hotel Valencia's
public spaces. Designing the lounge needed special
consideration as it is aligned in between several
structural columns and an emergency stair. The mandate
for the design team was to utilize natural materials
such as wood, concrete and brick to express a familiar
material in an entirely different way.
Project:
Buffer Ruled Wall,
Tampa, Florida
Architect:
MGA Group Architects,
Inc.
The Screen/Buffer Ruled
Wall was designed to create a beautiful piece of
sculpture and to screen the owner's yard from the
street. Using Eladio Dieste's building system as
inspiration, which includes brick and steel
reinforcing, the design team succeeded in creating a
functional work of art. Brick, used for the screen,
not only fulfilled the structural requirement, but
also allowed the design team to emphasize the
modulating waves.
A
common theme among the winning projects was the need
to utilize environmental-friendly materials to create
durable and sustainable structures. Brickworks'
inherent durability and sustainability not only made
it the leading material choice but it also enabled
most of the winning projects to receive or register
for LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental
Design) Certification, a voluntary, consensus-based
national standard for developing high-performance,
sustainable buildings.
About the Brick
Industry Association:
The
Brick Industry Association (BIA) is the national trade
association representing distributors and
manufacturers of clay brick and suppliers of related
products and services. The Association is involved in
a broad range of technical, research, marketing,
government relations and communications activities. It
is the recognized national authority on residential
and commercial uses of brick.
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The
Brick Industry Association (BIA), Reston,
Va.,
is a non-profit trade association representing the
manufacturers, distributors and suppliers of clay
brick. BIA's
40 manufacturers operate nearly 150 plants that
produce more than 85 percent of the brick shipped in
the U.S. and Canada. BIA also represents 149 U.S.
brick distributors.
Web
site:
www.gobrick.com.
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