|
Subscribe / Renew |
|
|
Contact Us |
|
| ► Subscribe to our Free Weekly Newsletter | |
| home | Welcome, sign in or click here to subscribe. | login |
September 27, 2000
A seminar about design/build and other alternative contracting methods will be held on Tuesday, Oct. 10. The event will be held at the Best Western Bellevue Inn from 8 a.m. to noon.
Keynote speaker Ron Leaders, a principal with the law firm Buckley & Leaders, will talk about the advantages and disadvantages of design/build. Methods of incorporating portions of successful design/build techniques with traditional design/bid/build contracting will be discussed and evaluated in a group setting. Registration is $95, which includes a continental breakfast and course materials. Enrollment must be made by Tuesday, Oct. 3. For more information, call the event sponsor, the Consulting Engineers Council of Washington, at (206) 623-5936.
A/E firms and the Internet Oct. 12
"Expanding your practice with the Internet," a one-day seminar led by architect and author Jonathan Cohen, will be held at Seattle University on Thursday, Oct. 12.
The seminar is aimed at design firm principals, planners, building owners and service providers to the architecture/engineering/construction industry. Cohen has written a new book, "Communication and Design with the Internet: A Guide for Architects, Planners and Building Professionals," which can be previewed online at http://www.communication-design.net. The registration fee of $299 includes a copy of the book.
Topics to be covered in the seminar include:
• Designing and managing Web sites
• Using graphics, CAD, GIS, 3-D modeling and multimedia
• Communicating with clients, partners, regulatory agencies and the public
• Managing project workflow with intranets and extranets
• Using the Web as a participatory space for planning and design
• Networked design organizations and the project information manager
• E-Commerce in the building industry
For more information, go to the Web site: http://www.communication-design.net/seminars.html. Register by calling (888) 861-6084.
New licensing board members named
Gov. Gary Locke has appointed Ying Fay Chan to the Board of Registration for Professional Engineers and Land Surveyors. Chan is the founder and principal-in-charge of CES, a consulting firm in Olympia. His term ends on July 9, 2005.
The governor appointed Charles Warsinke to the Board of Registration for Landscape Architects. Warsinke is a registered landscape architect with more than 28 years of experience in design and planning, and is a principal with Susan Black and Associates, a Seattle firm. His term ends on Sept. 5, 2005.
These professional boards examine candidates for license or registration and investigate and hold hearings on violations of regulatory law, as well as recommend adoption of rules for administering the law.
Latest projects at Jensen/Fey
Jensen/Fey Architecture and Planning was recently awarded design for the expansion of the Ronald McDonald House in Seattle.
Located at 5140 40th Ave N.E., the new facility will provide 62 new units to meet the housing needs of children with cancer and other life-threatening illnesses. Ten of the units will be designed for patients undergoing marrow transplant procedures.
Other projects in progress at Jensen/Fey include: the 91-unit Education Hills Townhomes and a 5,000-square-foot network operations center both located in Redmond, and the design of a 11,000-square-foot single-family home on Lake Sammamish.
The firm is also working on two projects in Seattle's Denny Triangle: a 32-floor, mixed-use high rise at Eighth Avenue and Olive Way currently in design, and The SpringHill Suites by Marriott, a 234-room hotel now under construction.
A 21-person architecture, planning and interior design firm, Seattle-based Jensen/Fey is in its fifth year of business.
GeoEngineers opens Boise office
Redmond-based GeoEngineers recently opened its ninth office. Located in Boise, Idaho, the new office adds another state to the firm's geographic service area, which includes Alaska, California, Oregon and Washington.
The firm had long-standing ties with a local engineer -- a relationship that proved to be the right mix of technical skills, local knowledge and experience in Idaho. That individual, Dave O'Day, was brought on board immediately as the firm's principal-in-charge of the Boise operation. O'Day's experience includes 30 years on technical projects throughout the western United States, the last 20 years of which have been in Idaho.
To support the Boise office, the firm has transferred Doug Argo from Bellingham. The new office is working on erosion protection, retaining structures, wastewater facilities and geotechnical and geologic studies related to residential neighborhoods and new developments.
Callison principal named to NAIOP forum
The National Association of Industrial and Office Properties (NAIOP) has named J. Mark Ludtka, a principal of Callison Architecture, to its national forum. NAIOP is a trade association made up of over 8,000 developers, owners, investors and related professionals. The national forums help members through networking and educational programs.
ASCE names civil engineering landmark
Volunteers for Outdoor Washington in Partnership and the U.S. Forest Service are dedicating a new trailhead in Wellington at 1 p.m. on Saturday, Sept. 30.
The historic significance of the Iron Goat trail was first recognized in 1993 when the American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE) designated the Stevens Pass area as a National Historic Civil Engineering Landmark.
The Stevens Pass area has posed fascinating and unique challenges to civil engineers and builders since 1892 when eight switchbacks were carved out of the mountain to create the first crossing. The First Cascade Tunnel was opened in 1900, eliminating the need to negotiate sharp corners and dangerous switchbacks. For the past century, the main line of the Burlington Northern Railroad passing through Stevens Pass has been and continues to be an essential Northwest transportation link.
The ASCE National Historic Civil Engineering Landmark process recognizes historically significant national civil engineering projects. Nominated projects have to be at least 50 years old. The program is designed to increase public appreciation of civil engineering.
New marketing association formed
A new organization has been formed for Spokane-area marketing directors and business development specialists in the architecture, engineering and construction industry.
Marketing Associates of Spokane (MAS) is seeking to expand its membership base and is inviting design professionals to take advantage of its training and continuing education opportunities. For more information, contact MAS president Jennifer Rappe at (509) 328-2994., e-mail rappe@spokane.coffman.com or vice president Marty Orchard at (509) 838-8681, e-mail morchard@integrus.net.
Chicago tries to save historic bungalows
Mayor Richard Daley of Chicago last week announced a plan to help preserve the city's historic bungalows. Under the program, anyone who wants to purchase or rehabilitate a city-designated historic bungalow can obtain a loan that only requires a 3 percent down payment, with no origination, appraisal or application fees.
"For many Chicagoans, a bungalow was the first house -- and the only -- house they ever owned. For those of us who were raised in them, bungalows will always occupy a special place in our hearts," said Daley at a news conference.
Anyone who rehabilitates a historic bungalow will be eligible for up to $3,000 in energy conservation grants, free architectural assistance and expedited services from the city's building and zoning departments.
The city defines a historic bungalow as a single-family, 1 1/2-story, rectangular brick residence with a low-pitched , overhanging roof, full basement and generous windows. They generally have a brick face with stone trim and were built between 1910 and 1940. There are about 80,000 such homes in Chicago.
Houston corrosion firm sold to Scottish buyer
Houston-based InterCorr International, a corrosion testing, research and technical services firm, has been sold for an undisclosed sum to Integriti Solutions, a major U.K.-based supplier of corrosion management software and equipment. The combined revenue of the two privately owned companies is more than $5 million.
Established in 1987 as Diagnostics and Measuring Services, Integriti Solutions bases its business on what was then a new method of corrosion measurement developed at the University of Manchester Institute of Science & Technology, the patents for which are held by Integriti and an online evaluation software system called Mentor.
InterCorr was established in Houston in 1982 to provide contract technical services for corrosion testing and research, materials evaluation, qualification, consulting and failure analysis to industries experiencing problems with corrosion.
The companies operate in the same vertical sectors, notably oil and gas production; refining; chemicals; pipelines; gas plants; power generation; pulp and paper; and petrochemicals.
The combined companies will employ 70 people and have offices in Houston, Calgary, London, Aberdeen and Dingwall, Scotland.
Survey critiques design/build
A new survey from management consulting and publishing firm Zweig White & Associates concludes there is no evidence that design/build will ever become the project delivery method of choice in the design and construction industries.
"Firms need to realize that design/build hasn't turned into the panacea it was believed it would become for the design and construction industries. It has its place in the industry, but we can all stop waiting for the time when every job will be completed using design/build, because it's not coming," said Mark Zweig, president and CEO of the firm.
In the 1997 edition of the survey, firms projected a median 80 percent increase in the percentage of gross revenue they would derive from design/build projects in the following three years. The 2000 edition of the survey, however, reported that firms anticipate a more moderate 25 percent increase in the percentage of gross revenue to be derived from design/build work in the next three years.
The survey said that sluggish expansion into public-sector work has been one obstacle to the industry's acceptance design/build. Many firms consider public-sector work the key to the future growth of design/build, but laws banning public projects from being performed using design/build still abound on the federal, state and municipal levels. The higher level of risk involved with design/build is another factor cited for reluctance to embrace this new contracting approach.
The 2000 Design/Build Survey is available from the publisher for $345, plus $4 shipping and handling. To order, contact Zweig White & Associates, P.O. Box 8325, One Apple Hill Drive, Natick, MA 01760, telephone (508) 651-1559, fax (508) 653-6522, or e-mail info@zweigwhite.com.
The American Society of Civil Engineers is inviting all civil engineers and interested individuals to "Passages to Century 21: A Civil Engineering Conference and Exposition," to be held Oct. 18-21 at the Washington State Convention Center.
This event will feature the installation of Robert Bein as ASCE national president, keynote speaker David Macaulay -- acclaimed author, illustrator and host of the new PBS mini-series "Building Big"-- and the state's Blue Ribbon Commission on Transportation.
For registration information, go to http://www.asce.org/conferences/convention00.
Registration fees vary based on the number of days attending conference. Full registration is $575 by Sept. 23 and $655 on-site conference day. Daily registration is $195 by Sept. 23 and $200 on site.
Harris Group re-engineers itself
The Harris Group, among the largest engineering firms based in the Pacific Northwest, is in the midst of major ownership and organizational changes, company officials said.
With nearly 500 employees, the Seattle-based firm is being restructured in five strategic business units: energy, forest industries, industrial manufacturing, microelectronics and telecommunications. The organization had served more than a dozen industries in the past. CEO Bob Harris said the company would maintain all six current offices under the new plan and assign staff at each office to appropriate business units.
The Harris Group is also in the midst of leadership and ownership changes. Now 64, Bob Harris plans to gradually step away while new company leaders take ownership. Leading this group is President and Chief Operating Officer Chris Thompson. Currently, there are 28 employee owners; the company will add more employee owners annually, based on merit.
Thompson says the biggest risk, and largest potential area of growth, is the new telecommunications business unit. He believes the phenomenal growth and maturation of the telecommunications industry provides a tremendous opportunity for the firm.
The firm was ranked the sixth fastest growing A/E/C firm in the country by The Zweig Letter, an industry publication.
Central Library arts planner replaced
The Seattle Public Library board of trustees has selected Jessica Cusick and Rick Lowe to be arts planners for the new $159 million Central Library in downtown Seattle.
Cusick and Lowe replace Nancy Spector, who withdrew as arts planner after she was asked to spearhead the Guggenheim Museum's new partnership with the Hermitage Museum in Russia. According to the Seattle Public Library, Spector considered doing both jobs, but decided the Central Library needed someone who could devote significant time to the project.
Cusick, who has a broad background in public art and urban design, runs a Los Angeles-based consulting firm that specializes in civic art and community development initiatives. While director of civic art and design for The Cultural Arts Council in Houston, she developed Houston Framework, a plan to identify civic art to improve Houston's environment. Lowe, founder of Project Row Houses in Houston, has for years actively explored the relationship between art and community.
The budget for the arts program is $900,000.
Library to hold SEPA hearing
The Seattle Public Library board of trustees will hold a hearing on new State Environmental Policy Act (SEPA) procedures that will allow the library to act as lead agency for library actions. The hearing is scheduled for 4:30 p.m. on Tuesday, Sept. 26, at the Central Library, 1000 Fourth Ave., Lee Auditorium, third floor.
The procedures include rules for: appointing a library official responsible for SEPA matters, sharing lead agency status and for managing environmental review of all library projects subject to SEPA.
The draft procedures are available on request from the Library Capital Program office, located at the Central Library, fifth floor. For more information, contact Faith Lumsden, who is the library's consultant in charge of drafting the procedures, at (360) 321-5474 or e-mail flumsden@whidbey.com.
Mithun changes name
Formerly known as Mithun Partners Inc. Architecture, Planning, Interior Design, the firm will now be known as Mithun Architects + Designers + Planners.
Mithun, which earlier this year moved its offices to Pier 56 on Seattle's downtown waterfront, said the new name and brand better reflect the collaboration of its 165 employees.
The Seattle-based firm's current slate of projects include the Puget Sound Environmental Learning Center on Bainbridge Island and the Pacific Northwest Aquarium, which it is designing in association with Terry Farrell & Partners of London.
September 13, 2000
The Zweig Letter, a design-industry newsletter, has released its annual ranking of the 50 fastest-growing U.S. architecture, engineering, planning, and environmental consulting firms. Topping the list are industry giants URS of San Francisco and The IT Group of Pittsburgh.
But the list includes many smaller firms as well, including those who made the top five: The BL Companies of Meriden, Conn., and Mulvanny G2 Architects of Bellevue. Mulvanny G2's revenues grew from about $11 million in 1997 to $28 million 1999 -- an increase of 143 percent.
The Harris Group of Seattle was ranked sixth. From 1997 to 1999, the firm's revenues grew from $39 million to $76 million -- an increase of 95 percent.
The Hot Firm 2000 ranking is based on the change in gross revenue from fiscal year 1997 to fiscal year 1999. Only firms that were in business as of Jan. 1, 1997 were eligible for the 2000 list, and the firm's 1997 revenue must have been greater than or equal to $500,000. Following are the top five firms. The complete list is available for download at http://www.zweigwhite.com/hotfirm2000/top50.
Firm: URS
Headquarters: San Francisco
1997 Revenue: $407 million
1999 Revenue: $1.4 billion
•Rank: 2
Firm: The IT Group
Headquarters: Pittsburgh
1997 Revenue: $402 million
1999 Revenue: $1.3 billion
• Rank: 3
Firm: Entact
Headquarters: Chicago
1997 Revenue: $16.3 million
1999 Revenue: $48 million
• Rank: 4
Firm: BL Companies
Headquarters: Meriden, Conn.
1997 Revenue: $5.5 million
1999 Revenue: $20 million
• Rank: 5
Firm: Mulvanny G2 Architects
Headquarters: Bellevue
1997 Revenue: $11.4 million
1999 Revenue: $28 million
"Microtunneling," the topic of ASCE meeting
The Seattle section of the American Society of Civil Engineers will host a dinner talk tonight about new practices in "trenchless" technologies.
The meeting will be held at the Ballard Yankee Grill, 5300 24th Ave. N.W. in Seattle. The featured speaker will be Kim Staheli, principal with Bennett/Staheli Engineers and research civil engineer with the U.S. Army Corp of Engineers. Staheli will give a presentation on trenchless technologies, emphasizing microtunneling. The presentation will cover microtunneling construction methods, design considerations, lessons learned from previous projects, and comparisons of microtunneling with pipe jacking, directional drilling, and traditional tunneling.
The schedule includes a social hour at 5:30 p.m., dinner at 6:30 p.m., a business meeting at 7:30 p.m, and the program at 8 p.m.
For reservations, call (206) 632-2667.
Marketers to 'get down' at EMP
The next meeting of the Seattle chapter of the Society of Marketing Professionals will be held at the Experience Music Project on Friday, Sept. 22. The meeting at the rock 'n' roll museum will include installing the organization's new board of directors and presenting the coming year's goals and events.
The event begins with hors d'oeuvres and drinks at 4 p.m. in the EMP Liquid Lounge. Children under 18 and other family members are also invited. The cost is $30 for SMPS members; $25 for children under 18; and $40 for nonmembers. For more information, go to the Web site http://www.smpsseattle.org. Fax completed registration forms to Tosha Vandegrift at (425) 861-6050.
Artists sought for King County projects
The King County Public Art Program is seeking artists for two projects: an environmental laboratory on the Lake Washington Ship Canal in Seattle and the Overlake Transit Oriented Development in Redmond. The application deadline for both projects is Sept. 18.
The project budget for the environmental lab is $30,000. The county and Seattle architect The Miller/Hull Partnership are interested in commissioning an artist whose work can tell the story of the region's water quality and will contribute to the educational nature of the facility. The county's Wastewater Treatment Division is developing a 13,200-square-foot addition to the environmental lab, which provides services to the county's Department of Natural Resources. For more information, contact Cath Brunner at (206) 296-8680, e-mail: cath.brunner@metrokc.gov.
The art budget for the Transit Oriented Development is $125,000. King County and Hewitt Architects, a Seattle firm, are seeking an artist whose work will focus on the transit portion of the multi-use facility. Residents of the new 300-unit complex will receive bus passes as an amenity to encourage transit use. For more information, contact Barbara Luecke at (206) 296-4137, e-mail: barbara.luecke@metrokc.gov.
Boxwood wins prize for corporate identity program
Seattle architectural firm Boxwood was awarded first place in the corporate identity category of the Society for Marketing Professional Services' Marketing Communication Awards. The annual awards program recognizes outstanding marketing pieces created by architectural, engineering and construction firms nationwide.
Boxwood's corporate identity program was awarded for its consistency, creativity, flexibility and adherence to "green" criteria, including the choice of paper that is processed chlorine free and contains 100 percent post-consumer waste.
The award was presented at the SMPS National Conference in Austin earlier this month. The new firm name and identity, designed by graphic/Web site design firm Plow Creative in collaboration with Boxwood, was launched in April of this year.
AIA Honor Awards: Call for entries
The Seattle chapter of the American Institute of Architects is inviting all Washington architects to submit recently completed work, not-yet-built projects and conceptual work for review and recognition in the 2000 Honor Awards for Washington Architecture.
This competition will be conducted on the Internet; entrants will present their submittals electronically for posting and public viewing on the AIA Seattle Web site (www.aiaseattle.org) in advance of the jury discussion and awards presentation on Nov. 13.
Serving on this year's jury panel will be Craig Hodgetts of Hodgetts + Fung Design Associates, a Santa Monica firm; Joseph Valerio of Valerio Dewait Train, a Chicago firm; Marion Weiss of New York-based Weiss/Manfredi Architects; and moderator James Russell of Architectural Record.
The deadline for submission is Oct. 25. Contact AIA Seattle at (206) 448-4938 for more information.
Bellevue seeks citizen committee members
The city of Bellevue is seeking applicants interested in serving on a citizen advisory committee for the Downtown Bellevue Implementation Plan Update. The committee will help identify transportation and urban design solutions that meet downtown Bellevue's needs over a 20-year planning period. To request an application form, contact Emil King at (425) 452-7223 or e-mail eaking@ci.bellevue.wa.us. The deadline for submitting applications is Sept. 14. The Bellevue City Council will make appointments in early October.
Callison to design Eddie Bauer project
Callison Architecture has been selected to design a new office facility at Eddie Bauer's headquarters in Redmond. The $25 million, 130,000-square-foot project for the outdoor clothing retailer will be designed to "sensitively blend" in with the existing campus and wooded area, the Seattle-based architectural firm said.
Callison, which designed the original Eddie Bauer corporate campus, is providing planning, design and construction administration services for this project.
Transportation award goes to Shoreline
The city of Shoreline was one of two recipients of this year's Best Practices award from the Institute of Transportation Engineers (ITE). Shoreline was recognized for its predesign study of a multimodal project along the Aurora Avenue corridor. Another best practices award was presented to the Connecticut Department of Transportation and Wilbur Smith Associates, an engineering and planning firm. Based in Washington, D.C., ITE is an international organization of traffic engineers, transportation planners.
Library to hold SEPA hearing
The Seattle Public Library board of trustees will hold a hearing on new State Environmental Policy Act (SEPA) procedures that will allow the library to act as lead agency for library actions. The hearing is scheduled for 4:30 p.m. on Tuesday, Sept. 26, at the Central Library, 1000 Fourth Ave., Lee Auditorium, third floor.
The procedures include rules for: appointing a library official responsible for SEPA matters, sharing lead agency status and for managing environmental review of all library projects subject to SEPA.
The draft procedures are available on request from the Library Capital Program office, located at the Central Library, fifth floor. For more information, contact Faith Lumsden, who is the library's consultant in charge of drafting the procedures, at (360) 321-5474 or e-mail flumsden@whidbey.com.
Mithun changes name
Formerly known as Mithun Partners Inc. Architecture, Planning, Interior Design, the firm will now be known as Mithun Architects + Designers + Planners.
Mithun, which earlier this year moved its offices to Pier 56 on Seattle's downtown waterfront, said the new name and brand better reflect the collaboration of its 165 employees.
The Seattle-based firm's current slate of projects include the Puget Sound Environmental Learning Center on Bainbridge Island and the Pacific Northwest Aquarium, which it is designing in association with Terry Farrell & Partners of London.
August 30, 2000
Milbor-Pita & Associates has received a contract from Union Pacific Railroad for investigation, design, bid package preparation and construction monitoring services for clearance improvement work at more than 20 rail tunnels along the Interstate-5 corridor in Oregon and California.
Leading the job will be the firm's project manager, Gerald Millar, who has extensive tunnel design, rehabilitation and repair experience on rail, highway and hydroelectric tunnels throughout the United States, Canada, Latin America and South America.
Milbor-Pita geotechnical engineering firm based in Bellevue.
Boxwood wins prize for corporate identity program
Seattle architectural firm Boxwood was awarded first place in the corporate identity category of the Society for Marketing Professional Services' Marketing Communication Awards. The annual awards program recognizes outstanding marketing pieces created by architectural, engineering and construction firms nationwide.
Boxwood's corporate identity program was awarded for its consistency, creativity, flexibility and adherence to "green" criteria, including the choice of paper that is processed chlorine free and contains 100 percent post-consumer waste.
The award was presented at the SMPS National Conference in Austin earlier this month. The new firm name and identity, designed by graphic/Web site design firm Plow Creative in collaboration with Boxwood, was launched in April of this year.
Trade center issues call for artists
The Washington State Convention & Trade Center Art Foundation is soliciting slides from artists who wish to compete for the design and execution of an exterior work of art at the Pike Street entrance of the facility.
The budget for the completed project is $200,000. The deadline for initial submissions is Oct. 2. Foundation members envision a work of art that might incorporate light, color and low-volume water. Three to five finalists will be selected by Nov. 30. The finalists will each receive $5,000 to develop a site-specific work of art. They will be brought to Seattle in April 2001 at the foundation's expense to present their proposals to the panel. The project will be awarded to one of the artists shortly thereafter.
The criteria for submission are posted on www.wsctc.com. For more information, contact Sharon Ducey at (206) 694-5000 or e-mail sducey@wsctc.com.
Meier employee passes engineers' exam
Cliff Berkey of Meier Enterprises has recently passed the state engineers' exam and is now a licensed professional engineer. He has been working with the Kennewick-based architectural and engineering firm for two years, managing numerous industrial projects.
Artist chosen for High Point Library
Artist Steven Gardner has been chosen by the Seattle Public Library to design artwork for the new High Point Library.
The art budget for the new library is $28,918. Located at the corner of 35th Avenue Southwest and Southwest Graham Street, the 7,000-square-foot library is scheduled to open next year.
Hired by King County Metro and the county Arts Commission, Gardner created "The Vine," a ceramic relief sculpture set into adjacent bus shelters at 23rd Avenue and Yesler Way. The sculpture is made up of 64 ceramic panels, including 28 "story panels" that depict the cultural history of the Central Area. Examples of his work can be viewed online at http://www.w-link.net/~sgardner/art/.
Exhibit to showcase architecture by women
The Association for Women in Architecture on Friday, September 22 is opening its exhibit, "Women Projects," which celebrates the work and influence of women in the profession.
The event begins at 6 p.m. aboard the Kalakala, a 1935 ferry docked at Lake Union. Peter Bevis, president of the Kalakala Foundation, will lead a tour of this historic ship. Following the tour, a reception and exhibit will be held at 7 p.m. in the Lake Union Café on 3119 Eastlake Ave. E.
Donations and project submissions are being sought for the event. Ticket prices are $20 for nonmembers, $18 for students and $15 for AWA members. All proceeds will go to the Kalakala Foundation to complete its restoration efforts. The deadline to purchase tickets is Monday, Sept. 18. For more information, e-mail Tami Chen at tamichen@hotmail.com or call (206) 675-9100.
Family picnic and climb at Seattle Chinese Garden
The public is invited to be among the first to take a guided walk that will introduce the elements of the 6.3-acre Seattle Chinese Garden at the "Climbing High Day" family picnic and membership drive on Saturday, Sept. 9.
Commonly celebrated at this time of the year, Climbing High Day is the day when Chinese traditionally climbed the mountains to reach the clouds, renewing their health and spirit after the hardships of the harvest.
The family picnic will take place from 11:30 am to 2:30 p.m. at the Seattle Chinese Garden at South Seattle Community College, 6000 16th Ave. S.W. Guests are advised to bring their own picnic lunch. Beverages and dessert will be provided. The suggested donation for the event is $3 per person or $8 per family. For reservations, call (206) 932-3236 by Sept. 6.
Artists sought for King County projects
The King County Public Art Program is seeking artists for two projects: an environmental laboratory on the Lake Washington Ship Canal in Seattle and the Overlake Transit Oriented Development in Redmond. The application deadline for both projects is Sept. 18.
The project budget for the environmental lab is $30,000. The county and Seattle architect The Miller/Hull Partnership are interested in commissioning an artist whose work can tell the story of the region's water quality and will contribute to the educational nature of the facility. The county's Wastewater Treatment Division is developing a 13,200-square-foot addition to the environmental lab, which provides services to the county's Department of Natural Resources. For more information, contact Cath Brunner at (206) 296-8680, e-mail: cath.brunner@metrokc.gov.
The art budget for the Transit Oriented Development is $125,000. King County and Hewitt Architects, a Seattle firm, are seeking an artist whose work will focus on the transit portion of the multi-use facility. Residents of the new 300-unit complex will receive bus passes as an amenity to encourage transit use. For more information, contact Barbara Luecke at (206) 296-4137, e-mail:barbara.luecke@metrokc.gov.
Unnamed donor gives OSU $20M
An anonymous donor has given the engineering college at Oregon State University a $20 million gift of stock. The contribution is the largest that both the engineering college and the university have ever received.
The donor is a graduate of OSU, university officials said. The donation will boost the university's campaign to raise $120 million for the College of Engineering. The fund-raising effort is in response to Oregon Gov. John Kitzhaber's demand that state universities double their number of engineering graduates in the next five years. About 17 percent of the OSU's undergraduates -- about 2,750 students -- are enrolled in the engineering program, a higher enrollment than any of the university's other colleges.
August 23, 2000
Another step in the permitting process has begun for the new downtown library at Fourth and Madison. The Seattle Public Library is seeking Council Concept Approval for the 11-story, 355,000-square-foot building designed by world-renowned architect Rem Koolhaas.
The Department of Design, Construction and Land Use will accept written comments on the project, No. 2005663, until Aug. 30.
The library request includes a modification or waiver of development standards for the building, uniquely designed with five platforms of "floating layers," enmeshed in steel tubes and glass.
Hoffman Construction is the general contractor/construction manager. The design team includes Koolhaas' Office for Metropolitan Architecture and its Seattle partner LMN Architects. Work is expected to begin April 2001 and finish in 2003.
Comments can be sent to 710 Second Ave., Suite 200, Seattle, WA 98104-1703, attn: Jess Harris. For more information, contact DCLU land-use planner Jess Harris at (206) 684-7744 or e-mail jess.harris@ci.seattle.wa.us.
Milbor-Pita wins Union Pacific job
Milbor-Pita & Associates has received a contract from Union Pacific Railroad for investigation, design, bid package preparation and construction monitoring services for clearance improvement work at more than 20 rail tunnels along the Interstate-5 corridor in Oregon and California.
Leading the job will be the firm's project manager, Gerald Millar, who has extensive tunnel design, rehabilitation and repair experience on rail, highway and hydroelectric tunnels throughout the United States, Canada, Latin America and South America.
Milbor-Pita geotechnical engineering firm is based in Bellevue.
New book about city parks
"Inside City Parks," a new publication sponsored by the Urban Land Institute and the Trust for Public Land profiles 25 park systems in the United States, highlighting recent efforts to revitalize municipal parks.
Written by urban park consultant Peter Harnik, the book includes profiles of park systems in Seattle, Portland, San Francisco, Chicago, Boston and New York. "Inside City Parks" describes innovative programs, and examines the link between park departments and other public agencies, as well as the private sector. Successful initiatives include those involving park conservancies, business improvement districts, greenway networks, waterfront parks, brownfields reuse and conversion of former federal facilities.
Copies of the book are available for sale to the general public by calling (800) 321-5011 or by visiting the Web site http://www.uli.org.
Exhibit showcases architecture by women
The Association for Women in Architecture is opening its exhibit, "Women Projects," and is holding a reception at 7 p.m. on Friday, Sept. 22 aboard the Kalakala. The exhibit will be followed by a reception at the Lake Union Cafe.
Organizers said the exhibit will feature work from various architects that is by, for or about women. Donations and project submissions are being sought. Ticket prices will be announced soon. All proceeds will go to the Kalakala Foundation. For more information, contact Tyra at (206) 971-5617, e-mail TyraS@mithun.com; or Tami Chen (206) 675-9100, e-mail tamichen@hotmail.com.
UW's new slate of PEPL courses
The University of Washington has posted its recent course lists for the Professional Engineering Practice Liaison program. For a list of complete course descriptions log onto www.engr.washington.edu/epp/Pepl/peplcal.html.
• Stormwater treatment: chemical, biological and engineering principles; Class meets in Vancouver; 8:30 a.m. - 4:30 p.m., Sept. 12-13; $495 early registration / $525
• Stormwater treatment by media filtration; 8:30 a.m. - 4:30 p.m., Oct. 12-13; $515 early registration / $545
• Design and retrofit of culverts for fish passage in the Northwest; Class meets in Spokane; 8:30 a.m. - 4:30 p.m., Oct. 18-19; $445 early registration / $475
• How to successfully use value engineering in capital projects; 8:30 a.m. - 4:30 p.m., Nov. 16-17; $375 early registration / $405
August 16, 2000
A team of design firms from Washington, Oregon and Vancouver B.C. was recently selected to develop a site master plan for Redwood Gateway Interpretive Center in southern Humboldt County, Calif. The team was selected through an invitation-only proposal process initiated by the San Francisco-based Save-the-Redwoods League. Lead by the Portland landscape architecture and design firm Walker Macy, the team includes Seattle's Miller Hull Partnership, ECONorthwest of Eugene and Aldrich/Pears Associates from Vancouver, B.C. Of the 35 submitting firms, the Walker Macy team is the only one not physically located in California. The design team will address the recent acquisition by the Save-the-Redwoods League of the Hartsook Inn, a historic lodging house on Highway 101, and the surrounding property. It will develop a master plan that restores the landscape and enhances visitor experiences while assessing the feasibility of redeveloping the site into a self supporting educational and interpretive facility.
Design firms show revenue growth
The 2000 "Zweig White & Associates Finance & Accounting Survey of Architecture, Engineering and Planning Firms" shows that earnings (before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization expenses) grew from 12.4 percent to 13.4 percent of net revenues between the 1999 and 2000 editions. While Zwieg White analyst Ian Rusk points out that strong economic conditions have contributed to revenue growth, he believes that industry-wide increases in profitability are more attributable to lower overhead levels. Meanwhile, net revenue per employee has grown with each year of the survey, jumping from $72,948 in 1997 to $79,683 in the 2000 edition.
Design Commission Opening
Mayor Paul Schell is seeking three new members for the Seattle Design Commission. They include one member-at-large, one urban/environmental designer and one landscape architect, to replace members whose terms will expire in October of 2000. Those interested in being considered for an appointment should send a letter of interest and resume by Friday, August 18, to Alex Field, Administrator, Boards and Commissions, Mayor's Office, 600 Fourth Avenue, 12th Floor, Seattle, Washington 98104.
Orenco Station recognized
The Orenco Station Town Center, near Portland, recently won three Gold Nugget Awards in a national housing awards program sponsored by Building Magazine.
![]() |
The project, designed by Fletcher Farre Ayotte of Portland, won three merit awards for design in the categories of Community/Town Plan over 100 acres; Mixed Use Project; and Condo or Attached Home. Orenco Station has now received eight awards including the First Place Award for Livable Communities Transit Design given by the US Department of Transportation, and has been published in several national magazines. The dense, mixed use development is designed around a light rail stop.
IBC 2000 seminar
The International Conference of Building Officials and the Continuing Education arm of the American Institute of Architects will sponsor a seminar on the non-structural provisions in the new 2000 International Building Code. The two-day seminar will be held on October 19 and 20, from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. in Seattle. The cost is $395, $345 for registration 30 days before the session. For more information, call (562) 692-3853, or visit www.icbo.org.
Rail-Volution conference
Rail-Volution 2000: Building Livable Communities with Transit will be held October 4-8 in Denver. The conference covers financing, land use issues, concurrent transportation issues, coalition building and community development related to rail. It is sponsored by a partnership of 18 government agencies and rail organizations. The registration fee is $325 before September 8 and $375 after that date. For more information, visit railvolution.com or call 1-800-788-7077
Prezant merges with Stewart & Associates
Prezant Associates, a safety consulting and laboratory service company, has added a new ergonomics division by merging with Stewart and Associates. The new division will offer services in compliance with WISHA ergonomics regulation, regular open-enrollment training courses and custom courses at various sites in Seattle or Spokane. For more information, call 281-8858 or 328-2084.
Camp Nor'wester opens
Campers, staff and supporters of Camp Nor'wester gathered at the camp's new John's Island location this month to celebrate the reopening of the camp. Jones & Jones provided design services for the camp relocation, much of it on a pro bono basis. The camp has been closed since 1996 following the sale of Sperry Peninsula on Lopez Island, where the camp had operated since 1945. A number of buildings were relocated from the old site.
Art Anderson managing hospital demolition
Art Anderson Associates has been selected to provide construction management services for the $2.3 million demolition of the old Alaska Native Medical Center near downtown Anchorage. The building, which has become functionally obsolete, narrowly survived a 1964 earthquake. A new, state-of-the-art complex has been constructed on more stable ground in south anchorage at a cost of $92 million. Significant amounts of asbestos-containing material are being removed and disposed of, and non-hazardous materials are being recycled.
Dull Olson Weekes wins award
Alpha High School, designed by Dull Olson Weekes of Portland, has received a Best Community Service Use award from the City of Gresham Planning Commission. It is the seventh award for the project. Located at the edge of the Gresham Downtown Plan District, Alpha High School establishes the design and density precedent for future development within the district. Located near a light rail station, the project anticipates a growing percentage of students and teachers relying on public transit. The high school is designed with limited parking and with showers for bikers.
Reid Middleton wins award
The American Galvanizers Association recently awarded Reid Middleton a 1999 excellence award for creative and innovative use of hot-diped steel in the water or marine environment.
![]() |
The project honored is the Port of Everett's Public Access and Transient Moorage Facility. Completed in 1998, the facility serves as a public access point to boats at the Port of Everett Marina, the second largest marina on the West Coast. It features the first gangway system in western Washington to fully comply with American with Disabilities Act slope requirements. All together, 40 tons of hot-dipped or galvanized steel went into the moorage. The steel makes up the piles, float-stop frames, connections between concrete piles and timber caps, and the guard rails.
Air conditioning fundamentals
A course on air conditioning fundamentals, sponsored by the University of Washington Department of Mechanical Engineering, will be held on Tuesdays and Thursdays from October 24 to December 5, 7 a.m. to 9 p.m. The fee for the course is $595. Air Conditioning Design will be offered at the same days and times from January 9 to February 15, 2001, also for $595. It is possible to enroll in both courses for the reduced fee of $1050 if registered by October 16. For a registration folder or more information, contact Engineering Professional Programs, University of Washington, 10303 Meridian Avenue North, #301, Seattle, WA 98133-9483, 543-5539, uw-epp@engr.washington.edu.
August 9, 2000
Mulvanny Architects is designing a new health clinic for the Tulalip Tribe. The clinic will be located at Tulalip Shores, north of Seattle. It is expected to serve nearly 12,000 people during its first year.
Charles Fritzemeier, one of Mulvanny’s two lead architects on the 25,000-square-foot, $7 million project, said the clinic’s design will reflect the culture of the Tulalip people while providing contemporary medical treatment in connection with traditional methods. The clinic is scheduled for completion in January 2001.
The design capitalizes on the Tulalip Bay location by incorporating traditional and contemporary entrances. One entrance is consistent with historical tribal villages that traditionally faced the Puget Sound because most transit was via canoe. But there is also a contemporary front door with street access. The overall facility resembles a collection of long houses and incorporates interior connections to multi-use terraces and decks located outside. Building materials for the project are commensurate with traditional construction in appearance and texture.
When completed, the clinic will offer a variety of services including family practice, dentistry, pharmacy, and community health. In addition to contemporary health services, the grounds will contain a healing garden that provides indigenous plant species and medicinal herbs significant to the Tulalip culture. Fritzemeier indicated that the grounds will also include walking paths, sitting areas, and wetlands to take advantage of the spectacular waterfront and mountain views.
The clinic will employ approximately 75 individuals. Clinic staff, strategic planners, Tribal Council and Elders of the Tulalip people have worked together with Mulvanny Architects to design and direct thes project.
Bellevue-based Mullvanny Architects is the third largest architecture firm in the Northwest with more than 320 employees in 4 states and in Taiwan.
R.W. Beck to design transfer station
Snohomish County has hired R.W. Beck to assist with the siting, design and construction managment of a new, 1,000 ton-per-day solid waste recycling and transfer station. Designated the Central Recylcing and Transfer Station, it will be located near Everett. The project will include a 40,000-square-foot, flat-floor style transfer building with a 17-foot grade separation between the main floor and the lower, trailer parking yard. The new station will replace the current Everett Recylcling and Transfer Station, which is located on land leased from the City of Everett. Paine Field is one of the sites under consideration for the new facility. If it is selected, the design consultants contract will be expanded to include public workshops and support facilities for the county's fleet maintenance and roads divisions.
Gehry Exhibit
"Frank O. Gehry: The Architect's Studio" will open in the East Gallery of the Henry Art Gallery at the University of Washington on August 18 and run until November 12. A free opening reception and curator's talk will be held on Thursday, Aug. 17, from 5:30 p.m. to 8 p.m. The exhibit consists of a dioramic replication of the working studio and includes hundreds of preparatory and working models for Gehry's most important international commissions including the Bilbao Guggenheim and Seattle's EMP.
Applied Business Solutions
Caryn Spain, president of Applied Business Solutions and author of "Strategic Insights: Decision-Making Tools for Business Leaders," will be at the Pacific Place Barnes & Noble for a booksigning on Wedensday, Aug. 9, from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. She is the author of two other books that take owners of small and medium-sized businesses through a strategic planning process.
Racing to the Future
Racing to the Future 2000 will be held in Las Vegas on November 28-30, 2000. The three-day program, exslusively for CEOs of design and environmental consulting firms, includes two days of motorcycle racing at Freddie Spencer's Hig Performance Riding School and one day of discussing real estate issues in an interactive forum. For more information about the event, call (800) 466-6275 or visit the Web site at www.zweigwhite.com/events/racing2000. .
August 2, 2000
The massive Grand Gateway project in Shanghai has opened. The 1.1 million-square-foot project, which includes a seven-level retail podium and a 34-story residential tower, is designed to expand to even larger proportions as the economy grows.
![]() Photos courtesy Callison/Chris Eden |
Designed by Callison Architecture for developer Hang Lung, the multi-use complex placed retail, entertainment and residential space next to Xuijahui subway station, one of Shanghai's main transportation arteries. There are strategic links through the subway to the retail and residential areas.
The project introduces Western-style retailing in Shanghai, with a kaleidoscope of environments. Visitors have a choice of areas that intentionally evoke Paris and Hollywood as well as traditional Chinese zones.
![]() |
Callison has been involved in the $600 million project since 1993, leading the efforts of a 25-member design team and an associate architecture firm. The project included dozens of subconsultants and specialists, the contractor and more than 100 government agencies.
Callison is currently involved in several projects in Korea.
The Suwon Gateway Plaza and the Guro Center Complex are located in urban transit hubs. Suwon is a public/private partnership being developed as a regional retail center for the city of Suwon. Guro Center, in Seoul, features three residential towers, a retail galleria, a multi-screen cineplex, a swimming pool and sports centers, restaurants and parking.
![]() |
One of Korea's largest development firms, Daelim Construction, has selected Callison to design the Chamsil Acrovill residential towers in Seoul. Callison is providing architecture and master planning services in collaboration with Seoul-based Heerim Architects and Engineers, and Group-3 of Korea. Construction is expected to begin in September 2000 and once complete, the project will be a five-tower, 1,000-unit residential complex on top of a six-level podium that includes office, retail, residential and athletic facilities. Acrovill is the heart of an area known for sports complexes that will host the 2002 Asian games.
July 26, 2000
Architecture In Perspective, the 14th annual exhibition of the American Society of Architectural Perspectivists is coming to Seattle. The exhibition will be hosted by NBBJ Design, from August 10th to August 31st, at the NBBJ Office Gallery, 111 South Jackson Street. On August 10th, an opening reception will be held at NBBJ Gallery from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. The public is invited.
Each year since 1986, the American Society of Architectural Perspectivists has sponsored Architecture In Perspective, a juried international architectural delineation competition that has included work by the most accomplished architectural illustrators around the world. The Architecture In Perspective exhibition consists of approximately 50 pieces of award winning artwork, and travels to various venues throughout the US. The Seattle exhibit is also sponsored by the University of Washington.
PEPL courses
Here is a course calendar for the Professional Engineering Practice Liaison program at the University of Washington:
Stormwater Treatment: Chemical, Biological and Engineering Principles - Vancouver, WA, Sept. 12 and 13, 2000, 8:30 a.m. - 4:30 p.m., $495 early registration / $525.
Stormwater Treatment by Media Filtration, Oct. 12-13, 2000, 8:30 a.m. - 4:30 p.m., $515 early registration / $545.
Design and Retrofit of Culverts for Fish Passage in the Northwest - Spokane, WA, Oct. 18 and 19, 2000, 8:30 a.m. - 4:30 p.m., $445 early registration / $475.
How to Successfully Use Value Engineering in Capital Projects, Nov. 16-17, 8:30 a.m. - 4:30 p.m., $375 early registration / $405.
Construction Site Erosion and Pollution Control - Vancouver, WA, Dec. 11-12, 8:00 a.m. - 4:30 p.m., $545 early registration / $575.
Stormwater Treatment: Chemical, Biological and Engineering Principles, Jan. 24 and 25, 8:30 a.m. - 4:30 p.m., $495 early registration / $525.
Alternative On-Site Stormwater Management Techniques, March 20-21, 8:30 a.m. - 4:30 p.m., $445 early registration / $475.
Fundamentals of Urban Surface Water Management, March 28-29, 8:30 a.m. - 4:30 p.m., $445 early registration / $475.
For a list of complete course descriptions log onto: http://www.engr.washington.edu/epp/Pepl/peplcal.html
For more information, contact Stephanie Strom at the University of Washington Engineering Professional Programs, Box 358725, 10303 Meridian Ave. N., Suite 301, Seattle, WA 98133, phone: (206) 685-9682, fax: (206) 543-2352, sstrom@u.washington.edu, www.engr.washington.edu/epp.
July 19, 2000
Samis Land Co. has just opened its newest development, the Corona Lofts, located one block north of the Smith Tower at 606 Second Ave.
The Corona consists of 20 units with rent ranging from $1,000-$1,100 for studios that are 640-850 square feet. Rent for one-bedroom units is $1,700-$2,200 for one-bedroom units that are 1,050-1,330 square feet. Five units are still available.
Stickney Murphy Romine Architects of Seattle designed the restoration work; Spaces, also a Seattle firm, did the interior design. The building has been restored to retain many of its circa 1903 characteristics, such as original millwork and wood floors, high ceilings, exposed brick walls and a refurbished lobby with a marble staircase. The Corona is also equipped with high-speed Internet access and cable television access.
For information on tours or leasing, contact Tamara Hahn at (206) 854-4400.
Architects push for ADA clarity
With the 10-year anniversary of the landmark Americans with Disabilities Act approaching on July 26, the American Institute of Architects this week urged the U.S. Department of Justice to provide greater clarity and certainty in the ADA.
"Architects have been striving to meet the intent of the ADA since its adoption 10 years ago, but can never be certain they've met the requirements unless they get sued," said R.K. Stewart, a member of the AIA Accessibility Task Force and an architect with Gensler in San Francisco. He cited a recent case in which the defendant was found by a district court to be non-compliant with the ADA even though the design and building was pronounced in compliance with the Texas Accessibility Standard -- which had been certified by DOJ as meeting ADA accessibility requirements. Another complaint: While architects are, on one hand, required to design ADA-compliant facilities, the DOJ will not certify beforehand that a design meets those requirements, he said. He added that current discussions between the AIA and DOJ to bring about improved clarity in the requirements have been well received.
Creative Capital director visits Seattle
Ruby Lerner, founding executive director of Creative Capital, a national organization that provides funding to individual artists, visited Seattle last week to introduce herself and her foundation to the arts community. The event was co-sponsored by SAM/Open Studio, Seattle Arts Commission, King Co. Arts Commission, Artist Trust, and the Seattle Independent Film & Video Coalition. Founded in 1999, Creative Capital is committed to working with artists in long-term partnerships, providing advisory services and professional development assistance along with financial support.
For more information on Creative Capital's schedule and upcoming events, visit the website at www.creative-capital.org.
Artists needed for 15 library projects
The Seattle Public Library and the Seattle Arts Commission are seeking artists to complete up to 15 projects in branch libraries over the next three years. Artists are sought in all media, including permanent materials such as metal or glass, surface treatments including etching or mosaic, and new media such as video or digital work. The Library is particularly interested in finding artists who want to explore, through their work, the meaning of a library as a repository of information and an icon of community identity. Branches for which work will be commissioned from roster artists include: Ballard, Beacon Hill, Broadview, Capitol Hill, Columbia, Douglass-Truth, Greenwood, High Point, Lake City, Montlake, North East, Northgate, Rainier Beach, and Southwest.
The artists selected will become part of a roster of no more than 30 artists pre-qualified for library projects. When public art commissions become available at branch libraries, a panel of library and community representatives will be assembled to select an artist for each project.
Chosen artists will work with the architectural design team, representatives from the branch library, and the community to discuss the appropriate integration of art into the building, to develop an art concept and design, and to fabricate and install the work.
The Library, as part of its art plan, has developed a collaboration program called Art Partners. For some of the branch library projects, the Library will pair artists from a roster with an artist from the local library community who will have excellent artistic skills but little or no experience working in the public realm. The experienced roster public artist will help select his or her teammate. This program is being established to encourage participation by local artists working in traditional or non-visual art forms, such as Chinese papercutters or community storytellers, whose work historically has not been articulated as permanent public work.
The program is open to established professional visual artists living in the Northwest (Washington, Oregon, Idaho, Montana, and British Columbia). The library projects vary in budget size from $12,000 to $50,000 or more. For more information, please call Seattle Arts Commission project manager Lisa Richmond at 684-0998.
Methodologie, Traver merge
Local brand and design firms Methodologie and The Traver Co. are merging. The combined company will be the city's fourth largest brand and design firm with total billings of over $6 million.
Since its inception in 1988, Methodologie has grown from five employees to 35, with over 50 clients including Microsoft, Immunex and Primus. Methodologie is led by two high-tech industry veterans, Janet DeDonato and Bob Grindeland. The husband-and-wife team have over 40 years of combined experience: Grindeland in technology, multimedia and online communication, and DeDonato with primary expertise in investor communications and identity.
The Traver Co.'s 20 years of experience in brand strategy and design has focused on high-profile local and national companies including Vulcan Northwest, Chateau Ste. Michelle and the Seattle Times. Led by Anne Traver, the 14-person firm has had significant involvement in the arts, including local art museums and theatre companies, as well as the tourism and hospitality industry. The combined firm, now totaling 49 employees, will work out of Methodologie's current offices at 808 Howell St.
Aviation expert to address CECW
John Nance, air safety analyst and advocate, will be the keynote speaker at the fall conference of the Consulting Engineers Council of Washington, Sept. 14-16, at Sun Mountain Lodge, Winthrop. Nance is best known to television audiences as aviation analyst for the ABC network and as the aviation editor for Good Morning America.
"Learning to break down the barriers that prevent need information from flowing to those who need it and learning to identify and change those barriers to teamwork and collaboration that hamstring every organization are the focus of this presentation," Nance said. The theme of the conference is "A 21st Century Model for Real Time Leadership."
For more information about the conference or to register, call Loy Young at CECW, (206) 623-5936.
July 12, 2000
Callison Architecture and Atlanta-based Thompson, Ventulett, Stainback & Associates will jointly design two retail centers for the Richard E. Jacobs Group of Cleveland.
One is the Triangle Town Center, a 1.2 million-square-foot super-regional retail property located in Raleigh, N.C. The the design partnership is based on Callison's market orientation and the contextual and planning resources of TVS. Construction will begin in this fall for completion in the spring of 2002.
The same design team will also work on the renovation and reconfiguration of Vallco Fashion Park, a 2-level regional mall located in Cupertino, Calif. Construction on the Cupertino center will begin in January of 2001, with completion expected the following November.
The Richard E. Jacobs Group is a private developer, owner and manager of regional shopping malls, with over 45 million square feet of retail space located in 16 states, including 37 malls.
Safeco Field, bridge, library win design awards
Skilling Ward Magnusson Barkshire has won the Grand Award in the American Consulting Engineers Council Engineering Excellence Award competition for its role in the design of Safeco Field. As the structural engineer for the 47,000-seat stadium, SWMB designed the 8.8 acre, 24-million-pound roof retractable roof that consists of three moving panels. To design the roof, the project team conducted extensive analyses to predict the loads of the moving roof as well as the stability of the supporting trusses. While typical stadiums can be analyzed using approximately 100 load cases, Safeco Field required 1,500 cases. A computer simulation to predict damper performance needed 400 times more calculations than conventional analysis, and the stadium design was subjected to 30 major computer-simulated earthquakes. Ultimately, the engineering ideas reduced the cost of the stadium by an estimated $30 million.
The design team of Parsons Brinckerhoff Douglas & Quade and Kaiser Engineers has won an Honor Award in the ACEC award program for the First Avenue South Bridge. The two firms assisted the Seattle Engineering Department and the Washington State Department of Transportation in an eight-year effort to make the bridge into a safe, free-flowing transportation route. Improvements include separating two-way traffic and eliminating narrow lane widths, reversible lane operation, high traffic flow and substandard weave and merge distances. Adding lanes and switching to one-way operations significantly reduced accidents and traffic congestion. Along with developing complex intersections and approaches to make the bridge safer, the design team also integrated pedestrian and bicycle lanes into the roadway, and created the Puget Sound region's only urban saltwater estuary.
KPFF Consulting Engineers of Portland has also won an Honor Award through the ACEC for its role in the restoration of the Oregon State Library in Salem. The firm addressed the special needs of the historic structure through and innovative design that uses thin steel plates in shear walls in combination with other non-invasive renovation methods. A system of pin piles were installed at strategic locations within the basement for additional footing capacity and to support the overturning forces of the new steel plate shear walls. The entire system helped the meet the requirements of current seismic codes, which have changed drastically since the building was constructed.
Earth Tech acquires Kaiser engineering units
Earth Tech Holdings, a unit of Tyco International, has acquired the infrastructure and facilities businesses of Kaiser Group International. The acquisition is expected to help Earth Tech expand in the fields of transportation, water/wastewater, facilities design and construction and microelectronics and clean technology. The sale is expected to be completed before the end of the month. Earth Tech is based in Long Beach, Calif., and employs 7,000 in 130 offices around the world. Tyco is a diversified manufacturing and service company operating in more than 80 countries, with 1999 revenues of $22.5 billion.
Merger and acquisition activity high, says survey
Almost nine out of ten design firms are currently considering some type of merger or acquisition activity, according to a survey conducted by Zweig White & Associates. The 86 percent positive response is up from 74 percent in a similar 1999 survey. At the same time, actual mergers and acquisitions are up 40 percent from last year, according to the same source. In a breakdown of survey responses, 73 percent are considering an acquisition, while 36 percent are considering sale of the firm. The number considering a sale has doubled since last year. For the fifth year in a row, potential buyers consider the Southeast as the top location in which to make an acquisition.
The 2000 Merger & Acquisition Survey of A/E/P & Environmental Consulting Firms is available from the publisher free of charge. Contact Zweig White & Associates, P.O. Box 8325, One Apple Hill Drive, Natick, Maine 01760, (508) 651-1559, fax (508) 653-6522, info@zweigwhite.com.
Engineering, construction firms form B2B exchange
Five engineering and construction companies--AMEC, Bovis Lend Lease, Hochtief and Turner, and Skanska--have formed and an Internet portal, http://www.aecventure, that links global and regional portals for business-to-business information exchange and online collaboration. The portal, open to the entire industry, is also intended assist in marketing and procurement. The founding companies are in negotiation with several other partners and actively seeking new global and regional alliances around the world.
Hazard Institute at CAUP
The Institute for Hazard Mitigation Planning and Research has been established within the College of Architecture and Urban Planning at the University of Washington to research ways to make Washington more disaster resistant. The institute will conduct research, offer mitigation planning courses and provide community outreach opportunities for students and faculty. There are plans to offer a certificate program in mitigation planning in the near future. The institute director, Bob Freitag, was appointed this past October and has 23 years of experience with the Federal Emergency Management Agency in a variety of management positions.
New educational research center
BJSS Duarte Bryant has joined several other firms throughout the country in a partnership with San Diego State University's College of Education to establish the national Center for the 21st Century Schoolhouse. The new academic center, located in San Diego on the SDSU campus, will be a resource for school administrators, policy makers and design professionals. Programs will address the interrelationship between educational programming and school design according to Frank Smith of BJSS Duarte Bryant. Areas of discussion will include the need for greater flexibility in classroom design to facilitate participatory learning and new educational delivery systems.
Center staff report an estimated $300 billion will be available from local, state and federal sources for school construction over the next five to ten years.
More Samis apartments opening
Samis Land Co. has just opened its newest development, the Corona Lofts, located one block north of the Smith Tower at 606 Second Ave.
The Corona consists of 20 units with rent ranging from $1,000-$1,100 for studios that are 640-850 square feet. Rent for one-bedroom units is $1,700-$2,200 for one-bedroom units that are 1,050-1,330 square feet. Five units are still available.
Stickney Murphy Romine Architects of Seattle designed the restoration work; Spaces, also a Seattle firm, did the interior design. The building has been restored to retain many if its circa 1903 characteristics, such as original millwork and wood floors, high ceilings, exposed brick walls and a refurbished lobby with a marble staircase. The Corona is also equipped with high-speed Internet access and cable television access.
For information on tours or leasing, contact Tamara Hahn at (206) 854-4400.
Architects push for ADA clarity
With the 10-year anniversary of the landmark Americans with Disabilities Act approaching on July 26, the American Institute of Architects this week urged the U.S. Department of Justice to provide greater clarity and certainty in the ADA.
"Architects have been striving to meet the intent of the ADA since its adoption 10 years ago, but can never be certain they've met the requirements unless they get sued," said R.K. Stewart, a member of the AIA Accessibility Task Force and an architect with Gensler in San Francisco. He cited a recent case in which the defendant was found by a district court to be non-compliant with the ADA even though the design and building was pronounced in compliance with the Texas Accessibility Standard--which had been certified by DOJ as meeting ADA accessibility requirements. Another complaint: While architects are, on one hand, required to design ADA-compliant facilities, the DOJ will not certify beforehand that a design meets those requirements, he said. He added that current discussions between the AIA and DOJ to bring about improved clarity in the requirements have been well received.
Arts foundation head to visit Seattle
Ruby Lerner, founding executive director of Creative Capital, a national organization that provides funding to individual artists, will visit Seattle to introduce herself and her foundation to the arts community on Thursday, July 13, 6-7:30 p.m. at the Seattle Asian Art Museum Auditorium in Volunteer Park. The event is co-sponsored by SAM/Open Studio, Seattle Arts Commission, King Co. Arts Commission, Artist Trust, and the Seattle Independent Film & Video Coalition. Prior to becoming Executive Director of Creative Capital, Ruby Lerner was previously executive director of the Association of Independent Video and Filmmakers in New York and publisher of The Independent Film and Video Monthly. She was also director of Alternate ROOTS, a coalition of performing artists in the Southeast. Founded in 1999, Creative Capital is committed to working with artists in long-term partnerships, providing advisory services and professional development assistance along with financial support.
For more information on Creative Capital's schedule and upcoming events, visit the website at www.creative-capital.org.
Arts Commission seeks artists for Seattle Libraries
The Seattle Public Library and the Seattle Arts Commission are seeking artists to complete up to 15 projects in branch libraries over the next three years. Artists are sought in all media, including permanent materials such as metal or glass, surface treatments including etching or mosaic, and new media such as video or digital work. The Library is particularly interested in finding artists who want to explore, through their work, the meaning of a library as a repository of information and an icon of community identity. Branches for which work will be commissioned from roster artists include: Ballard, Beacon Hill, Broadview, Capitol Hill, Columbia, Douglass-Truth, Greenwood, High Point, Lake City, Montlake, North East, Northgate, Rainier Beach, and Southwest.
The artists selected will become part of a roster of no more than 30 artists pre-qualified for library projects. When public art commissions become available at branch libraries, a panel of library and community representatives will be assembled to select an artist for each project.
Chosen artists will work with the architectural design team, representatives from the branch library, and the community to discuss the appropriate integration of art into the building, to develop an art concept and design, and to fabricate and install the work.
The Library, as part of its art plan, has developed a collaboration program called Art Partners. For some of the branch library projects, the Library will pair artists from a roster with an artist from the local library community who will have excellent artistic skills but little or no experience working in the public realm. The experienced roster public artist will help select his or her teammate. This program is being established to encourage participation by local artists working in traditional or non-visual art forms, such as Chinese papercutters or community storytellers, whose work historically has not been articulated as permanent public work.
The program is open to established professional visual artists living in the Northwest (Washington, Oregon, Idaho, Montana, and British Columbia). The library projects vary in budget size from $12,000 to $50,000 or more. For more information, please call Seattle Arts Commission project manager Lisa Richmond at 684-0998.
Methodologie and The Traver Company merge
SEATTLE - June 30, 2000 - Local brand and design firms Methodologie and The Traver Company announced that they are merging. The combined company will be the city's fourth largest brand and design firm with total billings of over $6 million. Since its inception in 1988, Methodologie has grown from five employees to 35, with over 50 clients including Microsoft, Immunex and Primus. Methodologie is lead by two high-tech industry veterans, Janet DeDonato and Bob Grindeland. The
husband-and-wife team have over 40 years of combined experience, Grindeland in technology, multimedia and online communication, and DeDonato with primary expertise in investor communications and identity. The Traver Company's 20 years of experience in brand strategy and design has focused on high-profile local and national companies including Vulcan Northwest, Chateau Ste. Michelle and the Seattle Times. Lead by Anne Traver, the 14-person firm has had significant involvement in the arts, including local art museums and theatre companies, as well as the tourism and hospitality industry. The combined firm, now totaling 49 employees, will work out of Methodologie's current offices at 808 Howell Street.