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Architecture & Engineering



May 25, 2005

Design Detailings: AIA Seattle holds annual meeting

AIA Seattle will have its annual meeting today from 4 to 6 p.m. at the International District/Chinatown Community Center, 719 Eighth Ave. S.

Attendees can participate in the election of AIA Seattle officers and directors, for terms beginning in September.

The agenda will include the AIA Seattle annual report and AIA national convention report. The event is free for AIA Seattle members. For information, call (206) 448-4938, e-mail aia@aiaseattle.org.

Library seeks help with design tours

The Central Library is recruiting volunteers to serve as tour guides to help visitors learn about the library's unique architecture, facilities and public art. Docents must have strong public speaking skills and professional training in architecture or construction management. One-hour architectural tours are scheduled throughout the week. Docents typically conduct two tours per month.

The next training session for new docents will take place at the Central Library on Saturday, June 11. To request application materials, contact Anne Vedella, the library's volunteer services coordinator, at anne.vedella@spl.org by Tuesday.


MWH Global buys Bellevue firm IPS

A Broomfield, Colo.-based engineering and construction company, MWH Global, has acquired a Bellevue firm, Integrated Project Solutions, which will operate as a wholly owned subsidiary of MWH Global.

MWH is a consulting firm with 6,000 employees worldwide. It does engineering design and remediation, and other work in Europe, Middle East, India, Asia and the Pacific Rim. Integrated has offered project management software and services in the Pacific Northwest for 10 years.


DKA makes Inc. Inner City 100 list

Seattle architectural firm DKA was recently named to a list of the fastest growing inner city companies in the country.

DKA ranked 79 on Inc. Magazine's Inner City 100 list. More than 4,500 nominations for the competition came from 150 cities.

The list ranks fast-growing businesses in inner city areas around the country. DKA more than doubled from 1999 to 2003.

Donald King started DKA in Seattle in 1985. The company does affordable and multi-family housing, libraries, schools, offices and commercial facilities.


$3M gift will help WSU A/E students

A $3 million donation will go to starting an institute for entrepreneurship at Washington State University's College of Engineering and Architecture.

Donors Harold and Diana Frank gave the funds to support student projects and scholarships for the academic school year.

Twelve students studying engineering and business were expected to join the summer institute to learn about team building, marketing and intellectual property.

Harold Frank said the GI Bill helped him finish college, and was the inspiration for setting up scholarships for others.


Brown and Caldwell expands services

The consulting firm of Brown and Caldwell is expanding its water and wastewater practice to help clients plan, measure and control assets.

Brown and Caldwell, which has an office in Seattle, will focus on asset management solutions for electric, gas and transportation utilities and agencies. Neil Reid and Darin Johnson have backgrounds in electric utility work, and have joined the company as senior consultants.


Time to "Get Real" at Inform Interiors

Inform Interiors of Seattle is hosting "Get Real," an exhibit celebrating authenticity in art and modern furniture that runs through June 13.

The exhibit is intended to show the difference between classic modern furniture when it is made by an authorized manufacturer and when it is not. It will showcase pieces from designers such as Charles and Ray Eames, George Nelson and Isamu Noguchi, including the molded plywood chair from Charles and Ray Eames that was named the best furniture design of the century by Time magazine.

The store is at 1220 Western Ave. For information, call (206) 622-1608.


Design Detailings: Thursday forum on roofing systems

Architects interested in the latest roof systems can attend a two-hour presentation from 2 to 4 p.m. Thursday at Bell Harbor International Conference Center, 2211 Alaskan Way. The presentation is sponsored by the Puget Sound Chapter of the Construction Specifier's Institute.

It will look at innovative trends in the roofing industry, including garden roofs, cool roofing and sustainable roof system design.

The seminar will cover selecting a roof system that meets code requirements, and the climactic forces and user demands that will impact the roof.

For more information on the topic visit http://www.epdmroofs.org. To register, contact Bill Alma at (206) 669-0978 or e-mail wlalma@aol.com.

Tours offer glimpse into Pearl District

Photo courtesy Red Studio -- Gregg Galbraith
Tours of Pearl District housing run through Sunday.

Pearl CitySpaces, a home tour event in Portland's Pearl District, runs through Sunday. The tour, the first of its kind in the trendy former warehouse district, will include stops at seven condos, rentals and live/work spaces. Each has interior designs by Pearl District home furnishing stores.

The spaces are designed to reflect different lilfestyles — empty nesters, a couple with a young child, a woman in her thirties and a 45-year-old bachelor. The designers include Pendleton Home, Lotus Antiquest, J.D. Madison and Design Within Reach.

Cost is $10 through Thursday, and $15 Friday through Sunday. Hours are 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Order tickets online at http://www.pearlcityspaces.com.


Bader Architecture now on Capitol Hill

Bader Architecture has moved from 603 Stewart St. to 752 Harvard Ave. E., Seattle 98102. Its telephone is (206) 344-3878, and fax is (206) 344-5242. The e-mail address is bader@barderarch.com, and Web site is www.baderarch.com.


Arai Jackson moves to Denny Triangle

Arai Jackson Ellison Murakami has moved from 1601 E. John St. to 2300 Seventh Ave., Seattle 98121. The phone is (206) 323-8800, and fax is (206) 323-8518. The Web site is http://www.araijackson.com.


$3M gift to WSU helps A/E students

To spur innovation, Harold and Diana Frank have donated $3 million for the establishment of the Harold Frank Engineering Entrepreneurship Institute in the College of Engineering and Architecture at Washington State University.

The summer institute will offer programs that help student innovators take ideas to the marketplace, providing support for mentors and resources to help the students create innovative products within multidisciplinary teams.

"Entrepreneurship is increasingly important for students to understand in our globally competitive marketplace,'' said Anjan Bose, dean of the college.

Twelve students from engineering and business will participate in the institute. The program involves six weeks in Pullman, where students will learn a variety of skills ranging from team building, oral communications and marketing, to understanding patents and intellectual property.


Reid Middleton's Ye earns P.E. license

Ding Ye of Reid Middleton recently received his Washington Civil Engineering Professional Engineer's license. He is a design engineer.

He has seven years of experience in civil, environmental and construction engineering. He has worked on site development, environmental restoration and construction management.


May 11, 2005

Design Detailings: Roofing trends seminar May 19

A seminar on roofing industry trends will be held May 19 at the Bell Harbor International Conference Center, 2211 Alaskan Way in Seattle.

It is targeted at architects, specifiers, roofing contractors and owners, and will cover garden roofs, cool roofing and sustainable roof system design.

Participants will learn how to pick a roof system that meets code requirements, complies with what users want and can handle climate change.

The event is sponsored by the Puget Sound Chapter of the Construction Specifier's Institute. Cost is $25 for the four-hour seminar. To register, call Bill Alma at (206) 669-0978 or e-mail wlalma@aol.com. Professional education credits are available. For more information, see http://www.epdmroofs.org.

Tour the Sea-Tac expansion May 18

Architects and engineers working with the Port of Seattle at Sea-Tac will lead a tour of the new Central Terminal and Concourse A on May 18.

The tour is being offered by the AIA Southwest Washington Component and the Structural Engineers of Washington.

This is Sea-Tac's first major terminal facility in 30 years and adds nearly a million square feet. Walls of glass, structural steel ceilings, and unique rock and water features are included.

Concourse A opened last year. The Central Terminal will celebrate a grand opening in June.

The tour is free to AIA and SEAW members, or $10 for non-members. For more information, call Janet Matkin at (253) 627-4006.


May 4, 2005

Design Detailings: Bruce Dees wins design awards

Two parks designed by the Tacoma landscape architecture firm Bruce Dees & Assocites received awards from the Washington Parks & Recreation Association during its annual conference in April.

The awards were for designs at Rainier Vista Park in Lacey and Perrigo Park in Redmond.

Candela principal speaks in Shanghai

Denise Fong will give a talk next week in Shanghai on hazardous materials in lighting products. Fong is a principal at Seattle-based architectural lighting services company Candela.The Right Light 6 conference is a place for experts to talk about emerging efficient lighting technologies, applications and policy.


Portland's Pearl on display in May

Portland's Pearl District Business Association will offer public tours of living spaces in the Pearl District in northwest Portland. "Pearl CitySpaces" will open May 13 and run through May 22.

People can see interior designs of seven condominium, rental and live/work spaces, as well as three new buildings: the Louisa at the Brewery Blocks, the 14-story Pinnacle at Hoyt Street Yards and the six-story Lexis also at Hoyt Street Yards. The Pinnacle and Louisa are set to open this month.

Tickets are $10 Monday through Thursday and $15 Friday through Sunday. Hours are 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. For more information, see http://www.pearlcityspaces.com.


Talk tomorrow on livable communities

An event tomorrow at the Cascade Club at Trilogy in Redmond will look at how economics and livable communities are linked.

"Aligning the Construction Industry & Economic Development in the Puget Sound Region to Create Livable Communities" is being offered by the UW College of Architecture and Urban Planning, and the Institute for Collaborative Building.

Cost is $300. Real estate professionals can receive eight clock hours for attending, and AIA members can get eight learning units.

For more information, call Lyn Firkins at CAUP at (206) 685-8222 or e-mail jasper@u.washington.edu. Also see http://www.caup.washington.edu/cpe/.


April 27, 2005

Design Detailings: Conference on coastal disasters

A conference on coastal disasters takes place next month in Charleston, S.C., covering lessons learned from recent hurricanes, earthquakes and tsunamis.

Coastal engineers will look at recent events at the "Solutions to Coastal Disasters" conference May 8-11. Topics will include erosion, hurricane landfall wind speeds, federal funding issues, emergency protection, forecasting and reconstruction.

The event is presented by the American Society of Civil Engineers. NOAA Coastal Services Center Director Margaret A. Davidson is one of the featured speakers. For more information see http://www.asce.org//conferences/cd05/.

Landmark board opening in Ballard

The Mayor's Office is seeking applicants for the Ballard Avenue Landmark District Board. The seven-member board regulates proposed exterior changes to buildings, structures and public rights-of-way.

The post is for a Ballard historian or someone with an interest in the Ballard community. Applicants should send a resume and letter of interest by May 15 to: Heather McAuliffe, Coordinator, Ballard Avenue Landmark District Board, 700 Third Ave. in Seattle. For more information, call Heather McAuliffe at (206) 684-0229.


San Francisco college picks LMN Architects

City College of San Francisco recently picked LMN Architects of Seattle for a joint venture with the San Francisco firm Tom Eliot Fisch. Three other candidates were considered to design a performing arts complex on the largest of the City College's 12 campuses.

The complex will have a 75,000-square-foot performing arts center and a 97,000-square foot-classroom/lab. Design is set to start this spring.


Otak hired for several projects

Otak has been selected to design several new projects, including the Seattle flagship store for the Environmental Home Center and infrastructure projects in Kirkland.

Pentalink Architecture chose Otak as technical architect for a $38 million expansion of the Foss Home campus in Seattle's Greenwood neighborhood. There will be 123 apartments, 36 nursing units and 15 assisted-care units, a new dining facility, courtyard garden and a 240-stall underground parking structure.

The city of Kirkland selected Otak for two infrastructure projects set for construction this summer. Otak will do surveying and civil engineering for a public sanitary sewer for residences in the Rose Hill neighborhood, and provide a sanitary sewer casing for a line that crosses Interstate 405 just south of Northeast 116th Street and Slater Avenue. This encasement is required for a proposed widening of I-405 later this summer, part of the I-405 Congestion Relief and Bus Rapid Transit Nickel Project.

Otak is a planning, architecture, design and engineering firm headquartered in Lake Oswego, Ore.


Sparling CEO joins ArtsFund

Sparling chief executive officer Jim Duncan was recently appointed to the board of trustees of ArtsFund.

The nonprofit raises about $4 million each year for 60 nonprofit arts organizations in King and Pierce counties.

Sparling designs electrical engineering and telecommunications systems.


April 20, 2005

Design Detailings: UW forum on density's downside

University of Washington's College of Architecture and Urban Planning will offer a free forum on urban density Wednesday, April 27.

"The Flip Side of Urban Density: Squeezing Out Nature, Green Space, Funky Places and Affordability?" will be held at Architecture Hall at 6:30 p.m. Speakers include professors Folke Nyberg and Kristina Hill.

The forum will be moderated by Seattle City Council member Richard Conlin and is co-sponsored by Seattle Audubon Society and Seattle Displacement Coalition.

Building healthy places, April 26

The city of Seattle will present a free talk on designing and building Healthy Places on Tuesday, April 26, at Seattle City Hall's Bertha Landes Room from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m.

Featured speaker Richard Jackson is the California Department of Health's state public health officer. Jackson will look at the correlation between the built environment and environmental health.

For more information, call Lynne Barker at (206) 684-0806 or see http://www.seattle.gov/dpd/Sustainable_Building/COS_004334.asp.


SAF gets new name, Web site

Seattle Architectural Foundation recently launched a new name, graphic identity and Web site.

Now called Seattle Architecture Foundation, the group is a resource for information on public architecture and design.

The brochure and Web site were created by Girvin | Strategic Branding & Design and CHCS Web Development. See http://www.seattlearchitecture.org.


Workshop on how to nominate landmarks

A free workshop on how to nominate places as historic Seattle landmarks will be held Saturday at The Good Shepherd Center, 4649 Sunnyside Ave. N. in Wallingford from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.

People can learn how neighborhoods and communities can protect buildings from being torn down. Historic Seattle and the city of Seattle's Department of Neighborhoods are offering the event. To register, call (206) 622-6952.


Silverstein to give WTC update

Chief Executive Officer of Silverstein Properties Larry A. Silverstein will give an update on redevelopment of the New York World Trade Center Complex on Thursday in New York.

The event is put on by the Structural Engineering Institute of the American Society of Civil Engineers as part of the 2005 Structures Congress, which starts today.


April 13, 2005

Design Detailings: Emerging design ideas in UW show

An exhibit about current architecture projects in the region will be on display Friday through April 24 at the University of Washington's College of Architecture and Urban Planning, Gould Hall, 3949 15th Ave. N.E. in Seattle.

"Headlines: Emerging Architectural Ideas" will have 100 drawings and models of buildings commissioned or under construction.

The exhibit is sponsored by the Professionals' Advisory Council of the Department of Architecture. An opening reception will be held Friday from 5 to 8 p.m.

For more information, contact project coordinator Clara Simon at (206) 616-7966 or simonch@u.washington.edu.

Waterfront topic of Dorpat lecture

The Seattle City Council is offering a free history lecture today at Seattle Central Library's Microsoft Auditorium, 1000 Fourth Ave. Historian Paul Dorpat will give a retrospective on the central waterfront, covering how its been used from the late 1800's through today. His talk is from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. Co-sponsors include AIA Seattle, Allied Arts and the Museum of History and Industry.

For more information, call Councilmember Peter Steinbrueck's Office at (206) 684-8804.


W&H Pacific buys land survey firm

 Beehler
Beehler

W&H Pacific recently acquired Statewide Surveying, an Olympia-based land surveying firm. Statewide's staff are now part of the Olympia office of W&H's survey department, with Statewide owner Pat Beehler directing that department.

Beehler has 37 years of experience, including work at engineering firms and the Department of Natural Resources. He chairs the Thurston County Chamber of Commerce.

Consulting and design firm W&H Pacific works on land development, transportation and surveying. It has nine offices in Washington, Oregon and Idaho.


Callison to design Calif. retail center

Seal Beach, Calif.-based Century National Properties has selected Seattle's Callison Architecture to design a retail center in Seal Beach.

The center will be along a boulevard, and have 20 restaurants and shops such as HomeGoods and Rite Aid. Callison provides planning and design services to retail, hospitality, residential, health care and corporate clients around the world.


Hutch building gets LEED

A building at Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center's South Lake Union campus got LEED certification under a U.S. Green Building category for new construction and major renovations.

The Robert M. Arnold Building is Seattle's 10th LEED facility, according to Zimmer Gunsul Frasca Partnership.

ZGF's Seattle office designed the seven-story, 372,000-square-foot facility as a brownfield cleanup and used local materials for about a third of the building.


Right-of-way talk in Tacoma

Two Skillings-Connolly staff members will give a talk on right-of-way acquisitions at the American Public Works Association's conference today at 3:30 p.m. in Tacoma.

Skillings-Connolly's real estate services manager Brian Fagernes and project manager Stephen Thomas show how they use a Web database to coordinate the steps to get right-of-way. For more information, call conference chair Kristina Nelson at the city of Tacoma, (253) 591-5787.


Stormwater area wins ACEC award

The South Florida Water Management District's Stormwater Treatment Area 3/4 was given the Grand Conceptor Award — the nation's most prestigious award for innovative engineering — by the American Council of Engineering Companies at award ceremonies held in Washington, D.C. on Monday.

Recognized as one of the most promising advancements in restoring the Everglades, the project was chosen the year's best engineering achievement over such projects as the Rion-Antirion Bridge in Greece and Chicago's new Millennium Park.

The project is a constructed wetland built on 17,000 acres of former farmland designed to naturally remove high levels of phosphorus from water entering the treatment area from thousands of acres of active agricultural fields to the north. After water flows through the treatment area, phosphorus levels are significantly reduced. The treated water is then allowed to enter the Everglades. The area is the largest ever constructed in the world and has exceeded performance expectations since it began operation.


April 6, 2005

Design Detailings: Medical design forum this week

The Architecture for Health Panel of Washington & Oregon and AIA Seattle Continuing Education offer "Medical Design Forum" Thursday and Friday.

The forum, running 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Thursday and 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Friday, analyzes emerging trends affecting health care design. It will be held at R.E.I., 222 Yale Ave. N.

Health care changes constantly in technology, practice methods and funding — all of which affect design. The forum explores issues that impact design and construction of all types of health care facilities.

Keynote speaker is Jim Lussier, president-emeritus of Cascade Healthcare Community, which operates St.Charles Medical Center in Bend, Ore.

For more information, call AIA Seattle (206) 448-4938.

GeoEngineers buys firm in Missouri

GeoEngineers has opened an office in Springfield, Mo., by acquiring Advantage Professional Services. Advantage specializes in horizontal directional drilling technology.

Redmond-based GeoEngineers does nearshore and terrestrial pipeline crossing projects.


Two at HBB earn LEED

Two project engineers at HBB Mechanical Engineers recently earned LEED accreditation. Terry Gatlin is working on a renovation at Seattle Central Community College and Richard Watson is doing commissioning work for Yakima County.

HBB is in Seattle and provides mechanical engineering for architects, school districts, colleges, universities and local governments.


Spokane marketers talk about branding

Marketing Associates of Spokane will hold a half-day workshop on branding April 14 in Spokane at Red Lion River Inn, 700 N. Division St.

Speakers Ann Bradford of Girvin|Strategic Branding & Design and Debbie DeGabrielle of DeGabrielle Consulting will cover positioning and ways to build a brand and raise awareness.

Bradford works with clients like Procter & Gamble and Microsoft on branding strategy and DeGabrielle was a marketing principal at NBBJ.

Cost is $60 for members, or $80 for nonmembers.

To reserve, call MAS Vice President Jamie Miller at (509) 927-7747 or see www.maspokane.org.


Architecture film, slide show offered

The Northwest Film Forum will show a film Saturday on architecture and a slide show by Dutch architect Matthijs Bouw on Sunday. The University of Washington's Department of Architecture is co-sponsoring the events.

Seattle architect Jerry Garcia of Universal Non-Linear Design will introduce the work of deconstructionist Gordon Matta-Clark before showing "City Slivers and Fresh Kills: The Films of Gordon Matta-Clark," which will begin at 7 p.m. Matta-Clark produced the films in connection with his architectural projects in the 1970s. Cost is $15.

On Sunday, Bouw will give a lecture and slide show at 5 p.m. followed by a dance party. Bouw co-founded One Architecture and collaborated with Rem Koolhaas on a recent Les Halles proposal. He will show slides of the strip-malled tulip farms of the Skagit Valley and the industrial sprawl of Sea-Tac. Cost is $4.

The Northwest Film Forum is at 1515 12th Ave., between Pike and Pine streets. Call (206) 267-5380 or see www.nwfilmforum.org.


Candela principals speak at NYC fair

Candela principals Denise Fong and Mary Claire Frazier will speak at Lightfair International, a conference on architectural and commercial lighting in New York City on April 10-14. The conference is expected to draw 20,000.

Fong will be on a panel to discuss how lighting professionals and manufacturers currently communicate, and ways this could be improved. Frazier will present lighting case studies and tools for museums. Seattle-based Candela offers architectural lighting services.


March 30, 2005

Design Detailings: Architects talk about libraries

On Thursday, April 7, a design panel will meet at Seattle Central Library to talk about civic libraries. Moderators are Bill LaPatra of Mithun and Richard Yancey of Weinstein A|U.

Panelists will be University of Washington Professor of Architectural History Meredith L. Clausen, Thomas Hacker of Portland's Thomas Hacker Architects, Seattle Public Library Coty Librarian Deborah L. Jacobs, King County library system director Bill Ptacek and Seattle Design Commission Chair David Spiker.

The talk starts at 5 p.m.

GreenWorld event April 7

The Northern Pacific chapter of the International Interior Design Association is organizing a sustainable design event for April 7. GreenWorld will be held at the Bell Harbor Conference Center in Seattle. The keynote lecture is "The Great Ocean Adventure" presented by Jean-Michel Cousteau, the son of Jacques Cousteau.

Tickets are $55, $40 for IIDA members. For information, call Justine Kish at (425) 260-0418.


Military projects to be recognized

On Friday at the Harbor Club in downtown Seattle, Captain Robert Parker will name the winners of a competition recognizing work A/E and construction firms have done for the Army, Navy, Corps of Engineers, Coast Guard and the Air Force.

Thirteen entries were submitted. Categories were expanded this year to recognize different sized firms and acknowledge design/build collaborations, a major trend in military construction projects.

The featured speaker is Rear Admiral Leendert "Len" R. Hering, Sr., of the Navy's Northwest group. To register, contact Bob Galteland at bgalteland@reidmidd.com. Details are posted at http://posts.same.org/seattle/announce.cfm.


ZGF to design science center

Portland's Zimmer Gunsul Frasca Partnership was recently selected as design architect for the University of Cincinnati's 200,000-square-foot Social and Behavioral Sciences Center.

Cincinnati architectural firm Baxter, Hodell, Donnelly, Preston is the executive architect for the project. The building will have learning rooms, research space and offices.


ASCE names award finalists

Finalists in an American Society of Civil Engineers competition to recognize projects around the world are: the AirTrain JFK Light Rail System in New York; the Mubarak Pumping Station in Toshka, Egpyt; the Olivenhain Dam and Reservoir in San Diego; the Time Warner Center in New York; and Greece's Rion-Antirion Bridge, which is being called the longest cable-stayed bridge in the world.

Finalists were picked from 22 entries. A winning project will be named April 13.


Workshop on cost control

Vashon Island-based Contract Solutions Group will offer a workshop April 1 at the Red Lion in Seattle on "Improving Owner Cost Control and Claim Recovery for A/E Services."

It will cover contract negotiations, ways to improve firm selection and strategies to recover cost overruns for deficient services. There will be presenters from Penhallegon Associates Consulting Engineers and Sampley Consulting. To register, call Jeri Jennings of Contract Solutions Group at (206) 463-7487 or see http://www.contractsolutionsgroup.com.


March 23, 2005

Design Detailings: ACEC recognizes Sparling projects

Children’s Hospital in Denver
Sparling worked on technology systems in the 1.2-million-square- foot Children’s Hospital in Denver. The hospital is designed by Zimmer Gunsul Frasca Partnership of Portland and H&L Architects of Denver.

Two Sparling projects are finalists in a competition sponsored by the American Council of Engineering Companies.

For the Seattle Central Library, Sparling designed a hands-free wireless badge system for staff to communicate. In Denver, the company researched technology systems that would increase efficiencies in a 1.2 million-square-foot Children's Hospital set to open in 2007.

There were 175 entries from around the country in the ACEC competition. Winners will be named next month at the national convention.

CoCA show on art collaboration

A show called "Help Wanted: Collaborations in Art" runs through April 23 at the Center on Contemporary Art, 410 Dexter Ave. N. in Seattle.

Tonight at 7:30 there will be a multimedia presentation by artist Trimpin.

The show is organized by Gabe Kean, publisher of online magazine Born, and Jacob McMurray, senior curator at EMP.

Eleven installations are the collaborations of people in fields such as poetry, comics, architecture, video and programming.

For more information, see http://www.cocaseattle.org.


clater Partners moves to Olive Way

Sclater Partners Architects, an architectural design and planning firm in Seattle, moved to new offices at the Times Square Building at 414 Olive Way, Suite 300. It has also launched a new Web site, http://www.sclaterpartners.com. Phone is (206) 624-8682, fax is (206) 621-8445. The company was located at 2230 Eighth Ave.


Green building tips out on DVD

"Building with Awareness," a how-to documentary on design and construction of a green home, was recently released on DVD.

The DVD covers how to construct a mud plaster wall and maximize solar gain, for example. It features a New Mexico home with straw bale walls for insulation and adobe walls for thermal mass.

The documentary was directed by Ted Owens, who is an expert on energy- and resource-efficient building design who lives in a straw bale home.

The DVD is a product of Owens' Corrales, N.M.-based company Syncronos Design, and is for sale through http://www.buildingwithawareness.com and Amazon.com.


Peter Rasmussen wins AIA award

 Rasmussen
Rasmussen

The American Institute of Architects southwest Washington chapter gave its 2005 Charles community service award to Peter Rasmussen, a partner at Architects Rasmussen Triebolhorn of Tacoma.

Rasmussen was Tacoma's deputy mayor and chaired the Tacoma Planning Commission. The American Institute of Architecture southwest Washington chapter has members in Pierce, Thurston, Lewis, Mason and Grays Harbor counties.


How not to plan urban projects

Meredith Clausen, a professor of architectural history at the University of Washington, gives a free presentation about her newest book in Seattle on Wednesday, March 30.

The talk will be held at Rainier Square Conference Center, 1333 Fifth Ave. at 5:30 p.m. The book, which covers the Pan Am Building in Manhattan, is a case study in how not to plan a large-scale urban project.

Seattle Architecture Foundation is the sponsor. For more information, call (206) 667-9184.


March 16, 2005

Design Detailings: Tour the Seminar II complex in Olympia

The public is invited to tour the $41 million Seminar II complex at Evergreen State College in Olympia today.

Mahlum Architects of Seattle will lead the tour of the building, which is being submitted for LEED gold certification.

The tour starts at 5:30 p.m. at Red Square on campus. Reservations for a buffet dinner afterwards are required, cost is $25 for AIA and Construction Specifications Institute members, or $35. Call Janet Matkin at (253) 627-4006 for reservations.

Earth Solutions NW opens in Redmond

Bob Levinson, former president of Earth Consultants, recently formed a geotechnical engineering firm called Earth Solutions NW. Levinson is a principal in the new firm.

Earth Solutions NW specializes in value engineering, geotechnical engineering and risk analyses. The office is at 2603 151st Place N.E., Redmond, 98052. The phone number is (425) 284-3300.


Deborah Jacobs to speak at Town Hall

City Librarian Deborah Jacobs will be interviewed March 21 at Town Hall by reporter and urban planning specialist Bill Dietrich of The Seattle Times.

The talk will cover architecture and usage of the Central Library, as well as trends in information science and urban neighborhoods.

Tickets are $5, at the door only. Town Hall is located at 1119 Eighth Ave. in Seattle.


March 9, 2005

Design Detailings: ZGF to design science center

Portland's Zimmer Gunsul Frasca Partnership was recently selected as design architect for the University of Cincinnati's 200,000-square-foot Social and Behavioral Sciences Center. Cincinnati architectural firm Baxter, Hodell, Donnelly, Preston is the executive architect for the project. The building will have classrooms, research space and offices.

AIA Seattle offers home show, exhibit

AIA Seattle will hold a day-long forum Thursday on trends in residential design at the Environmental Home Center. Cost is $120 for members, or $200 for nonmembers.

AIA Seattle's Historic Resources Committee is calling for entries to display in a May exhibition called "New Kid on the Old Block," which will showcase historic buildings, neighborhoods and examples of sustainable design. Deadline is March 24 to register, materials are due April 14.

Jean Caroon, principal of Boston firm Goody Clancy, will be the keynote speaker at a related panel discussion, which will be held at AIA Seattle May 5.

For more information, call AIA Seattle at (206) 448-4938 or see www.aiaseattle.org.


AIA recognizes young architects

The American Institute of Architects recently named five recipients of the AIA Young Architects Award. AIA considers young architects to be professionals licensed 10 years or fewer regardless of age, and the award recognizes those making significant contributions to the profession early in their careers.

AIA recognized F. Michael Ayles of Stratford, Conn., Jeffrey DeGregorio of Boston, Miguel Rivera of Austin, Texas, Rick Harlan Schneider of Washington, D.C., and Eric Strain of Las Vegas.


Abdelmessih wins engineer award

The Puget Sound Engineering Council named St. Martin's College mechanical engineering professor Amanie Abdelmessih Academic Engineer of the Year. St. Martin's is in Lacey.

The council gives the award to an engineer in academia who works on advancing engineering and improving engineering education.

Abdelmessih has twice spent summers researching at NASA's Dryden Flight Research Center. She has done research at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory and at flight research centers. Abdelmessih earned her bachelor's degree at Egypt's Alexandria University and her doctorate at Oklahoma State University.


Design-Build classes start March 18

The Design-Build Institute of America's Northwest chapter will hold an educational program on project delivery on March 18. Related programs will follow in June and September. Those who complete the programs will receive the institute's Design-Build professional designation. For more information, contact the chapter at (206) 491-1148 or through its Web site, www.dbianwc.org.


Two at HBB earn LEEDs

Two project engineers at HBB Mechanical Engineers recently earned LEED accreditation. Terry Gatlin is working on a renovation at Seattle Central Community College and Richard Watson is doing commissioning work for Yakima County. HBB is in Seattle and provides mechanical engineering for architects, school districts, colleges, universities and local governments.



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