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September 6, 2017
Ever wonder what a city designed with women in mind might look like?
That's one topic of a free panel discussion titled “Power and the Urban Form in Seattle” that will be held from 7 to 9 p.m. Sept. 11 at MG2, 1101 Second Ave. in Seattle.
The event is part of the 2017 Seattle Design Festival and is being presented by Whitney Rearick, a former affordable housing project manager.
Rearick said urban planning decisions have historically favored those with power. From redlining and racial covenants to interstates that divide low-income communities. Who has power — and who doesn't — is reflected in the urban fabric.
The panelists are Charles Mudede of The Stranger, Thaisa Way and Anne Taufen Wessells of the University of Washington, and Anaid Yerena of the UW Tacoma.
They will talk about how urban planning can address historic patterns of discrimination and segregation. They will also address where different groups live, what kind of buildings they live in, as well as how and for whom public spaces are designed.
R.S.V.P. at http://tiny.cc/ghddny/.
The American Institute of Architects Seattle chapter will present a free program Sept. 18 that encourages architects to advocate for more people-oriented development and vibrant urban communities.
“Enter the Fray: How Architects & Designers Can Be Powerful Advocates” is being presented by AIA Seattle's public policy board from 5:30 to 7 p.m. at 1010 Western Ave. in Seattle.
The board says architects and designers are uniquely positioned to advocate for design that contributes to healthy, livable communities, and to work towards finding consensus on controversial issues, but too often they step back from getting involved in public policy. The panel is Rico Quirindongo of DLR Group, Barbara Swift of Swift Co., Grace Kim of Schemata Workshop, and Sara Maxana of the city of Seattle. The moderator is Rick Mohler of the University of Washington.
The event is part of the 2017 Seattle Design Festival. The schedule is at http://designinpublic.org/.
SMPS Seattle will hold its Networking|2017-2018 Kick-Off Party from 4 to 6:30 p.m. Sept. 20 at Lease Crutcher Lewis at 2200 Western Ave. in Seattle.
The event will include a brief annual report and introduction of the 2017/2018 board of directors. There will be drinks, appetizers and entertainment.
Cost is $40 for members, $45 for member firms and $50 for non-members. SMPS members can bring one non-member guest for free. Register at http://tiny.cc/2676my/.
The Seattle City Council's Planning, Land Use and Zoning Committee will hold a public hearing at 7 p.m. Sept. 11 on proposed legislation to change the design review process.
The meeting is at SIFF Uptown Cinema Theater, Auditorium 3, at 511 Queen Anne Ave. N.
Proposed changes include:
Requiring early community outreach by applicants before starting the design review process
Changing thresholds that determine if design review is required to total square footage instead of dwelling unit counts, use and zone
Establishing new thresholds to determine the type of design review based on site and project characteristics
Allowing affordable housing projects that receive public funding or federal low-income housing tax credits to go through an administrative design review process.
Design in Public will present a free discussion on design literacy from 6 to 9 p.m. Sept. 13 at DLR Group's office at 51 University St. in Seattle.
Panelists will share their experiences teaching design and interdisciplinary art. They are Sergio Daliva of the Universidad Autonama Metropolitana, Robert Bonniol of Mode Architectural, George Zatloka of DesignArt and Technology Studio, Carol Rashawana of K-Love4art+Gallery 110, Camella Cooper of Artifacts Collective and Beverly Naidus of the University of Washington Tacoma. The facilitator is Celine Rosak of Design Thinking & Innovation Collective.
R.S.V.P. at http://tiny.cc/u72fny/. The event is part of the 2017 Seattle Design Festival.
AIA Seattle's Urban Design Forum will offer a free panel discussion on “Resilient Power: Adapting To Risk In A Changing Seattle” from 5:30 to 7 p.m. Sept. 14 at 1010 Western Ave.. in Seattle.
AIA Seattle said the city is committed to becoming more resilient in the face of social, economic and physical challenges, and is a member of the 100 Resilient Cities program funded by the Rockefeller Center.
The panel is Michael Mariano of Schemata Workshop in Seattle, Jessica Finn Coven of the city of Seattle and Katy Ricchiuto of EcoDistricts in Portland. It will discuss regional resilience, including disaster preparedness, eco districts, housing affordability and social equity, and focus on the connections between those things.
R.S.V.P. at http://tiny.cc/t2g5my/. The event is part of the 2017 Seattle Design Festival.
August 30, 2017
The University of Washington Integrated Design Lab will offer tours of the Bullitt Center at 1501 E. Madison St. in Seattle Sept. 9, 11 and 12.
The Bullitt Foundation opened the $32.5 million building in early 2013, and bills it as the world's greenest commercial building. It earned Living Building certification from the International Living Future Institute.
The tours are Sept. 9 at 10 a.m. and noon, and Sept. 11 and 12 at noon and 4 p.m.
They will highlight strategies that help the Bullitt Center meet the Living Building Challenge, such as mechanical and electrical systems, gray water and rainwater treatment systems, non-flush toilets and the stairway.
Cost is $5. Buy tickets at http://tiny.cc/dyw7my/. The tours are part of the Seattle Design Festival.
Architecture firms in July reported rising demand for design services, the American Institute of Architects said.
The Architecture Billings Index was 51.9 in July, the sixth month of an above-50 score, which indicates an increase in billings. But the index was down from 54.2 in June, the AIA said in a press release.
The index reflects the approximate nine to 12-month lead time between architecture billings and construction spending.
The South scored the highest, at 53.8, followed by the Midwest at 53.8, the Northeast at 53.6 and the West at 50.9. The project-inquiries index was 59.5 and the design-contracts index was 56.4.
AIA Chief Economist Kermit Baker said the July figures show continued health in construction. “Strong gains in new project work coming into architecture firms points to future growth in design and construction activity over coming quarters.”
Tomorrow, the American Society of Landscape Architects will host a program via Facebook Live about security issues in designing public places in view of recent events in Charlottesville, Barcelona and London.
A panel of landscape architects will examine public safety for public, government and institutional properties. Key design goals and challenges will also be discussed, with a focus on how to provide a balance between addressing threats and creating beautiful public spaces.
Panelists are Bernie Alonzo of Gustafson Guthrie Nichol in Seattle, Leonard Hopper of Weintraub Diaz in Nyack, N.Y., and Richard Roark of Olin in Philadelphia. The moderator is Nancy Somerville of the American Society of Landscape Architects in Washington, D.C.
The livestream is from noon to 1 p.m. at http://www.facebook.com/AmericanSocietyofLandscapeArchitects/.
Microsoft will present two free panel discussions — about ethical issues with artificial intelligence and how to design for diverse groups — on Sept. 15 at Seattle Central Library, 1000 Fourth Ave.
The talk called “Humanity-Centered Design: How Ethics Will Change AI” is from 6 to 7 p.m. It will focus on designing artificial intelligence that empowers people and improves the world.
Panelists are Mira Lane of Microsoft, Rob Girling of Artefact, Warren Schramm of Teague, Scott Nazarian of McKinsey & Co., and author Ramez Naam. The moderator is Ruth Kikin-Gil of Microsoft.
The “Inclusion by Design” talk is from 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. It will explore whether human diversity can be leveraged to create meaningful experiences for billions of people.
Panelists are Jyoti Shukla of Nordstrom, Oscar Murillo of Microsoft, Jessica Eggert of IncludeGlobal, Surya Vanka of Authentic and Anne Diaz of Airbnb. Moderator is Steve Clayton of Microsoft.
R.S.V.P. at http://tiny.cc/ij96my/. The discussions are part of the 2017 Seattle Design Festival.
August 23, 2017
Sam Assefa, director of Seattle's Office of Planning & Community Development, will discuss the city's approach to neighborhood planning, issues of density, zoning and land use from 5 to 7 p.m. Sept. 11.
Assefa will also talk about impacts of the Housing Affordability & Livability Agenda as recommendations are incorporated into neighborhood upzones across the city.
The free event will be in the Bertha Knight Landes Room of City Hall at 600 Fourth Ave. It was organized by AIA Seattle as part of the 2017 Seattle Design Festival, which runs Sept. 9 – 22 at venues in the city. R.S.V.P. at http://tiny.cc/cjc5my/.
The Passive House Institute US 12th annual North American Passive House Conference is Sept. 27 – Oct. 1 at Motif Hotel at 1415 Fifth Ave. in Seattle.
The theme is “The Path to Zero Source Energy.” The 70 presentations will educate builders, architects, policymakers and energy professionals on methods for achieving resilient and healthy zero net energy buildings, including houses, multifamily, commercial and high-rise.
Cost is $545 for Passive House Alliance US members, and $690 for non-members. Register at http://tiny.cc/msg5my/.
DLR Group said it bought Dallas-based interiors firm Staffelbach. The terms were not disclosed.
Staffelbach provides programming, planning, workplace strategy, design, facilities management, move management, and product specification for Fortune 100 clients.
Its 70-person firm will operate as DLR Group|Staffelbach beginning Oct. 2, and join with DLR's Austin and Houston offices to serve clients in Texas.
Staffelbach was founded in 1966 by Swiss-born interior designer Andre Staffelbach, who is in the International Interior Design Hall of Fame. In 1985, he was joined in Dallas by Jo Heinz.
DLR Group provides architecture, engineering, interiors, planning, and building optimization. Among its projects in Texas is Canopy Hotel by Hilton in Dallas. Workplace clients include GEOLOG and USAA.
With Staffelbach, it has a 1,150-person staff.
A free exhibition on the future of transport, called Futurama Redux, will be at Seattle Central Library at 1000 Fourth Ave. Sept. 8-16 as part of the 2017 Seattle Design Festival.
It is the first U.S. showing of the international traveling exhibition. It was inspired by the Futurama exhibition at the 1939 World's Fair, which predicted (and celebrated) our auto highway, and gasoline-dominated present.
Futurama Redux imagines how we undo the 1939 Futurama paradigm to achieve efficient and clean urban mobility by the Year 2050. It encourages discussion of how Northwest residents might work backwards from a desired 2050 future to guide transportation and land use changes over the coming years.
The exhibit is sponsored by Coltura, a Seattle group that works to accelerate America's transition away from gasoline use, and Smarter Than Car of Beijing and Vienna. It is a think tank dedicated to questions of bicycle urbanism and future urban mobility.
Registration is open for the 2017 AIA Seattle Honor Awards for Washington Architecture, which recognize projects designed by architects throughout the state.
The early bird submission deadline is Sept. 20 and final submission is Sept. 27.
For more information, go to http://tiny.cc/egqvmy/.
The Honor Awards gala is at 5:30 p.m. Nov. 13 at Benaroya Hall in Seattle.
August 16, 2017
Katerra and the Young Professionals Committee of the Seattle chapter of the Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat will hold a free program titled “Cross-Laminated Timber 101” at 5:30 p.m. Aug. 30. It will be at Katerra's office, 542 First Ave. S.
Presenters are Hans Erik Blomgren, Jennifer Caldwell and Alec Thomas of Katerra. They will give an overview of CLT, its benefits and drawbacks, why it has become a popular talking point and how is it being accepted by local jurisdictions.
There will be a social hour with food and drinks, and attendees can examine CLT panels in the office. Register at http://tiny.cc/1t11my/.
Portland-based Otak said it acquired Loris and Associates, a Superior, Colorado-based civil and structural engineering firm. Financial terms were not released.
Loris was founded in 1988 and has 18 employees. It works with municipal clients on infrastructure, including trails, roads, bridges and site structures, and provides construction management.
Loris will become a division of Otak, an engineering, urban design, architecture, planning and project management firm with over 300 on staff.
In a press release, Otak said Peter Loris and his senior management team will help increase and diversify business in Colorado. They will be based in the Superior office, and collaborate with Otak's Boulder and Denver offices.
Otak said the merger will provide both firms' Colorado clients comprehensive engineering services, and expanded capabilities in planning and design.
Marketing Associates of Spokane announced its new 2017/2018 board of directors.
The board is Leslie Hebert of Coffman Engineers, president; Andrea Frye of Vandervert Construction, vice president; Brian Burton of Lydig Construction, treasurer; Brooke Giordano of DCI Engineers, sponsorship chair; Kasey Kuhn of Uptic Studios, special events chair; Katie Holmes of Trindera Engineering, public relations/social media chair; April Smith of GeoEngineers and Stephanie Aden of DCI Engineers, special programs co-chairs; and Terri McRae Garrett of ALSC Architects and Lukas Witkowski of Inland Northwest AGC, membership co-chairs.
Seattle Business Magazine ranked OAC Services No. 2 in its 100 Best Companies to Work For in Washington State in the medium-size businesses category, OAC said in a press release.
The Seattle-based construction management, architecture and engineering company said employees rated it exceptional in all categories: performance, communication, training and education, decision-making, rewards and recognition, benefits, leadership, work environment, hiring and retention, and corporate culture.
OAC competed against companies with 40 to 100 employees.
The city of Seattle is seeking members for a committee to provide feedback on development plans for Kaiser Permanente Medical Center at 201 16th Ave E. on Capitol Hill.
The goal is to ensure compliance with the master plan, which describes zoning, long range planning and transportation planning.
To be considered, send a letter of interest by Aug. 30 to Maureen Sheehan, Seattle Department of Neighborhoods, P.O. Box 94649, Seattle, WA 98124-4649 or to Maureen.Sheehan@seattle.gov. Sheehan is at (206) 684-0302.
Kaiser Permanente acquired Group Health Cooperative on Feb. 1.
Construction will begin in September on an addition to Bremerton United Methodist Church at 1150 Marine Drive in Bremerton.
Miles Yanick & Co. of Poulsbo designed the new entrance to the church and sanctuary. Construction is expected to be complete in 2018.
The BJC Group is the general contractor and Wnek Engineering is the civil engineer.
In a press release, Miles Yanick & Co. said the church was designed in 1963 by noted church architects Durham, Anderson & Freed. Yanick said it worked with the church building committee to devise an entrance that respects the lines of the original design.