Newton partners with Industry to Find Innovative Building Solutions
Collaborating with industry to research and create solutions for climate change, one architecture faculty member is exploring robotic masonry systems as a more effective and precise method to meet the demands of a hot, crowded and resource scarce future.
Assistant Professor David Newton was awarded the inaugural Nebraska Masonry Alliance Design Research and Fabrication Grant for his proposal “Sustainability in Robotic Masonry Construction.”
With this grant, Newton aims to explore masonry systems and how they can advance sustainable building solutions. Starting in the 2023 spring semester, students taking Newton’s Arch 492/592/892 Computational Design Processes seminar will acquire hands-on experience researching the robotic processes and how best they can be leveraged to design more sustainable solutions.
“The project will allow students to gain experience and knowledge working with robotic fabrication and file-to-fabrication workflows involving generative design, performance analysis and design optimization,” said Newton. “Students will also examine and develop robotic fabrication procedures and masonry details that allow for swift “low-power” assembly and, crucially, the efficient disassembly of these systems in order to address the issue of recyclability.”
“Newton brings his research into the classroom to facilitate students learning a new skillset related to masonry construction that could significantly guide the trajectory of the professions and help designers explore more sustainable solutions for the built environment,” said Architecture Program Director David Karle. “This grant is another example of our longstanding partnership with Nebraska Masonry Alliance and the many ways our faculty are collaborating with industry.”
In first place, the College of Architecture’s Master of Science in Architecture with specialization in Interior Design (MSID) program is named among the Nine Best Online Master’s in Interior Design Degree Programs by BestValueSchools.org.
The 36-credit hour MSID program was a pioneer in online graduate interior design education and has over 15 years of experience in offering an online advanced degree. It is the college’s most decorated program, earning four top ranking degree accolades in the past three years. Last year, the program was honored with Best Master’s Degree by Intelligent.com. In 2019, MSID earned OnlineMasters’ Top 5 Best Online Master’s in Interior Design Programs with a special distinction for Best Faculty and Value College listed the program among the Top 25 Online Interior Design Programs with a ranking of ninth.
“At BestValueSchools.org, we understand the difficulties prospective students face in choosing where to go to school,” said Cassie Williams, communications specialist for BestValueSchools.org. “Because of that, we’ve researched thousands of colleges and universities to find the very best schools that meet the most important needs of prospective students for the best possible price. Universities and colleges that are part of our rankings meet our criteria for the best value education – great programs at a great price.”
According to BestValueSchools.org, the nine Online Master’s in Interior Design programs on their list have been evaluated and selected to represent a comprehensive cross-section of the available Online Master’s in Interior Design programs offered by public and private institutions of higher education.
“The flexibility of our online program affords students, from anywhere in the world, the opportunity to work with award-winning faculty to align their interests for a rewarding and meaningful graduate experience,” said Interior Design Program Director Lindsey Bahe. “This recognition speaks to the dedication of our faculty to foster and mentor our students in their pursuit of an advanced degree through academic design research that will enhance their skillset and knowledge to be forward thinking designers.”
-BVH Architecture donates lead corporate gift for scholarships and design competition
Working to elevate design excellence, student engagement and access to higher education, Nebraska-based BVH Architecture pledges $45,000 in scholarship funds as the lead corporate gift for the College of Architecture’s Norman Ochsner Matching Gift Challenge. As a matching gift, the scholarship funds will be matched by the Ochsner fund for a total impact of $90,000 for student scholarships. The scholarships will be awarded in conjunction with two BVH sponsored design competitions for architecture and interior design students. Once the funds are endowed for a year, program administrators and faculty can begin program implementation. To assist with competition administration costs, BVH is also pledging an additional $30,000.
A third-year architecture and interior design studio will be invited to participate. Participating studios may submit team or individual entries. Winners will be selected by a jury based on demonstrated creative and technical excellence in the study of architecture and interior design.
“BVH Architecture has been a long-time supporter of the college,” said Dean Katherine Ankerson. “BVH’s donation demonstrates their desire and commitment to improving the quality of education and opportunities we provide our students and shaping the future trajectory of the professions. We are extremely grateful for this gift and their continued support and friendship.”
BVH and the college have enjoyed a long and enduring partnership. Over the years, many UNL graduates have found internships and employment with BVH’s multi-disciplinary, design studios in Lincoln and Omaha, Nebraska, and Denver, Colorado. Numerous employees have taught courses and provided studio critiques, strengthening that important connection between academia and the professions.
“BVH Architecture is thrilled to take part in the Ochsner gift matching program to create design competitions for the Architecture and Interior Design Programs,” said Mark Bacon, BVH design principal. “BVH has a storied history supporting the UNL College of Architecture with achieving education and design excellence. The next chapter is creating two endowed scholarships to provide new opportunities and exciting possibilities for the next generation of designers. Our commitment to the students, faculty and college illustrates the optimism we find vital in the designed world.”
BVH’s donation match was made possible by an estate gift from a 1967 alumnus Norman Ochsner who grew up and lived in Norfolk, Nebraska. To maximize Ochsner’s forward-thinking gesture, the college is investing and using a portion of those funds for matching, endowment-level scholarships of $15,000 or more. For more information regarding the Norman Ochsner Matching Gift Challenge or other donation opportunities contact Cameron Andreesen, director of development with the University of Nebraska Foundation at 402-458-119 or cameron.andreesen@nufoundation.org.
UNL Architecture Students Win Grand Prize In International Competition
Former master of architecture students Hannah Christy and Craig Findlay were named the student grand prize winners of Architizer’s prestigious 2020 One Drawing Challenge for their project titled “Concrete Atla(nti)s.” Out of 404 total international submissions, spring graduates Christy and Findlay were selected by a jury as the student competition winners.
“We feel extremely grateful Architizer has recognized our work in the 2020 One Drawing Challenge. Working on this project with my studio partner Craig Findlay, and our professor Brian Kelly, was an absolute joy,” said Christy. “Brian constantly encouraged us as a team to push ourselves by challenging countless conceptual avenues and unconventional representation techniques. Overall, it was such a positive experience, and we are beyond thankful for this outcome.”
Their entry originated from Associate Professor Brian M. Kelly’s Studio Copy Right design research studio during the fall of 2019. Other College of Architecture finalists include Audrey Lanik and Di Zai Awng for their project “Elevated” and Ian Jones for his project “Tower of Tangier’s.” All of these submissions were supervised by Kelly.
“Mentoring Hannah and Craig through this project was a very rewarding experience for me, and this recognition is a testament to their talent and hard work,” said Kelly.
Christy and Findlay offer insight to their project’s meaning and inspiration.
“Representing our capacity to maintain archaic infrastructure in an overwhelming environment overflowing with waste, occupied by a population complacent to unrest, this drawing is as complex as the topics it alludes to. It is set in one of the 72 decommissioned Atlas-F missile silos scattered across the United States. This drawing critiques the haphazard mismanagement of reusable commodities of varying scales ranging from abandoned infrastructure to recyclable materials. Through the convention of a section, this drawing shows the activities in the depth of the repurposed missile silo.”
This is the second year in a row Kelly’s architecture students have represented the college as finalists in this competition. Nate Gradoville competed last year with his project titled “Seed Lottery.”
“This prestigious award is indicative of the strength and passion possessed by former graduate architecture students Hannah Christy and Craig Findlay and Professor Kelly’s continued dedication to mentorship,” said Architecture Program Director David Karle.
The College of Architecture announces the appointment of David Karle to director of the Architecture Program. Karle previously served as interim director during the 2020 spring semester and assumes the director position August 17th.
Karle brings years of academic expertise and leadership to this position. He has been with the Architecture Program since 2010 teaching undergraduate and graduate architecture studios and theoretical courses such as Elements of Architectural Design, Urbanism and Project Territory.
Karle has been active building collaborations with a variety of stakeholders and professional organizations including developing a long-standing partnership with SGH Concepts and Dri-Design. The collaboration created a student scholarship/award program in 2014 which has brought in over $60,000 in additional funding to the college with 24 student scholarships awarded. The partnership bridges both theory and practice, bringing awareness to the university, the college and the construction industry.
Helping shape college and university policies and advance the discipline, Karle has served on the college’s Curricular & Student Affairs Committee (CSAC), representing the Architecture Program in reviewing changes to address topics related to undergraduate and graduate curriculum, scholarships, honors, awards and international programs. As program director and CSAC committee member, Karle aims to build strong connections with international and university partners to enhance student recruitment and faculty exchange; create more robust study abroad opportunities and student engagements and maximize the extent to which students pursue diverse degrees through new pathways within and across multiple disciplines.
Working to elevate the college’s contributions at the university level, Karle served on the ACE-10 Impact Project Committee helping shape course curriculum. Karle also represents the College of Architecture on UNL’s Faculty Senate, an essential element of the university’s shared governance initiative.
Renown as an urbanism and architectural design scholar, Karle has presented at various design conferences, and his work has been widely published and esteemed by his peers. Karle’s writings have been published in the Journal of Architectural Education, MONU, Manifest, CLOG and Mas Context. Currently, he is a member of the editorial board at Magazine on Urbanism (MONU).
Karle has been awarded numerous accolades during his tenure with UNL including a Great Plains Fellowship by the Center for Great Plains Studies for his contributions in regional patterns of urbanism; the Faculty Award for Excellence in Teaching by the College of Architecture for his sustained record of admirable teaching and innovative instruction; and the UNL Annis Chaikin Sorensen Award for outstanding teaching in the humanities. Among his peers, Karle is known for his tireless pursuit of student academic recognition, mentoring new scholars, helping them earn several awards annually in regional and national competitions.
“I am honored by this promotion and will work to sustain and facilitate current initiatives and build upon our program’s strengths and long-standing tradition of excellence,” said Karle. “I am dedicated to advancing our leadership and collegiality by supporting faculty, students, and staff.”
“David has served the Architecture Program tirelessly in many ways over the years,” commented College of Architecture Dean Katherine Ankerson. “I join the faculty with full confidence in his demonstrated leadership and look forward to watching the next chapter of the Architecture Program unfold.”
Architecture students help Lincoln museum explore expansion options- Tractors. Most Midwesterners have memories associated with them whether it be their first childhood toy; a hot, humid summer of baling hay or a way of life. Over 3,000 guests from as close as next door to as far as India visit University of Nebraska’s Lester F. Larsen Tractor Test and Power Museum every year because of their interest and nostalgia for these mammoth machines. Museum Manager of Exhibits Lance Todd and museum stakeholders would love to see those numbers increase and have partnered with UNL’s College of Architecture to explore expansion options for the museum. The design project was originally planned as a way to kick off the museum’s 100th anniversary scheduled for this summer, however with the COVID pandemic, the celebration has been moved to 2021 but the design process forged ahead with the help of UNL architecture students.
“We have over 30 tractors in our collection, the oldest being a 1910 Minneapolis Ford tractor,” said Todd. “Adding to that collection with additional rare pieces is one of our goals. Additional exhibit and storage space would allow us to have more tractors and more memorabilia than what are actually on display now. It would give us the freedom to rotate things in and out and curate the collection we want. I would love for us to be known for how unique and rare our collection is. We don’t want to be just a collection of antique tractors similar to what you might find at a county fair. We want to be a museum where you’ll find models and unique pieces you won’t find anywhere else.”
Located on UNL’s East Campus, the current museum began as a tractor testing laboratory built to satisfy a 1919 Nebraska law mandating that every model sold in Nebraska must pass specified power and performance standards. It was the first tractor testing facility in the world and became recognized as a museum by the UNL’s Board of Regents in 1998 with a new testing facility located adjacent to the original building.
With over 100 years in operation and not having a major renovation in years, the Architecture Program’s Fabrication And Construction Team (FACT) design/build studio, led by Professor Jeffrey L. Day, FAIA was a welcome strategic partner. Working remotely, the studio spent an intense eight weeks researching, designing and reimagining what the next chapter for this facility would look like.
FACT usually takes on projects that engage creative, non-profit clients and communities in collaborations that span design and construction and have a meaningful impact for all parties involved. “The museum collaboration was a perfect fit for the FACT studio. The project offered our students a unique challenge to design concepts that would not only engage visitors with the past but also the future of agricultural technology. It’s very rewarding for our students to take on projects that don’t have predetermined solutions. Such projects lend to the creative process and stretches the designers’ skills.”
The students were asked to address certain museum criteria and goals. Ideally, this new development would expand the exhibit space by two to three times its current size, transform the aesthetics and accessibility of the facility into a first-class museum with an inviting reception area and office space, develop ways to engage the campus and the public with innovative programming and create additional classroom and learning areas for students and clubs.
The remote studio was split into four design teams, each coming up with creative solutions for the museum to consider. The first team proposed merging new construction with repurposed service buildings for a museum complex; another suggested extending the exhibition beyond the future building and distributing tractors throughout East Campus using a grid of display frames, the third team explored a new building site on East Campus with greater public access and visibility; and the last with a thematic agricultural nod to the museum’s past proposed a complex of buildings with a “living street” for increased community engagement.
“For the short amount of time they were given, I was very impressed with the ideas the students came up with,” Todd said. “It definitely gave us a lot of options to look at moving forward. What we generally do with projects like this is pull from ideas presented by each group and then add it to some of our own ideas, and usually what we come up with is a really unique plan.”
Professor Day said the student concepts were presented to UNL’s Executive Campus Planning Committee and the Aesthetic Review Committee for feedback. “The committee responses were very helpful for the students’ project development,” said Day. “They offered input regarding the pluses and minus of each proposal and suggestions for how each team could advance their designs.” The next phase for the museum project is fundraising and concept refinement.
“FACT would like to assist the museum by developing the student ideas further,” said Day. “We could also look at building some aspect of the student designs such as the display frame exhibits to create visibility for the museum which would do a lot to propel community awareness for the project and fundraising efforts.”
Day explains the students can continue to work on this project as a UCARE assignment, independent study or possible future studio.
“I was really happy with the work the students did for this eight-week remote studio,” Day said. “Ideally, I prefer in-person studio instruction. I think there’s something to be said about making physical things, whether it’s building mock ups in the shop, or models or something like that. However the students made some solid digital designs and concepts for further development that I’m pretty proud of.” Working remotely due to the COVID pandemic presented students some skill strengthening opportunities in adaptability.
“This is my first, fully-remote studio,” said architecture student Sunkist Judson. “Since we didn’t have access to go visit the Larsen Museum and Splinter Labs in person, I feel like we did not get the opportunity to fully experience the space. Looking at images provided by Lance Todd and using Google Earth is one thing, but being there at the site in person is a little different. Personally, I feel more connected when I visit a site.”
However, even with the drawbacks of working remotely, Judson said he wouldn’t want to change his experience. Judson said he really liked working with a real client.
“This is a unique experience for me, and I look forward to see how the next group will take these ideas and elevate them to the next level,” said Judson. “I love we are looking into a project where it might become part of a reality someday, even though it is just the beginning. I love that I get to be a part of this design where we are working for the community and the university.”
The College of Architecture is pleased to announce Dean Katherine S. Ankerson, FIIDA, was one of six International Interior Design Association (IIDA) members inducted into the prestigious IIDA College of Fellows for 2020.
Ankerson joins an elite peerage, an honor few can claim with less than 1% of IIDA members elevated to the College of Fellows, and of those fellows, only a select few are full-time educators.
According to IIDA, induction into the College of Fellows honors a member’s achievements and contributions to the profession and the association. It is the highest and most prestigious honor IIDA bestows. The College of Fellows is composed of members who have demonstrated outstanding and exemplary professionalism and leadership.
“The IIDA College of Fellows honors IIDA members who have demonstrated significant accomplishments within the association and their own design communities. This year’s inductees are thought leaders, inspiring educators and design innovators. We are pleased to be welcoming them for this term,” said College of Fellows Chair Guy Geier, FIIDA.
This fellowship adds to Ankerson’s long list of accolades and accomplishments as an educator and advocate for the design community. In addition to the IIDA fellowship, Ankerson was honored by the Interior Design Educators Council (IDEC) in 2017 as a fellow and has held numerous prestigious professional positions. She has served as a board member for design organizations such as the Council for Interior Design Accreditation (CIDA), the American Institute of Architects-Nebraska (AIA NE), the AIA NE Foundation, the Nuckolls Fund for Lighting Education and IDEC among other professional contributions.
In addition to IIDA, Ankerson is a member of the American Institute of Architects (AIA) and the Interior Design Educators Council (IDEC). She is also a licensed architect in Washington and Nebraska and holds a National Council of Architectural Registration Boards (NCARB) certificate.
“It is humbling to be named an IIDA fellow and listed among the ranks of professionals who I’ve always admired,” commented Dean Ankerson. “As with every honor there is opportunity, and I hope to learn from this esteemed peerage of designers and galvanize the next generation of designers to be leaders and innovators who will plan boldly, design fearlessly and realize their limitless potential for what is possible.”
Architecture Students Design New Santee Sioux Nation Family Resource Center
University of Nebraska College of Architecture master students are helping theSantee Sioux Nation Family Resource Center (SSNFRC) become a reality. After years of planning, consultation and design, this new center is breaking ground January 10th at 2 pm on the Santee Sioux Nation Reservationat the corner of Wounded Man Ave and Visiting Eagle St.,Niobrara, Nebraska, with an estimated fall 2019 completion date. This 950 square foot facility encompasses a Child Advocacy Center and a Services and Support Center for residents and members of the Santee Sioux Nation. Among the amenities, the center will have rooms for private interviews, observations, examinations and a large room and kitchen for family reunions.
The work on the SSNFRC facility began late in 2015 as a collaboration between The Nebraska Children and Families Foundation (NCFF), The Santee Sioux Tribal Council (SSTC) and the PLAIN2015-16 design research studio, instructed by Architecture Associate Professor Jason Griffiths. In the spring of 2016 Griffiths and design-build master students created the concept designs and assisted with construction documents for the project in consultation with SSTC and NCFF.
With the concepts in hand, this allowed the design team to raise funds and begin negotiations with construction professionals.
“Over the next year I was able to maintain enthusiasm and develop details of the project through other classes,” said Griffiths. “These efforts paid off through material donations of brick by Glen-Gery Brick and the International Masonry Institute, windows from Acadia, CLT wall cost deductions from Structurlam and “in-kind” donations of services from engineers Shaffer & Stevens.”
With commitments and financials in place, the NCFF appointedActual Architecturefounder and UNL Architecture Professor Jeffrey L. Day as the architect of record for the final stages of the project including preparing construction documents, construction contract administration and collaborating with Griffiths, the PLAIN studio and contractor Woody Roberts Construction.
“The Santee Sioux Nation Family Resource Center is a fine example of how the College of Architecture can bring a meaningful change for Nebraskans who live in challenging situations. Teaching architecture through “design-build” presents a unique opportunity to provide quality buildings for people who would not normally have the benefit of our profession,” said Griffiths.
A facility located in a remote, rural Nebraska community under federal jurisdiction with the confines of a tight budget presents many challenges that would understandably exclude most working architects. However it’s precisely those difficulties that give College of Architecture students unique learning experiences in design-build education explains Griffiths.
“The process is long and often appears to move slowly but it also provides a true test of the patience and broad, creative thinking needed to make a good building,” said Griffiths. “Through design-build, students learn to apply their knowledge to “real world” situations while maintaining a high quality of architecture.”
Griffiths explains the SSNFRC is a great example of architectural work that elevates ordinary building forms through careful consideration of spatial arrangements.
“It illustrates how the functional aspects of a building can develop into a symbolic architectural language,” said Griffiths. “In this case the message lies in the eloquent arrangement of two squares that are linked together in the corners, a symbol for uniting people whose lives have been disrupted by difficult circumstances. From the exterior, the building appears unremarkable. Its double gables convey the plan arrangement in two simple facades each with a square window. However this simplicity is a pretext for a message of stability that we want the project to convey.”
Through careful consideration and input from stakeholders’ consultations, the students created a facility that was cognizant of the environmental situations surrounding the building’s occupants.
“Children and families coming to this building do so in difficult emotional circumstances. We hope that an unassuming building would help mitigate fear and anxiety wherever possible,” said Griffiths. “To provide privacy, windows selected for the façade that look into examination rooms are partly obscured with a ContraVision, one-way screen, brick pattern, while the larger windows that open to the gathering spaces invite the kind of reconciliation that we hope the building will help achieve.”
Additionally, this building will be the first, fully-conditioned, cross-laminated timber (CLT) building in the Great Plains region. CLT is an emerging form of construction that offers an alternative to concrete and steel construction. It provides a clean, fast-track assembly system with the benefits of carbon sequestration.
“These CLT advantages add to a profound sense of warmth and stability on the interior. The wall and roof panels, produced from solid 4’ thick Douglas Fir, provide a natural finish with a palpable sense of solidity that is rare in contemporary architecture,” said Griffiths. “Once completed SSNFRC will become a showcase for advanced forms of engineered lumber construction and will demonstrate how the College of Architecture is promoting new, innovative, forms of architectures to the next generation of architects.”
Associate Professor Peter Olshavsky’s essay “Reconfiguring Architectural Agency” appeared in the catalogue for Steven Holl’s exhibition at the Dorsky Museum. As part of the museum’s Hudson Valley Master series, Steven Holl: Making Architecture, examines the work of one of the world’s foremost architects (http://www.stevenholl.com/exhibits/126).
Curated by Nina Stritzler-Levine in collaboration with Steven Holl Architects, the exhibition reveals Holl’s intricate and distinctive process of making architecture through approximately one hundred models and related sketches and other studies created for nine recent projects, among them the Arts Building at Franklin and Marshall College, Pennsylvania; The Kennedy Center Expansion, Washington D.C.; the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston; and Maggie’s Cancer Care Center in London.
Dr. Olshavsky was invited to write an essay linking Holl’s work to architectural phenomenology. The essay argues that Holl’s recent architecture is rooted in a reconfigured notion of architectural agency. This reconfiguration provides three opportunities.
“It enables us to re-describe Holl’s important relation to the tradition of phenomenology. It shows architecture’s active comportment in socially embedded settings,” said Olshavsky. “It advances the insight: architecture makes us what we are”.
With a research focus in history, theory and design, Dr. Olshavsky was a clear choice for selection. “As a scholar in architectural history and theory, this was a wonderful opportunity to help shape the discourse on Holl’s recent work. Holl and the Dorsky Museum were very engaged and supportive,” commented Olshavsky. “I hope we will be able to work together again in the future.”
The exhibition is currently at Soongsil University Gallery in Seoul, Korea and will continue to travel internationally.
“Dr. Olshavsky’s invitation to author the essay exemplifies the quality of scholarly work produced by our renowned faculty. It is gratifying to see Peter’s work continually showcased on an international stage,” said College of Architecture Dean Katherine Ankerson.
The College of Architecture is pleased to announce the Hyde Lecture Series opens another exciting chapter for the design and planning disciplines. The 2018/2019 series, “Enacting Change”, invites speakers to campus who utilize planning and design as tools for building agency in local and international communities.
The college’s Hyde Lecture Series is a long-standing, endowed public program. Each year the college hosts compelling speakers in the fields of architecture, interior design, landscape architecture and planning that enrich the ongoing dialog around agendas which are paramount to the design disciplines and College of Architecture graduates.
The college is also pleased to share this year’s Hyde Lecture Series poster was designed by Atlas Lab Inc.
Lecturer Line-Up:
FALL
Speaker: Majora Carter, CEO of Majora Carter Group, LLC. Date, Time & Location: August 24, Friday, 4:00 pm, Union Auditorium
Speaker: Dan Pitera, executive director of the Detroit Collaborative Design Center, University of Detroit Mercy School of Architecture Date, Time & Location: October 5, Friday, 4:00 pm, Richards Hall, Room 15.
Speaker: Amie Shao, principal with MASS Design Group Date, Time & Location: October 26, Friday, 4:00 pm, Richards Hall, Room 15.
Speaker: Brigitte Shim, professor at the John H. Daniels Faculty of Architecture, Landscape, and Design, University of Toronto and a principal at Shim-Sutcliffe Architects Date, Time & Location: November 9, Friday, 4:00 pm, TBA.
SPRING
Speaker: Katherine Darnstadt, architect, educator and founder of Latent Design Date, Time & Location: February 8, Friday, 4:00 pm, Union Auditorium.
Speaker: Kimberly Garza, founder and principal at ATLAS Lab Date, Time & Location: March 1, Friday, 4:00 pm, Richards Hall, Room 15.
Speaker: Yolande Daniels, partner and principal designer at StudioSUMO Date, Time & Location: March 8, Friday, 4:00 pm, Richards Hall, Room 15.
Speaker: Lisa Schweitzer, professor with Sol Price School of Public Policy, University of Southern California Date, Time & Location: April 5, Friday, 4:00 pm, Richards Hall, Room 15.
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