Showing posts with label AIA Colorado. Show all posts
Showing posts with label AIA Colorado. Show all posts
Thursday, April 14, 2016
April is Colorado Architecture Month!
Every April The American Institute of Architects Colorado Chapter celebrates Colorado Architecture Month. They, together with support from other organizations, produce a series of public events throughout the state which highlight the importance of architecture in our every day lives and encourages the community to see why design matters. To check out upcoming events click here.
Friday, March 8, 2013
Confessions of a Charrette Junkie by JV DeSousa
Our friend and colleague JV DeSousa recently posted a blog about the design charrette that our principal, Paul Brady, participated in this past year. We hope that you find this article as interesting as we did! Enjoy!!!
To read other blogs by JV DeSousa please visit their blog by clicking here.
I’ll come right out and admit it. . . . . I’m a charrette-aholic.
What’s a charrette you ask? Well, the word really means “cart” in French and its relationship to architecture stems from the use of a cart to collect final projects in the design studios at the Ecole des Beaux Arts in Paris, but if you look it up on Wikipedia it says:

A charrette (pronounced [shuh-ret]), is often Anglicized to charette and sometimes called a design charrette. . . . In fields of design such as architecture, landscape architecture, industrial design, interior design, interaction design, or graphic design, the term charrette may refer to an intense period of work by one person or a group of people prior to a deadline. The period of a charrette typically involves both focused and sustained effort. The word “charrette” may also be used as a verb, as in, for example, “I am charretting” or “I am on charrette [or: en charrette],” simply meaning I am working long nights, intensively toward a deadline.
Much to the dismay of many people around me—starting with my wife and kids and ending with my business partners—I love working all sorts of weird hours of the night. I find that my most creative period of the day is between 1 a.m. and 3 a.m. And I love the craziness, intensity—and yes, stress—of having a very short period of time to complete a lot of design work. I can’t say exactly why I like this—it’s just the way I’m wired. So there it is—I’m an admitted charrette-aholic.
Last October I got a big fix at the Housing Colorado Now! Conference. I was given the opportunity to lead a great group of people through a charrette to design a project for the Estes Park Housing Authority. The team consisted of co-leader Paul Brady of Godden | Sudik Architects, Ulla Lange of WORKSHOP8, Elena Scott of Norris Design, Matt Heiser and Steve Lane of Basis Architecture, Matt Seewald of Palace Construction, Rita Kurelja of the Estes Park Housing Authority, Elicia Ratajczyk of Housing Colorado, several other design and development professionals and six amazing students from UC Denver.
The charrette was two days and two nights of non-stop designing, drawing, discussing, thinking and laughing (there may have been some crying and complaining too). In the end the design concept was distilled to “everyone wants their own little cabin in the woods.” I’ve never worked on any other project where large ungulates (aka elk) and how they walk across the site received more design discussion than cars and parking. And by the middle of the second night things got a little strange when one of the students took it upon himself to make up names for all of the team members. Swale Sister and Berm Bot make sense for landscape architects, but why one young female architecture student was named Tebow was lost on me.
In forty-eight mostly sleepless hours we went from a blank page to this:

And then to this:




To read other blogs by JV DeSousa please visit their blog by clicking here.
I’ll come right out and admit it. . . . . I’m a charrette-aholic.
What’s a charrette you ask? Well, the word really means “cart” in French and its relationship to architecture stems from the use of a cart to collect final projects in the design studios at the Ecole des Beaux Arts in Paris, but if you look it up on Wikipedia it says:
A charrette (pronounced [shuh-ret]), is often Anglicized to charette and sometimes called a design charrette. . . . In fields of design such as architecture, landscape architecture, industrial design, interior design, interaction design, or graphic design, the term charrette may refer to an intense period of work by one person or a group of people prior to a deadline. The period of a charrette typically involves both focused and sustained effort. The word “charrette” may also be used as a verb, as in, for example, “I am charretting” or “I am on charrette [or: en charrette],” simply meaning I am working long nights, intensively toward a deadline.
Much to the dismay of many people around me—starting with my wife and kids and ending with my business partners—I love working all sorts of weird hours of the night. I find that my most creative period of the day is between 1 a.m. and 3 a.m. And I love the craziness, intensity—and yes, stress—of having a very short period of time to complete a lot of design work. I can’t say exactly why I like this—it’s just the way I’m wired. So there it is—I’m an admitted charrette-aholic.
Last October I got a big fix at the Housing Colorado Now! Conference. I was given the opportunity to lead a great group of people through a charrette to design a project for the Estes Park Housing Authority. The team consisted of co-leader Paul Brady of Godden | Sudik Architects, Ulla Lange of WORKSHOP8, Elena Scott of Norris Design, Matt Heiser and Steve Lane of Basis Architecture, Matt Seewald of Palace Construction, Rita Kurelja of the Estes Park Housing Authority, Elicia Ratajczyk of Housing Colorado, several other design and development professionals and six amazing students from UC Denver.
The charrette was two days and two nights of non-stop designing, drawing, discussing, thinking and laughing (there may have been some crying and complaining too). In the end the design concept was distilled to “everyone wants their own little cabin in the woods.” I’ve never worked on any other project where large ungulates (aka elk) and how they walk across the site received more design discussion than cars and parking. And by the middle of the second night things got a little strange when one of the students took it upon himself to make up names for all of the team members. Swale Sister and Berm Bot make sense for landscape architects, but why one young female architecture student was named Tebow was lost on me.
In forty-eight mostly sleepless hours we went from a blank page to this:
And then to this:
Monday, May 14, 2012
Box City
Denver recently wrapped up their annual Box City day which Godden | Sudik Architects, in past years,has had employees volunteer for. The event is a great example of how the Denver Metro Area is educating kids in a really fun way about historic preservation and urban design. They use items such as boxes, empty paper towel rolls, art supplies, etc. to create buildings and communities based on their own creativity.
This is an annual event that is open to the public and is a really great experience for kids!
Check out AIA Colorado's website for more information and pictures http://aiacolorado.org/events/COArchitectureMonth/BoxCity.aspx.
Monday, September 26, 2011
Habitat for Humanity Design Competition
AIA Denver has partnered with CAD-1, Inc., to administer a design-build competition for Habitat for Humanity of Colorado/Blue Spruce Habitat for Humanity. The competition is currently underway, and the winning design and team will be unveiled in October 2011 at the AIA Colorado 2011 Practice & Design Conference. The construction of the home located in Kittredge, Colo., will be completed in 2012 by volunteers.
Several goals for this project include demonstrating that sustainable design and building practices are not luxuries, and creating a sustainable benchmark for Habitat for Humanity of Colorado and Blue Spruce Habitat for Humanity.
Visit the initiative’s website at www.aiadenverdesignbuild.com for more detailed information and updates. Please contact AIA Denver at 303.446.2266 for information on ways you can get involved.
Labels:
AIA Colorado,
AIA Denver,
CO,
Design Competition,
Design-Build,
Habitat for Humanity,
Habitat for Humanity Blue Spruce,
Kittredge
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