Congratulations to the AIA New York Chapter 2005 Housing Design Award Winners.


 

Mission
Programs
Events


Mission
The mission is to explore issues of design, policy and technology in the development of new housing and livable neighborhoods. We invite the participation of all who are interested in housing design, including the development community, students and members of the public.


Programs

The committee sponsors public programs at the Center for Architecture that feature presentations by architects, planners, and other professionals at the forefront of housing and community design. The programs were created in 2003 in response to Mayor Bloomberg's Planning Initiatives to create new neighborhoods and housing units throughout the city, and look at past and present examples of successful housing as a guide for planning for the future.

In 2005, the Committee sponsored the inaugural AIA New York Chapter Housing Design Awards. It is the first biennial building types awards program established at the Center for Architecture and complements the internationally recognized AIANY Design Awards. Premiated projects were presented at the October 17 exhibition, which ran from October 6 through November 30. See summaries in eOculus 10-4-05 and 10-31-05 at www.aiany.org/eOCULUS/pastissues.php. In 2006, the AIANY will continue to co-sponsor the Boston Society of Architects(BSA) biennial housing awards, as it has since 2000.

The Committee sponsors the annual AIA New York Chapter Ratensky Lecture in November, which honors individuals who have made significant lifetime contributions to the advancement of housing design. The 2005 Lecture was given by Theodore Liebman, FAIA. The Committee and its members have been active participants in current and recent housing initiatives, including:

  • NYC Model Code - Residential Committee, chaired by Herbert Mandel, AIA, making recommendations for adoption of the International Building Code by the City of New York. See www.aiany.org/chapter/news.html 19 November 2004
  • New Housing New York (NHNY) Legacy Committee planning for a RFQ and design-build competiton for the AIA Sesquicentennial Celebration in 2007. The project is a follow up to the 2004 New Housing New York Design Ideas Competition sponsored by the AIANY, The Council of the City of New York, and the City University of New York, with participation by the NYC Departments of City Planning, Buildings, and Housing Preservation & Development.
  • 2004 Learning from Lower Manhattan, a national AIA conference sponsored by the AIA New York Chapter with committees on Planning & Urban Design, Housing, Public Architecture, Transportation, and the Environment planned for September 2004.
  • Collaboration in the Winter 2003/04 issue of Oculus: Everything Housing From Homeless Shelters to Luxury Living
  • Ten Steps to Create More Affordable Housing in New York City, which was produced by the AIA New York Chapter Task Force. See www.aiany.org/chapter/news.html 11 July 2003

To join the committee or be placed on our email list, please contact Committee Chair James McCullar FAIA james@mccullar-aia.com or Co-Chair Willis S. DeLaCour, Jr. AIA wdelacour@dfarchs.com. Housing Events with continuing education LUS and HSW credits are held at the CENTER FOR ARCHITECTURE, 536 LaGuardia Place, the first Monday of the month at 5:30 PM, unless otherwise noted in the AIA New York Chapter calendar. For descriptions of events, see:

2005 Events with focus on housing

2004 Events with focus on housing

2003 Events with focus on housing

Related Housing Links:

AIA National Housing Knowledge Community

Design Advisor

New York City
Department of City Planning
Department of Buildings
Department of Housing Preservation and development
Landmarks Preservation Commission

Federal
HUD

State
NYSERDA

Private Organizations
Citizens Housing and Planning Council
National Housing Conference
The Enterprise Foundation
The Joint Center for Housing Studies
The Local Initiatives Support Corporation
The Neighborhood Reinvestment Corporation

2005 EVENTS WITH FOCUS ON HOUSING

Monday, February 7
Drinks 5:30/Program 6 PM/Reception to Follow

EMERGING TRENDS IN SUPPORTIVE HOUSING

Principals of AIANY Chapter firms will present recent designs that illustrate varying approaches that serve an increasingly diverse and neglected segment of our population. Each reflects the belief that aesthetic environments enhance the lives of all people, rich and poor, a theme identified in the winter 2003/04 issue of Oculus "Everything Housing: From Homeless Shelters to Luxury Living". The format will be similar to the successful surveys of market-rate, affordable, and senior housing held during 2003 and 2004.

Welcome: Susan Chin, FAIA, President, AIA New York Chapter

Introduction: Nadine Maleh, Director of Design & Construction, Common Ground Community

Louise Braverman, Architect
Louise Braverman, AIA will present Chelsea Court, New York, NY, an award winning design for 18 previously homeless and low-income residents.

TEK - Thanhauser Esterson Kapell, Architects
Jack Esterson, AIA will present Safe Haven Housing, New Haven, CT, the conversion of a large loft building for a diverse program of supportive housing nearing completion.

Domenech Hicks & Krockmalnic, Architects
John Ellis, FAIA will present three examples of widely varied supportive housing projects and client groups located in New York City.

Polshek Partnership LLP
Susan T. Rodriguez, FAIA will present Schermerhorn House, a new building in Boerum Hill, Brooklyn for Common Ground and Actors Fund to house 200 special needs and previously homeless residents.

With special thanks to the sponsors of this event,
Consolidated Brick and Margaritelli Wood Floors.
Location: Lecture Hall, Center for Architecture, 536 LaGuardia Place between West 3rd & Bleecker Streets
RSVP: To register, email rsvp@aiany.org with name & date of event
Price: Members, Non-members & Students - FREE
CES HSW 1.5

top


Monday, March 7
Drinks 5:30/Program 6 PM/Reception to Follow

AN EVENING WITH COSTAS KONDYLIS & PARTNERS, LLP

Introduction by Andrew Alpern, Attorney, Architect & Architectural Historian Costas Kondylis and Partners LLP has been a leading high-rise residential interior design and architecture firm in New York City since its founding in 1989. Described as the "most sought after residential architecture firm in the city" Costas Kondylis & Partners continues
to be on the cutting edge of residential design in New York City, Boston and Miami.

Join Costas Kondylis and his partners as they discuss such topics as: what it takes to build a successful architect/developer relationship; the impact of zoning on today’s high-
rise residential projects; the technical challenges and innovations associated with high-rise construction today; design trends in today’s condominium and rental buildings; and what lies ahead for the high-rise residential market in New York City. A broad overview of completed and on the boards projects will be presented including: Trump World Tower, 845 UN Plaza; Morton Square, 1 Morton Square; The Heritage at Trump Place; The Grand Tier, 64th Street and Broadway; The Aston, 800 Sixth Avenue; 200 Chambers Street; 627 West 42nd Street; and a new ‘W’ hotel in Miami Beach.

With special thanks to Permasteelisa Cladding Technologies for sponsoring this event.
Location: Lecture Hall, Center for Architecture, 536 LaGuardia Place between West 3rd & Bleecker Streets
RSVP: To register email rsvp@aiany.org with name & date of event
Price: Members, Non-members & Students - FREE
CES HSW 1.5

top


Monday, April 4
AN EVENING WITH JOHN M. JOHANSEN, FAIA
Introduction by Kevin C. Lippert, Publisher, Princeton Architectural Press

Architect and educator John M. Johansen is best known for modern designs such as the U.S. Embassy in Dublin (1964), Goddard Library at Clark University (1968), and Mummers Theater in Oklahoma City (1970); and in more recent years, for futuristic designs based on new science and technology published in his latest book, Nanoarchitecture: A New Species of Architecture (Princeton Architectural Press, 2002). Like the modern architects of his generation, he has also designed exceptional housing, including Roosevelt Island, New York, but his most inventive designs were reserved for private houses which he will present this evening. In the 1977 Global Architecture Houses, he wrote: "25 houses to date have been designed by me and built. Each house is separate and individual work. Each house is designed for particular individuals. Each house is designed about a basic idea. Houses are always romantic. Deal with experiences that primitive or those of our current technological age. Houses have been described as Bridge house, Telephone Pole house, Labyrinth house, Rigged house, Greenhouse house, Component house, Grotto house, Upsidedown house, Sprayed Concrete house. My influences come from Wright, Mies, Breuer, Palladio, the psychoanalytical explanation of legends, and more recently from Archigram, Systems, and outer space technology. My next current interest in interchangeability permutation and Kinetics, yet always with a romantic and very human concern."

Location: THE CENTER FOR ARCHITECTURE Lecture Hall
536 LaGuardia Place between West 3rd & Bleecker Streets
RSVP: To register email rsvp@aiany.org with name & date of event
Price: Members, Non-members & Students - FREE
CES HSW 1.5

Monday, June 13, 2005
INCLUSIONARY HOUSING: where we are now and where we are going Co-sponsored with Planning & Urban Design Committee
Under New York City Inclusionary Housing zoning regulations, developers are encouraged to include units for low to moderate income households in return for floor area bonuses above what is allowed for residential development. The panel will discuss recent developments, including those in Hudson Yards and Greenpoint-Williamsburg districts, and how inclusionary housing can be implemented in the future and to what extent it can provide for the growing need for affordable housing. Panel members include:
Mark Ginsberg, AIA, Moderator, Partner, Curtis + Ginsberg Architects, LLC
Frank Braconi, Executive Director, Citizens Housing Planning Council
Rafael Cestero, Deputy Commissioner for Development, Department of Housing Preservation & Development
Regina Myer, Director, Brooklyn Borough Office, Department of City Planning
Ron Moelis, Principal, L & M Equities

Thursday June 2, 2005
NEW HOUSING IN HARLEM
An evening with Assemblyman Keith Wright, Max Bond, FAIA, developers and architects engaged in the development and design of new housing in Harlem. The presentation will begin with examples of new housing followed by a discussion of issues of design and affordability that affect not only Harlem but all of New York City in a time of rapid transformation through zoning changes and expansion of market-rate housing outside the Manhattan core.

Introduction
Keith L. T. Wright, Member, NYS Assembly; Chair, Subcommittee on Public Housing; Chair, Harlem Community Development Corporation

Panel
J. Max Bond, FAIA, Moderator, Partner, Davis Brody Bond, LLP
Carlton A. Brown, Chief Operating Officer, Full Spectrum of NY, LLC
Lou Katsos, Assoc. AIA, President, Jekmar Associates; Executive Board Member, Greater Harlem Chamber of Commerce
Roberta Washington, AIA, Principal, Roberta Washington Architects, P.C.

Projects
Strivers Gardens, Partner, Davis Brody Bond, Architects; Lou Katsos with Strivers Gardens, LLC, Developer
1400 Fifth Avenue Roberta Washington Architects; Full Spectrum of NY, Developer
213 West 112 Street Townhouse, Robert Krone & Joan Blumenfeld, Architects
The Kalahari, Frederic Schwartz Architects: Jack Travis & GF55 Architects;
FSLM Joint Venture - Full Spectrum of NY and L&M Equities, Developer

With Special thanks to CONSOLIDATED BRICK for its generous support of this event. Visit www.consolidatedbrick.com to view its product line.

Monday, September 12, 2005
AN EVENING WITH AMANDA M. BURDEN & SHAUN DONOVAN
New directions in neighborhood planning & affordable housing
Co-sponsored with Planning & Urban Design Committee:
CPC Chair Amanda M. Burden and HPD Commissioner Shaun Donovan will present recent initiatives and collaborative efforts between the Departments of City Planning and Housing Preservation & Development in the Mayor's ongoing program to create new neighborhoods and affordable housing opportunities throughout the city. Their presentations will be followed by a discussion with AIA New York Chapter representatives moderated by J. Max Bond Jr., FAIA, and end with questions from the audience.

Welcome
Susan Chin, FAIA, President, AIANY Chapter

Speakers
Amanda M. Burden, AICP, Hon. AIA, Chair, NYC Planning Commission
& Director, NYC Department of City Planning
Shaun Donovan, Commissioner, NYC Department of Housing
Preservation & Development

Respondents
Mark Ginsberg, AIA, Past President, AIANY Chapter
Joan Blumenfeld, FAIA, President Elect, 2007, AIANY Chapter
J. Max Bond Jr., FAIA, Partner, Davis Brody Bond, LLP, Moderator

With Special thanks to CONSOLIDATED BRICK for its generous support of this event. Visit www.consolidatedbrick.com to view its product line.

Monday, October 17, 2005
Everything Housing: From Homeless Shelters to Luxury Living Exhibit Opening and Presentation of Winning Projects
HPD Commissioner Shaun Donovan will offer introductory remarks and Juror Adele Naude Santos, FAIA, will present 14 award winning projects that cover a range from HPD supported affordable housing to luxury towers, some of which are new designs still in construction. The reception will begin in the Hines Gallery and continue to the Lecture Hall, where the program begins at 6 PM.

The exhibition will run from October 6 to December 3. A list of awards and jurors may be viewed at the AIANY website www.aiany.org. This is the first "building types" awards program, which complements the internationally recognized Design Awards program for Architecture, Interior Architecture and Projects currently on view in the Lecture Hall.

Introductory Remarks
Shaun Donovan, Commissioner, NYC Department of Housing Preservation & Development

Presentation of Projects
Adele Naude Santos, FAIA, Dean, School of Architecture & Planning, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

With special thanks to sponsors for their generous support
Exhibition: The Hudson Companies Inc., Anonymous Donor
Reception: Square D, Prosurance Redeker Group, Ltd., Skidmore, Ownings & Merrill, LLP

Monday, November 7, 2005
The 2005 Ratensky Lecture A HOUSING PRACTICE by THEODORE LIEBMAN, FAIA
Ted Liebman's career spans more than four decades and four continents. His work as a public sector architect was celebrated this summer in the Exhibition and Symposium "Housing Policy and Design- Lessons of the Urban Development Corporation: 1968–1975". Many of those lessons about housing density, creating neighborhoods, and understanding people's needs became the foundation of Mr. Liebman's private practice. His talk will start with the thrust of housing research began at the UDC and quickly move to the current work of the Liebman Melting Partnership. Together, with partner Alan Melting, FAIA, they have created a truly international practice with an urban housing focus.

The annual Ratensky Lecture was initiated by the AIA New York Chapter in honor of Samuel Ratensky (1910–1972), an architect and housing official who was responsible for major housing initiatives in the city from 1946 to 1972, and who served as a mentor to the many architects who worked in his programs. The lecture series honors individuals who, like Sam Ratensky, have made significant lifetime contributions to the advancement of housing and community design. Special thanks to the George Lewis Fund for support of the Ratensky Lecture series.

Tuesday, November 22, 2005
Atlantic Yards, Brooklyn: A New Mixed-Use Development Co-sponsored with Planning & Urban Design Committee
Atlantic Yards is an important development opportunity adjacent to downtown Brooklyn. The site sits astride a major subway/ rail nexus and utilizes undeveloped space over the MTA rail yards as well as redevelopment of adjacent properties. The program consists of a new professional basketball arena with adjacent office and housing towers and supporting retail and other uses. The plan features many innovative design approaches. Issues include density and urban design relationships to the adjacent community and to the City's recent Downtown Brooklyn plan, how transportation and other impacts can be mitigated, provisions for affordable housing and job creation, and the planning and approvals process itself (as an MTA project, the project bypasses NYC land use review protocols in favor of a NY State review process).

Welcome
MARK STRAUSS, FAIA, AICP, AIANY President-Elect

Speakers
James Stuckey, Executive Vice-President for Community & Residential Development, Forest City Ratner Companies
Frank Gehry, FAIA, Ghery Partners, Project Architects
Laurie D. Olin, FASLA, Olin Partnership, Landscape Design

Panel Discussion
Frank Braconi, Executive Director, Citizens Housing & Planning Council
Brad Lander, Director, Pratt Center for Community Development
Jordan Gruzen, FAIA, Gruzen Samton Architects

Moderator
Ernest Hutton, AICP, ASSOC. AIA, Co-Chair, AIANY Planning & Urban Design Committee

New Housing Then Friday Film Series at the Center of Architecture
Co-sponsored with Exhibitions International and Center for Architecture, who planned the series
February 2, 2005: John Lautner-The Spirit in Architecture
March 11, 2005: Lustron-The House America's Been Waiting For (1948)
April 8, 2005: Life & Work of Alfred Beadle: Phoenix's Most Controversial Modernist Architect (1927–1998)
June 17, 2005: Ralph Rapson: Pioneering Architect/Educator
July 8, 2005: An Evening with Alastair Gordon

top


2004 EVENTS WITH FOCUS ON HOUSING

Monday, January 12 – Hafele Showroom (25 E. 26th St.)
WHAT'S WRONG WITH THE NYC CODE?
Co-Sponsored with the Building Codes Committee & Real Estate Board of New York

New York city has established the Model Code Program to engage in the review and modification of the International Building Code (IBC) to facilitate its adoption by the city.
The Program includes a series of technical committees created to investigate various areas of code coverage. As one aspect of this process, the committees will have the
opportunity to incorporate measures which will rectify elements of the present code which we feel have been either deficient, confusing or missing.

The forum is being convened by the Residential Committee of the Model Code Program to hear your input on issues of concern related to residential buildings. The panel will consist of three professionals who are involved in the deliberations and will be in a position to make recommendations for modifications of, additions to, and or/or deletions from the IBC prior to its presentation for adoption. Please join us to share your thoughts.

Introduction: Mark Ginsberg, AIA, President, AIA New York Chapter

Panel members
Herbert Mandel, AIA
Herbert L. Mandel, P.C. Architect/City Planner
Chair, Residential Committee, NYC Model Code Program
Ronny A. Livian, P.E.
Deputy Commissioner, NYC Department of Buildings
Chair, Construction Requirements Committee, NYC Model Code Program
Fatma Amer, P.E.
Assistant Commissioner, NYC Department of Buildings
Chair, Administration and Enforcement Committee, NYC Model Code Program


Thursday, January 22 – Center for Architecture
AN EVENING WITH MELTZER/MANDL ARCHITECTS, P.C.

Principals Marvin H. Meltzer, AIA, and David Mandl, AIA, will discuss the approach their firm has taken in the successful creation of more than 3,500 market-rate and affordable housing units in New York City. Project Managers Dan Heyden, AIA, and Yu Inamoto, AIA, will contribute to a talk that will include slides of relevant housing examples as well as an overview of innovative solutions that have added value to their projects. In addition, each will provide unique insights into the myriad of regulatory challenges involved in new construction, adaptive re-use, rehabilitation, and landmark preservation. Established in 1995, the award winning firm is noted for the design of 45 Wall Street, the first large scale
office-to-residential conversion to go into construction under the new lower Manhattan zoning regulations. Currently the firm has over 30 projects underway, including mixed-use affordable housing in Harlem, market-rate lofts in Chelsea and the East Village, and mixed-use projects in Fort Greene and Hoyt-Schermerhorn in Brooklyn.

This is the first of a series of presentations by firms on the practice of housing design. The series is modeled on a format initiated in 1997 by AIANY President Robert Geddes, FAIA, that featured talks by SOM and Tod Williams Billie Tsien & Associates on the practice of architecture.

 

Monday, February 2 – Center for Architecture
AN EVENING WITH GRUZEN SAMTON, ARCHITECTS
Co-Sponsored with the Planning & Urban Design Committee

Gruzen Samton, Architects has been at the forefront of residential design since its predecessor, Kelly & Gruzen, participated in the first FHA programs that grew out of
the New Deal in the 1940’s. The exposed concrete frame of Chatham Towers in Chinatown and Horizon House’s split level, skip-stop, Marseilles-like apartment towers on the Hudson
in Fort Lee, NJ , both in the late 1950’s, heralded for the firm a new era in housing design.
Ultimately, the firm produced more than 30,000 apartment units including projects for Ed Logue’s UDC, HUD, HPD, the Housing Authority, a substantial number of private sector apartment complexes on both sides of the Hudson River; numerous senior living developments and new housing communities in Rochester, Roosevelt Island, Queens West, Iran and Shanghai. Partners Jordan Gruzen, Peter Samton, Gerry Vasisko, Alfreda Radzicki and Ivan Ilyashov will present their experience on the qualities that make for eminently livable residential design in dense urban settings.

This is a continuation of presentations by firms on the practice of housing design. The series is modeled on a format initiated in 1997 by AIANY President Robert Geddes, FAIA, that featured talks by SOM and Tod Williams Billie Tsien & Associates on the practice of architecture.

 

Monday, February 23 – Center for Architecture
I.M. PEI, FAIA, FRANK WILLIAMS, FAIA, & BILL ZECKENDORF JR.

The evening will focus on the residential buildings designed by I.M. Pei with Bill Zeckendorf, Sr. as owner-developer, and the next generation of residential buildings designed by Frank Williams with Bill Zeckendorf, Jr. as owner-developer.

In 1948 William Zeckendorf, Sr. invited Mr. Pei, who was teaching at the Harvard Graduate School of Design, to accept the newly created post of Director of Architecture at Webb & Knapp real estate development corporation, resulting in many large-scale architectural and planning projects across the country. Locally, their collaboration produced Kips Bay Plaza, University Plaza at New York University (across from 536 LaGuardia Place), and Society Hill in Philadelphia.

The collaboration between Frank Williams and Bill Zeckendorf, Jr. has helped to shape the Manhattan skyline through the design of such buildings such as the Park Belvedere and the Rhiga Royal Hotel. Frank Williams wrote that Bill Zeckendorf, Jr. "taught that each complex or building must give some amenity back to the city, whether zoning codes require the amenity or not…there is a civic responsibility underlying each commission.

In 1989-94, Pei, Williams, and Bill Zeckendorf, Jr. collaborated on the design for the Four Seasons Hotel on East 57th Street, completing a cycle of vision and friendship.

 

Monday, April 12 – Center for Architecture
MICHAEL KWARTLER ON HOUSING WE LOVE BUT CAN'T BUILD AGAIN UNDER CURRENT ZONING
Co-Sponsored with the Planning & Urban Design Committee

From his perspective as architect and urban designer, Michael Kwartler, FAIA, will explore l housing that was built before 1961 and the current zoning resolution. This is an area of study explored by the 2003 AIA/NYC Housing Task Force to investigate meaningful changes in zoning and building codes to promote new neighborhood development in the city. The presentation will include slides of relevant examples and focus on lessons that can be learned from the planning and design of earlier, successful neighborhoods.

This event will be an elaboration of Michael's memorable 2003 presentation at the Hafele Showroom which demonstrated the need for greater flexibility in zoning regulations through a series of images, such as the juxtaposition of a West Village streetscape with Co-Op City, each with the same density but
where one is legal to build today and the other is not.

 

Monday, May 3 – Center for Architecture
EMERGING TRENDS IN SENIOR HOUSING

Principals of five AIANY Chapter firms will present recent designs that illustrate varying approaches to providing supportive residential environments for a growing segment of our population with diverse needs. The format wll be similar to the successful surveys of market-rate and affordable housing held last year at the Hafele Showroom.

Introduction: Stephen A. Kliment, FAIA, Editor, Building Type Basics for SENIOR LIVING

Perkins Eastman Architects
Douglas King, AIA, AICP will present an overview of Continuum of Care Facilities with Buckingham's Choice in Adamstown, MD; Kendal on Hudson in Sleepy Hollow, NY; and Sun City Ginza East, an urban CCRC in Tokyo, Japan.

Swanke Hayden Connell Architects
Joseph Aliotta, AIA will present Rockwell Terrace, a 72 unit senior citizens housing project in New Rochelle, NY designed under NYS Housing Trust Fund guidelines on a narrow site.

SLCE Architects
Saky Yakas, AIA will present the DeSales Residence, a 14-story, 128-unit enriched project for low income seniors at Fifth Avenue and 108th Street in New York City.

Gruzen Samton Architects LLP
Michael S. Gelfand, AIA will present Maple Point, an 89 unit senior housing facility in suburban New York based on a neighborhood concept serving residents of varying needs.

Goshow Architects, LLP
Eric Goshow, AIA will present Presbyterian Senior Services GrandParent Family Apartments, a 51 unit service enriched new building in the South Bronx - the first in the city dedicated to serving low income grandparents who are raising grandchildren.

Building Type Basics for SENIOR LIVING, a new book written by members of Perkins Eastman Architects and edited by Stephen A. Kliment, FAIA, for Wiley & Sons, will be on display.

Special thanks to Consolidated Brick for supporting this event.

 

Monday, June 7 – Center for Architecture
AN EVENING WITH MAGNUSSON ARCHITECTURE AND PLANNING

Magnusson Architecture and Planning (MAP) was established in 1985 with the commitment of creating better communities through better architecture. Now an award-winning twenty person firm with projects throughout the five boroughs and metropolitan area, MAP is at the forefront of affordable and market-rate housing and large-scale community planning. Currently the firm has over 25 projects underway for a total of over 2,500 units of housing.

Magnus Magnusson, AIA, founder and Principal, will discuss the firm’s history, structure, and new directions. Principal, Petr Stand, APA, will discuss the origins of the advocacy and community planning work of the firm through a case study of Melrose Commons Urban Renewal Area in The South Bronx. Client, Yolanda Garcia, Executive Director of the community group Nos Quedamos will describe the group’s early work with MAP and its evolution over 11 years. Joseph Lengeling AIA, the firm’s design Principal, will discuss lessons learned, design departures, and projects currently under design.

This is a continuation of presentations by firms on the practice of housing design, and follows earlier events with Meltzer Mandl Architects, Gruzen Samton Architects, I.M. Pei,
FAIA, Frank Williams, FAIA, and William Zeckendorf, Jr.

 

Wednesday, September 8 – Center for Architecture
AN EVENING WITH RKT&B ARCHITECTS

Since its founding in 1963, Rothzeid Kaiserman Thomson & Bee has been involved in housing design in New York City and surrounding communities. The breadth of its housing portfolio covers virtually every form and income level built in the city since the 1970s. RKT&B's housing work is particularly identified with its pioneering efforts in the adaptive reuse of existing manufacturing and commercial buildings. Most recently the firm has been involved projects such as the Towers Residences (with Perkins Eastman) on Central Park West, and the development of an infill prototype with pilot projects completed in Brooklyn. In recognition of its contribution to housing design, the firm received the Pioneer
in Housing Award from the AIA New York Chapter in 2001.

The presentation will trace the history and evolution of the firm's housing work; and Carmi Bee, FAIA, Professor of Architecture at the City College of New York, will share thoughts on the relationship between the teaching and practice of housing design and how it has changed over the last 25 years.

 

September 17, 18 & 19
LEARNING FROM LOWER MANHATTAN CONFERENCE

Learning from Lower Manhattan is a national conference presented by The American Institute of Architects New York Chapter and the following AIA National Component Knowledge Communities: the Regional and Urban Design Committee, the Housing Committee, the Public Architects Committee, the Committee on the Environment, and The Center for Livable Communities.

This conference will bring together architects and urban designers from around the nation to explore how New York is rebuilding after 9/11. Speakers and symposia will look at more than the World Trade Center site and Lower Manhattan. How has 9/11 affected thinking about the region, and how will rebuilding strengthen the region? The conference will foster a better understanding of what is being done right, what is missing, and what could be done better in Lower Manhattan and the New York region. It will generate discussion of lessons learned that might help others to achieve their goals in regional, urban, and downtown design for the 21st century.

Housing Events are scheduled for:
Friday, September 17
Four Housing Tours in Lower Manhattan:

Financial District: Conversion of Office Buildings in Historic CBD
Battery Park City: New Mixed-Use Residential District
Lower East Side: Restoration and Infill Housing in Historic District
Tribeca / West Street: Conversions of Loft Buildings & New Infill Housing in Manufacturing District

Saturday, September 18
National AIA Housing Committee Meeting
Lower Manhattan Housing Panel

 

Monday, October 25 – Center for Architecture
MEMORIAL TRIBUTE FOR JOSEPH WASSERMAN, FAIA
Co-Sponsored with the Planning & Urban Design Committee
Joseph Wasserman passed away June 25, 2004 after a long and distinguished career as a member of the AIA New York Chapter. His firm, Hoberman & Wasserman, exemplified the impact of modern design in housing and community planning. The firm began with the winning design for the Roosevelt Memorial Competition in Washington, DC., and designed many notable projects over a period of thirty years, including 1,200 units of UDC housing. His last project in the city, where he was both architect and developer, combined mixed-use housing on the avenue with beautifully composed townhouses on side streets in the upper west side of Manhattan. In 1991 he retired to the Berkshires, where he renovated a city block and designed and operated a movie theater in Great Barrington, MA - film was a second love. He was an active member of the AIA New York Chapter, where he served as President and long time member of the Housing Committee. In 1987 he was awarded the AIANY Pioneer in Housing Award in recognition of his distinguished contribution to housing and community design.

The event will feature speakers who will remember Joe followed by excerpts of a film which he commissioned on his life and work. This tribute will be a continuation of a memorable presentation Joe gave at the Center for Architecture in November 2003.

 

Monday November 1
2004 RATENSKY LECTURE BY WILLIAM J CONKLIN, FAIA:
Experiments in the Environment/Social Interface of Housing

Co-Sponsored with the Planning & Urban Design Committee

William J. Conklin, formerly of Conklin Rossant Architects, will present the evolution of his firm from its origins in the dreams of the Garden City movement and early Modernism. The firm was founded by Albert Mayer and Julian Whittlesey, early 20th century visionary New York architects and social reformers. The firm designed many apartment buildings and housing developments, including Manhattan House, Butterfield House, 333 East 69th Street, the new town of Reston, VA, and the original Lower Manhattan Plan. Hundreds of thousands of people today now live in environments affected by its work. The talk will be illustrated by images of the firm's work, both built and unbuilt.

The annual Ratensky Lecture was initiated by the AIA New York Chapter in honor of Samuel Ratensky (1910-1972), an architect and housing official who was responsible for major housing initiatives in the city from 1946 to 1972, and who served as a mentor to the many architects who worked in his programs. The lecture series honors individuals who, like Sam Ratensky, have made significant lifetime contributions to the advancement of housing and community design.

Introduction: Lance Jay Brown, FAIA, ACSA Distinguished Professor

Special thanks to the AIANY Chapter George Lewis Fund for sponsoring this event.

top


2003 EVENTS WITH FOCUS ON HOUSING
Co-sponsored by the Housing Committee
& Planning and Urban Design Committee

Monday, May 5 – Hafele Showroom
MICHAEL KWARTLER ON HOUSING WE LOVE
BUT CAN'T BUILD AGAIN UNDER CURRENT ZONING
Introduction by George Miller, FAIA, President, AIA New York Chapter

From his perspective as architect and urban designer, Michael Kwartler, FAIA, will explore with us low-rise high density housing that was built before 1961 and the current zoning resolution. This is an area of study within the newly formed AIA/NYC Housing Task Force to investigate meaningful changes in zoning and building codes to promote the production of affordable housing. The presentation will include slides of relevant examples and focus on what lessons we can learn from the planning and design of earlier, successful housing types.

 

Friday, May 16 – 200 Lexington Avenue
THE NEW HOUSING MARKETPLACE:
CREATING HOUSING FOR THE NEXT GENERATION

The New York City Department of Housing Preservation & Development will review the Mayor's recently announced $3 billion, five year plan for building and rehabilitating 65,000 housing units.

Introduction: George Miller, FAIA, President, AIA New York Chapter

Speakers
William Traylor, Deputy Commissioner for Development & VP for Public Finance at HDC

Carol Clar, Assistant Commissioner for Local Legislative Affairs

 

Monday, May 19, Hafele Showroom
THEODORE LIEBMAN ON THE NEW YORK STATE URBAN DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION (UDC)
Introduction by George Miller, FAIA, President, AIA NY Chapter

From his perspective as former Chief of Architecture at UDC, Theodore Liebman, FAIA, principal of The Liebman Melting Partnership, will discuss the agency in terms of how and why it started, the dynamics of State and City tensions, and its substantial accomplishments in development of new housing throughout the state. The talk will include slides of relevant housing examples, and will touch on the fundamental politics of dealing with cities, mix of incomes, attempts at bringing low-income family units to Westchester County, and President Nixon's freeze on funding and it's impact. He will also review the changes in architectural philosophy from 1971 to 1975 that shifted emphasis to low-rise high density and feedback from the UDC experience.

Mr. Liebman is presenting again for those who were unable to attend on April 7, the night of the spring blizzard. In spite of the snow, approximately 40 people attended and we had an enjoyable evening at the Hafele Showroom.

 

Monday, June 2 – 200 Lexington Avenue
THE NYC HOUSING AUTHORITY(NYCHA): FROM 1934 TO THE PRESENT

The NYCHA Design Department will present seven decades of housing design: from "First Houses" to "towers in the park" and return to modern contextualism. NYCHA has employed some of the best architectural talents, and continues to do so as evidenced by recent designs. NYCHA is the largest provider of public housing in the U.S. with 345 developments and over 500,000 residents, which are supported by educational, cultural, recreational, and daycare programs. In spite of the failures of public housing in other cities, NYCHA remains a viable affordable housing option, with full occupancy and a large waiting list.

Introduction: George Miller, FAIA, President, AIA New York Chapter

Speaker
Eftihia Tsitiridis, AIA
, Deputy Director of Design, New York City Housing Authority

 

Friday, June 20 – 200 Lexington Avenue
CREATING HOUSING OPPORTUNITIES IN NYC'S CURRENT & EMERGING NEIGHBORHOODS

The New York City Department of City Planning will present its zoning initiatives to facilitate the Mayor's recently announced $3 billion, five year plan for building and rehabilitating 65,000 housing units.

Introduction: George Miller, FAIA, President, AIA New York Chapter

Speaker
Richard Barth
, Executive Director, NYC Department of City Planning

 

Monday, July 14 – Hafele Showroom
AN EVENING WITH FIVE ARCHITECTS:

A survey of recent market-rate housing
This is the first of a 2003-2004 series of presentations of work by AIA NY Chapter architects, in conjunction with the winter issue of Oculus: "Everything housing from homeless shelters to luxury living". The next event in September will be on affordable housing.

Introduction: George Miller, FAIA, President, AIA New York Chapter

Architects
The Stephen B. Jacobs Group, P.C.
Stephen B. Jacobs, FAIA will present 120 West 21st Street Apartments, a study in creative contextual zoning for the design of 200 rental units in Chelsea.

Meltzer/Mandl Architects, P.C.
Marvin Meltzer, AIA will present 57 Bond Street, a six-story, ten unit condominium with a curving facade and 12-ft. high floors on a former gas station site in NoHo

Gruzen Samton Architects Planners & Interior Designers, LLP
Scott Keller, AIA will present the award winning TriBeCa Pointe, a 42-story tower on a 7- story base attached to Stuyvesant High School in Battery Park City

Costas Kondylis & Partners LLP Architects
Costas Kondylis, AIA and David West, AIA will present 1 Morton Square, a new residential block that "mixes townhouses, condominiums and rentals into a distinctive urban design" on West Street, scheduled for completion in 2004.

Gary Edward Handel + Associates, LLP
Gary E. Handel, AIA will present the Lincoln Square complex in Manhattan and the more recent Millennium Place in Boston as "laboratories for a new model of high-density, mixed-use residential development that provides the critical mass to transform urban areas."

 

Monday, September 8 – Hafele Showroom
EMERGING DESIGN OUTSIDE THE MANHATTAN CORE:
A survey of recent affordable housing

This is a continuation of the series of presentations of work by AIA New York Chapter architects, in conjunction with the winter issue of Oculus: "Everything housing from homeless shelters to luxury living." The presentation offers the opportunity to see examples of housing being developed under HPD and other affordable housing programs, and will cover a range of scales from single buildings to city blocks and new community development in the ongoing revitalization of older neighborhoods throughout the city.

Introduction
Chris Cirillo, Managing Director, Division of Neighborhood Planning, Department of Housing Preservation & Development

Architects
GF55 Architects
David Gross, AIA will present Madison Court, a contextual mid-rise city block development with ground floor retail on Madison Avenue and townhouses on East 117th and 118th Streets in Harlem.

Roberta Washington Architects, P.C.
Roberta Washington, AIA will present 1400 Fifth Avenue, a contextual green condominium development with ground floor retail on Fifth Avenue and townhouses on West 116th Street in Harlem.

Delacour & Ferrara Architects, P.C.
Wids DeLaCour, AIA, will present two and three-family townhouses in various locations outside the Manhattan Core.

Curtis + Ginsberg Architects LLP
Mark Ginsberg, AIA, will present community designs for the Morrisania district of the Bronx: the Third Avenue zoning and urban design study; Taino Plaza housing; and Morrisania Air Rights Houses.

Magnusson Architecture and Planning, P.C.
Magnus Magnusson, AIA, will present case studies of two new communities: the development of Melrose Commons in the Bronx; and Rheingold Gardens, the redevelopment of the former Rheingold Brewery site in Bushwick, Brooklyn.

Friday, September 19 – 200 Lexington Avenue
TEN STEPS TO CREATE MORE AFFORDABLE HOUSING IN NYC: A presentation by the AIA New York Chapter Housing Task Force
In December 2002, Mayor Bloomberg announced a program to stimulate construction of 65,000 new and renovated housing units. In response, the AIA New York Chapter convened the Housing Task Force to enhance the Mayor's initiatives by looking at issues that limit the quality and quantity of housing production. Deputy Mayor Doctoroff has responded favorably by requesting relevant agencies to review the recently completed Task Force report, and to collaborate with the Chapter on ideas outlined in the report. The presentation will be made by members of Task Force responsible for its specific recommendations.

Introduction
George Miller, FAIA, President, AIA New York Chapter

Zoning Resolution Recommendations
Mark Ginsberg, AIA, Task Force Chair
Theodore Liebman, FAIA
Michael Kwartler FAIA

Building Code Recommendations
Herbert Mandel, AIA
Susan Wright, AIA
Richard Visconti, AIA

Zoning + Building Code Recommendations
Michael Gelfand, AIA

Friday, October 17 – Center for Architecture
PROPOSED WEST CHELSEA REZONING
The Manhattan Office of the Department of City Planning will present its plans for West Chelsea, including access and improvements along the High Line, upzoning various parcels to residential use, provisions for affordable housing, and preservation of the manufacturing and gallery core.

Speakers
Vishaan Chakrabarti, Director Manhattan Office
Jeff Mulligan, Project Director
Irik Botsford, Project Director

Monday, November 3 – Center for Architecture
AN EVENING WITH JOSEPH WASSERMAN, FAIA
The firm of Hoberman & Wasserman exemplifies the impact of modern design in housing and neighborhood planning. As young architects, the principals got their start by winning the Roosevelt Memorial Competition in Washington, D.C., and in response to the opportunities offered under Mayor Lindsay and Governor Rockefeller, started a housing firm that designed many notable projects in the city over a period of thirty years. Mr. Wasserman's last project in the upper west side of Manhattan, where he was both architect and developer, combined mid-rise mixed use housing on the avenue with beautifully composed town houses on the side streets. Mr. Wasserman has been an active member of the AIA New York Chapter, where he served as president, and in 1987 his contribution to housing design was recognized by the Pioneer in Housing Award.

Introductions
Mark Ginsberg, AIA, President Elect, AIA New York Chapter
Theodore Liebman, FAIA, The Liebman Melting Partnership
Peter Samton, FAIA, Gruzen Samton Architects Planners & Interior Design, LLP

Wednesday, November 19 – Center for Architecture
2003 AIANY RATENSKY LECTURE BY MICHAEL PYATOK, FAIA
Michael Pyatok, principal of Pyatok Architects in Oakland, California, and Professor of Architecture at the University of Washington, has been invited to give the AIA New York Chapter 2003 Ratensky Lecture.

Michael Pyatok is a nationally recognized designer of affordable housing whose work has been featured in the national media, including Newsweek and Atlantic Monthly, and is the recipient of numerous design awards. Mr. Pyatok is best known for his innovative design work and for his efforts to assist in the creation of community groups that design and build low-income housing projects. Mr. Pyatok, a Brooklyn native and graduate of Pratt Institute and the Harvard Graduate School of Design, is the recipient of the AIA New York Chapter 2003 Pioneer in Housing Award. His work will be shown in the Architectural League's "Urban Life: Housing in the Contemporary City" exhibition at the Urban Center, which runs from October 17 through December 4.

The annual Ratensky Lecture was initiated by the AIA New York Chapter in honor of Samuel Ratensky (1910–1972), an architect and housing official who was responsible for major housing initiatives in the city from 1946 to 1972, and who served as a mentor to the many architects who worked in his programs. The lecture series honors individuals who, like Sam Ratensky and Michael Pyatok, have made significant lifetime contributions to the advancement of housing design.

Introductions
George Miller, FAIA, President, AIA New York Chapter, Pei Cobb Fried & Partners, LLP
Carmi Bee, FAIA, Professor of Architecture, CUNY
Rothside Kaiserman Thomson & Bee, P.C.
Alex Ratensky, AIA, Founding Dean, School of Architecture, University of South Florida
Theodore Liebman, FAIA, The Liebman Melting Partnership

top