Site Visit No. 13: Quarantining in Miami with Germane Barnes
Jun 26, 2020
Ashley and Erik speak with Germane Barnes about life under quarantine at home in Miami, Florida. Germane is an Assistant Professor of Architecture and Director of the Community, Housing & Identity Lab (CHIL) at the University of Miami and principal of the research and design practice, Studio Barnes.
June 26, 2020
QUARANTINING IN MIAMI WITH GERMANE BARNES
Site Visit No. 12: Quarantining in New Orleans with Carrie Norman
Jun 24, 2020
Ashley and Erik speak with Carrie Norman, Assistant Professor of architecture at Tulane University, and co-founder of the New Orleans and Chicago-based architecture and design collaborative, Norman Kelley, about life under quarantine at home in New Orleans, Louisiana.
June 24, 2020
QUARANTINING IN NEW ORLEANS WITH CARRIE NORMAN
Site Visit No. 11: The McMurty Building with Sunil Bald
Oct 03, 2019
Ashley and Erik visit the McMurty Building with Sunil Bald, Associate Dean and Adjunct Professor at the Yale School of Architecture, and parter in the New York-based Studio SUMO.
October 1, 2019
THE MCMURTY BUILDING WITH SUNIL BALD
Site Visit No. 10: The Alcoa Building with Raymund Ryan
Sep 15, 2019
Ashley and Erik visit the Alcoa Building with Raymund Ryan, curator of architecture at the Carnegie Museum of Art’s Heinz Architectural Center in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
September 15, 2019
THE ALCOA BUILDING WITH RAYMUND RYAN
Raymund Ryan is the curator of architecture at the Carnegie Museum of Art’s Heinz Architectural Center in Pittsburgh. An architect, critic and curator, Ray’s work focuses on the architecture and unique urban characteristics of Pittsburgh, and produces exhibitions that attempt to move the often forgotten cities beyond the coasts, like Pittsburgh, to the forefront of architectural discourse.
On today’s episode, we discuss our visit to the Alcoa Building in downtown Pittsburgh. Designed by Harrison and Abramovitz, the Alcoa Building is one of Pittsburgh’s most notable skyscrapers, celebrated for its structural and material ingenuity, and representative of the city’s storied history as one of the nation’s most important hubs for wealth, manufacturing and technological advancements.
Site Visit No. 9: Airtime with Anya Sirota
Aug 01, 2019
Ashley and Erik visit Airtime with Anya Sirota, Professor of Architecture at the University of Michigan Taubman College of Architecture and Urban Planning, and principal of Akoaki.
August 1, 2019
AIRTIME WITH ANYA SIROTA
Anya Sirota is an architectural designer, researcher and educator. With her partner, Jean Louis Farges, Anya directs the Detroit based studio Akoaki. Through a distinct synthesis of aesthetics, social enterprise and cultural programming, the practice has established a reputation for innovation in the urban realm. The work, grounded in an affection for collective, unrestricted and inclusive experiences, has recently been featured in exhibitions at the Vitra Design Museum, the Saint Etienne International Design Biennial and the Detroit Institute of Art. Anya currently teaches at the University of Michigan Taubman College of Architecture and Urban Planning, where she directs the Michigan Preparatory Program in Detroit.
On Today’s Site Visit, we discuss a recent trip we took to Airtime in Ann Arbor, Michigan - an interior trampoline park popular for kids birthday parties, gymnastics training or simply exerting some pent up energy. We began by asking Anya to explain why she chose Airtime for today’s Site Visit, and how the building has come to represent a new medium through which she has been able to understand architecture, program and its cultural implications.
Site Visit No. 8: U.S. Air Force Academy with Paul Andersen
Sep 07, 2018
Ashley and Erik visit the U.S. Air Force Academy campus in Colorado Springs, CO with Paul Andersen, Clinical Associate Professor of Architecture at the University of Illinois at Chicago and director of Independent Architecture.
September 1, 2018
U.S. AIR FORCE ACADEMY WITH PAUL ANDERSEN
Paul Andersen is the director of Independent Architecture. His projects range from cruciform bubble gum columns to almost ordinary houses. Paul teaches at UIC and previously taught at the Di Tella, the Harvard GSD, and Cornell University. He has been a guest curator at the MCA Denver and the Biennial of the Americas, a Fulbright Specialist in Architecture, and is the author of The Architecture of Patterns and Curve Culture.
On Today’s Site Visit, we return to Colorado and discuss our visit to the US Air Force Academy campus located in Colorado Springs. Built between 1958 and 1968, the campus spans almost 20,000 acres of land on the east side of the Rocky Mountains, about 60 miles south of Denver. Designed by Skidmore Owings & Merrill, the US Air Force Academy campus abandons the traditional architectural styles typical of the country’s other military academy buildings and instead, embraces a Modernist approach. The massiveness of the campus, along with the austerity and simplicity of its buildings, speaks to the messaging the US Air Force Academy and the country as a whole sought to display during the nation’s post-WWII era. Paul’s interest in the campus ranges from how its material characteristics relate to the surrounding environment, to the influence national politics had over the academy’s design. The Air Force Academy Campus, along with Colorado’s role in contemporary architectural discourse, have inspired much of Paul’s interests and work.
Site Visit No. 7: Downtown Denver with Kevin Hirth
Jul 01, 2018
Ashley and Erik visit Downtown Denver with Kevin Hirth, Assistant Professor at the University of Colorado Denver College of Architecture and Planning, and director of KEVIN HIRTH co.
July 1, 2018
DOWNTOWN DENVER WITH KEVIN HIRTH
Kevin Hirth is the Director of Kevin Hirth Company and Assistant Professor at the University of Colorado Denver College of Architecture and Planning. Kevin holds a Master's of Architecture with distinction from the Harvard Graduate School of Design and a Bachelor's of Science in Architecture from the University of Virginia. Upon graduation, Kevin was granted the singular honor of receiving both the Harvard Faculty Design Award and AIA Henry Adams Medal. In 2017 he was awarded the League Prize by the Architectural League of New York.
On today’s Site Visit, we are going to discuss our recent tour of downtown Denver. Some highlights of the tour included Phillip Johnson’s Wells Fargo Center and Roche Dinkeloo’s Denver Performing Arts Complex. These buildings, which were an extension of a larger master planning initiative led by Pei, Cobb, Freed & Partners, play an important role in contextualizing the city within the dramatic landscape of Colorado. Completed in 1983, the Wells Fargo Center is currently the third tallest tower in Denver and among several of Johnson’s famous towers located throughout the US. The Denver Performing Arts Complex, which was completed in 1979, is a massive performing arts center with ten performance spaces and home to a handful of Colorado’s music and theater companies. These buildings, along with the architectural character of the city, have inspired much of Kevin’s work, his interest in history, urbanism, representation and materiality.
Site Visit No. 6: Bounce Milwaukee with Whitney Moon
Apr 07, 2018
Ashley and Erik visit the Bounce Milwaukee with Whitney Moon, Assistant Professor of Architecture at University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, where she teaches architectural history, theory, and design.
April 1, 2018
BOUNCE MILWAUKEE WITH WHITNEY MOON
Whitney Moon is Assistant Professor of Architecture at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, where she teaches architectural history and theory, as well as design studios. Her research interests reside in 20 th and 21 st century art and architecture, with an emphasis on theatricality, performance and ephemeral works. Currently, she is working on a collection of essays about the rise and fall of pneumatic architecture in the 1960s and 70s entitled “Who Let the Air Out?” Moon’s writings have been published in JAE, Dialectic, Places, Room One Thousand, and The Other Architect, with a forthcoming essay in PRAXIS. A registered architect in California and Wisconsin, Moon earned her Ph.D. in Architectural History & Theory from University of California, Los Angeles, and B.Arch from California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo.
On today’s Site Visit, we discuss our recent trip to Bounce Milwaukee, an indoor adventure playground that hosts a wide variety of activities including an inflatable sports arena, a laser tag course, a rock climbing wall and other attractions geared towards a broad audience of patrons. Located just off the city’s North-South freeway, Bounce Milwaukee is a destination for kids and adults alike, offering an exciting environment for birthday parties or rainy Saturdays complete with alcoholic beverages and snacks for adults. The character of Bounce Milwaukee speaks directly to Whitney’s passion for pneumatic architecture, the term used to describe membrane structures stabilized by the pressure of compressed air. First conceptualized in the 1960's, pneumatic structures were proposed as a progressive and lightweight alternative to standard construction techniques. They have since been utilized across a diverse assortment of professions, as infrastructure for factory work to military operations used as decoys in times of war.
Site Visit No. 5: The Monadnock Building with Stewart Hicks
Mar 01, 2018
Ashley and Erik visit the Monadnock building with Stewart Hicks, Assistant Professor of Architecture at the University of Illinois at Chicago and a co-founder of Design With Company.
March 1, 2018
THE MONADNOCK BUILDING WITH STEWART HICKS
This episode of Site Visit was recorded live in Design with Company’s office, which is located on the Monadnock building’s 14th floor. Erected in 1893, the Monadnock building, designed by two notable Chicago architecture firms Burnham & Root and Holabird & Roche, is considered the world’s tallest load-bearing brick building. The building is prolific in terms of the revolutionary technology employed in its construction, one of the signature contributions of Chicago’s historical architecture. Other notable structures located within proximity to the tower include the Harold Washington Library designed by Thomas Beeby, the Arts Institute of Chicago and Millennium Park. The Monadnock building has evolved into an icon for the city, with its purple-brown brick, thickened street-level walls, and limited ornamentation. Stewart’s passion for the building has played a role throughout his work, and particularly through his interests in architectural legibility, and the public’s engagement with design.
Stewart Hicks is an Assistant Professor of Architecture at the University of Illinois at Chicago and a co-founder of Design With Company, a practice he leads with Allison Newmeyer in Chicago. Design with Company’s work focuses on how literature and architecture intersect through fiction, character, type, or metaphor and how these themes can translate into installations, speculative urban scenarios, temporary pavilions and designs for buildings.
Site Visit No. 4: Weir Court with Joyce Hsiang & Bimal Mendis
Jan 18, 2018
Ashley and Erik visit Weir Court at Yale University with Joyce Hsiang, Assistant Dean and Critic at Yale University school of Architecture and Bimal Mendis, Assistant Dean and Director of Undergraduate Studies at Yale University school of Architecture.
January 15, 2018
WEIR COURT WITH JOYCE HSIANG & BIMAL MENDIS
This episode of Site Visit was recorded live in Weir Hall, a Victorian Collegiate Gothic building located within Jonathan Edwards College – one of Yale’s first residential colleges. Opening in 1925, Weir Hall, served as the home to the Department of Architecture from until 1963, when the school moved to its current building, Rudolph Hall. Today Weir Court looks over the Art and Architecture Building designed by Paul Rudolph and Louis Kahn’s Yale Art Gallery.
Joyce Hsiang is an Assistant Dean and Critic at Yale University’s School of Architecture. Bimal Mendis is an Assistant Dean and Director of Undergraduate Studies at the Yale School of Architecture. Joyce and Bimal are both Principals of Plan B Architecture & Urbanism, an interdisciplinary design and research collaborative based in New Haven, Connecticut. Their passion for Yale’s history and landscape has influenced their own work, as evidenced by their recent participation in the 2017 Exhibit Columbus -- an annual exploration of art and architecture in Columbus, Indiana.
Site Visit No. 3: Walking the Pedway with Kelly Bair
Jan 05, 2018
Ashley and Erik visit the Chicago Pedway with Kelly Bair, Partner at BairBalliet, and Assistant Professor of Architecture at the University of Illinois at Chicago.
January 1, 2018
WALKING THE PEDWAY WITH KELLY BAIR
This episode of Site Visit was recorded live in the Chicago Cultural Center, which is currently playing host to the 2017 Architecture Biennial titled Make New History. On today's Site Visit, Ashley, Erik and Kelly visit the Chicago Pedway, a complex network of underground tunnels, bridges and concourses, connecting an assortment of skyscrapers, transportation hubs, and department stores in the central business district of Chicago. Development of the Pedway began in 1951 and today it links more than 40 blocks and 50 buildings. As we discovered, there are many dead ends, construction zones, and closed corridors in the Pedway. However, we managed to find joy in the many twists and turns -- getting a little lost -- and especially in the conversation about Kelly's current practice which often focused on lines, thresholds and endless interiors.
Kelly Bair is principal of Central Standard Office of Design and Partner at BairBalliet. Her work has been exhibited nationally and internationally including in the inaugural Chicago Architecture Biennial (2015) and the 15th International Architecture Exhibition in the U.S. Pavilion at the Venice Biennale (2016). Her writing on architecture has been published in Project, Log, and Room One Thousand among others. Bair is an Assistant Professor of Architecture at University of Illinois at Chicago. She is also co-founder of Possible Mediums, a collaborative of four architects and educators interested in shaking up the context and format in which architecture is taught, produced, and engaged.
Images of the Pedway
"The Next Port of Call" by BairBalliet for the 15th Architectural Biennale in Venice, Italy
Site Visit No. 2: Going to the Theater with John McMorrough
Nov 01, 2017
Ashley and Erik visit the Michigan League to see a musical with John McMorrough, Associate Professor at the University of Michigan Taubman College of Architecture and Urban Planning, and a principal architect in Studio APT (Architecture Project Theory).
November 1, 2017
GOING TO THE THEATER WITH JOHN MCMORROUGH
Ashley and Erik visit the Michigan League to see a musical with John McMorrough, Associate Professor at the University of Michigan Taubman College of Architecture and Urban Planning, and a principal architect in Studio APT (Architecture Project Theory). The building is currently home to a staged production of One Hit Wonder. Written by Jeremy Desmon, this jukebox musical is set to a soundtrack that includes notable one-hit wonders such as "Walking on Sunshine" by Katrina & The Waves and "Closing Time" by Semisonic.
John McMorrough's work is motivated by the conviction that architecture, as a field of knowledge, continually needs to situate its productive and projective capacities, in both the reconsideration of its conceptual legacies and the testing of its competencies vis-à-vis the specifics of building. John has worked for design offices in Kansas City, New York, Boston and Rotterdam and has taught architectural theory & design at Yale University, the Ohio State University, and the University of Applied Arts in Vienna.
Musical Recommendations:
Site Visit No. 1: Menards with Ellie Abrons
Aug 30, 2017
September 1, 2017
MENARDS WITH ELLIE ABRONS
Ashley and Erik visit Menards with Ellie Abrons, Assistant Professor at the University of Michigan Taubman College of Architecture and Urban Planning and principal of the architecture firm T+E+A+M, with Thom Moran, Adam Fure and Meredith Miller.
Prior to joining Taubman College, Ellie Abrons worked as a project designer in numerous offices such as servo, GregLynnFORM, and Office dA. Ellie is the recipient of residency fellowships at the Akademie Schloss Solitude in Stuttgart, Germany and The MacDowell Colony in New Hampshire. Her work has been exhibited at the Venice Biennale, Storefront for Art and Architecture, A+D Gallery, and the Architectural Association. T+E+A+M was the winner of the 2017 Adrian Smith Prize for the Ragdale Ring and is a participant in the 2017 Chicago Architecture Biennial. From 2010 to 2015, Ellie led the design practice EADO.