ArchitectureWeek
HOME   |   DESIGN   |   PEOPLE & PLACES   |   CONTEXT   |   CULTURE   |   TECHNOLOGY   |   SEARCH
  Topics Index
Places Index
Architects Index
Authors Index

Departments
  •  Design and Building News
  •  Design Articles
  •  Building Articles
  •  Digital Design Tools
  •  Environment Articles
  •  Building Culture Articles
  •  Architectural Products Articles
  •  Classic Home Collection
  •  Patterns of Home
  •  Postcards to ArchitectureWeek
  •  Green Architecture
  •  Historic Preservation
    Green Focus
  •  Global Warming and Climate Change
  •  Architecture 2030
  •  Passive House
  •  Reskinning
  •  Solar Design
  •  Passive Solar Design
  •  Photovoltaics
  •  Green Roofs
  •  Sustainable Design and Building
  •  LEED - Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design
  •  LEED Certified
  •  LEED Gold Certified
  •  LEED Platinum Certified
    Building Types - Residential
  •  Houses of Architects
  •  Additions
  •  Apartments
  •  Condominiums
  •  Bungalows
  •  Castles
  •  Designers' Own Houses
  •  Houses, Large and Small
  •  Large Houses
  •  Small Houses
  •  Mixed Use Buildings
  •  Multi-Family Housing
  •  Palaces
    Building Types - Public and Civic
  •  Academic and Schools
  •  Airport Terminals
  •  Art Galleries and Museums
  •  Bridges
  •  Cathedrals
  •  Churches
  •  Community Centers
  •  Courthouses
  •  Environmental Education Centers
  •  Exhibition and Exposition
  •  Gardens
  •  Government Buildings
  •  Landscape Architecture
  •  Libraries
  •  Monuments and Memorials
  •  Mosques
  •  Museums
  •  Parks and Parking
  •  Plazas and Piazzas
  •  Stadiums
  •  Schools
  •  Temples
  •  Theaters
  •  Town and City Halls
  •  Town and City Planning
  •  Urban Design and Planning
  •  Land Use and Transportation Planning
  •  Environmental Planning
    Building Types - Commerical
  •  Bank Buildings
  •  Commercial Architecture
  •  Factory Buildings
  •  Hotels and Inns
  •  Laboratory Buildings
  •  Health Care Buildings
  •  Mixed Use Buildings
  •  Office Buildings
  •  Parks and Parking
  •  Cafes and Restaurants
  •  Retail Design
  •  Skyscrapers
    Architectural Topics
  •  Adaptive Reuse
  •  Architecture Awards and Prizes
  •  Architecture and Video
  •  Professional Practice Issues in Architecture and Building
  •  Marketing for Building Design Professionals
  •  Professional Liability in Architecture and Building
  •  Katrina and Gulf Coast
  •  World Trade Center
  •  The Pentagon
  •  In Memorium
  •  Some Architecture with Curves
  •  The Facade
  •  The Orders
  •  Some Organic Architecture
  •  Public Art
  •  Daylighting
    New Media Focus
  •  Architectural Wikis
  •  Architectural Web Sites
  •  Architectural CAD
    Architectural Styles
  •  Egyptian Architecture
  •  Greek Architecture
  •  Roman Architecture
  •  Medieval Architecture
  •  Georgian Architecture
  •  Gothic Architecture
  •  Hindu Architecture
  •  Islamic Architecture
  •  Romanesque Architecture
  •  Japanese Architecture
  •  Byzantine Architecture
  •  The Doric Order
  •  The Ionic Order
  •  The Corinthian Order
  •  Baroque Architecture
  •  Victorian Architecture
  •  Art Nouveau Architecture
  •  Art Deco Architecture
  •  Arts and Crafts Architecture
  •  Broadly Classical Architecture
  •  Neo-Classical Architecture
  •  Early Modern Architecture
  •  Prairie Style Architecture
  •  Modern around the World
  •  Expressionist Modern Architecture
  •  Deconstructivist Modern
  •  Expressionist Architecture
  •  Post Modern Architecture
  •  High Tech Modern Architecture
  •  Vernacular Around the World
  •  Neo-Vernacular
    Construction Types
  •  Bearing Masonry Construction
  •  Brick Construction
  •  Cut Stone Masonry Construction
  •  Concrete Construction
  •  Curtain Wall Construction
  •  Fabric & Tensile Construction
  •  Geodesic Construction
  •  Glass in Construction
  •  Light Wood Frame Construction
  •  Steel Construction
  •  Timber Construction
  •  Remodeling
    Climates
  •  In Temperate Climates
  •  In an Alpine Climate
  •  In a Mild Temperate Climate
  •  In a Cold Temperate Climate
  •  In a Desert Climate
  •  In a Warm Temperate Climate
  •  In a Hot, Humid or Subtropical Climate
  •  In a Tropical Climate
    Architectural Contexts
  •  Infill Development
  •  In an Campus Context
  •  In a Hill or Cliffside Context
  •  In a Mountain Context
  •  In a Riverside Context
  •  In an Rural Context
  •  In a Small Town or City Context
  •  In a Suburban Context
  •  In an Urban Context
  •  In an Village Context
  •  In a Waterfront Context
    Architecural Elements
  •  Arches
  •  Courtyards
  •  Domes
  •  Stairways
  •  Vaulting
  •  A Range of Rooms in ArchWeek
  • LEED Platinum Certified - 02
    LEED Platinum Certified page: [prev] | 01 | 02 | 03 | 04 | 05 | [next]

    ArchWeek Image

    AIA HOUSING AWARDS: SINGLE-FAMILY

    In the Towerview neighborhood of Racine, Wisconsin, a strikingly modern two-story home stands apart on a lakefront site. Though its architects credit nearby Victorians as inspiration for the vivid colors highlighting its facade, the playful tone, rectilinear massing, and structurally expressive detailing seem to make more recent references — as well they might. — Published 2011.0406

    Continue...

    ArchWeek Image

    DOCKSIDE GREEN: PHASE TWO

    The second phase of the Dockside Green project in Victoria, British Columbia, recently received a high-scoring LEED Platinum certification from the Canada Green Building Council. Known as Balance, this part of the development comprises 171 residential units in two adjacent towers. It earned a LEED score of 63 points out of a possible 70, matching the score of Dockside Green's first phase, Synergy (featured in ArchitectureWeek No. 401). — Published 2011.0302

    Continue...

    ArchWeek Image

    HOUSING AWARDS FROM HUD AND THE AIA

    Residents of Congo Street in Dallas, Texas, loved their tight-knit community of homeowners and long-term tenants. By 2008, however, the neighborhood's modest, century-old houses had fallen into disrepair.

    The local firm buildingcommunityWorkshop worked with five homeowners to develop a unique plan for renovating their homes without displacing anyone from the neighborhood during the process — and while also reaching for LEED Platinum. — Published 2010.1208

    Continue...

    ArchWeek Image

    PORTLAND AIA AWARDS

    When the University of Oregon made plans with longtime athletics benefactor Phil Knight, chairman of Nike, to build a new study center for student athletes on the Eugene campus, the stated goal was to create a building of striking beauty that celebrates the landscape. The resulting John E. Jaqua Academic Center for Student Athletes is a gleaming glass cuboid set against a reflecting pool, impressing passersby with its pristine presence while providing abundant outdoor views to the select athletes within. — Published 2010.1110

    Continue...

    ArchWeek Image

    TEACHING DESIGN/BUILD: STUDIO 804

    Studio 804, which takes its name from the final design studio within the graduate architecture program at the University of Kansas, compresses every aspect of design/ build practice into an intensive five-month experience.

    In the ten years since the studio began, we've progressed from small-scale projects to creating affordable housing for the city of Lawrence to the point at which students now design, build, and install prefabricated homes for entry-level buyers in Kansas City. — Published 2010.1020

    Continue...

    ArchWeek Image

    BETTER ENERGY CODES NOW

    Update: Local and state building code officials did approve a package of revisions to the commercial section of the 2012 International Energy Conservation Code (IECC) in late October, as recommended here. New and renovated buildings constructed in jurisdictions that use the new 2012 IECC are predicted to use 30 percent less energy than those built to current standards. —Editor — Published 2010.1013

    Continue...

    ArchWeek Image

    GREEN SCIENCE IN SALT LAKE CITY

    The new Meldrum Science Center, certified LEED Platinum, provides an outstanding teaching and laboratory facility for the Westminster College campus in Salt Lake City, Utah.

    The airy, daylit interior of the four-story, 60,000-square-foot (5,600-square-meter) building provides a fertile matrix for interactive learning about science — in the curriculum and in the building. — Published 2010.0929

    Continue...

    ArchWeek Image

    AIA MICHIGAN AWARDS 2010

    The Richmond Center for Visual Arts in Kalamazoo is striking, with building forms tied to its arts hub functions.

    Copper cladding, curving in two dimensions, wraps the lobby and front exhibit areas, setting off a large glazed facade section that allows natural light deep into the space. The lightness of the glass and copper, and of zinc that wraps the lecture areas, contrasts with the visual weight of the precast concrete panels cladding the rest of the building. — Published 2010.0811

    Continue...

    ArchWeek Image

    NEW SAN FRANCISCO ARCHITECTURE

    SFMOMA commissioned a new sculpture garden for the top of its parking structure, with provisions to connect to the main San Francisco Museum of Modern Art building — a late-20th-century classic that prefigured the wave of museums constructed following the Guggenheim Bilbao in 1997. Jensen & Macy Architects conceived of the garden, which was completed by successor firm Jensen Architects, as a gallery without a ceiling. — Published 2010.0609

    Continue...

    ArchWeek Image

    AIA TOP GREEN BUILDINGS 2010

    A boxy new house stands on stilts in the Katrina-ravaged Lower Ninth Ward of New Orleans. Its form may be distinctly contemporary, but the home has ties to its place: filigree railings recall the ornamental ironwork of the French Quarter, and a linear plan evokes some sense of the regional shotgun house vernacular. — Published 2010.0428

    Continue...

    LEED Platinum Certified page: [prev] | 01 | 02 | 03 | 04 | 05 | [next]

     

    IN THIS ISSUE
     Contents/RSS
    Environment
    Foundations of Passive House
    Culture
    Corbu's Maison Ternisien
    Culture
    People & Places

    AND MORE
      Current Contents
      People & Places
      Blog Center
      Book Center
      Download Center
      New Products
      Products Guide
      Classic Home
      Calendar
      Competitions
      Conferences
      Events & Exhibits
      Architecture Forum
      Architects Directory
      Topics Library
      Complete Archive
      Web Directory
      About ArchWeek
      Search
      Subscribe & Contribute
      Free Newsletters
       


     
    QUIZ

    Current Issue Contents

      Special thanks to our sustaining subscribers offering Spring Door Hinges and Corporate Gifts.

    Send this to a friend       Subscribe       Contribute       Media Kit       Privacy       Comments
    ARCHWEEK   |   GREAT BUILDINGS   |   ARCHIPLANET   |   DISCUSSION   |   BOOKS   |   BLOGS   |   SEARCH
    ArchitectureWeek.com/
    © 2006-2012 Artifice, Inc. - All Rights Reserved