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AIA
Indiana
Office
Location:
50 South Meridian,
Suite 302
Indianapolis, IN
46204
Phone:
317 634-6993
Executive Director
Jason Shelley [email]
Bookstore Location
50 South Meridian,
Suite 100
Indianapolis, IN
46204
Phone:
317-634-3871
Bookstore Manager
Nancy Grounds [email]
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AIA
Indiana 2007 Annual Design Awards
AIA
Indiana presented seven design awards
at its Annual Convention on October 12, 2007 in Columbus, IN.
Scroll
Down Page To View Award Winners
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View
2007 Service Awards |
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| Outstanding
Indiana Architecture |
Project
Name |
Luminous
Bodies Residence |
Evansville,
IN |

Photographer
Alise O’Brien Photography,
St. Louis, MO

View More Information
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Project
Architect |
ASTIGMATIC
Studio |
San
Francisco, CA |
About
Project |
Project Description:
The residence is a poetic response to the disjunction
and unification represented in the literal commission:
to design a living space for a divorced couple that
upon retirement wanted to live together. The residence
is completely handicap accessible because one owner
has cerebral palsy. Pairs of “V” glulam
columns along the 100’ long wings minimize
obstructions and allows the interior and exterior
to blur together with the additional use of storefront
glazing as the exterior skin.
Jury Comments:
“The roof just floats above the landscape…it
is the shelter”
“The interior is equal to the exterior
….I
like how you have to engage the wood structure on the
inside too…”
“I would really like to see this house
….
it is a real country house.”
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| Honor
for Excellence in Architectural Design |
Project
Name |
Shelbyville Fire Station No. 1 and Headquarters |
Shelbyville,
IN |

Photographer
Greg Murphy Studios, Inc.,
Trafalgar, IN

See More Information |
Project
Architect |
Axis Architecture + Interiors |
Indianapolis,
IN |
About
Project |
Project Description:
The Shelbyville Fire Station No.1 is a true urban
fire station located in the center of the City
of Shelbyville. The architect was challenged with
designing a modern building that meshed in with
the historic massing of surrounding buildings of
a small Indiana City.
The architect began this project with a study of
the history of Shelbyville and a survey of the buildings
located in the downtown area adjacent to the site.
This information was used as a baseline for the context
for the design. The architect developed a concept
that utilized the entire width of the site with parking
and all site utilities at the rear of the site so
that the front could be unobstructed. A tower at
the intersection between the living quarters and
the apparatus bay was employed to emulate and compete
with other surrounding structures solidifying the
Fire Station’s civic presence.
The Shelbyville Fire Station No.1 is designed and
successfully serves as a fire station, department
headquarters and community center for the residents
of Shelbyville, Indiana. This project has definitely
been an example of good design in civic architecture
effecting a populous in a positive way while showing
that good design can be available within budget and
within the set schedule.
Jury Comments:
“We like that we can see context…that
it’s respectful of that context and takes clues
from that context but it’s also its own thing”
“It’s a use that may not naturally fit
into a Main Street location but…they’ve
done a good job of making an architecture that is
amiable to pedestrian traffic…”
“The plan is quite clear and we like that the
tower is actually a hose tower…”
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| Honor
for Excellence in Architectural Design |
Project
Name |
High Acres Indiana House |
Columbus,
IN |

Photographer
Esto Photographics, Inc.,
Mamaroneck, NY

See More Information |
Project
Architect |
RATIO Architects, Inc. |
Columbus,
IN |
About
Project |
Project Description:
Originally built in 1929 by
a prominent Indiana industrialist, this small country
cottage was originally built as a summer-time respite,
and would eventually in the 1950’s become a
weekend cottage of local Columbus area business leader,
and time-honored contemporary architecture champion
and philanthropist, J. Irwin Miller. The cottage’s
new owners, a young family with small children, would
require the cottage to be expanded to three times
its existing square-footage, yet remain modestly
scaled in proportion to the existing hilltop. The
concept for “growing” the cottage suggested
the addition of two new cottage-wings spreading outward
from the main body, forming a nicely-scaled terrace
garden to trap the mid-day sun, and receive the cool
valley breezes. The key to the massing composition
is the development of the glass connectors, or two-story
bridges, which are designed to isolate the new wings
added to each side of the cottage. The more contemporary
bridges allow a sort of time-lapse to occur, between
the old and the new, and affords the introduction
of exterior materials like stone, slate, and clapboard
siding to enter the interior. The buildings are anticipated
to age and weather handsomely, and with a timeless
sense of permanence over the coming years.
Jury Comments:
“We respect the strategy of the two additions…they
don’t look like cheap imitations…they
are equal in detailing and craft to the original....”
“It would be hard for me to not look at this
project, to triple the program, and I would do two
things that are so completely different from the
original that you understand the original is a different
thing….that’s not what they did, they
chose a different approach and they did it really
well and that’s what is admirable about it.”
“I think it’s the best of them all….”
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| Merit
for Excellence in Architectural Design |
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Butler University Health & Recreation Complex and
Student Housing Village
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Indianapolis,
IN |

Photographer
MV2 Photography,
Indianapolis, IN

See More Information |
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RATIO Architects, Inc |
Indianapolis,
IN |
About
Project |
Project Description:
Butler University’s mission is to provide the highest
quality of liberal and professional education by creating
and fostering a stimulating intellectual community built
upon interactive dialogue and inquiry among faculty, staff
and students.
The Health and Recreation Complex, located to the west
of Hinkle Fieldhouse, is carefully nestled in a hillside
surrounded by a wooded area. In utilizing the hillside,
the project team was able to create a pass-through connector
for students between the main campus and the new Student
Housing Village.
Further east along the Promenade, carefully woven onto
the long hill that borders the west length of Boulevard
Place, the new Student Housing Village overlooks the Butler
Bowl to the west and the historic Butler/Tarkington neighborhood
to the east. The student housing village is comprised of
six apartment buildings made up of 126 total four-bedroom
units and four single units. The Village also features
a village center, the Dawg-House, named after the university
mascot. The Dawg-House serves as a community center where
residents can gather to watch their favorite show on the
flat screen TV, play a game of pool or simply hang out.
A small convenience store and outdoor seating are the perfect
solution for students’ mid-afternoon snack cravings
and study breaks.
Jury Comments:
“The program is evocative and complex and the architecture
responds to it….”
“We like the continuity of materials…there
is a residential quality to the residential center and
something different to the rec center that has been properly
done and which is so often not the case in university residential….”
“It has to deal with the larger scale of the composition
of buildings but they also did a nice job of detailing
each building.”
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Merit
for Excellence in Architectural Design |
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Monopoly House |
Indianapolis,
IN |

Photographer
Greg Murphey
Indianapolis, IN

See More Information |
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Demerly Architects |
Indianapolis,
IN |
About
Project |
Project Description:
The house was conceptualized as three separate elements
comprised of two living units and an interstitial space
tying them together. The clients have two grown children
who will not live in the house, but need their own rooms.
Those rooms are separated from the master bedroom by
a bridge on the second floor. Thus, the basic living
pattern of the family becomes manifest in the form of
the house.
The simple massing of the house presents a gable form
that is clearly part of the vernacular of the historic
neighborhood in which it is located. Rather than add additional
elements to the house, the simple mass is instead carved
away to let the negative space create a covered front entry
and back porch. The gabled profile is extruded beyond the
plane of the front façade to accentuate its form.
The central section connects the separate functions of
the house. In the interior of the house, the transitional
space becomes an incredible volume with the bridge running
through it. The carefully crafted placement of the walls
creates separation between the functional elements of the
space while allowing them to coexist in the same volumetric
space.
Jury Comments:
“As a gesture that can be part of a larger whole
it is very sensible. I could imagine this could create
as an example a larger environment of similar dwellings
that could be quite evocative.”
“Obviously drawn from the other stuff around without
looking just like it…good vernacular.”
“Plan for narrow site is properly organized…vibrant
interior spaces”
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| Citation for
Excellence in Architectural Design |
Project
Name |
Frankey’s |
Indianapolis,
IN |

Photographer
Drew Endicott,
Indianapolis, IN

See More Information |
Project Architect |
Axis Architecture
+ Interiors |
Indianapolis,
IN |
About
Project |
Project Description:
Established in 2003, Frankey’s is one of Indianapolis’ only
independently owned clothing boutiques specializing in
cutting-edge clothing from an ever-changing list of trendsetting
fashion designers. Asked to make a fashion-forward, upscale
boutique the design solution involved disconnecting the
store from the project site, creating a quiet and flexible
interior and restraining the palette and lighting designs
to allow the clothes to shine. An uninterrupted field of
European hard wood flooring allows for endless configurations
of mobile stainless steel fixtures. To provide an outline
for organization, the 22’ high exposed ceiling is
interrupted with a series of drywall bulkheads that fold
down the shell walls to create feature vignettes.
Jury Comments:
“The project presents a direct solution with modest
and beautiful moments”
“The reductive material palate and specific editing
choices makes it work.”
“The best interior submittal very skillfully done”.
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| Citation
for Excellence in Architectural Design |
Project
Name |
Manchester College Science Center |
North Manchester, Indiana |

Photographer
WM Photographic Services,
Indianapolis, IN

See More Information |
Project Architect |
InterDesign |
North Manchester, Indiana |
About
Project |
Project Description:
This 85,600 square-foot Science Center completes the definition
of the campus mall and strengthens the coherence and
integrity of the overall campus. Its placement near the
center of campus serves as a bridge between science and
non-science programs and reinforces the existing pedestrian
circulation patterns of this small Indiana private college.
The design of the exterior complements the scale and
character of existing campus buildings by utilizing a
familiar palette of brick, stone and glass. Inside, the
client stressed that the design needed to accentuate
their hands-on approach to science by providing informal
places for students and faculty to interact and a flexible
learning environment that puts the doing of science on
display. .
Jury Comments:
“We really like how it finishes off the quad…with
integrity and without fuss”
“There is clarity to the floor plan and site plan
arrangement. Very well done. ”
Regarding a photo one professor on the jury noted “I
don’t lecture in many rooms that look like that.
It looks like a good space to teach in.”
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The
distinguished jury from AIA Iowa was:
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Kate
Schwennsen, FAIA
Kate
Schwennsen, FAIA, is the Associate Dean for Academic
Programs of the College of Design at Iowa State University.
Among her duties are responsibilities for strategic planning,
budgeting, and curricular oversight for this college of
2,000 design students. Prior to returning to her alma mater,
(BA, 1978; M.Arch., 1980), to teach architectural design
and professional practice, she practiced architecture for
ten years in professionally critical areas, including office
and project management, marketing, and design.
Kate has served in important
leadership positions in international, national, regional,
and state professional, civic, and regulatory organizations.
Many of her efforts have been directed at advancing the
education of architects and the standards of the profession
through changing the who, what and how of 21st century
practice. Specifically, her efforts have focused on making
the “who” more inclusive, the “what” more
sustainable, and the “how” more collaborative
and knowledge-based. In 2006, Kate served as the 82nd President
of the American Institute of Architects. She was the second
woman, second Iowan, and second educator to serve as the
elected leader of this then 149-year-old, 78,000-member
organization
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Mark Engelbrecht,
FAIA
Mark Engelbrecht is dean of the College of Design
at Iowa State University. Since receiving his BArch from Iowa
State and MArch from Columbia University, Engelbrecht has been
teaching and practicing for nearly four decades. In 1977, the
Iowa Chapter of the American Institute of Architects (AIA)
presented him with its first award for accomplishments in education,
and the national AIA elected him to its prestigious College
of Fellows in 1998. Engelbrecht is a native Iowan whose family
has been involved in public and private education within the
state for three generations.
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Paul Mankins, FAIA
Paul Mankins,
FAIA, a Principal with substance Architecture, has been recognized
as one of the Nation’s
leading architects and designers. He began his career in 1985
in the office of Charles Herbert & Associates—Iowa’s
most celebrated design practice. Following graduate studies
and stints with Smith–Miller + Hawkinson in New York
City and Kaplan McLaughlin Diaz in San Francisco, he returned
to Iowa in 1991. Since returning to Iowa, Paul has directed
the design of projects recognized with over thirty Honor and
Merit Awards for design from the Central States Region, Iowa,
and San Francisco Chapters of the AIA. Major projects include
the Meredith Corporation Expansion in Des Moines, winner of
a National 2002 Honor Award for Architecture, Des Moines’ new
Central Library, and significant corporate interiors projects
on both coasts. In addition, he has served as an adjunct
faculty member at Iowa State University since 1998 teaching
architectural design. In recognition of his contributions
to the profession, Paul received
the Design Achievement Award from Iowa State University in
1998 and the Young Architects Award from the AIA in 2003. In
2004 he was elected to the College of Fellows of the American
Institute of Architects. He is currently one of the youngest
Fellows in the nation.
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Kevin Nordmeyer,
AIA
Kevin Nordmeyer,
AIA, LEED AP is a partner at RDG Planning and Design. Kevin’s particular expertise
is centered on sustainable design in Iowa. Kevin is the Chair
of the United States Green Building Council-Iowa Chapter and
a board member of the Iowa Environmental Council and the Center
on Sustainable Communities. Kevin is a lecturer at Iowa State
University focusing on sustainable design in the Department
of Architecture. Kevin was the lead designer for the Center
for Energy and Environmental Education at UNI in 1992 – Iowa’s
first modern sustainable building. Kevin has been recognized
nationally for sustainable design with the Iowa Association
of Municipal Utilities Office Facility – one of the Top
Ten Green buildings in the country in 2002 and is currently
working on other significant sustainable work in the area including
Earthpark, The Great Ape Trust, The Marion Arts and Environment
Center, GreenWood, and the College of Design Foundations Pavilion
at ISU.
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