The American Institute of Architects (AIA) selected nine recipients of the 2016 Small Project Awards.
Now in its 13th year, the AIA Small Project Awards Program recognizes the work of small-project practitioners and promotes small-project design.
Award recipients are categorized into two groups. Category 1 is small project construction, objects, works of environmental art or architectural design elements up to $150,000 in construction cost. Category 2 is small project construction up to $1.5 million in construction cost.
“With construction budgets regularly running into the tens and hundreds of millions of dollars, it’s important to emphasize the impact smaller projects can have,” said Jury Chair, Marika Snider, AIA. “As architects we strive to provide clients with more than just buildings, but solutions to improve life – these projects highlight this notion.”
The jury for the 2016 Small Project Awards includes: Marika Snider, AIA (Chair), Snider Architecture; Will Bruder, FAIA, Will Bruder Architects; Mira Locher, FAIA, Kajika Architecture; Elizabeth Ranieri, FAIA, Kuth Ranieri and Jonathan Tate, Office Jonathan Tate.
(Click images to enlarge)
Category 1
Photo: Ed Massery, courtesy AIA.
Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh Studio Hive | Pittsburgh | GBBN Architects
The Studio Hive is part of the Teen Zone in the East Liberty Branch of the Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh. Made of wood and sound absorbent industrial felt, its creation has contributed to a 350% increase in attendance at the library’s teen programs and events. The design team developed a 3D digital model of the hive, which allowed designers to tune the form and refine it to minimize material waste. The connection to both the remaining library and the street provides teens with a sense of their social context and environment while they occupy a space that is uniquely personal.
Photo: Paul Crosby, courtesy AIA.
Deployable Smocked Porch | Winterset, Iowa | substance architecture
A simple wooden frame defines the small space and supports two porch swings. The smocked screening creates curtains that allow access and provide shade and enclosure. A rectangular opening in the roof allows a shaft of daylight to enter the space. This opening is echoed in the small turf area cut into the floor. The project was designed and constructed adjacent to the courthouse square in Winterset as a pro bono effort to support The Iowa Preservation Alliance. The wood was salvaged from a demolished home, and the labor to sew, fabricate, and construct the space were provided by the design team. As a result, the budget for the project was $900.
Photo: Kevin Scott, courtesy AIA.
wa_sauna | Seattle | goCstudio
This floating sauna, funded through a crowdfunding campaign, functions as a boat that can be moored at a marina or private property and taken out on the open water. The interior is heated by a wood burning stove. As a mobile piece of architecture, wa_sauna is able to engage with people living aboard boats and houseboats as well as the large community of boaters, kayakers, paddle boarders and rowers. It uses a pre-manufactured aluminum frame and floatation system for the deck.
Photo: Nik Nikolov, courtesy AIA.
Weihnacht Huts | Bethlehem, Pennsylvania | NAD
This pro-bono design is for 35 craft exhibit huts for an authentic German Weihnachtsmarkt (open-air Christmas market). The huts feature a steeply-sloped roof designed for snowfall and a ridge line borrowed from traditional Moravian vernacular. With a limited budget for materials ($286 per unit), paired with the necessity for the structures to be taken apart and stored every year, the deck, walls, and roof panels are constructed as single units to be taken apart, transported, and stored flat with ease. The poly-carbonate roof is not only easy to dissemble, but also allows for a large amount of light and warmth inside during the day. During the night the huts are illuminated from within to add to the Christmas atmosphere of Bethlehem’s historic district.
Category 2
Photo: Mike Sinclair, courtesy AIA.
Girl Scouts Camp Prairie Schooner | Kansas City, Missouri | el dorado inc.
Camp Prairie Schooner features a dining hall, five permanent units, two buildings for troop use, a 40-foot rappel tower, an archery range, a swimming pool and a zipline. The load bearing walls of the structures are constructed of 2x6 wood studs that support a series of common & scissor trusses. The envelope is clad with corrugated metal panels, complementing the wood and aluminum clad windows and skylights. The end of the bunk houses are a combination of fluted polycarbonate glazing and painted concrete board over a rain screen system. All mechanical systems are concealed within the trusses. The pendant lights are custom fixtures designed and built by a former girl scout.
Photo: Johnsen Schmaling Architects, courtesy AIA.
Linear Cabin | Alma Lake, Wisconsin | Johnsen Schmaling Architects
The Linear Cabin is a small family retreat, its low-slung body sitting in a small clearing in Wisconsin’s North Woods. The building consists of three identically sized, nearly opaque boxes tied together with a continuous thin roof plane. The voids between the boxes allow for unobstructed views through the building from the outside, and into the sylvan landscape from within. The interior is clad in knotty pine, and is tempered by its crisply detailed joints and the simple lines of the lacquered millwork throughout. The cabin is wrapped in blackened cedar, with its darkness matching the weathered monochrome of traditional Wisconsin cabins.
Photo: Will Crocker, courtesy AIA.
St. Pius Chapel & Prayer Garden | New Orleans | Eskew+Dumez+Ripple
The new chapel was designed as a quiet refuge and intimate sanctuary for reflection and contemplation. The sanctuary, which complements the modernist character of the adjacent church (circa 1963), is small but tall, keeping occupants close while inspiring reverence. Beyond a few pieces of furniture and religious items, the space’s power and purpose is enhanced by its very simplicity allowing occupants worship in quiet and contemplative solitude, without distraction.
Photo: Mitch Tobias, courtesy AIA.
Studio Dental | San Francisco | Montalba Architects, Inc.
The goal was to create a spacious interior while packing Studio Dental’s required program for its mobile unit. The 26-foot-long trailer with 230 interior sf features a waiting area, sterilization room, and two operatories. The sterilization room is hidden behind millwork panels that wrap around to form the patient waiting bench. A centralized, double-sided millwork panel houses equipment for both operatories and gestures up to 11-foot-plus ceilings with translucent sculpted skylights. Materials include natural wood millwork, bright-white surfaces, and a custom perforation pattern.
Photo: Iwan Baan, courtesy AIA.
Village Health Works Staff Housing | Bujumbura Burundi | Louise Braverman, Architect
Embedded in the mountainside of an off-the-grid rural village in Burundi, this 18-bed staff housing is a bridge between East African elemental aesthetics and inventive sustainability. The 6,000-sf dormitory captures scenic mountain views. The same design aspects that establish its visual presence, such as airflow enhancing porches, also advance its sustainability.
Related Stories
| Apr 12, 2011
American Institute of Architects announces Guide for Sustainable Projects
AIA Guide for Sustainable Projects to provide design and construction industries with roadmap for working on sustainable projects.
| Apr 11, 2011
Wind turbines to generate power for new UNT football stadium
The University of North Texas has received a $2 million grant from the State Energy Conservation Office to install three wind turbines that will feed the electrical grid and provide power to UNT’s new football stadium.
| Apr 8, 2011
SHW Group appoints Marjorie K. Simmons as CEO
Chairman of the Board Marjorie K. Simmons assumes CEO position, making SHW Group the only firm in the AIA Large Firm Roundtable to appoint a woman to this leadership position
| Apr 5, 2011
Zaha Hadid’s civic center design divides California city
Architect Zaha Hadid is in high demand these days, designing projects in Hong Kong, Milan, and Seoul, not to mention the London Aquatics Center, the swimming arena for the 2012 Olympics. But one of the firm’s smaller clients, the city of Elk Grove, Calif., recently conjured far different kinds of aquatic life when members of the City Council and the public chose words like “squid,” “octopus,” and “starfish” to describe the latest renderings for a proposed civic center.
| Apr 5, 2011
Are architects falling behind on BIM?
A study by the National Building Specification arm of RIBA Enterprises showed that 43% of architects and others in the industry had still not heard of BIM, let alone started using it. It also found that of the 13% of respondents who were using BIM only a third thought they would be using it for most of their projects in a year’s time.