Project Focus: Oversee.net
9.22.08 | Oversee.net was yet another
groundbreaking collaboration between dTank and
Felderman Keatinge & Associates. The client is a
rapidly expanding online marketing firm known for
its forward-thinking. Due to the company's
dramatic growth, it was ready for a new workplace
and wanted it to reflected strongly the Oversee.net brand and its focus on functionality.
Conant Architects Inside Park Restaurant
8.25.08 | One might not expect to find a resort setting in a church courtyard in
midtown Manhattan, but Conant Architects has achieved this,
appropriately enough, on Park Avenue.
Putting My Money Where My Mouth Is
7.21.08 | When do revolutions start? Do they, as some suggest, simply burst
into flame, in due course producing tectonic shifts in values and a new
way of life? Or is there a period of rumbling and of belching of smoke
before the great fire begins?
Project Focus: Little Assembly Required
7.14.08 | The intricate details of workstation selection and implementation may not
be the first topic when discussing the design of an office interior.
Certainly this is so in the case of the Watermark Credit Union
headquarters in Seattle. This recent IA Interior Architects
project features an eye-catching 15-ft.-high pavilion (which serves as an
internet café) wrapped in 3-Form Eco-Resin, bold references to the
Watermark brand, and interior landscaping.
Industrial Buildings at Office Quality
5.5.08 | Introduction
Most architects are faced with significant competition when they decide to compete for a large industrial facility design project; when the process includes both architects and design-build contractors this competition often becomes both more severe and more polarized. And neither the design firm nor the developer is often able to step out of their metaphor for industrial design quality.
Most architects are faced with significant competition when they decide to compete for a large industrial facility design project; when the process includes both architects and design-build contractors this competition often becomes both more severe and more polarized. And neither the design firm nor the developer is often able to step out of their metaphor for industrial design quality.


