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The New 'Contemporary'BY CASSAUNDRA BROOKS
Gnosis Home Tours Feature Homes of Architects
Perhaps you marvel at their structures,
but don’t know their names. Or maybe
you admire their works with some understanding
of their individual styles. Regardless,
we sometimes take the arts of architecture
and design for granted, not considering
the work that goes into that nicely decorated
office building or that striking-looking
theater, museum, library, or gym. Balancing
durability with style, modern motifs with
practicality, and individuality with complementary
aestheticism is no easy job.
If individual style and creativity distinguish
one architect from another, how does
the average person extract these marks of
personality from each architect’s work? One
way would be to view the collections of two
particular architects and note the contrasts
in design and style. To help you start, we
![]() Gnosis, Ltd., a nonprofit organization, annually grants the public viewing access to a number of architects’ and designers’ homes each autumn through their Architects and Designers’ Own Homes Tours. Suzanne D. Johnson, executive director of Gnosis, Ltd., says that the tours are intended to illustrate the fact that good design is both attainable and affordable. The featured homes fall under the term modern. Everyone has undoubtedly heard that word before, but what does it mean with regard to architecture? Johnson quotes Mark Wigley on Le Corbusier’s Toward an Architecture: “The goal is momentum. Modern architecture is simply that: architecture, which allows itself to be carried forward. More precisely, architecture is the movement forward. It is not a matter of replacing an older architecture with a newer one…Only by moving forward can architecture be seen or produced.” With delightful deviations on traditional structure and design—disappearing walls, shocking uses of metal, unexpected finishes, and creative use of light—these homes are pieces of art. Yet they are not treated like “look but don’t touch” museums. They are functional, practical, kid- and pettested, and thoroughly enjoyed. Introduced on these pages are four of the designers featured in last fall’s special tour. Building from the Ground Up
John Kane
Name: John Kane AIA , LEED AP (architect principal)Company: Architekton Typical Style: Contemporary; functional; warm; indoor-, outdoor-, climate-, and context-responsive Inspiration for Home: Derived from functional and site responsiveness. Previous Projects: Include Tempe Center for the Arts, Phoenix/ Tempe/Mesa light-rail stations, Chandler/Gilbert Community College Student Center, Scottsdale Community College Fitness Center, Jewelry by Gautier, Farmer Studios, and Tempe Police Substation. 464 S Farmer Ave, Suite 101, Tempe, AZ 85281 (480) 894-4637 jfkane@architekton.com architekton.com
Matthew Trzebiatowski
Name: Matthew G Trzebiatowski, AIA (principal
and design architect)Company: blank studio, inc. Typical Style: In a word: contemporary. But it’s so much more. Blank studio was created to challenge, inspire, and elevate design awareness in an environment that is directed toward increasingly simplistic and synthetic solutions. The design process centers upon investigation and synthesis, the experiential use of space, and engagement of the senses. Inspiration for Home: As a reminder that all design solutions should be in a direct response to the environment in which the project exists, Trzebiatowski calls the home Xeros, a description in Greek of the condition of land in relation to nearby water. The building includes an opaque face situated toward the intense western afternoon sun, with the other faces exposed to the south and east, shielded by an external layer of woven-metal shade mesh. Its unique shape, along with its height, allows the maximum amount of site to be retained for low-water-use vegetation. The site itself was “recycled,” in that new life was injected into a neglected plot in an equally neglected 1950s-era Phoenix neighborhood. History: Matthew G Trzebiatowski, AIA (Wisconsin, 1972) earned a master’s degree in architecture from the University of Wisconsin at Milwaukee School of Architecture and Urban Planning (SARU P) in 1997. Trzebiatowski is a registered architect in Arizona and Wisconsin, and is currently a faculty member at Collins College of Design and Technology. Trzebiatowski established blank studio in 2001 with his wife, Lisa, while working with an internationally recognized architectural studio in Phoenix. As an emerging concern in our natural and constructed environments, explorations into sustainable technology and practices inform much of the current work of blank studio. Besides its educational component, the studio participates in various local and international design competitions. 1441 E. Sunnyside Drive, Phoenix, Arizona 85020 (602) 331-3310 blankspaces.net
Altering Existing Homes
Brian & Melissa Farling
Names: Brian and Melissa FarlingCompany: Home Company: Studio Twenty46 Inc. Full time employer: Jones Studio, Inc. Typical Style: The Farlings practice architecture of this time—call it modern. Inspiration for Home: The Farlings are transforming a 1950s modest ranch into their long-term, permanent home. Their focus is capturing blue sky and green landscape to make modest-size spaces feel larger, comfortable, and uplifting. History and Previous Projects: Melissa has most recently joined Jones Studio, but before that, she worked on the Maricopa County Downtown Court Tower while at Gould Evans. She is also studying the effects of views of nature on stress as a Research Associate for the Academy of Neuroscience for Architecture and the Academy of Architecture for Justice. Brian has worked with Jones Studio, Inc. for the past nine years, most recently leading the design and construction team for the new expansion to the University of Arizona’s College of Architecture and Landscape Architecture. 2046 S. College Avenue, Tempe, AZ 85282 studio2046@earthlink.net Melissa@jonesstudioinc.com brian@jonesstudioinc.com Jones Studio: (602) 264-2941
McCoy & Simon
Architects & Owners: McCoy and
Simon Architects, Ron McCoy, FAIA and
Janet Simon, (602) 808-9899Landscape Architect: Ten Eyck Landscape Architects, Christine Ten Eyck, (602) 468-0505 Cabinetry: Kenyon Studios, Krista Kenyon, (623) 936-8077 General Contractor: Studio, Stonecreek Building Company, (480) 832-0905 Kitchen and Residence: RJ Bromley Construction, (480) 557-9217 Typical Style: McCoy and Simon’s work is contemporary, in the tradition of modern architecture and with an emphasis on craft and the intimacy of materials and details. This is a version of modern architecture that emphasizes space and carefully considered response to program, context, and landscape. Inspiration for Home: This home is a careful integration of the life and work of the family. The design is inspired by its site, which is dominated by a spectacular setting in the shadow of Camelback Mountain and by the native landscape that surrounds the home. The specific qualities of light from all directions are used to shape the design. History and Previous Projects: Janet Simon graduated from Sci Arc and worked with architects Richard Meier and Barton Meyers. Ron McCoy graduated from Princeton and worked under Michael Graves and Robert Venturi. Their office works on all scales of design, from hardware to urban. They have designed numerous homes, schools, and commercial projects in Phoenix and Los Angeles, and have completed several projects for institutions such as the Getty Museum. Ron McCoy is a professor at ASU and serves as the University Architect.
Visit gnosisltd.org for information on Gnosis, Ltd. and its annual tours. |
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