MIT mock-ups featured in David K. Ross’s new book

Posted on May 15th, 2021 by Nicole Sakr

Posted under: _MIT Site 4, construction

Archetypes features a recent series by Canadian artist David K. Ross, who works at the interface of photography, film, and installation. His images of architectural mock-ups, staged at night with dramatic lighting that isolates structures from their surroundings, demonstrate how these objects have become a charged form of proto-architecture. The book offers an effective platform to consider what it means to pre-construct fragments of buildings in all their complexity. Published alongside Ross’s images are four essays framing the historical, technological, and civic significance of the mock-up.

NADAAA, Kendall Square, Cambridge, United States, 2018 (I and II)

For more information or to order a copy please click HERE.

Many of Ross’s works will be exhibited at upcoming shows in Zurich, Munich, Basel, and at Daniels Building’s Architecture and Design Gallery.

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Villa Varoise wins 2020 Hobson Award!

Posted on January 22nd, 2021 by Nicole Sakr

Posted under: _Villa Varoise, Awards

Villa Varoise has received an Honor Award for Residential Design from a joint BSA/AIANY committee. The award was announced at the annual BSA Gala hosted last night online. See all the 2020 BSA Award winners HERE including a sustainability award for the Daniels Building! Check back soon for a special AIANY video about the house!

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SUPPORT BLACK DESIGNERS

Posted on November 18th, 2020 by Nicole Sakr

Posted under: _Daniels Building, Things We Like

Photograph by Guershom Kitsa. Via the Daniels Faculty

Daniels Faculty alumni Ashita Parekh and Tolu Alabi have installed a mural on the Daniels Building as a call to improve diversity in the discipline of design. The mural includes smaller ‘pixel’ artwork pieces submitted by Black designers. Learn more about the mural and the creative group Daniels Art Directive HERE.

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Nueva arquitectura de la enseñanza

Posted on November 15th, 2020 by Nicole Sakr

Posted under: _Daniels Building, _Melbourne School of Design, Press

The Melbourne School of Design and the Daniels Building are featured in Porcelanosa Lifestyle’s article on new educational architecture.

“La arquitectura académica necesita espacios específicos que inducen al estudio, a la concentración de la investigación, a intercambio de ideas y debates entre compañeros para generar un sentido crítico y reforzar el aprendizaje.”

Read on HERE.

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Katie speaking at Facades+ Toronto

Posted on September 27th, 2019 by Nicole Sakr

Posted under: Lectures

Katie will speak on the Daniels Building’s heritage façade on October 11th at the Facades+ Conference: Toronto 2019 at the Hyatt Regency, 370 King Street, Toronto. Find full Conference info HERE and register HERE!

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PEAKS AND GABLES

Posted on July 19th, 2019 by Dara Lin

Posted under: _Daniels Building, Press

Matthew Marrani describes in the Architect’s Newspaper how the Daniels Building uses modern material systems to reference the language of the Gothic heritage Knox College building.

Read more HERE.

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WALLPAPER* ON TORONTO’S THRIVING ARCHITECTURE SCENE

Posted on June 24th, 2019 by Dara Lin

Posted under: _Daniels Building, Academic, Press

Alex Bozikovic describes “a new and more braggadocious spirit” in Canada’s largest city, fueled by the 20-year building boom. Among the featured works is the Daniels Building.

“The University of Toronto architecture school now has a home that speaks of serious creative ambition… An addition by Boston firm NADAAA with Toronto’s Adamson Associates echoes the whimsy of the older building with pointy concrete and steel.”

Read Wallpaper*’s full piece HERE.

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Katie speaking at UHPC Symposium

Posted on May 30th, 2019 by Nicole Sakr

Posted under: Lectures

Next Monday, June 3rd, Katie will share a case study on the Daniels Building’s Taktl façade system at the multi-day UHPC Interactive Symposium in Albany, New York. More information can be found on the Symposium’s website HERE. Register HERE.

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NADAAA ANNOUNCES PROMOTIONS

Posted on January 2nd, 2019 by Nicole Sakr

Posted under: Things We Like

 

NADAAA is pleased to announce several changes to our leadership in 2019. Arthur Chang, AIA has been named a Principal of the firm. Richard Lee, Harry Lowd, and Amin Tadj have been promoted to positions of Associate. All four have been instrumental in our success, leading projects and essential participants in NADAAA’s commitment to design excellence. Our team looks forward to working with them in their new positions.

Arthur Chang, AIA  Arthur has served as Senior Design Architect and Project Manager at NADAAA since the firm began in 2011. He was also a Designer and Project Manager at Office dA for seven years. Arthur holds a Master of Architecture from the University of Pennsylvania’s Graduate School of Fine Arts and a Bachelor of Architecture from Cal Poly San Luis Obispo. Arthur was the Project Architect for the Melbourne School of Design, which opened in 2014. He is currently leading the construction administration of a new residence hall for the Rhode Island School of Design and managing the design of a new subway head-house for the MBTA in Boston’s Seaport District.

Richard Lee  Richard has served as Senior Designer and Project Manager at NADAAA since the firm began in 2011. He was also a Project Manager and Designer at Office dA for nine years. Richard holds a Master of Architecture from Harvard’s GSD and a Bachelor of Architecture from RISD. He recently led the design and management of several projects within the new Daniels Building at the University of Toronto. Richard is currently managing renovations to multiple RISD dormitories in Providence, RI.

Harry Lowd  Harry has served as Senior Designer and Project Manager at NADAAA since the firm began in 2011. He was also a Project Architect and Manager at Office dA for five years. He holds a Master of Architecture from RISD and a Bachelor of Arts from Wesleyan University. Harry recently served as Project Designer for the award-winning Rock Creek House in Washington DC. He is currently managing a large mixed-use development project for MIT in Cambridge, MA.

Amin Tadj  Amin joined NADAAA in 2013 and has served as Senior Project Designer and Project Manager on several award-winning projects. Amin holds a Master of Architecture from the University of Tehran. He is currently the Project Manager of a large mixed-use tower in Cleveland, Ohio. He is the Senior Project Designer on the Adams Street Branch Library project in Boston and has been a design leader on multiple NADAAA projects and design competitions.

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NADAAA AT GEORGIA TECH: THE TECTONIC GRAIN

Posted on November 14th, 2018 by Hannah Wang

Posted under: Installations + Exhibitions, Lectures

photo by Shenjie Li

The Tectonic Grain is a textual and visual array which draws from this experience of designing space for design. The exhibit’s unique layout acts as both model and statement. A lecture given by Nader of the same name on October 24th opened the exhibit and serves as a supplement to the exhibit. To read the corresponding essay, click HERE. To learn more about The Tectonic Grain and the Stubbins Gallery at the Georgia Tech College of Design click HERE.

exhibition connection detail; photo by Shenjie Li

NADAAA approaches architecture with an understanding of a shared ability between academia and its own buildings to teach and challenge the conventions of built space. NADAAA’s work includes three schools of architecture and design: The Hinman Building at Georgia Tech, the University of Melbourne School of Design, and the Daniels Faculty of Architecture at the University of Toronto. Consequently, NADAAA integrates within its practice an extensive understanding of design schools and the structural and circulatory factors that impact learning about design.

photo by Shenjie Li

In the Atlanta and Melbourne projects, research on suspension became a transformative pedagogical tool. At Georgia Tech, we used the gantry crane above to delicately suspend an entire studio space – “the crib” – in order to maintain the flexibility of the ground level. In the Melbourne School of Design, where there is no budgetary allocation for dedicated studio space, 22 meter LVL beams spanned the atrium and formed the structure for a totemic suspended structure that served as the only dedicated series of studio spaces. The structure is massive and volumetric at its top, extending down to the studio walls in a kind of bas-relief, and eventually thinning out to plywood veneers at its base, where the surface of the cladding serves to create a coffered acoustic ceiling that hovers above the great hall.

Melbourne hanging studio elevation; photo by Nader Tehrani

For the Daniels Building in Toronto, while the idea of suspension was not a motivating force, the integrative mandates and lessons of Atlanta and Melbourne projects became instrumental in the transformation of the design. When the concrete shell roof structure was challenged, the project was virtually brought to its knees in a moment of truth, as it were, effectively on the verge of compromising the building’s most salient feature. The question, for us, was whether this roof was a materially driven idea, or rather just about the integration of structural illumination, environmental, and hydrological performance, as the latter became to dominate our thinking, we redesigned the structure more economically in steel, while keeping its essential figure and performance intact. Composed of a layered system of parts, the steel I-beams with corrugated steel deck, covered with light gauge structs, gypsum board sheets with radiant panels, and a coating of paint. Thus, the paint shows no grain, as such, the most characteristic feature of the building resides in the morphological grain of the roof itself.

Toronto roof section; photo by Nader Tehrani

Credits
Curation and design: Nader Tehrani, Lisa LaCharité & Hannah Wang
NADAAA Installation: Hannah Wang & Luisel Zayas
Georgia Tech School of Architecture students: Shenjie Li & Rachel Cloyd
Photographs: Nader Tehrani & Shenjie Li

photo by Shenjie Li

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