MSD wins top Interior Design Excellence Award

Posted on November 23rd, 2015 by Nicole Sakr

Posted under: _Melbourne School of Design, Awards

The Melbourne School of Design is winner in the Public Spaces category and the Overall Winner in the 2015 Interior Design Excellence Awards of Australia. See the other winners here and photos of the awards party here!

idea awards 2015

 

 

 

 

 

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MSD WINS BIG WITH INAUGURAL AIA AWARD

Posted on November 6th, 2015 by Nicole Sakr

Posted under: _Melbourne School of Design, Awards

At Australia’s 2015 National Architecture Awards The Melbourne School of Design took home the inaugural Daryl Jackson Award for Educational Architecture, the highest honor for educational architecture in Australia. Daryl Jackson is a fixture in Australian architecture having won the first Sir Zelman Cowen Award and the Royal Australian Institute of Architects Gold Medal. He has led a very successful practice while continually contributing to the academy. We are proud to win such a prestigious honor and to be featured on the cover of AA!

AIA Australia award-blog2

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Learning in Fluid: A New University Typology

Posted on November 5th, 2015 by Nicole Sakr

Posted under: _Melbourne School of Design, Press

The Melbourne School of Design is featured in C3 no.374, an issue that examines five new University buildings that are beginning to form a new building typology.

c3-MSD

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DRAWING AMBIENCE DISCUSSION THIS FRIDAY AT COOPER

Posted on November 4th, 2015 by Nicole Sakr

Posted under: Events, The Cooper Union

This Friday at 6:30 in Cooper’s Great Hall: Nicholas Boyarsky, Robin Middleton, Joan Ockman, Bernard Tschumi, Anthony Vidler, Michael Webb, and Dean Nader Tehrani on “Drawing Ambience”

drawing ambience

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MSD BACK ON BUSTLER

Posted on October 28th, 2015 by Nicole Sakr

Posted under: _Melbourne School of Design, Press

We are reminiscing this week about how the JWA/NADAAA partnership won the Melbourne School of Design project — back on Bustler!

MSD on Bustler

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ACADIA 2015

Posted on October 21st, 2015 by Nicole Sakr

Posted under: Lectures

Nader will lecture this Saturday at ACADIA 2015 at The University of Cincinnati School of Architecture and Interior Design at 6:30pm.

http://2015.acadia.org/index.html

Acadia-Cincinatti

 

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‘drawing ambience’ opens tomorrow at the Cooper Union

Posted on October 12th, 2015 by Nader Tehrani

Posted under: Academic, Installations + Exhibitions, The Cooper Union

Opening tomorrow evening in the Arthur A. Houghton Jr. Gallery. Details here.

‘Ambient Speculation’

As I landed in London in late 1986, I felt I had just missed the party. With the aura of some of the greatest hands of this exhibition still lingering in “the bar,” a good many of them had already packed their bags and moved on to greener pastures. Not only had the economy picked up in Rotterdam and Paris – among other places – but the political support that the voice of architecture was gaining in the European sphere was having a significant impact on the shape of things to come, providing the opportunity for the ambient speculation of this generation to be translated into physical reality. The rest is history, and we are still living out an extension of that narrative some three decades later, but the preamble to the political and economic turnaround is probably the telltale part of this story.

In the early 1970’s, Alvin Boyarsky’s Architectural Association was marked by a sudden internationalization of the institution, at a time when the British Government could no longer subsidize the school. This coincided with a broader cultural shift toward the alignment of economies across borders and time zones – which, in turn, proved a fecund opportunity to make the AA a platform for the architect as global citizen. If economic pressures seemed to be the reason for the urgencies of the moment, they were not cast as limitations. This was perhaps the most productive historic moment of the AA, when a new intellectual opportunism was found in the generative moment of architectural inception: the drawing.

OMA

Drawing by OMA, circa 1984

Significantly, the drawings presented here have a great range: from the hand sketch to the meticulously constructed, from the poetic to the realistic, and from the utopic to the polemical. The heterogeneity of media deployed suggests the richness of the environment within which these architects were operating. If some drawings were entrenched in the theater of real competitions, they were nonetheless deeply invested in architectural ideas that could produce new forms of knowledge. If those ideas seemed distant, theoretically hermetic, or relegated to the realm of “paper architecture” at the time, then the turn of events in subsequent years has proven to make those very projections both the beneficiaries and victims of reality. For this reason, we not only see these images as prophetic in their ability to be translated beyond the terms of their medium, but, in fact, as instruments in their own right. The drawings speak, they cast shadows, and they emanate vastly different ideological predispositions. Between representation and generation, the drawings oscillate from conditions known to conditions unprecedented. Within this space of speculation, they also suggest how the drawing, as instrument, positions itself within discourse – and Boyarsky understood the power of that agency.

Boyarsky’s curatorial ingenuity did not come so much from the tailoring of a new curriculum, but rather the assembly and overlay of critical architectural voices, most often in a symphony of dissonance. In the context of this exhibition those voices take shape with the alignment of the mind and hand through a series of architectural projections that see the instrumentality of drawing as perhaps the most potent political act of architecture. The drawings are neither subservient to building, nor marginal to them; they underline that the practice of architecture is rooted in a cultural process that begins long before the project at hand, and ends long after we are all gone. Boyarsky’s pedagogical strategy may also serve us well today with the recognition that a powerful school of thought is not necessarily rooted in the control of the singular voice, but rather the building up of a discursive platform with the certainty of uncertain results.

Nader Tehrani, 2015

Dean, The Irwin S. Chanin School of Architecture

 

 

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Public Natures: Evolutionary Infrastructure

Posted on October 12th, 2015 by Nicole Sakr

Posted under: Academic

Weiss/Manfredi’s new book Public Natures has just been released with a round-table discussion between Nader, Preston Scott Cohen, Felipe Correa, Keller Easterling, Paul Lewis, and Hashim Sarkis.

The relationship between the mega-project and utopia depends on how the former is historicized. In the scale of the mega-project as conceptualized in the early to mid-twentieth century, pieces of infrastructure seemed to have a kind of visionary status in their time, but have become quite miniature compared to what’s being produced today. The utopian has become brutally real and is now institutionalized within a developed bureaucracy that sustains that very scale today. And so the question is to what degree can a vision be sustained under those terms, because the power of singularity has, more often than not, come to be compromised in the process. Another utopian vision may lie in the possibilities of design by community or design by politics, or in finding ways of creating something that is not only architecturally, but also socially, larger than the sum of its parts. Architects must now figure out how to do a project that has the capacity to wield such specifications at various levels at this new scale that has been delivered to us.”

– Nader Tehrani

Public Natures-blog

 

 

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Rock Creek House wins BSA Design Award

Posted on October 8th, 2015 by Nicole Sakr

Posted under: Awards

The BSA is recognizing the DC House in their Honor Awards for Design Excellence program. The awards gala will be held January 28th, 2016, save the date!

BSA-design-awards 2015 Rock Creek

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Rock Creek House wins AIADC Excellence in Architecture Award

Posted on October 6th, 2015 by Nicole Sakr

Posted under: Awards

The recently completed Rock Creek House in DC has won the 2015 AIADC Excellence in Architecture Award.

Vote for Rock Creek in the People’s Choice Awards now on facebook.

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