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archrecord2

Welcome to archrecord2, RECORD’s community dedicated to the world's emerging and influential young architects. The section has four areas both in print and online: Design showcases young firms on the rise, Work relates to career and education, Live explores what architects do when they're not designing, and Talk offers a forum for young architects to speak about anything on their minds.

Have you been out of architecture school for 10 years or less and have a story to share that might inspire other young architects? Contact editor Ingrid Spencer.

Alejandro Villarreal

Hierve Diseñeria: Boiled Over by Design
Alejandro Villarreal named his Mexico City firm Hierve, the Spanish word for "boiling.” It was an apropos decision for a firm that brings an ebullient mix of social responsibility, functionality, and spirituality to its projects.

Photo courtesy Hierve Diseñeria

Wesleyan University's crew

Wesleyan University’s SplitFrame: Architecture Research Design Build
Learn about a wildlife sanctuary created by Wesleyan University's year-old design/build studio.

Photo courtesy Wesleyan University

Ammar Eloueini

AEDS: Life in plastic, it’s fantastic
Lebanese-born architect Ammar Eloueini established Ammar Eloueini Digit-All Studio (AEDS) in Paris in 1997. Although the Museum of Modern Art owns Eloueini’s work and the New York Architectural League, AIA Chicago, and the French Ministry of Culture have showered him with accolades, this forward thinker admits it is taking time to fully realize his talents.

Photo courtesy AEDS

design: FPmod
Florencia Pita

FPmod: Where the wild things are made
Florencia Pita thinks cities should have more sleeping monsters. At least one, maybe two, just a few at the most. “We haven’t been able to move past Modernism,” says the architect, professor, and principal of three-person Los Angeles–based architecture firm FPmod, which she founded in 2006.

Photo courtesy FPmod

Julio Salcedo, principal of Scalar Architecture

Scalar Architecture: Urban scale, small world
Julio Salcedo, principal of architecture firm Scalar Architecture, is taking back the word generic.  He uses the word freely, and to him, especially when coupled with the term generative, it doesn't mean bland and personalityfree.

Photo courtesy Scalar Architecture

Free Green principal Ben Uyeda

Free Green: Giving it away
Two years ago, archrecord2 profiled Ben Uyeda as his team from Cornell competed in the Solar Decathlon. Following the competition, team members formed Zero Energy Design (Independence Energy Homes), a collaborative effort among architects, engineers, and financial experts to design green residential architecture.

Photo courtesy Free Green

Gregory Walker, AIA, and Hank Houser, AIA, principals of Houser Walker Architecture

Houser Walker Architecture: Half a glass, full plate
Whatever Gregory Walker, AIA, and Hank Houser, AIA, bring to the mix that makes up their seven-person firm, it's working, and despite equivalent shares of optimism and pessimism, they're both equally surprised at their success.

Photo courtesy Houser Walker Architecture

Jon Brouchoud and Ryan Schultz

Wikitecture: From clicks to bricks, avatars to architects
It takes a village to conceive architecture. Just consider Studio Wikitecture, which won Architecture for Humanity's Founders Award in the 2007 AMD Open Architecture Challenge.

Photo courtesy Wikitecture

Li Yun and Philippe Rondeau

PRA: Young power players in China
Meet Philippe Rondeau, a Frenchman who has joined up with a Chinese partner, Li Yun, to make his mark on the Eastern skyline.

Photo courtesy PRA

Qingyun Ma, founder of Shanghai firm MADA s.p.a.m., and the current dean of the USC School of Architecture.

USC’s American Academy in China takes it East
Last year, well-known Chinese architect Qingyun Ma, founder of Shanghai firm MADA s.p.a.m., moved to Los Angeles to become dean of the USC School of Architecture. Now he’s bringing USC back to China.

Photo courtesy USC

Adam Goss and Red Mike

Spirit of Space: Elusive design caught on video
Two Chicago-based architecture graduates whose firm, Spirit of Space, translates architectural space into film. SlideshowVideos

Image courtesy Spirit of Space

Virginia Kindred, AIA, Lauren Rubin, AIA, and Amy Shakespeare, AIA

Redtop Architects: Three Heads Are Better
When the three founders of Redtop Architects, met while working for a New York firm, they found that they had a lot more in common than red hair. "We had a mutual admiration for each other," says Shakespeare, "as well as a similar aesthetic and goals."

Image courtesy Redtop Architects

Van Alen Institute New York Prize Fellowship Project, 2008-2009

Van Alen Institute Fellowship Program
Last year, the Van Alen Institute introduced a fellowship program, meant to support emerging architectural practitioners and scholars. As a result, the institute has become an architectural alchemist, putting together wide-ranging research interests to get at the notion of public architecture. Slideshow

Image courtesy Van Alen Institute

Joel Degermark and Catharina Frankander

Electric Dreams: Wake up!
The phrase "Swedish design" calls up images of spare spaces laid by careful masons or rendered from local woods. Not mini-spectacles, such as the ceiling of Pleasant Bar in Stockholm, which is covered in convex security mirrors. "We often get that comment, that we're not what one expects from a Swedish design studio," says Joel Degermark, one half of Electric Dreams.

Image courtesy Electric Dreams

Herwig Baumgartner and Scott Uriu

B+U: Envisioning a city of sound
Talk about frozen music. Herwig Baumgartner and Scott Uriu, partners in the nine-year-old, Los Angeles-based architecture firm B+U, have found a way to turn actual sound into buildings. Slideshow

Image courtesy B+U

Matthew Grzywinski and Amador Pons

Grzywinski Pons Architects takes Manhattan
Challenged with the constraints of working within New York City, including laying the foundations for a hotel just 29 inches above a subway line, Grzywinski Pons Architects have defined their design approach based on their location.

Image courtesy Grzywinski Pons Architects

Ramiro Diaz-Granados and Heather Flood

SCI-Arc’s CHUB table
It's not often—or ever—that a boardroom table causes a sensation. At least not until architects Ramiro Diaz-Granados and Heather Flood created the CHUB table, one of the most original pieces of furniture ever for the board of directors of the Southern California Institute of Architecture. Slideshow

Image courtesy SCI-Arc

design: Bauenstudio
Marc Roehrle and Mo Zell

Bauenstudio: Exploring container and contained
Some young architects feel it's time to start their solo practices when they have a client. Others wait until they win a competition. For Marc Roehrle and Mo Zell, both happy circumstances came to pass, one after the other, and, in 2006, Boston-based Bauenstudio was born.

Image courtesy Bauenstudio

work: DesignBuildBLUFF
DesignBuildBLUFF Team

DesignBuildBLUFF: Drawing on two-by-fours
In 2000, University of Utah architecture professor Hank Louis started DesignBuildBLUFF, a lab that gives students the opportunity to create functional and beautiful houses on the Navajo Nation Indian Reservation. Slideshow

Image courtesy DesignBuildBLUFF

design: Architecture in Formation
Matthew Bremer, AIA

Architecture in Formation: Dream projects, all real
When architect Matthew Bremer, AIA, isn’t busy designing cool projects like a VIP lounge in New York’s JFK Airport, a showroom for an upscale purveyor of Brazilian design, Manhattan apartments, or the redevelopment of a 103,000-square-foot former prison site in Brooklyn, New York, he’s working on his dream project—developing his family’s ranch land in Bulverde, Texas, into a walkable, modern, mixed-use community. “It doesn’t matter where you are,” says Bremer, “the Texas creeps back into your blood.”

Image courtesy Architecture in Formation

work: Situ Studio
Situ Studio Partners

Situ Studio: Finding connections without limits
Situ Studio is a self-described “research, design, and fabrication firm,” and its five partners, who met while studying architecture at Cooper Union in New York City, emphasize the variety of their work. This approach allows the firm to work on diverse projects, such as analyzing the topography of a crater in India while fabricating a lobby installation for Kohn Pedersen Fox. Slideshow

Image courtesy Situ Studio

Henry Buckingham, AIA & Warren Techentin, AIA

Techentin Buckingham Architecture: Keeping it real-world
Techentin Buckingham will pass on paper architecture. The Los Angeles studio, founded by college friends Warren Techentin, AIA, and Henry Buckingham, AIA, has focused its six years so precisely on real-world building that the partners only recently decided to enter one competition annually—if only to keep staff spirits high and creative juices flowing.

Image courtesy Techentin Buckingham Architecture

James Meyer, AIA

LeanArch: Adding whimsy to sophisticated design
He doesn’t wear a cape, but architect James Meyer, AIA, principal of Los Angeles firm LeanArch, has a superhero thing going on nonetheless. Having started his solo practice in 2000 with small projects like bathroom remodels and room additions, Meyer says he began his fledgling firm with a passionate concept.

Image courtesy LeanArch

Arthur Del Muro, AIA and Dominick Demonica, AIA

Teaming with larger firms serves opportunities
Eight-and-a-half days is barely enough time for most people to get over jet lag when traveling, but for a group of nine students from Catholic University in Washington, D.C., it's a period of intense work in far-flung locations such as Nepal, Machu Pichu, or Ireland.

Image courtesy DDA

Theodore Galante

The Galante Architecture Studio
When you come from a family of builders, what choice is there but to be an architect? For Theodore Galante, AIA, his family members' capacity to make things both inspired and contributed to what he calls a "mystic assumption" that he'd follow that route.

Image courtesy The Galante Architecture Studio

Spirit of Place: Nepal

Spirit of Place: Students go global
Eight-and-a-half days is barely enough time for most people to get over jet lag when traveling, but for a group of nine students from Catholic University in Washington, D.C., it's a period of intense work in far-flung locations such as Nepal, Machu Pichu, or Ireland. Slideshow

Image courtesy Spirit of Place

KRDB: The art of the deal
How does a guy with a degree in finance from Michigan State University end up as principal of an architecture firm in Austin, Texas? “Currency arbitrage just wasn’t giving me a creative outlet,” laughs Chris Krager, principal of Austin-based KRDB. “I did the banking thing for four years. That was enough.” Krager moved to Austin to seek a degree in architecture. “I wanted to build, and the University of Texas had a good balance of theory and practice.” Slideshow

Images: Courtesy KRDB

Tom Allisma

Tom Allisma: Developing a taste
Omaha is better known as the heart of corn country than as a hotbed of architectural design, but it has proved fertile ground for one young designer. Tom Allisma, Assoc. AIA, balances teaching interior design; acting as principal of his design firm, Tom Allisma Productions; developing concepts; and designing restaurants and bars, which he and his business partners also finance. Slideshow

Images: Courtesy Tom Allisma Productions

David Yum

David Yum Architects: Appreciating complexities
When architect David Yum started his own practice, David Yum Architects, in New York City, in 2000, he was eager, enthusiastic, and confident that success would be imminent. Slideshow

Images: Courtesy David Yum Architects

James Conlon and Pilar Peters along the Grand Canal

Mapping Venice: Students take on the city of water
One of the biggest frustrations of architectural-history professors is that the material they teach and the students to whom they’re teaching it are often separated by thousands of miles. Ask any of them what they’d do for their students with a million bucks, and most would say, charter a private jet and let their students visit and experience first-hand the great monuments of the world.

Images: Courtesy of Columbia University

Dwayne Oyler and Jenny Wu

Oyler Wu Collaborative: Layers and texture
Their resume reads like an architect’s fairy tale: two aspiring architects, Dwayne Oyler and Jenny Wu, met at Harvard’s Graduate School of Design, graduated, and moved to New York to hone their craft working with prestigious architects and firms—he for Toshiko Mori and Lebbeus Woods, she for Architecture Research Office and Gluckman Mayner Architects. Slideshow

Images: Courtesy Oyler Wu Collaborative

The four partners of Associated Fabrication

Associated Fabrication: Heavy metal/light touch
The four partners of Associated Fabrication operate a design firm under the name 4-pli, and mobilize Associated's services within different projects. Slideshow

images: Courtesy Associated Fabrication

But Françoise N’Thépé and Aldric Beckmann

Beckmann N’Thépé:
Despite the obstacles, Françoise N'Thépé and Aldric Beckmann, founders of Paris-based firm Beckmann-N'Thépé, started in 2002, has already been able to amass one of the most impressive collections of new work in Paris. Slideshow

Respond at: construction.com/community/forums.aspx.

Images: Courtesy Beckmann N’Thépé

Abdel Munem Amin and David Yi-Jen Tseng

Mountain Pine Beetles: epidemic or opportunity?
Vancouver-based intern architects Abdel Munem Amin and David Yi-Jen Tseng created the only architectural response to the competition—a modular stair titled Six Steps: Blue Modular. In line with the competition’s call for mass-market applications, the stair can be reconfigured to accommodate any orientation or distance between floors. Slideshow

Images: Courtesy Abdel Munem Amin and David Yi-Jen Tseng

Esther Sperber

Studio ST: From inside to the ground up
When Israeli architect Esther Sperber left Pei Partnership Architects to strike out on her own with Studio ST in 2003, she was excited, nervous, and up to the challenge. “Having the opportunity to work so closely with Mr. Pei was amazing,” she says. Slideshow

Students of URBANbuild

URBANbuild students bring hope to New Orleans
Even before Hurricane Katrina decimated New Orleans, housing in the city was a problem. Tulane University’s School of Architecture, under an umbrella program of the school called Tulane City Center, had been working to help since the summer of 2005, with a design-build studio called URBANbuild. Slideshow

Image: Courtesy of URBANbuild

Primmer and Roberto

De Leon + Primmer Architecture
A flurry of recent commissions validated the decision of De Leon + Primmer Architecture’s principals to return to Louisville, Kentucky after relocating to Charlotte, North Carolina. Slideshow

Mafoombey

Mafoombey explores the acoustics of cardboard
Martti Kalliala and Esa Ruskeepää were college roommates while attending the architecture school at Helsinki University of Technology. The two students began to experiment with cut corrugated cardboard when they entered the open-to-all Habitare design contest at the University of Art and Design in Helsinki in 2005. The competition asked for a small space for listening to and experiencing music within the set dimensions of 2.5 cubic meters. Thus was born Mafoombey, a space for music. Slideshow

Image: Courtesy of Mafoombey
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Caliper Studio

Making it with metal
For New York City firm Caliper Studio, it’s the making that gives them passion, as they combine design services with metal fabrication. Slideshow

Image: Courtesy of Caliper studio

Great Schools by Design hits the spot
In Work, it’s discussion about school design that caused the American Architectural Foundation and Target to team up and get students involved. Slideshow

Image: Courtesy of ACE and OWP/P

Montalba

An optimistic approach
David Montalba, AIA, has done a lot and gained a lot of mentors in his scant 35 years on the planet. As well as working for several prominent Los Angeles–based architecture firms—Gehry Partners, Pugh+Scarpa, Daly Genik, among others—Montalba has succeeded in making a name for his three-year-old firm, Montalba Architects, in a region that is, well, lousy with quality architects. Slideshow

Leslie Thomas

An architect uses her design training to bring awareness to a crisis
Leslie Thomas, partner with the Chicago-based firms Larc Inc. and Larc Studio, wasn’t one to jump on causes and preach about them. However, when the architect, mother, and Emmy-winning art director (for art direction of the 1999 HBO movie Introducing Dorothy Dandridge) saw a Image of a victimized child in a March 2006 New York Times article about the genocide in Darfur, she was changed. Slideshow

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