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updated May 2008

Bell Labs More Flexible, More Adaptable
A three-day brainstorming event of architects, landscape architects, preservationists, planners, historians, mechanical engineers, and sustainable consultants concluded on Sunday with innovative visions and exciting news that the nearly 2,000,000 square foot office building and research facility in Holmdel, originally built as Bell Laboratories on 472 acres, has immense capacity for rehabilitation and adaptation.
Sponsored by the American Institute of Architects’ New Jersey Chapter (AIA-NJ),
Preservation New Jersey, the Docomomo-NY Tristate Chapter, the National Trust

for Historic Preservation and billed as a Design Charrette, the event convened 38 design professionals from New Jersey, New York and the northeast to address the problems that surround the sustainable reuse and retention of the historically significant building and landscape designed by renowned architect Eero Saarinen and landscape architect Hideo Sasaki in the early 1960s.

Friday’s events included an afternoon tour for the charrette participants, conducted by current owner Alcatel-Lucent, of the facility that has been vacant for the last 9 months and named in Preservation NJ’s 10 Most Endangered Historic Sites in 2007. Friday evening saw the participants, and members of the public from Holmdel and beyond, gather at the Holmdel Senior/Community Center. Jim McCorkel, Co-President of the Citizens for Informed Land Use, the local host organization, offered the welcome. Nina Rappaport, Chair of the Docomomo-NY Tristate Chapter, spoke of Saarinen’s importance and of the Bell Labs project, which has recently been declared eligible for listing in the National Register of Historic Places. A group of Bell Labs “Pioneers,” retired staff who worked in the building, joined in a panel discussion which helped to assess the building’s functionality and much-appreciated spirit of place, challenging the
often-stated claim that the building’s design is inflexible and cold, noting its robustness and connection to the landscape.
On Saturday, led by charrette facilitator, Clinton Andrews, PhD, Associate Professor and Director of the Program in Urban Planning and Policy Development at Rutgers University’s Bloustein School, the designers and planners took to paper and pencils almost immediately for the full-day session. Breakout teams explored possible reuse scenarios from various perspectives: architectural, programmatic, marketing, systems, etc. “The collegial exchange between diverse disciplines and young professionals working alongside senior designers was revealing, stimulating and key to the success of the charrette exercise. Everyone gave their expertise, ideas and time with great enthusiasm,” according to Michael Calafati, AIA, a lead organizer of the charrette.
Andrews and the designers presented the findings of the charrette to the public at the Holmdel Senior/Community Center on Sunday. Their concepts were visionary
illustrating a range of solutions that predominately focused the improved performance of the building incorporating a sustainable restoration scheme that would bring the building into the 21st century with new systems and building elements while preserving its historic and character-defining features. For example, some proposed that the distinctive mirrored exterior walls could be retrofitted with interior glazing; additional natural light could be introduced into the original windowless laboratories by means of new light wells; the flat roof and parking lot areas could easily accommodate photovoltaic cells to produce “green” electricity on site, and air could be better circulated. The groups also
invented new programs for the building from high-tech laboratories, healthcare,
educational and cultural, to residential with a consensus being to maintain the 472 acres as publically accessible land. The coalition of groups that held the charrette will make the findings public on the websites of AIA-NJ and Preservation NJ (www.aia-nj.org and www.preservationnj.org).

For more information on the Bell Labs building and it's current status go to:
http://preservationnj.wordpress.com/

 

 

updated February 2008

New Jersey Monthly features AIA-NJ

March's issue of New Jersey Monthly magazine features AIA-NJ's top 150 Buildings and Places selected as part of our AIA150 celebration.

more

 
     

Robert Hillier Awarded
MICHAEL GRAVES LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT AWARD

Photo: Standing left to right: Martin G. Santini, Robert Cozzarelli , J. Robert Hillier of Solesbury, Pa., AIA-NJ Immediate Past President Jerome Leslie Eben of West Orange, N.J.

J. Robert Hillier, FAIA, was awarded the first "Michael Graves LifetimeAchievement Award" at the American Institute of Architects New Jersey chapter's Awards Dinner held on Jan. 12 at The Newark Club.

Hillier, a 38-year veteran of the industry, is the founder and president of the Princeton-based RMJM Hillier. The firm has several offices located throughout the nation and serves clients around the world. To date, Hiller has acquired an excess of 250 design awards for the company. Additionally, he is an adjunct professor at the Princeton University School of Architecture. He resides in Solesbury , Pa.

"The last 40 years have been so wonderful for me, I could not ask for a better life," Hillier said, in accepting the award.

"It is a great honor to be able to present J. Robert Hillier with the first Michael Graves Lifetime Achievement Award this year," said Seth Leeb, newly elected president of AIA-NJ. "His noteworthy contributions to the field of architecture have made him a worthy recipient of this prestigious award."

Michael Graves is a professor emeritus at Princeton University as well as the principal of the Princeton-based Michael Graves and Associates. Additionally, he was the 2001 recipient of the prestigious national AIA Gold Medal. Graves' firm is responsible for the design of numerous significant buildings throughout the nation and the state, including the Alexander House, Princeton , and the Plocek House, Warren.

 

 

2008 Officers Installed

New President Plans to Address Issues Affecting the Architectural Industry


Photo: Standing left to right: Thomas Meyers, Jason Kliwinski, David DelVecchio, Stacey Ruhle Kliesch, Seth Leeb, Glenn Pellet, Robin Murray, Jerome Leslie Eben, and Michael Hanrahan.


 

 

AIA-NJ installed its 2008 officers at the annual awards dinner held on Jan. 12 at The Newark Club. The event celebrated the top achievements among architects and architectural companies throughout the state.

"The eight officers that were installed represent some of brightest minds within AIA-NJ," said Jerome Leslie Eben, immediate past president of AIA-NJ. "They possess the leadership qualities that are necessary to propel this organization to success."

More than 230 people from throughout the state attended the black tie gala.

The officers installed included President Seth A. Leeb, President-Elect Stacey Ruhle Kliesch, 1st VP Jason Kliwinski, 2nd VP Thomas Meyers, Treasurer Glenn W. Pellet, Secretary Michael J. Hanrahan, Immediate Pat President Jerome Leslie Eben, and AIA-NJ Regional Director David Del Vecchio.

 

 

Newly Licensed Architects Ceremony

October 2007

In October AIA-NJ held a dinner and ceremony for the newly licensed New Jersey architects at the Newark Club. All of the architects newly licensed by the state of New Jersey over the last year were invited to the ceremony.

AIA-NJ Committee Chair William Brown III, AIA and AIA-NJ President Jerome Eben, AIA presented each licensee with a certificate of achievement during the event. Congratulations to all new architect.



 
 
 



 

 

 


 
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