7 January 2011 |
Educational, Media Coverage, Renovation, Residential
The Yale Herald
Morse, Modernism, and fifty years of Yale
Hannah Kieschnick, September 24th 2010
Hannah Kieschnick finds out what it means to be Modern at a school where old is gold, and tradition is king.
Morse has always been a new college. Constructed in 1961, Morse is less than thirty years younger than the original colleges, most of which were designed by John Gamble Rogers and built in the ’30s...Read Article
6 January 2011 |
Media Coverage, Offsite Fabrication, Residential
Lucie Young, The Telegraph, 05 January 2011
Design and nature form a harmonious alliance on the Maryland shore, where the architect Stephen Kieran and his wife Barbara live in a house inspired by the pine forest around them
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23 September 2010 |
Education, Educational, LEED Platinum, Publications, Waste Divergence

Recently released: the Design for Reuse Primer, a free e-publication project by Public Architecture. In this comprehensive guide to repurposing materials directly from the waste stream, read about the reclaimed lumber and stone used at our LEED Platinum-rated Sidwell Friends Middle School in Washington, DC, including lessons learned and material sources.
22 April 2010 |
Announcements, LEED Platinum, Offsite Fabrication, Residential

Section showing sustainable initiatives
The American Institute of Architects (AIA) and its Committee on the Environment (COTE) have announced that the Special NO 9 House designed by Philadelphia-based architects KieranTimberlake, with New Orleans firm John C. Williams Architects as executive architect, has been named a ‘Top Ten Green Project' for 2010. The house is one of thirteen single-family homes designed by prominent architectural firms for Make It Right, an organization founded by actor Brad Pitt to provide storm-resistant, affordable, and sustainable housing for the residents of New Orleans' Lower Ninth Ward displaced by Hurricane Katrina. The COTE Top Ten Green Projects program, now in its 14th year, celebrates projects that are the result of a thoroughly integrated approach to architecture, natural systems and technology.
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15 April 2010 |
Educational, Exhibitions, Residential

Eero Saarinen with a model of Morse and Stiles Colleges, courtesy Yale University Archive
Eero Saarinen: Shaping the Future, the first retrospective on the Finnish-born architect, is currently on view in New Haven, Connecticut through May 2. The tour concludes at Yale, where Saarinen studied architecture and designed some of his most significant buildings and where the major archive devoted to his work resides.
Details of our current renovation of Saarinen's Morse and Ezra Stiles College are included in the exhibition. The project includes the restoration and renovation of all existing facilities, the reconfiguration and updating of living quarters, and the addition of a below grade, naturally-lit, 30,000-square-foot common space, all while retaining Saarinen's original design intent. Morse College, named for Samuel F.B. Morse (Yale, 1810), artist, physician, and inventor of the electric telegraph, and its companion, Stiles College, named for Ezra Stiles (Yale, 1746), theologian, lawyer, scientist, philosopher, and Yale president, were conceived as a single design, intended to be both responsive to and distinct from Yale's other residential colleges.
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