Wednesday, May 28, 2008

Where we live
An essay I wrote last year for mnartists.org has been reprinted by 10,000 Arts, a quarterly co-production of mnartists and Rake magazine. (Photo by Colin Kopp)

Here's the beginning of the essay: "I've been living in the same city for a long time. Maybe that's why I crave the unusual. I abhor cookie-cutter architecture, which is just as prevalent in urban areas as in cul-de-sac suburbia. How many three-story brick condos with railed terraces have you seen constructed in recent years?

I want buildings that curve, use everyday materials in strange ways, use strange materials in everyday ways, inspire fear, or give me pause. I like to nestle next to Moos Tower on a sunny day, bike under the Guthrie's blue-black cantilever at night, and duck into that new box buried behind the Walker Art Center that frames the winter sky.

I also like the dangerous: decrepit structures with peeling paint and collapsed roofs. Walking across the cracked, aging pedestrian bridge at I-94 near Augsburg College-with cars buzzing on the highway below-makes my heart beat a little faster. Crossing the Lowry Avenue truss bridge is thrilling when you poke your head out the window to look at the Mississippi River's waves through the steel openings of this 1955 landmark. (Let someone else drive.)"

You can read more here.

Tuesday, May 27, 2008

In the papers ...
Review: Psycho Buildings: Arists and Architecture (Building Design, UK)
Psycho Buildings (Visit London website)
Twisted Structures That Challenge The Imagination (Times of London)
Split Rock lighthouse gets spiffed up (Star Tribune)
Restoration at Split Rock Lighthouse (Minnesota Historical Society)
Honoring those who preserve city's past (Star Tribune)
A tiny masterpiece, unloved, faces threat (New York Times)
Architect Jean Nouvel to build new Paris skysraper (AFP)
(Photo courtesy of Times of London)

Sunday, May 25, 2008

Japan Architect and other vintage magazines
Felix Burrichter, creator of PIN-UP, "a magazine for architectural entertainment," is smitten with sex and architecture magazines. From Playboy, Playgirl and Butt to l'Architecture d'Aujourd'hui, Casabella and Japan Architect, he loves them all. Burrichter writes an essay in defense of the printed magazine in one of the those really thick magazines that is shoved into the Sunday New York Times. For some reason, I don't have mine today, just the regular magazine and all the other goodies in the Sunday Times. However, you must read the Burrichter essay and then go to Clip/Stamp/Fold, a website documenting a Princeton University show on vintage architecture magazines from the 1960s and 1970s. After you've done, come back here and tell me what post-metabolism means.

Tuesday, May 20, 2008


Nelson and Peck: Eyesores of downtown
If you spent Sunday enjoying the sun and missed the Star Tribune, Rick Nelson and Claude Peck sent a shout-out to the ugliest buildings in downtown Minneapolis. (And Lord, we have a bunch of them.)

Says Peck, "Flashy architect Helmut Jahn did a bunch of cool designs in the Chicago loop, including the dazzling and popular State of Illinois Building. So why'd he leave us with the 701 Building, a forgettable midsize office tower with turquoise and salmon-colored accents and the personality of a toaster?"

Also on their list:
  • HHH Metrodome
  • Star Tribune addition
  • Normandy Hotel
  • Towle Building
  • Hilton Hotel
  • International Centre
  • Target Center
  • Hennepin County Medical Center
  • Salvation Army Apartments
  • 100 Washington Avenue
  • Former Federal Courts Building, 4th Street
What did Nelson and Peck miss? Have any complaints about their list? Jot down a comment, please. (Photo of the Normandy Hotel courtesy of the Star Tribune)

Monday, May 19, 2008

weeHouse Makes Big Splash
by FRANK JOSSI

Five years ago Stephanie Arado, a violinist with the Minnesota Orchestra, began discussing with architect Geoffrey Warner her dream of building a small, affordable home on atop a bluff in Lake Pepin, Wis. Warner embraced the challenge and went to work on a novel experiment to build a modular home for Arado and then transport it down to Lake Pepin on trucks where a team would put together the pieces.

A Star Tribune feature on the weeHouse in a 2003 generated enough interest from potential clients that Warner decided to turn the concept into a business which today falls under the rubric of his St. Paul-based firm, Alchemy Architects. The weeHouse line of prefabricated homes range in size from 350 square foot studios to 2,200 square foot, three bedroom units with price tags of anywhere from $79,000 to $245,000.

The weeHouse, blessed with a cute name and a compellingly modern boxy appearance, almost immediately captured the attention of the architectarti. In 2006, the Walker Art Center showcased the weeHouse in an exhibition on contemporary pre-fab homes, along with several California firms and the Minneapolis-based firm FlatPac Home. Soon to follow were articles in many magazines and newspapers, among them the New York Times, Dwell, MplsStPaul, TIME, Midwest Home and others.

The Macalester Groveland resident’s weeHouse line of modular homes offers simple shoebox shaped structures 14 feet wide and from 26 feet to 46 feet long. They can be set side-by-side with a deck between them or stacked on top of one another. One trademark of the line is a series of tall nearly floor-to-ceiling sliding door on one or more sides of the homes which often open on to a deck.

Buyers have plenty of siding and flooring options, though not as many as a traditional new home might have. Still, Warner notes that the weeHouse allows for plenty of customization on the exterior and within the confines of the box. Despite the prefabricated components, a typical weeHouse project still takes time to complete the planning, manufacturing to construction of the homes, he says.

“The whole process takes around nine months, though we’ve done them as fast as two to four months,” he says. The manufacturing, he adds, is done by pre-fabrication plants located in different regions around the country, reducing the distance from factory to clients’ sites.

Alchemy has built 15 weeHouses and has another 24 on the drawing board, says Warner. None exist in St. Paul, though Alchemy built one in for a client in the Linden Hills neighborhood of Minneapolis. With so little land available in St. Paul, he’s not surprised a weeHouse client hasn’t stepped forward.

“We don’t want you to rip up your house and put up a weeHouse, that wouldn’t be very environmental,” he says with a grin. The majority of his clients are building weeHouses in the Hudson River Valley of New York as weekend escapes from the Big Apple or as their primary homes.


Yet despite the press interest in pre-fab homes trying to sell even cool ones in large numbers remains a daunting challenge. “If these homes were hugely popular there’d be dozens of people working in our office,” he says. “If this were really easy a lot of people would be doing it. But the whole building culture doesn’t lend itself to building this way.”

Warner, 43, grew up in the St. Anthony Park neighborhood, not from his current home, and graduated from Como High School and then earned a degree in architecture from the University of Minnesota. He worked just a few years for the Architectural Alliance in Minneapolis before winning a Dinkeloo Traveling Fellow Award, which he used to stay at the American Academy of Rome and study Carlo Scarpa, an Italian modernist who died in 1978.

For a time the disheveled-haired Warner dabbled in furniture making and fabricated materials from found objects. In the room of his office where he was interviewed slender light bulbs hung between the wires of a weathered box spring attached to a blue and white MnDOT car pool sign. Next to his chair was a metal tripod-like stand carrying a bowling ball on a bracket and a lamp attached to its apex.

Although the architect has captured plenty of interest in the weeHouse, Alchemy does business on a number of fronts. He points to a model of a proposed building for Specs Optical on Hennepin Avenue and mentions his design for a new 13,000 square foot building in northeast Minneapolis for Popular Front, an interactive agency.

A home in Clearwater he designed was highlighted as the Star Tribune’s Home of the Month in April. The home he shares with his wife, Dawn Dekeyser, an architect, and the couple’s two children, on Goodrich. The home has two smallish garages with a definite weeHouse influence.

Alchemy’s touch can be found in the building where it offices at Raymond and Hampton. Warner helped redesign the building for a host of creative tenants, including a landscaping firm and internationally renowned photographer Alex Soth, among others. Alchemy holds down the loading dock and has as windows two window-filled garage doors.

The attention paid to the weeHouse has brought other work from large companies such as Saturn, Volkswagen and Marriot, all who have tapped Alchemy for creative input on building pre-fab structures, says Warner. Yet despite the exposure the weeHouse has generated the concept of living small in a pre-fab house does not reverberate with a huge number of Americans.

In fact, Warner says, the company would be doing better in Europe, where small is embraced. For now, though, his focus is on changing the outlook for pre-fab in this country -- a significant challenge.” On our end we’re still retooling the way we do things and how we can do things better for our clients and for ourselves,” he says.

(Reprinted with permission of the Highland Villager newspaper and the author. Frank Jossi is a St. Paul-based journalist and editor.)

Tuesday, May 13, 2008

A few of my favorite new words
One of my favorite sections in World's Away: New Suburban Landscapes, the book that accompanies the current show on suburbia at the Walker Art Center, is the lexicon of new words and phrases collected by Rachel Hooper and Jayme Yen. I'll list a few here, along with the definitions provided in the book, which was edited by Andrew Blauvelt, design director at the Walker. By the way, at the Walker's website you can add your own creations or do it in the comment section of this blog.

Ball pork: A stadium hosting privately owned sports teams and built primarily with public funds.

Edifice rex: An extremely large new house, often built in an older suburb of smaller homes, characterized by an ostentatious, over-size façade. (See also: McMansion, monster home, starter castle, tract mansion)

Garage Mahal: A large or opulent garage or parking structure

Snout house: A house from which the garage protrudes like a nose from the main residence toward the street.

Drive ‘til you qualify: A phrase used by real estate agents whereby potential homebuyers travel away from the workplace until they reach a community in which they can afford to buy a home that meets their standards.

Nerdistan: An upscale suburb or suburban city in which a large percentage of the population is employed by nearby high-tech industries,

Patio Man: A satirical term coined by David Brooks to describe a suburban Republican man who lives with his wife (dubbed Realtor Mom) and is obsessed with backyard leisurely pursuits and the latest in outdoor grilling technology.
Spotted: Architectural models in downtown Minneapolis

If you're in downtown Minneapolis this week, stop by the TCF Bank atrium (8th Street and Second Avenue) and check out the architectural models on display. The exhibit offers a close-up view of the high-profile construction projects and initiatives that will shape the Twin Cities’ urban environment.

Titled “Building Community: Visuals and Models of the New Urban Community,” the event is organized by Minneapolis-based Community Enhancement and Organizing. The event’s major sponsors include Minneapolis Community Planning and Economic Development (CPED) and Hennepin County Housing, Community Works and Transit.

The exhibit closes at 2 p.m., Friday, May 16. A series of noon and afternoon receptions are also scheduled, featuring notable speakers, door prizes and catered food.

On Wednesday, May 14, architect Rick Carter of LHB and Robert Gibbons of Metro Transit will discuss eco-friendly buildings and buses. On Thursday, May 15, CPED's Tom Streitz and Aeon president Alan Arthur will speak. Streitz will discuss new city housing programs and projects and Arthur will discuss nonprofit housing developments. Also on Thursday at 4:30 p.m., Minneapolis Regional Chamber of Commerce CEO Todd Klingel will discuss new downtown hotels and preparations for the Republican National Convention in St. Paul this fall.

The Downtown Journal wrote a brief article about the exhibit.

Thursday, May 08, 2008

Down To The Studs: A Green Remodel
by FRANK JOSSI

A home on Pinehurst Avenue in St. Paul's Highland Park neighborhood represents one of the more ambitious attempts in the area to create a totally “green” home.

Much of the house has been ripped down to the studs to incorporate new energy efficient windows, thick insulation, eco-friendly wood, Energy Star appliances and a solar hot water heater are installed and a 1,400 square foot addition is built.

When completed the construction zone of a home will be transformed into the EcoDEEP Haus, as its creator calls it, an eye-catching white and gray metal modern home with a roof filled by solar panels and a green garden. The mastermind behind the house is architect Kevin Flynn, who will live in it with his wife, fellow architect Roxanne Nelson, and the couple’s three children.

Flynn says the remodeling project will make the home twice the size of the original house yet use only half the energy. And it might even have used less energy if he, say, had an unlimited budget. “We could have spent a lot more on the appliances,” he says. “I’ve seen a lot of remodels where the refrigerator alone is $6,000 – that was our entire kitchen appliance budget.”

The house, at 2199 Pinehurst, is among a growing number of green remodeling projects being done in the Twin Cities. The most ambitious one, in Minnetonka, was completed recently by Peter Lytle, executive director of Live Green, Live Smart, an organization promoting green building practices. WCCO anchor Don Shelby followed Lytle’s remodel for the station’s Project Energy series.

Jimmie Sparks, residential energy program manager of the Neighborhood Energy Consortium, says he’s seen “five or six” homes being remodeled in a fashion similar to the EcoDEEP Haus in the Twin Cities, among them Lytle’s house. He’s visited the home a number of times and serves as third party validation for the home, which Flynn hopes will be designated a Minnesota Green Star remodeling project.

“We are seeing a lot more green remodels,” says Sparks. “There’s a couple of reasons why – the locations (of the homes) are good, there’s good transportation options and shopping options close by and less of a commute than if they (homeowners) lived in the suburbs.”

Flynn will not have much of a commute since his office will be in his home, which in and of itself will become a showcase for sustainable architecture and materials. His family currently lives on the West Side but plan to move once the remodeled is done in June.

The 46-year-old architect has been active in sustainability circles for decades and now serves as the vice-president of the Mississippi Headwaters Chapter of the U.S. Green Building Council. He founded EcoDEEP, a firm that has worked as a sustainability consultant for projects such as the Blue Earth Justice Center, Cargill’s corporate headquarters, the City of Woodbury, East Los Angeles College, St. Paul’s Phresh Salon and Spa.

To generate interest and draw clients, Flynn also maintains a blog charting progress on the home. While green approaches have been around for years, he believes the difference now has been a greater public embrace of sustainable products due to concerns over global warming and the building industry’s improvement in creating green product lines.

“Industry wasn’t prepared in the past with good, high performance products for builders,” he says. “The industry has finally caught up with the demand.”

Flynn says he and Roxanne spent a year in a search of a house they wanted to live in and could transform into an eco-house. They were drawn to the 1940s one and a half story Cape Cod house because it needed updating and could be modified into a more modern, he says.

The couple decided to add an addition – a kitchen on the home’s west side, a two story bedroom addition on the backside that connects to the existing second story –that will bring the size to 3,000 square feet. The addition uses particle board-style studs and other framing pieces from wood grown in sustainable forests certified by the Forest Stewartship Council.

In looking at how to save energy in any house, Flynn says insulation and windows can make a huge difference, along with energy efficient heating and cooling systems. The house uses triple-paned Toronto, CA-based Inline Fiberglass windows that he says “outperforms wood, metal or vinyl frames” and have with “Low E” ratings, a measure of their ability to reduce heat loss and allow for solar gain in winter.

Making the house as “tight” as possible reduces energy. To that end, home will be insulated a “closed cell” spray foam with that fills any open gaps and requires no plastic vapor barrier used in traditional construction. Closed cell insulation is “more environmentally friendly” and provides a more air tight seal than other environmental foam sprays.

Sealants are being used throughout the house to close any potential gaps. With tight homes come the risk of mold but Flynn says the EcoDEEP Haus will have an air exchanger that keep indoor air refreshed constantly.

The kitchen will have all Energy Star-rated appliances and generally finding those proved no great challenge except for the refrigerator. Flynn did not want an automatic ice maker and exterior water or water dispenser and few refrigerators come without them, though he finally found one.

The home’s wood floors will be reinstalled in the remodeled home, saving money since Flynn won’t have to buy any new products. The carpeting that will be in a few rooms will come from Interface Flor, Inc. and have a high recycled content, he says.

Solar panels will cover part of the home’s roof. One section of panels will supply hot water for use in the home, another section will produce electricity, he says. The solar panels will be accompanied by a green roof garden of native grasses and vegetation, says Flynn.

Meanwhile, inside the home he plans to reduce water consumption by adding aerators to faucets and shower heads and low having low flow toilets.

For years builders and architects have tried to create momentum for a sustainability movement with middling success. Yet Flynn believes, finally, the time has come for green remodeling to become mainstream. Energy prices will not be falling anytime soon and concerns over global warming will likely only grow.

“For years and years and years I was the eco-guy but now we’re seeing more and more architects getting interested in this,” he says. “It’s in the newspapers, in magazines, and there’s a lot of attention being paid by corporations to sustainability. It’s here to stay.” (Reprinted with permission of the Highland Villager newspaper and the author. Frank Jossi is a St. Paul-based journalist and editor.)

Tuesday, May 06, 2008

Help Myanmar rebuild
A cyclone has killed tens of thousands of people in Myanmar, also known as Burma, located in southeast Asia. Death tolls continue to rise. Aid organizations are offering help. (This BBC video from Rangoon during the cyclone shows its overwhelming force.) And so is Architecture for Humanity. The nonprofit is attempting to raise $10,000 to provide "design services to communities affected by the disaster."

Monday, May 05, 2008



I-35W construction update
"Six months ago there was nothing here," says Kevin Gutknecht of the Minnesota Department of Transportation. "It's a testament to man's ingenuity." See it for yourself with the help of this MinnPost video.

Thursday, May 01, 2008


Minnesota's Top 10 most endangered for 2008
An abandoned jail, a small town bank, below ground resources, and a mid-century Modern icon represent just a few of the diverse sites named to the Preservation Alliance of Minnesota’s 2008 list of the Ten Most Endangered Historic Places.

This list, the 15th annual compilation the Alliance has released, profiles the state's most endangered historic sites.

The 2008 Ten Most Endangered Historic Places List includes:
  • St. Louis County Jail, Duluth
  • Historic Mantorville Normal School, Mantorville
  • McGrath Old State Bank, McGrath
  • Layman’s/Pioneer and Soldiers Memorial Cemetery, Minneapolis
  • Oakland Apartments, Minneapolis
  • Peavey Plaza, Minneapolis
  • St. Anthony Falls Historic District Archaeological Resources, Minneapolis
  • Floral Hall (Olmsted County Fairgrounds Building #31), Rochester
  • St. Matthews (Rock of Ages) Evangelical Lutheran Church, St. Paul
  • Buch House, Shakopee
The Ten Most Endangered program is designed to spotlight historic properties that face imminent danger through demolition, neglect, severe alteration, or inappropriate public policy. Through this program the Alliance seeks favorable outcomes that can be achieved through a preservation approach. Of the 122 places listed over the life of this important program, two-thirds have been saved in part through the awareness generated by its listing. Success stories include Minneapolis’ Midtown Exchange and the Ivy Tower, St. Paul’s Head and Sack House, the Stillwater Lift Bridge, the former Red Wing High School, the Litchfield Opera House, and Virginia’s B’Nai Abraham Synagogue. A full listing of previous Ten Most Endangered properties, and more information about the Alliance’s work to preserve, protect, and promote Minnesota’s historic resources, can be found here.

A photographic exhibit featuring the Ten Most Endangered Historic Places for 2008 — created by Doug Ohman, Pioneer Photography, Kodet Architectural Group and Drumminhands Design — will be displayed at museums, libraries and other public places throughout the state during 2008. (Source: Preservation Alliance of Minnesota press release)