Showing posts with label Exhibits. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Exhibits. Show all posts

Apr 18, 2013

TruexCullins Offices Under Construction


Our earthbag wall is rising!  Well, in this case, we are using air, but the end result is the same:  we are building an "earthbag" structure inside our offices at 209 Battery Street to symbolize and celebrate our work in Nepal.


In an earlier post, we described this method of earthbag construction, being used by Edge of Seven to build new schools for disadvantaged girls in rural Nepal.  Diantha Korzun is currently assisting Edge of Seven with the design of the latest earthbag construction project, a new school and community center at Mankhu Village Farm.

So what's our airbag wall all about?  You will see it in the front lobby of our space, where the walls are forming a makeshift classroom facing Battery Street.  We acquired some polypropylene rice bags and have been inflating them to emulate the real earthbag walls being built in Nepal.  The room that is forming has become an ad-hoc meeting space.  It has become a teaching tool.  And the rising walls have become a symbol of the upward mobility that these projects are affording to the girls of Nepal. 

At Sparky's retirement party on May 9, everyone will be invited to help us expand the construction.  We are looking forward to this being a fun, interactive event! 

 
 
We've collected all the info about our extended campaign with Edge of Seven into one mini-website:   For info about the earthbag construction projects, Sparky's party on May 9, and the October trek to Everest Base Camp, check out: www.truexcullins.com/sparky
 
And to make a donation to Sparky's fund now, please go to:
 
 

Apr 2, 2013

A Celebration and a Call to Action


JOIN US TO CELEBRATE THE CAREER OF
SPARKY MILLIKIN

After a long and distinguished career in design and construction, Robert “Sparky” Millikin is now retiring as Managing Principal of TruexCullins. Sparky has been instrumental in the success of this firm. He is respected in the office and the community at large as a trusted business leader and mentor.

Please join us on Thursday May 9 from 5 to 9pm to celebrate the career of Sparky Millikin.

A graduate of Dartmouth College and the Yale School of Management, Sparky combined studies in architecture and business with practical construction experience. Prior to his construction and architecture career, Sparky spent over a decade sharing his love of the outdoors with others as a climbing instructor, ski coach, and Outward Bound leader. On his honeymoon he led his wife up the Middle Teton in Wyoming and had many adventures in places like Yosemite, Joshua Tree, the Sawtooths, and the White Mountains. Having always aspired to be among the “big mountains” of the Himalayas, Sparky has now opened up a new chapter with his recent trek in the Solo Khumbu region of Nepal with the Edge of Seven.


The party will be catered by Sherpa Kitchen, Burlington’s own Nepalese restaurant.

As a gesture of goodwill to Sparky for his retirement, please consider joining us in supporting his work with Edge of Seven. You may make a donation through our crowdrise site at
http://www.crowdrise.com/truexcullins-nepal

So please join us on May 9 to learn about upcoming adventure opportunities, taste Nepalese food from Sherpa Kitchen, and wish Sparky "happy trails" in his retirement.

Nov 26, 2012

Architecture for the Birds


The festive season is upon us and we are looking forward to the annual TruexCullins holiday party.   Mark your calendar for Wednesday December 5th for a friendly celebration with food, drink ... and birdhouses.  (VIEW THE BIRD HOUSE EXHIBIT)




This year we will be showcasing a collection of unique birdhouses designed and built by TruexCullins staff and friends.  The creative works of avian architecture will be up for silent auction during the reception, with all proceeds going to benefit the King Street Center.  Guests may also vote for their favorite birdhouse as part of the People’s Choice competition.

The TruexCullins holiday party is open to all clients and friends of the firm (and readers of the blog).  We hope to see you on Battery Street next Wednesday.  And if you would like to build a birdhouse for the auction, there’s still time.  Submissions may be dropped off at our office for Carmen George by Monday December 1st.


Sep 13, 2012

Celebrating the work of Rolf Kielman


In the early 1970s, Rolf Kielman joined fellow classmate Terry Jacobs and designed a series of cutting-edge houses that utilized an air panel system for the collection of warm air and a rock box for thermal storage. The Sunpower homes, as they were called, adhered to the design principals of reduced size, improved thermal envelopes and effective siting and orientation. Four of these were built around Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania.

It is now 40 years later, and Rolf’s portfolio of projects has steadily grown to include numerous energy-positive homes, hotels and resorts that are naturally wedded to their environment, and cultural and civic buildings that galvanize communities. His work includes creatively branded workspaces, custom designed furniture and architectural follies. His urban planning projects are instantly recognizable as some of our most notable public spaces.

Please join us on Friday September 21st to celebrate this 40 year span of impressive work by Rolf Kielman. We are hosting a reception from 5 to 8pm with an exhibit of his architecture in our office on Battery Street.

If you stopped by last week during the Art Hop, you were able to catch a sneak preview of the show. Throughout the exhibit, the thoughtful and artful communication of each design is clearly evident, from beautifully drawn sketches and original watercolors to handmade wood models, including some specifically commissioned for this event.

While we may marvel at his craft, anyone who knows Rolf can attest that his “living legacy” reaches beyond just the architectural work he produces. Much of his energy today directly touches people’s lives through his work with local community organizations such as the Committee on Temporary Shelter, the King Street Youth Center, the 52 Kids Foundation, the Howard Center, and many more.

Rolf continues to be a creative designer, inspiring leader and gracious mentor for all of us at TruexCullins. And next Friday we do hope you’ll join us to recognize his talents and celebrate his 40 years (and counting!) of architecture and craft.



 

Aug 29, 2012

20 Years of Art Hop / 40 Years of Rolf


We love this time of year in Vermont. The air turns cooler, students return to their classes, and we ready ourselves for the busy fall season. And the big event in Burlington that always kicks things off is the South End Art Hop.

Once again, TruexCullins is pleased to be participating in this year's Art Hop, with an exhibit in our office on Battery Street on Friday Sept 7 and Saturday Sept 8. We are site # 50 on your Art Hop map, so please stop by when you're out enjoying the festivities on Friday night.
 

This is a big year for the Art Hop, and it's a big year for us. 2012 is the 20th year for the Art Hop, and for the occasion we are celebrating 40 years of architecture by Rolf Kielman. 

On display in our office will be an exhibit of drawings, photographs and models that span the 40 years of Rolf's work, from 1972 to the present. Our office will be open Friday night for the opening reception from 5 to 8pm. Then on Saturday, our doors will be open again for public viewing from 10am to 3pm.


If you miss the events this weekend, fear not. The exhibit will be up throughout the month of September and can be seen any time during regular office hours. More exciting events are also in store for later in the month, so stay tuned.

Feb 6, 2012

Fighting Climate Change in Vermont, One Net-Zero House at a Time


We are in the middle of one of the warmest winters in memory, with a noticeable lack of snow. Many are still cleaning up from Tropical Storm Irene, which hit a state not used to dealing with hurricanes and flash floods. As these examples of extreme weather events grow more common, fewer people are doubting that climate change is affecting Vermont in very real, measurable ways.

A new exhibit is now open at the ECHO Lake Aquarium and Science Center that explores the impact of climate change in New England. Seasons of Change: Global Warming in Your Backyard is an interactive travelling exhibit that will be at ECHO until March 25, 2012.

You may think you know what to expect with global warming, but this exhibit will open your eyes to much more. Developed by members of the New England Science Center Collaborative and Brown University, Seasons of Change looks at how climate change is affecting things in Vermont like invasive species, foliage, maple products, fishing and more.

This is a daunting challenge, but we are rising up to meet it.

This week we will be attending the Better Buildings by Design conference, an annual event hosted by Efficiency Vermont that brings together architects, engineers and builders for 2 full days of interactive learning about building efficiency. Global warming is often thought of as the result of pollution from cars and power plants, but buildings are actually an equal culprit. Nationwide, buildings are responsible for one third of all greenhouse gas emissions, equal to that of transportation and industry.

At Truexcullins, we are working for a better climate future by designing net-zero energy buildings. These buildings produce as much energy as they use. By intelligently managing the energy demands and eliminating the need for fossil fuels, we can reduce greenhouse gas emissions and slow the spread of global warming.

One of our recent green homes will be recognized with an award from Efficiency Vermont at this week's conference. This net-zero energy home in Calais, Vermont will be receiving the award for Best of the Best in Energy-Efficient Residential New Construction. TruexCullins Principal Lee Grutchfield was the architect on the project, with general contractor Hobie Guion and energy consultant Andy Shapiro of Energy Balance, Inc.
 



Congratulations to the entire project team!  We have more of these projects in the works, and we look forward to working with all of our colleagues and consultants to develop net-zero energy buildings that help to solve our climate challenges. 

Sep 5, 2011

Westphalen Photography at the Art Hop


Join us this Friday, Sept 9th, at Vermont's largest visual arts event ... the South End Art Hop!

We are excited to be participating in the Art Hop again this year with an exhibit of architectural and landscape photography by our good friend Jim Westphalen.  If you're out Hopping on Friday night, please do stop by our offices at 209 Battery Street - Art Hop site # 52 - and check out the show during the opening reception.  Our office will be open again on Saturday, and the photos will remain up for public viewing throughout the month of September.

Jim is a Vermont-based professional photographer who specializes in interiors, architecture and photography for the hospitality industry.  His images appear regularly in fine shelter and garden publications such as Design New England, Fine Homebuilding, Better Homes and Gardens, and many more.  You can see samples of his work at www.jimwestphalen.com.

After you check out Jim's show at our office on Friday night, head down Pine Street for the rest of the Art Hop action.  The Art Hop is a product of SEABA, the South End Arts and Business Association.  During this two-day event, more than 500 artists will be showing their work in the studios, galleries and businesses along and around the Pine Street corridor ... including Rolf Kielman, who will be exhibiting his "slot" furniture at Select Design at 208 Flynn Avenue.

Jun 22, 2011

Future Furnishings: The Best and Worst of NeoCon 2011

posted by Matthew Bushey

Last week a couple of us from the office travelled to the fantastic city of Chicago for NeoCon, the largest contract furnishings trade show in North America.

Unlike most other architecture and design trade shows, NeoCon does not take place in a large convention center, with vendors setting up temporary booths to display their wares.  It is held every year at the Merchandise Mart in Chicago, up until recently the largest commercial building in the world with 4.2 million square feet spread across 25 stories, 50% of which is occupied by the wholesale showrooms that open their doors for this trade show that attracts 50,000 people.


This is the event that most contract furnishings manufacturers use to roll out their new products for the year.  You can also find lighting, flooring, fixtures, and finishes throughout the Mart, but furnishings are really the main attraction for this 3-day show.  Here is our short list of the best and worst of NeoCon 2011:

Aloft Lounge by Arcadia
design by Qdesign
First up: the Aloft Lounge chair by Arcadia.  I love that this is totally different, very unique, but still comfortably sensible.  The lightweight steel base delicately holds up a folded wood frame with a comfortable upholstered seat.  The three elements come together – and complement each other – rather nicely.  The series also includes a love seat, occasional tables and benches.  I think the elongated length of the love seat is a bit too much for the scale of the frame, but I do really like the tables: substituting a glass top for the upholstered seat as the third element in the composition.

OMHU desk for Linak U.S.
design by Rie Norregaard


This table is one that I could easily imagine at home in one of our Vermont projects.  Rie Norregaard is the creative director of Omhu, a product design firm guided by Scandinavian influences.  For NeoCon, she designed this table for Linak, a company that makes electric linear actuators.  (Those are the devices that make the table move up and down at the push of a button)  But this table is all about the natural wood top.  Norregaard took a 200-year old slab of ash wood and had it sandblasted, resulting in an extreme texture of woodgrain that pops right off the surface.  The simplicity of the design allows the natural materials to be fully appreciated, but the treatment of the wood is also very unique.

Sketch chair by Davis
design by Burkhard Vogtherr & Jonathan Prestwich

 
I was really impressed with the Davis showroom.  Bent plywood frames, duo-tones and textures, and supple upholstery.  The Sketch Chair series is one of eight new collections that Davis introduced at this year’s NeoCon.  The Sketch is a conference or side chair that looks and feels just right.  It has a small footprint, with slender base designs and an upholstered seat that wraps around you just enough.  The horizontal stitch across the back gives it just the right amount of definition and interest.  It’s not a large chair, but in its form and detailing it projects a refined elegance.

Breathe Living Wall by DIRTT

One of the best showroom experiences we had was the hour we spent at the DIRTT showroom, at their “Green Learning Center” across the street from the Mart.  DIRTT is a company that was formed about 7 years ago to address the shortcomings in the marketplace at that time for modular, demountable wall systems.  They make factory-built walls that offer many benefits over conventional drywall construction, literally spelled out with one of my favorite acronyms: Doing It Right This Time.

 

DIRTT introduced a number of new products at NeoCon this year, including this one we liked best: the Breathe Living Wall.  Breathe is not a modular wall system but is actually an accessory item that can be mounted to any DIRTT wall, or to any standard wall surface: be it gypsum, stone, or concrete.  I was a bit surprised to realize that DIRTT had more to offer than just modular walls, and Breathe seems to reinforce this fact that they are now expanding beyond their core product.

The Breathe system is composed of a series of modular pots that fit into a slat-wall system to create a living wall.  There is a built-in gravity-fed water irrigation line that runs along the entire installation, separate from the individual pots, providing water to each plant through special devices in the bottom of each pot.  It is low-mess and low-mantenance, and is an opportunity to bring a living wall indoors where before it just wasn’t practical.


Proximus casegoods workwall by Halcon 
design by David Grout and Donna Corbat for Gary Lee Studios
 
This is a product that was actually released at last year’s show, winning a Best of NeoCon Gold award, but still held a prominent spot at NeoCon 2011.  The Proximus casegoods collection by Halcon is a private office workwall that really works.  Each component of the system is built up to maximize function, with storage, filing, and stacking relocated at eye level, not hidden beneath the worksurface.  Huge panels slide across the entire wall, concealing what you might not want to see or revealing what you do.  The panels are finished with stunning wood veneers that coordinate beautifully with the primary desk and all parts of the Proximus family.

 
 

Occhio chair by Martin Brattrud
design by Jeffrey Hollander, Guy Painchaud, Lee Pasteris, Banning Rowles

Martin Brattrud is known for upholstered seating, but this is one piece that stands out from their regular collection of standards.  The Occhio lounge chair has a distinctive wood back, kind of a weave pattern of wood veneers, with an angular wood base and arms.  The chair looks lower than it feels, thanks to a comfortably thick seat cushion.  So often, the backs of chairs are not something we want to look at, but this chair would be perfect for locations where you see it from all sides: the back is its best side.





I did say this was my Best and Worst list of NeoCon 2011, so let me wrap up with what I thought was the biggest bomb at the show:

The Chakra Chair by Karim Rashid 
for Raynor Contract

The 7th floor of the Merchandise Mart is full of booths by smaller companies, so you can usually find a few surprises.  I did a double-take when I came across this chair by Karim Rashid.  Rashid is, of course, a popular industrial and interior designer who you are probably familiar with through his work with Umbra and Target.  I’ve got to say, I’ve never been a big fan of Karim Rashid.  Let’s just say there are a few too many gratuitous curves in his palette for my tastes.

This is his latest chair, the Chakra, which he designed for Raynor Contract.  Chakra is the Hindi term for the body’s power centers, and the design of this chair is based on these pressure points.  It is a comfortable chair, but I wouldn’t say it’s relaxing.  It definitely has a very unique form, but it’s not one that I find inviting.  More alien than anthropometric, this chair is something that subjects you to its grip, ready to receive each muscle independently for what could be a traumatic experience.  As one online reader put it: “Finally, a chair that supports my kidneys!”

This is not a chair for sitting.  It is more of a device for holding humans. 

There’s something for everyone at NeoCon.

 

May 3, 2011

A Bench for the Montshire


Rolf Kielman, architect and principal with TruexCullins, recently collaborated with Lauritz Larsen, local furniture maker and artist, on a project for the Montshire Museum of Science in Norwich, Vermont.  Together, Rolf and Lars crafted a bench for visitors to the museum’s Woodland Garden as part of a competition open to members of the Vermont Furniture Guild.  In January a jury reviewed the submissions and selected Rolf and Lars’ design as one of five benches to be commissioned by the Montshire Museum.

The goal of the competition is to expand public awareness of and appreciation for the work of Vermont artisans, and provide artistic and functional features that will enhance visitors' enjoyment of Montshire's Woodland Garden.

An opening reception will be held this Friday, May 6th, from 5 to 8pm, at the Frog Hollow Vermont State Craft Center, on Church Street in Burlington.  The event is free and open to the public. The five winning benches will be on display on Friday night and will remain at Frog Hollow throughout the month of May.  In addition to Rolf Kielman and Lars Larsen, the exhibit features the work of master craftsmen Doug Clarner, Mark Dabelstein, David Hurwitz, and Dan Mosheim and sons.  After the show the benches will be permanently installed in the Montshire Museum’s Woodland Garden in Norwich.


We hope you can come out on Friday night and check out the winning designs and support all our Vermont artists!

Dec 15, 2010

Holiday Reception Recap

Thank you to everyone who came out for our annual holiday party, held at our offices earlier this month.  The event was a chance for us to show our appreciation for our loyal clients and friends.  The main attraction was an exhibit of watercolor and acrylic paintings by Tom Cullins, who has built an impressive portfolio of representational and abstract paintings, exploring the light, form, and detail of his surroundings in Vermont and Greece.  His work has recently been shown elsewhere in Burlington, Shelburne, and at a two-person exhibition in Kea, Greece.

The night was also a celebration of the life of Kathy Lamoy, who was an essential part of our office for 19 years.  A healthy portion of the proceeds from the sale of Tom’s paintings went towards an education fund for Kathy’s daughter, Chelsea.  And we are happy to say that almost all of the paintings in the show were quickly sold.  There are still a few unclaimed works, and many are still on display.  So if you missed the opening reception, you are welcome to stop by our offices between now and the end of year to view this original artwork.

Here are a few photos from the event, and more are posted on our facebook page.