Showing posts with label kitchens. Show all posts
Showing posts with label kitchens. Show all posts

Mar 12, 2012

A New Direction for Vermont State College dining


TruexCullins recently teamed up with Sodexo, one of the nation’s largest food service companies, to submit a proposal for the renovation and operation of the dining facilities of the Vermont State College system.  After a four-month RFP process, the proposal was approved and Sodexo was awarded the contract to be the exclusive food service vendor for Vermont State College.

The schools include Castleton State College, Johnson State College, Lyndon State College, and Vermont Technical College.  Sodexo will begin providing food service for the VSC students at these schools at the beginning of the 2012 fall semester, with new menus and greater variety.

The new menus will prioritize locally sourced foods, providing students with a true farm-to-plate experience.  The renovations to the dining facilities will support these new culinary initiatives with comfortable dining and gathering areas.  Students will walk into completely transformed residential dining restaurants, with new food preparation areas and enhanced seating.



You can read more about the future of dining at the Vermont State College campuses in this article from Lyndon State.

Jul 7, 2010

Top Five: Local Architectural Attractions

posted by Matthew Bushey, AIA

We are all enjoying our beautiful (albeit brief) Vermont summer, so I thought I would share my top five local tourist attractions geared specifically for those interested in architecture and interior design.

In my last article, I looked at five top picks for design hotels. This time, we’re staying much closer to home, with a list suitable for those of us planning a staycation, or for visitors to the Green Mountain State. Vermont is well known for its natural landscape, but if you’re looking for a slightly more unconventional design-related attraction, the local area has a few things to offer.

These are all family-friendly attractions, suitable for the roadside adventurer in you. So between your visit to the Ben and Jerry’s factory and that day hike on the Long Trail, be sure to check out these alternative tourist spots for architecture and design:

1. YESTERMORROW COMMUNITY PROJECTS, Warren and Waitsfield, VT
The Mad River Valley has long been the epicenter of the Design/Build movement in Vermont, dating back to the mid-1960s when a group of young architects settled in this area and began experimenting with new theories and methods. This Vermont-based movement was characterized by organic forms, hands-on processes, and natural materials.

The improvisational spirit of this area continues today with the ongoing work of the Yestermorrow Design/Build School. Yestermorrow has been teaching design and construction for over 30 years, and they often reach out into the surrounding towns to build creative small-scale structures. These include picnic pavilions, playhouses, bus shelters, treehouses, bandstands, and more. They are all carefully crafted and beautifully eclectic.

You can see a lot of them if you visit the neighboring towns of Warren and Waitsfield, along scenic Route 100. Click here for an album of many of Yestermorrow’s community projects.

2. 1950 HOUSE, Shelburne Museum
Located at the Shelburne Museum, home to the grounded steamship Ticonderoga and the historic Round Barn, is another lesser-known but just as entertaining architectural attraction: the 1950 House. Here you can actually pay money to go to a museum to experience a fully-preserved 1950s-era residence. The 1,000-square-foot ranch house is just as it would have been 60 years ago, with late-1940s and early-1950s design and decoration. You are free to open the cupboards, look in the refrigerator, or sit down with a copy of LIFE magazine. It’s just like a trip to Grandmas’s house, only here the Shelburne Museum has taken the effort to preserve this piece of Americana for our benefit (and amusement).

If you pay a visit the 1950 House and find it to be strikingly similar to your own, then perhaps you should give TruexCullins a call. We can help you with that.

3. GREAT VERMONT CORN MAZE, Danville, VT
If architecture is the transformation of basic building materials into structures that offer a specific spatial experience, then I call this attraction the ‘Architecture of Corn’. The Great Vermont Corn Maze is the largest in the state, with 8.5 acres and about 2 miles of trails defined by that ubiquitous summertime crop. It opens on July 31st this year, and runs thru October.

But wait, you say, this is supposed to be a list of the top five examples of the built – not natural - environment. Even though the medium here is the common corn crop, I would say this is a wonderful example of purposeful design, with a very explicit mark of man-made ingenuity. This is Experiencing Architecture the Vermont way.

4. FARM BARN, Shelburne Farms
Shelburne Farms is a 1400-acre working farm dating to 1886 and is now a nonprofit environmental education center, and National Historic Landmark. There is much to see and do on the property, but the most dramatic moment for me is always when the tractor-pulled wagon makes its way from the visitor parking lot, rolling up the gravel path of the Frederick Law Olmstead-designed landscape, and turning the bend to come into view of the majestic Farm Barn, looming large over you.

The Farm Barn was constructed in 1890, and in the 1990s it received a major upgrade, allowing it to continue to serve as the main headquarters for Shelburne Farms. The building houses a variety of functions and wraps an almost-2 acre courtyard. The historic Farm Barn stands as a beautiful backdrop to the many events that occur across the grounds, at a scale appropriate to the vast site.

5. WORLD’S TALLEST FILE CABINET, Burlington, VT
Perhaps the oddest attraction you will find in the city of Burlington is the World’s Tallest File Cabinet. As a designer of workplace interiors, I can’t help but marvel at this uncommon monument honoring that most common of workplace chores: filing paperwork.

The structure was built in 2002 by local artist Bren Alvarez. It seems to grow out of a vacant, weedy lot on Flynn Ave, on the south side of town. The file cabinet is a tribute to the ‘Southern Connector’ – the local beltway that was never built: there are 38 drawers stacked upon themselves, representing the number of years of paperwork that the project accumulated.

Time –and rust- are taking its toll on the metal monument. If nature doesn’t claim it, other forces may finish it off instead. The sculpture sits in the path of the proposed road, and the city has promised that the project is finally moving ahead, after decades of stalemate. I hope the city has made accommodations for this work of art. If not, be sure to stop by to see this attraction before it is relegated to the archives.

Jul 30, 2009

Paper or Plastic?

posted by Matthew Bushey on July 30, 2009

As an architect in the Interiors Studio, I’m always keeping my eyes open for new materials that are truly sustainable, durable, and beautiful. (And, I should add, affordable.) One material of particular interest is what we use for the kitchen counter. It’s often the most visible feature in the room and establishes the character for the whole kitchen. At the same time, it receives a lot of abuse and must meet some pretty tough performance requirements.

One new product that we really like is Paperstone. It came on the market a few years ago and quickly gained popularity as an alternative countertop and cladding material. I first tried it out in my own house, installing new kitchen counters, in part to “test-drive” the new product before offering it as a suggestion to others. Our office has since used it on other projects, including the new guest suites at the Portland Harbor Hotel.

The product is green because it is made of recycled paper, held together with a natural resin binder. While conventional solid surfacing is a petrochemical-based plastic product, Paperstone is the eco-friendly alternative. Even stone, which may be a natural material, is hardly sustainable. After all, it takes a million years to make, and it is very energy-intensive to extract.

We like the look of PaperStone. It’s been compared to soapstone, and has a soft feel. Unlike stone, it is warm to the touch, and is a friendly material that invites use. It holds up perfectly fine to heat (up to 350 degrees) and water (undermount sinks are fine). After a few months of heavy use, it can get a little dull, but all it takes is a little wood oil or mineral oil (or their PaperStone Finish) and it will bring back that satin sheen.


The inventor of the product has since sold the PaperStone brand and has gone on to develop the next-generation of sustainable composite surfacing. They call it EcoTop, and they’ve added some bamboo to the recipe to make it even harder and more durable. We’ve taken a look at it in our office. The first thing we noticed was that it doesn’t have the same nice matte finish as PaperStone. However, the color line is much improved.
The jury is still out on EcoTop, but for now, I would continue to recommend PaperStone if you’re looking for an eco-friendly material for your kitchen counter.