| AIA Puerto Rico presented
Honor Awards to eight projects and Recognition Awards to five individuals
during the chapter’s annual convention last month. Jury members
Terry Brown, FAIA, Albuquerque; Alex Diez, AIA, New York City; and Jesus
Amaral, FAIA, Puerto Rico, served as jury members, evaluating projects
in four categories.
Recently Built Projects
•
The “Relocation Housing for Israel and Bitumul Barrios” earned
Elio Martínez-Joffre, AIA, the 2003 AIA Puerto Rico Honor Award.
“This beautiful project was impressive due to its delightful color
and playfulness of forms,” the jury commented. “The apartments’
bold shapes are gracefully sited. The strong social statement that this
project makes to Puerto Rico challenges stereotypes of public housing
and provides a unique platform for future development for poor and underdeveloped
neighborhoods.”
•
“The Learning Center at the Arecibo Observatory,” by Pilarin
Ferrer-Viscasillas, AIA, Mendez Bruner Badillo and Associates, received
Honorary Mention. The small project, which is essentially a large classroom,
impressed the jury because of its “sculptural boldness, especially
how its form hugs the land while at the same time erupts from it. The
architects accomplished this on a very difficult site.” The observatory,
part of the National Astronomic and Ionosphere Center, is operated by
Cornell University under cooperative agreement with the National Science
Foundation. It offers 10,000 square feet and outdoor space, including
an observation platform with a 1,000-foot-tall radio telescope.
•
The jury also selected two projects for Merit Certificates: “Doral
Financial,” by Segundo Cardona, AIA, Sierra Cardona Ferrer (image
below); and “House Remodeling on España Street” by
José Marchand-Siffre, AIA. The jury chose the first because “the
project offers a new vocabulary of architecture to the financial district
with its arching roof-line and amber accents that attract attention in
a simple unpretentious manner,” and the latter because it “demonstrates
how a very constricted site with seemingly few possibilities can actually
lead to a very creative solution cleverly integrating exterior spaces
with interior ones.”
Unbuilt Projects
The jury granted an Honor Award to “Infill Housing in the Historic
Center of Vega Baja,” by Jorge Rigau, FAIA. “In this age of
urban sprawl, it is important that the fabric and texture of our cities
and of our streets be maintained and repaired to prevent their further
decline,” they noted. “The urban infill project in Vega Baja
is of critical importance.” The project was conceived and presented
with clarity and intelligence, the jury found, and its different housing
prototypes appropriately respond to specific site conditions.
Research/Publications
“Proposal for the Rehabilitation of the Faculty Center,”
by John B. Hertz, AIA, was singled out for an award in the research/publications
category. “The research for this project is complete and clearly
illustrated. This in-depth research is important to the University of
Puerto Rico because it sheds light on the needs and strengths of renovating
an historic building designed by Henry Klumb,” the jury said. “Careful
renovations to this building will help maintain the unique character of
the campus.”
Student awards
•
AIA Puerto Rico invites AIAS students from its two schools of architecture
to submit projects to the awards program as a means of integrating the
students into the profession. In the AIAS category, the jury presented
an honor award to the “Solar House,” prepared under the direction
of Dr. Fernando Abruña, AIA, for the
national Solar Decathlon. University of Puerto Rico students Nancy
Nazario, Jammile Victorio, Brian Padilla, Arlene Vázquez, Vanesa
Miranda, Doraida Cabrera, and Destiny Young took part in this project,
which the jury characterized as “setting a high standard in leadership
in revolutionizing basic living conditions for the future in a clear solution
to a difficult problem.”
• An Honorary Mention went to the “Research, Extraction, Preparation,
and Application of Mineral Pigments,” prepared by Polytechnic University
students Lorely González, Alejandro Santiago, and Carlos Quiñones,
under the direction of Beatriz del Cueto, FAIA. “This is a thorough
and informative research project, where students attempt to understand
traditional techniques as well as new possibilities for finishing architectural
surfaces,” said the jury. “The research is not only of great
value to the students who conducted it, but also a significant contribution
to the field of historic preservation.”
Recognition Awards
Chapter members nominate candidates for recognition awards, which are
evaluated by a local multidisciplinary jury that includes the secretary
of public works, director of the Institute of Puerto Rican Culture, president
of public broadcasting, and president of the College of Architects. This
year’s winners include:
• Sierra Cardona Ferrer, who received the Firm of the Year Award
for excellence in design and client service since 1984
• Elio Martínez Joffre, AIA, who received the Excellence
in Education award for his work with University of Puerto Rico students
in community service
• Edward Underwood-Rios, AIA, for his tenure in the Municipal Assembly
of the City of San Juan, who was chosen for the Excellence in Public Work
award
• Astrid Diaz-Vega, AIA, who received an Honorable Mention in Community
Outreach for her television program “Notes on Architecture”
and her “Hurricane-Secure Houses” publications.
• The Commitment to Architecture Award, granted to non-architects
who have advanced the cause of good design and improved the dignity of
the profession through their interest, actions, and focus on related issues,
went to Socorrito Diaz, an elementary school teacher who has devised a
program to teach her grade-school students appreciation of architecture.
Copyright 2003 The American Institute of Architects.
All rights reserved.

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