Awards: 2005 Institute Honor Award for Interior Architecture
Recipient: Neil M. Denari Architects
Project: l.a. Eyeworks Showroom; Los Angeles
Client: Gai Gheradi & Barbara McReynolds; Los Angeles
Photo: Benny Chan, Fotoworks
 

   
 
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COD 2007 Ideas Competition Winners

 
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 COD Ideas Competition Archive

2007 Committee On Design Ideas Competition "A Fountain of Use"

"I went to the woods because I wished to live deliberately, to front only the essential facts of life, and see if I could not learn what it had to teach…."

“I did not need to go outdoors to take the air, for the atmosphere within had lost none of its freshness. It was not so much within doors as behind a door where I sat, even in the rainiest weather.”

—Henry David Thoreau, Walden

PRESENTED BY
The American Institute of Architects
Committee on Design
In conjunction with the AIA conference, "The Rejuvenation of American Cities on the Water", April 12–15, 2007

COMPETITION JURY
Julie Sinclair Eakin CITE Magazine Houston
Raymond Jungles, FASLA Miami
Peter Magyar Florida Atlantic University Fort Lauderdale
Chad Oppenheim, AIA Oppenheim Architecture + Design Miami

ABOUT THE AIA COMMITTEE ON DESIGN
The AIA Committee on Design was founded to promote design excellence among members of the AIA and the broader design community, both nationally and internationally, and with the public at large. In realizing this mission, the committee promotes a range of activities intended to encourage a dialogue on the art of building.

2007 AIA COMMITTEE ON DESIGN SPONSOR
USG Inc.

COMPETITION ORGANIZERS/CONFERENCE COCHAIRS
James Bowen, AIA Bowen Architecture Sarasota, FL
Roberto Espejo, AIA Pelli Clarke Pelli Architects Miami
Michael Ross, FAIA HGA Architecture | Engineering | Planning Los Angeles

CHALLENGE
Fountain of Use is a design ideas competition exploring the meaningful use of water as a component of urban planning. As the COD convenes in Miami to examine the rejuvenation of cities on the water, the competition entries will contribute to the general discussion by illustrating concepts about the responsible use of water within a developing urban design framework along a waterfront. The challenge is the identification of the myriad potential roles of water in sustaining the contemporary waterfront city and the design of elements that fulfill those roles.

The competition title suggests a traditional fountain or the legendary Fountain of Youth as a source of rejuvenation. Competition participants are encouraged to be mindful of the extraordinary importance of water, its use, and consumption by our current society and in particular the built environment. Participants are encouraged to consider the sustainable design opportunities in relation to the scale of this site and the potential rejuvenation of the city of Miami.

PROGRAM
In keeping with the primary purpose of idea generation, the traditional design program is substituted by a thesis or proposition. The thesis should be clearly developed and briefly described. The thesis shall generate the particular program for each participant’s entry. The participant is responsible for determining the necessary information to convey both the thesis and to describe the design of the elements of the plan, project, or system.

SITE
The site consists of the open space along the Downtown Miami Waterfront extending from Museum Park on the north to Bayfront Park on the south, Biscayne Bay to the east and Biscayne Blvd. on the west. Museum Park is the future site for the Miami Museum of Art by Herzog & de Meuron, which is currently under design. The AA Arena is home to the Miami Heat and serves as a venue for cultural events. Bayside Marketplace is a small outdoor shopping center built in the mid-1980s with a marina. Bayfront Park is Miami's first waterfront park, established in 1924. Bisecting this site is Port Boulevard, bridging to the Port of Miami. Further to the north is the Carnival Center for the Performing Arts, completed in October 2006 by Pelli Clarke Pelli Architects and featuring two structures flanking an oval Arts Plaza bisected by Biscayne Blvd.

CRITERIA
Design Excellence: Entries should exhibit a compelling and useful strategy for the role of water within this specific urban condition and emphasize the ecological importance of water as a natural resource.

  • Acknowledgement of Place: Cities on the water have a distinct history and physical relationship. Miami is a unique place, environmentally, culturally, and socially. Entries will be considered for their responses to these characteristics.
  • Sustainable Design: The prevalence of water, shallow groundwater, storm water treatment and retention, as well as storm surge from hurricane events are primary issues for the application of appropriate sustainable design strategies in Florida. How should evolving and redeveloping urban areas address these issues?
  • Design Process: How do innovative design methods promote creativity and generate great design? Collaborative and interdisciplinary teams are encouraged to participate.

COMPETITION WINNERS (listed in alpha order)

La Nueva Costanera de Miami (The New Miami Waterfront)
Mike Mense, FAIA and Ron Andersen

"We propose to strengthen Miami’s relationship with water by bringing downtown Miami back to the waterfront by bringing the waterfront to downtown Miami." - Competition Team

Jury Comments
Exuberance and wit characterize the Mywater concept and it ultimately proved irresistible among a few other entries that also made a canal of Biscayne Boulevard. The vision proposed here is one we would actually enjoy experiencing—a return of wildlife to its habitat, for instance, together with the recognition of and respect for the site’s urban bones. Taking the opposite approach from the carefully considered PALM, the sheer scale of unbridled ambition and optimism here was refreshing. Not “How?” but “Why couldn’t it work?” is the question we couldn’t ignore.

 

 

 


PALM (Planting in the Aquifer for a Livable Miami)
Wendy Evans Joseph, FAIA
Farzana Gandhi
Jonathan Lee
Thruston Pettus Jr.


"PALM introduces a micro-approach to desalinating the Biscayne Aquifer, providing Miami with a sustainable source of potable water and a cohesive scheme for waterfront infrastructure." - Competition Team

Jury Comments
Notably, PALM was the only project that specifically mentioned sustainability in its description.

The designers’ original approach to thinking about the city’s (and specifically this site’s) future won us over. They identified a genuine need and, in proposing this desalinization initiative, interpreted the competition’s program challenges in a meaningful way. The technology is appealing in its simplicity—we felt that some version of the idea could actually be made to work.

By focusing their energies on a very particular, useful aspect of water, they were able to deliver a comprehensive proposal in very little time.