Committee on Design

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  • 1.  Join us at the Historic Resources Committee Luncheon at AIA25 in Boston!

    Posted 04-09-2025 12:43 PM
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    The AIA Historic Resources Committee is super excited for our upcoming luncheon and program held annually in conjunction with the AIA Conference on Design, in Boston this coming June.

    For 2025, our program A Landmark for our Future: The Boston Public Library will be held at the Library, (McKim Mead and White, 1895; Philip Johnson, 1972) in its remarkable Guastavino Room-showcasing structural and architectural innovations for which this extraordinary landmark is known.

    Located in Boston's national historic Back Bay neighborhood, facing Trinity Church and the historic Copley Square, the BPL is ideally suited to host our timely discussion of public architecture, public service, and the role of discourse and education in an historic, and changing, context.

    https://www.bpl.org/art-architecture/

    Our program will touch on the history of the McKim building-a rare confluence of art, architecture, technology, and collections. We will dig deeper into its significance-through the specific work of immigrants Rafael Guastavino and family as they navigated the prevailing cultural landscape in pursuit of the American Dream. We will learn about the efforts of the BPL as it negotiates the fine balance between modernization, services, and stewardship of significant collections and historic resources. Finally, we will explore implications of these topics as they affect other cultural institutions and their heritage.

    The Guastavino Room is named for its renowned vaulted ceilings, an innovation designed by the Guastavino family, who worked with Charles McKim to open the unique exposed tiling as a design aesthetic-the interlocking Guastavino terracotta tiles add a majesty to the room carried throughout the McKim building. This system revolutionized structural design for decades. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B_JfCpBXDgo

    The HRC has engaged three incredible speakers for this program (see additional Bio information attached):

    David Leonard           President of the Boston Public Library

    Ann M. Beha FAIA     Founder and Principal of Ann Beha Architects (now Annum Architects)

    John Ochsendorf      MIT Professor of Architecture; Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering and Author of Guastavino Vaulting, the Art of Structural Tile.

    Come early or stay late to explore the wonderful Copley Square area. Attendees will be able to informally walk through the BPL buildings before and after lunch.

    Or take a tour Art & Architecture Tours at the Central Library | Boston Public Library

    After the luncheon, be sure to attend the Fellows Investiture at 2 PM, just across the street at Trinity Church-another event you won't want to miss!

    Space is limited, so sign up for our luncheon today.

    Looking forward to seeing you in Boston!



    ------------------------------
    Robert Burns, AIA
    2025 Chair
    Historic Resources Committee Advisory Group
    Richmond, VA
    ------------------------------

    Attachment(s)



  • 2.  RE: Join us at the Historic Resources Committee Luncheon at AIA25 in Boston!

    Posted 04-09-2025 05:57 PM
    Even if I can not attend due to likely conflicts, I will highly recommend that others attend. Having known the place and the changes over the years since my eight at Harvard and many times since. To see the work of Guastavino itself is very remarkable. Everyone who can join should. 





  • 3.  RE: Join us at the Historic Resources Committee Luncheon at AIA25 in Boston!

    Posted 04-10-2025 05:40 PM

    As a public institution, in response to budget cuts and the withdrawal of NIH Grant funding, we have been placed on a travel freeze. Sadly, I will miss meeting with you all this year.

     






  • 4.  RE: Join us at the Historic Resources Committee Luncheon at AIA25 in Boston!

    Posted 04-11-2025 09:55 AM

    Thanks Roy! High praise indeed. All have worked hard to make this a session both about the BPL and about preservation and design methodology-how to take on a storied building of any age through research, testing, programming and creative adaptive re use. Its in such early stages that there is a good opp for dialogue and contribution. Perhaps we should set up a chat room post session for ideas and comments! As a public building, owned by the City, this project also must meet demanding requirements for energy management and for contemporary services and physical and programmatic access. All of this adds up to a complex system of planning and design thinking, still in early stages.

     

    It would be great-and very much valued-- to have a brain trust in the room!!

    Ann Beha FAIA