awards and news

“From site, client, and experience, Frank Harmon spins a highly specific, easy-living modernism.” - Vernon Mays, Residential Architect magazine

Sky Gardens.com: GPW: Duke University Ocean Conservation Center (OCC)

Sunday, August 28th, 2011

by Linda Velazquez, Aug. 27, 2011

Greenroofs.com Project of the Week: 8/22/11  DukeOCC1long
Duke University
Ocean Conservation Center (OCC)
Beaufort, NC, USA
2,400 sf. Greenroof

Located at the Duke University Marine Laboratory in Beaufort, North Carolina, the 5,600 sf Marguerite Kent Repass Ocean Conservation Center (OCC) is a stellar example of merging the built structure with the site. Built in 2006, it uses geothermal pumps for heating and cooling, solar panels for hot water, and photovoltaic rooftop panels to convert sunlight into electricity. Local building materials, such as yellow southern pine and Atlantic white cedar and recycled wood, are used throughout the structure. Designed by the office of Frank Harmon Architect PA, the OCC was awarded Gold LEED certification.

Installed by Living Roofs, Inc. in 2010 over the low-slope portion of the previous Energy Star® roof, the 2,400 sf greenroof utilizes a pre-vegetated extensive system with specialized components to secure it from high coastal wind exposure…

CLICK HERE TO SEE THE ENTIRE ARTICLE

photo from Sky Gardens.com

photo from Sky Gardens.com

Sustainable Architecture on the North Carolina Coast: The Ocean Sciences Teaching Center

Tuesday, January 19th, 2010

This is a Masters project — focused on the renamed OCEAN CONSERVATION CENTER — submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Master of Environmental Management degree in the Nicholas School of the Environment and Earth Sciences of Duke University.

By Gwen Maura McLaughlin

Dr. Michael K. Orback, Advisor

View the entire project here:  Sustainable_Architecture_on_the_North_Carolina_Coast_The_Ocean_…

Ocean Conservation Center Featured On Treehugger.com’s “10 Best Environmental Programs” List

Thursday, August 20th, 2009

August 20, 2009 (BEAUFORT, NC) – The Ocean Conservation Center in Beaufort, NC, designed by Raleigh, NC-based Frank Harmon Architect PA,  is one of the reasons Treehugger.com has placed Duke University’s Nicholas School of the Environment and Ear Sciences on its list of “10 of the Best College Environmental Program in the U.S.”

Treehugger.com is an international media outlet dedicated to driving sustainability issues into mainstream discourse. Contributor Blythe Copeland offers the following about Duke’s program:

“Students at Duke University’s Nicholas School of the Environment and Earth Sciences choose from undergraduate, graduate, or doctoral degrees in concentrations that include environmental studies and policy, earth and ocean sciences, and environmental law. The University also maintains a hands-on Marine Laboratory in Beaufort, NC, where courses on biology, science and nature writing, and marine policy take place in the Gold LEED-certified conservation center. Doctoral candidates have three research areas to pick from: marine science and conservation, which includes marine ecology and coastal geology; earth and ocean sciences, comprising climate change and solid earth processes; and environmental studies and policy, which focuses on ecosystem science and aquatic and atmospheric sciences.”

Located on Piver’s Island at the head of the Beaufort Inlet, the Ocean Conservation Center provides state-of-the-art teaching facilities for Duke’s Marine Lab, while identifying and demonstrating innovative, environmentally sound design and construction technology. Completed in 2006 as Duke’s only Gold LEED-certified building, the Center features photovoltaic cells, geothermal heating and cooling, and recycled and local materials wherever possible. The building was featured as a case study in Environmental Design + Construction magazine in June of this year.

Treehugger’s complete list of Best College Environmental Programs in the U.S. can be seen at www.treehugger.com/files/2009/08/10-of-the-best-college-environmental-programs-in-the-us.php. For more information on Duke’s program, go to www.nicholas.duke.edu/marinelab/facilities/repass.

For more information on Frank Harmon Architecture PA, visit www.frankharmon.com.

Duke’s Greenest Building Gets The Gold

Sunday, August 16th, 2009

November 25, 2008 (RALEIGH, NC) Duke University’s Ocean Conservation Center at the Marine Lab in Beaufort, N.C., designed by Frank Harmon Architect PA of Raleigh, has been awarded the U.S. Green Building Council’s LEED Gold certification, Duke’s Office of News & Communications reported today.

LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) is the national benchmark for high performance “green” buildings.

The 5,600-square-foot Center in Beaufort is Duke’s only LEED Gold certified building, Harmon was able to design it to that standard of environmental responsibility and conservation thanks to a grant from the Wallace Genetic Foundation.

Completed in 2006, the Ocean Conservation Center uses geothermal pumps for heating and cooling, solar panels for hot water, and photovoltaic rooftop panels for converting sunlight into electricity. Harmon used local building materials (yellow southern pine and Atlantic white cedar) and recycled wood throughout the structure.

Other eco-friendly features include an abundance of operable windows for natural lighting and ventilation, deep roof overhangs to keep the sun off the windows, permeable sidewalks, a zinc roof designed to last 100 years and to reflect heat, and native landscaping.

The center houses a teaching laboratory, a 48-seat lecture hall with advanced teleconferencing and videoconferencing capabilities to connect to classrooms and research labs around the globe, and a glass-enclosed commons area.

Frank Harmon has designed many LEED-certified buildings, including the Botanical Gardens Visitors Center under construction now at the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill. He designed that building to receive LEED Platinum certification, the highest level in the certification program.

For more information on Frank Harmon and his work, visit www.frankharmon.com.

For more information on Duke’s Ocean Conservation Center, visit www.nicholas.duke.edu.

Construction Underway On Duke’s State-of-the-Art Ocean Science Teaching Center

Saturday, August 15th, 2009

January 10, 2006 (BEAUFORT, NC) Construction has begun on Duke University Marine Laboratory’s new Ocean Science Teaching Center (OSTC), designed by Raleigh architect Frank Harmon, FAIA, principal of Frank Harmon Architect PA.

Located on Piver’s Island at the head of the Beaufort Inlet, the OSTC will provide state-of-the-art teaching facilities for Duke’s Marine Lab, while identifying and demonstrating innovative, environmentally sound design and construction technology.  According to Harmon, the OSTC will serve as a “beacon for sustainability, incorporating the built with the natural environment” in the context of Piver’s Island, the Rachel Carson Estuarine Research Reserve, Gallants Channel, the Cape Lookout National Seashore, Beaufort Inlet, and the historic town of Beaufort.

The new building will include three primary spaces: laboratories, a lecture hall, and a commons overlooking Beaufort Channel. Harmon’s angular design responds to the site along the edge of Piver’s Island, where it will enjoy southwest breezes blowing in from the channel and create an open, inner courtyard for the campus. The channel side of the 5000-square-foot building will feature a large, wooden porch just outside of the glass-enclosed common area, which will provide panoramic views of the natural surroundings. Building materials will include wood, wood shingles, glass, and cement panels.

To obtain a gold LEED® rating, the building will feature photovoltaic cells, geothermal heating and cooling, cisterns to collect rainwater for landscaping needs, and recycled materials will be used wherever possible. The wood-shingled exterior will complement the coastal context, according to Harmon. Landscaping will include a large new dune, which will direct the wind over the building, rather than directly at it, and protect other landscaping features.

Duke Marine Lab, whose resident faculty reflects expertise in oceanography, marine biology, ecology, physiology, biochemistry, cultural anthropology and marine policy, offers a year-round curriculum for undergraduate, professional masters and doctoral students as well as a full range of research, residential and teaching facilities.

The Lab was founded in 1931 as a summer field station for the university’s zoology and botany departments at Duke University. It has become a year-round facility used by scientists and educators from throughout the world. In 1991, the Marine Lab joined Duke University’s Nicholas School of the Environment, the first School specifically created to address environmental problems from a multidisciplinary perspective.

The public is invited to monitor the progress of the OSTC’s construction via a live “web cam” accessible on Harmon’s website, www.frankharmon.com: click on “current” projects, then Ocean Science Teaching Center and the link at the bottom of the page.

Frank Harmon is an award-winning architect whose firm was recently named “Top Firm Of The Year” by Residential Architect magazine.

Duke’s DELTA “Smart House” Breaks Ground

Saturday, August 15th, 2009

May 2, 2005 (DURHAM, NC) – Duke University’s DELTA “Smart” House officially began construction Thursday, April 21, after a special groundbreaking ceremony at the site (410 Powe Street) on the central campus.

Designed by award-winning architect Frank Harmon, FAIA, of Raleigh, the Duke Engineering Living Technology (DELTA) Smart House, part of the Pratt School of Engineering, will double as a residence and as a testing ground for 11 of Duke’s engineering students, who will monitor the mechanical and electrical systems within the house and conduct their own experiments to develop further innovations in environmental building technologies.

Over the past two months, the project has garnered national attention. It was published in the “on the boards” section of the March edition of  Residential Architect, a Washington, D.C.-based professional journal. Last week, it was featured in the American Institute of Architect’s journal, AIArchitect.

According to Harmon, this “living laboratory” will offer students a unique opportunity for hands-on engineering experience outside of the classroom.  The house will also demonstrate to the community the potential for living in a “smart” house that is both energy efficient and a harmonious inhabitant of its environment.

The site chosen for the DELTA house in Duke’s central campus greatly determined the form of the building, Harmon explained. It responds to the grid of the neighborhood while still maintaining a southern orientation for ideal solar experimentation. The house is based on a simple form that is flexible and easily changeable, he added, so that students can implement various experiments over time for monitoring the life of the house.

The plan is comprised of open spaces on both floors ideal for public activities including lab stations throughout. These spaces are flanked by the private areas of the house, which surround a functional core containing bathrooms and parts of the kitchen.

The house should be completed by the end next spring for the first students to move in by the fall of 2006.

Harmon is principal of Frank Harmon Architect PA in Raleigh. For more information visit www.frankharmon.com.

Duke University “Smart House” Garners National Attention

Saturday, August 15th, 2009

April 1, 2005 (RALEIGH, NC) Duke University’s future DELTA Smart House, designed by award-winning architect Frank Harmon, FAIA, of Raleigh, is featured this month in Residential Architect magazine’s “On The Boards” section.

DELTA is an acronym for Duke Engineering Living Technology Advancement. As the article points out, it was the brainchild of a group of Duke students who approached Harmon with the idea for “an environmentally friendly student residence that could double as a laboratory for studying and developing green building technologies.”

Using the students’ research, Harmon designed a 4200-square-foot residence featuring a host of “green” features — photovoltaic panels, geothermal heat pumps, a rainwater collection system, and vegetated roof, to name a few –  with “smart” walls that will allow the students who live there to access, adjust and monitor all electrical and mechanical systems. Other interactive features include movable skylights and windows, as well as removable sections of walls, floors and ceiling.

“The idea is that the students can create innovations for now and in a decade,” Harmon told Residential Architect’s senior editor Meghan Drueding.

The DELTA Smart House is supported by the Duke’s Pratt School of Engineering and slated for completion in January 2006. It will house 10 engineering students.

Frank Harmon is principal and founder of Frank Harmon Architect PA in Raleigh and an associate professor at North Carolina State University’s College of Design. Residential Architect is a professional journal published by Hanley Wood Magazines, Washington, D.C.

For more information on Frank Harmon, visit www.frankharmon.com.