awards and news

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

Merchants Millpond State Park Breaks Ground on NC Parks & Recreation’s First “Green” Visitors Center

Sunday, August 16th, 2009

March 11, 2008 (GATESVILLE, NC) –  On Saturday, March 15, the North Carolina Department of Parks & Recreation will hold its groundbreaking ceremony to start construction of the LEED® Gold rated Merchants Mill Pond State Park Visitors Center in Gatesville, NC, the department’s first LEED®-rated building and a model for responsible development. The ceremony will begin at 10:30 a.m.

Designed by Frank Harmon Architect PA in Raleigh – a nationally recognized leader in sustainable design – the project will include a 6500-square-foot Visitor Center with exhibit space, an auditorium, classrooms, workspace and administrative offices, plus an 600-square-foot outdoor classroom. A trail will lead from to the outdoor classroom at the edge of the pond.

According to Frank Harmon, FAIA, the building “touches the site as lightly as possible in an attempt to protect and preserve the many species of plants and wildlife that call Merchants Millpond State Park home.” The project respects the environment, he said, by minimizing the impact and footprint of both building and the parking area.

Daylight and views will be available in all occupied spaces, he said, with particularly dramatic views available through the two-story glass window in the lobby and the adjacent porch along the Millpond side of the building. Every main space in the building will benefit from natural light through at least two sides of the room, which will reduce the need for artificial illumination.

The Visitors Center will also utilize an efficient geothermal heat pump system to protect the surroundings from the noise of the mechanical equipment and to reduce energy use.

Locally available materials, such as Atlantic White Cedar wood siding, will be used on the interior and exterior of the building. “To protect the native Atlantic White Cedar species, at least 95 percent of the lumber will come from trees in the Dismal Swamp that were felled during Hurricane Fran,” Harmon noted.

Since water conservation is a primary concern, the Visitor Center will contain dual-flush toilets and waterless urinals. Collection cisterns will provide rainwater for irrigation and hosing down canoes at the Outdoor Classroom.

Merchants Millpond is a Registered Natural Heritage Area that covers 1900 acres and includes the millpond and part of Lassiter Swamp. It was established as a state park so that its diverse biological, scenic, archaeological, geological and recreational values could be protected.  For more information and directions to the park, visit http://ncparks.gov/Visit/parks/memi/main.php.

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

Frank Harmon Receives SAR/AIA Award For Modern, Innovative Residential Design

Sunday, August 16th, 2009

September 25, 2006 (RALEIGH, NC) — Frank Harmon, FAIA, principal of Frank Harmon Architect PA in Raleigh, has received an award from the South Atlantic Region (SAR) of the American Institute of Architects (AIA) for his design of a modern, environmentally sensitive residence on Shem Creek in Charleston, South Carolina that required “21st-century solutions to 400-year-old problems.”

The Low Country residence belongs to a physician who wanted a spacious house to share with his son that would feature an abundance of windows open to the view of nature and wildlife on Shem Creek, which includes 100-year-old, Spanish-moss-draped live oaks.

That request came with two enormous challenges, according to Harmon: (1) The best view of the creek would be on the western elevation, where the sun would bake the house on hot summer afternoons, and (2) the house would be located in a hurricane zone, so the windows, as well as the structure itself, would have to withstand up to 150-mph winds and accompanying debris.

For strength, the house was built of steel and laminated-wood (Southern yellow pine) framing that rests on matt-concrete footings. The roof is one large, simple plane that shelters the house from the area’s torrential rains and collects rainwater in cisterns for landscape irrigation. Carports are dramatically cantilevered to shelter the owner’s cars and, in the off-season, boat.

The house’s long, thin shape allows each room to have windows and porches overlooking the water. The operable windows create natural cross-ventilation for the interior, which features locally available Southern yellow pine paneling.

To capitalize on the view of the creek, Harmon designed a large glass wall to front the southwest side of the house. Yet this same wall had to be protected from excessive summer heat gain, while allowing cooling breezes into the house, and had to be protected from extreme weather.

The solution was a series of 10 screens, hinged above the porch, constructed of hand-fabricated metal frames, which house perforated-metal panels, which can protect the house during any season. In their horizontal (open) position, they shade the house in spring and fall. In their vertical (closed) position, they create a shaded porch, allow cooling breezes to enter the house, and keep damaging debris out. Made of hot-dip galvanized steel to resist wind-borne, corrosive salt, the 800-pound screens were also designed and installed to allow a single person to lift and balance them easily as they are moved from one position to another.

The house is approached from a long, sandy drive under a canopy of moss-draped live oaks. A low ramp leads up and into the house. At that point, Harmon says he likes to think that the view of the salt marsh – replete with blue herons, ibis, and water lilies – “unfolds like elements in a delicate Japanese painting. Yet the rock-solid structure and metal screens demonstrate the graceful strength needed to survive in a beautiful, if sometimes brutal, coastal landscape and climate.”

Harmon will receive his award during the SAR/AIA’s annual conference, which will be held this year on October 4 in Chattanooga, Tennessee. For more information on Frank Harmon, visit www.frankharmon.com.

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.