awards and news

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

NC Botanical Garden’s New LEED Platinum Education Center Opens

Tuesday, October 13th, 2009

October 13, 2009 (CHAPEL HILL, NC) – Frank Harmon Architect PA of Raleigh, NC, has completed the North Carolina Botanical Garden’s new and thoroughly “green” 29,656-square-foot  Education Center at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Governor Beverly Perdue attended the dedication ceremony and praised the project for being slated as the first LEED Platinum certified building in the state.

A multi-award-winning “green” architect, Frank Harmon, FAIA, designed the center as a cluster of eco-friendly buildings, connected by breezeways and covered porches, that nestles into a wooded hillside.

The “Flow of Ideas Exhibit” and Information Hall comprises the center section, along with a gift shop, library, and an area for plant sales. The Reeves Auditorium is located the western section, and the eastern wing houses classrooms and offices.

The cluster composition – or “family of buildings,” as Harmon likes to call it – serves as a gateway to the Botanical Garden and allows visitors to flow through the exterior space to the gardens behind the center and on to the trails and adjacent creek.

A new parking lot with porous paving provides access from Old Mason Farm Road to the Center. New gardens, to be developed over the next two years, will create expanded outdoor spaces.

All systems and materials in the Education Center were designed to minimize environmental impact and support human health. Green technologies include photovoltaic panels, above- and below-ground rainwater cisterns, bio-retention ponds, geothermal heating and cooling, natural day-lighting, and low-flow plumbing. Construction materials were obtained from within a 500-mile radius, including lumber milled from the site. Recycled components include steel beams made out of scrap metal from automobiles.

Embracing all the principles of sustainable design, the NC Botanical Garden Visitor’s Education Center is slated to receive LEED-Platinum certification.

“This is a gentle building with a green heart, embracing its North Carolina hillside and forming a doorway for future generations,” Harmon said.

Director Peter White has called the Center a “generously proportioned, green, and welcoming facility [that] will have a transformative impact on the way the Garden is experienced.”

Harmon noted that all stakeholders in the project — staff, visitors, faculty, Foundation and neighbors – actively participated in the design concept.

“We facilitated 20 design workshops, drawing on the energy and knowledge of all constituents to create the building and landscape design,” he said.

David Swanson served as the landscape architect for the project. Isaac Panzarella PE of Consider Design created the mechanical and green systems design. Carl Simmons PE served as civil engineering and Charles Murphy PE served as structural design. The project manager was Matt Griffith, AIA, of Frank Harmon Architecture PA.

The grand opening and dedication took place October 12 to coincide with University Day, which celebrates the laying of the cornerstone of the first building at UNC-Chapel Hill.

For more information on the North Carolina Botanical Garden and its new Education Center, go to www.ncbg.unc.edu.

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


Frank Harmon To Serve As Juror For AIA/Northern Virginia Design Awards Program

Sunday, August 16th, 2009

May 12, 2009 (RALEIGH, NC) – North Carolina architect Frank Harmon, FAIA, principal of the award-winning firm Frank Harmon Architect PA in Raleigh, will serve as juror for the North Virginia Chapter of the AIA 2009 Design Awards. The judging will take place in the offices of Pearce Brinkley Cease & Lee in Raleigh on May 15. Harmon will present the winners in Alexandria, Virginia on June 8.

Frank Harmon is a recognized leader in modern “green” architecture and an adjunct professor of architect at North Carolina State University’s College of Design. He is also a frequent juror for design awards programs across the country and a frequent speaker at design conferences on the subject of modern, innovative, regional architecture.

The AIA Northern Virginia Chapter Design Awards recognize its members’ achievements in the design of the built environment. Any licensed AIA member of the Northern Virginia Chapter may enter a project. All work submitted for the 2009 awards program had to be completed after June 1, 2004.

Categories for the awards are: Institutional Architecture, Commercial Architecture, Residential Architecture, Interior Architecture, Historic Architecture, Conceptual / Unbuilt Architecture, and Urban Design and Master Planning. A special category — the Herlong Memorial Award – recognizes work by associate or intern AIA members.

AIA/Northern Virginia is headquartered in Alexandria, VA. For more information on the chapter’s awards program, go to www.aianova.org.

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

Harmon House, Model Included In A Special Exhibit at the National Building Museum

Saturday, August 15th, 2009

December 15, 2005 (RALEIGH, NC) An award-winning vacation house in the Bahamas, designed by Raleigh architect Frank Harmon, FAIA, principal of Frank Harmon Architect PA, will be included in the upcoming exhibition, “The Green House: New Directions in Sustainable Architecture” at the National Building Museum in Washington, D.C. beginning May 2006, and afterwards at other venues in the United States.

According to curatorial associate Reed Haslach, the exhibition “will examine what makes a home ‘green,’ sustainable building materials and home products, and will be highlighted with examples of those avant-garde architectural projects that were part of the companion catalog. (Princeton Architectural Press published the catalog, or book, earlier this year under the same name.) Among those projects is Harmon’s Taylor Vacation House in Scotland Cay, Bahamas.

In addition to photos and drawings of the Taylor House, the curators have commissioned Harmon to construct a scale model of the project for use in the Museum (through May 2007) and in the subsequent traveling exhibition.

The Taylor house was completed in 2000. In 1999 it received an Honor Award from the North Carolina chapter of the American Institute of Architects (AIA/NC). In 2000 it received an Honor Award from the Triangle section of AIA/NC. And in 2003, it was named Residential Architect magazine’s “House of the Year.”

The National Building Museum explores and celebrates architecture, design, engineering, construction, and urban planning. To learn more about the museum, visit the website: www.nbm.org.

The Green House: New Directions in Sustainable Architect is available at area bookstores. To read more about it, visit Amazon.com. For more information on the Taylor Vacation House, visit Harmon’s website — www.frankharmon.com — and click on “Projects.”