awards and news

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

Judy and Frank Harmon Discuss “What I Learned Doing My House” During Boston Convention

Sunday, August 16th, 2009

March 24, 2008 (RALEIGH, NC) – Award-winning landscape architect Judy Harmon, ASAL, and her husband, architect Frank Harmon, FAIA, will participate in a panel discussion entitled “What I Learned Doing My Own House” during Residential Design & Construction (RDC), a two-day convention and trade show for design and construction professionals, home owners, and consumers to be held April 2 and 3 in the Seaport World Trade Center in Boston, MA.

The Raleigh couple created their home and gardens together in 1994, juxtaposing Frank Harmon’s thoroughly Modern residential design with Judy Harmon’s curvilinear garden design, which creates a paisley of sunny, open spaces and dense, shaded foliage. According to the Harmons, the house and gardens were designed as halves of the greater “whole” — as equal parts of the living experience. Their residence has won design awards and has been featured in numerous publications, including the book Outside The Not-so-big House by architect Sarah Susanka and landscape architect Julie Moir Messervy.

According to Claire Conroy, editor of Residential Architect magazine and moderator for this panel, the Harmons and other invited speakers will discuss “the surprises and delights they experienced designing their own dwellings. Was it a dream come true or the client from the dark side? What would they do differently if they could? What insights did they gain for other projects and other clients?” The panel will offer “a behind-the-scenes look at what architects create for themselves.”

“What I Learned Doing My Own House” will take place on Thursday, April 3, from 1-3 p.m. Joining Conroy and the Harmons will be Mark Hutker, AIA, of Hutker Architects in Vineyard Haven, MA, and Mark McInturff, FAIA, of McInturff Architects in Bethesda, MD.

The RDC offers workshops and professional development opportunities to enrich residential design and construction professional’s design and technical skills. Nationally and internationally recognized industry leaders share their knowledge and expertise. The convention allows the public to meet architects and interior designers and to view hundreds of exhibits featuring new products, new technologies and both traditional and non-traditional design. For more information visit www.buildboston.com.

For more information on the Harmons’ home, visit www.frankharmon.com. Click on “projects” then “Harmon residence.”

Modern House At Home In A Traditional Neighborhood: Landscape Design Receives NCASLA Award

Saturday, August 15th, 2009

September 28, 2005 (RALEIGH, NC) “Garden in a Busy Neighborhood,” a project designed by landscape architect Judy Harmon, ASAL, that demonstrates how innovative landscape design can make a Modern house fit comfortably into a traditional neighborhood and become a private oasis for a family in the midst of a busy area, recently received a Merit Award for residential design presented by the North Carolina Chapter of the American Society of Landscape Architects (NCASLA).

The award-winning project, located in a busy, established neighborhood on Brooks Avenue near Hillsborough Street in Raleigh, is actually Harmon’s own property, which she designed in collaboration with her husband, architect Frank Harmon, FAIA, who designed their residence.

The decision to site the long, narrow house near the south boundary and to leave the center of the site open for a sunny garden and swimming pool were keys to Harmon’s successful design. Walls and fences, covered in vines, follow the perimeter of the site for pool protection, privacy, visual quietness, and to some extent, a sound barrier.

The couple chose the site, Harmon said, because of its proximity to N.C. State University (Frank Harmon serves as an associate professor of architecture) and because it features mature mulberry and willow oak trees. To insure the health of those trees, the house rests on piers rather than a trench foundation. This also allowed Harmon to site the house and garden walls near the trees without hurting their roots.

Since the house featured large glass windows, Harmon planted the north side of the property with wax myrtles and live oaks for privacy. She used three existing large trees to create a dark, shadowy entrance to the house in contrast with the bright views of the garden from the large living room window. Later, she added a grove of redbuds to the west near the dining room. Over the years she also added a long daylily bed, a small water lily pool, and a large perennial area “which was planned to be more private than a typical front yard but friendlier than most backyards since it was on the street,” Harmon said. Other outdoor “rooms” provide for gardening, entertaining, swimming and relaxing.

To further enhance the health of the mature trees on site, Harmon specified permeable paving material for the driveway and car “court” so that water can penetrate to the roots.

The awards jury called the project “innovative” and expressed its appreciation for Harmon’s efforts to protect the trees.