awards and news

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

Outside The Not So Big House — In Raleigh: Landscape Architect’s Work Feature In New Book

Saturday, August 15th, 2009

March 21, 2006 (Raleigh, NC) — “Our homes often reflect a particular view of our place in the continuum between the built environment and world of nature,” writes bestselling author Sarah Susanka in Outside The Not So Big House, the newest addition to her popular collection of The Not So Big House books which she co-wrote with noted landscape designer Julie Moir Messervy. In fact, this observation opens a 10-page section of the book devoted to the garden design by Raleigh landscape architect Judy Harmon, ASLA, for the house she shares with her husband, architect Frank Harmon, FAIA.

New to bookstores from Taunton Press, Outside The Not So Big House combines Susanka’s and Messervy’s talents to show readers “how to bring house and garden into perfect harmony.”

Judy Harmon’s section, entitled “The Attraction of Opposites,” demonstrates, through study and lush photography by Grey Crawford, a garden “designed to mirror and attract oppositions between inside and out, hard and soft, light and dark, and private and public.” The authors discuss how Harmon subdivided her property into “ a series of outdoor rooms with different uses, sizes, shapes, furniture, and plantings” to make the grounds as inhabitable as the different rooms in the house. The last page of the section focuses on details of the landscape design, including simple organic forms, the oval lawn, outdoor accessories, and complementary hues.

“When a husband and wife are also architect and landscape architect,” Susanka writes, “there’s a wonderful alchemy that takes place, as can be seen in this home – a perfect integration of landscape and building.”

Besides Harmon’s work, the book includes 24 other homes and gardens from across the country that the authors feel illustrate their design ideas.

The Harmons’ award-winning house (completed in 1994) and gardens are located off Brooks Avenue near N.C. State University and can also be seen on Frank Harmon’s website, www.frankharmon.com (click on “projects” then “Harmon Residence”). Outside The Not So Big House is available wherever books are sold.

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.

Raleigh Designers Present Seminars at Major East Coast Conference & Expo

Saturday, August 15th, 2009

June 7, 2005 (RALEIGH, NC) Architect Frank Harmon, FAIA, principal of Frank Harmon Architect PA, and landscape architect Dick Bell, FASLA, both of Raleigh, will present seminars at the 17th annual Architecture Exchange East Conference and Expo (ArchEx) to be held in Richmond, Va., November 3-4, sponsored by the Virginia Society of the American Institute of Architects. ArchEx is a major educational and professional forum for all building and design professionals and related industry along the east coast.

Harmon’s seminar, entitled “Architecture With A Conscience: Designing Contemporary Regional Architecture,” will illustrate “the importance of place and region to innovative, appropriate and sustainable design,” he said, using his and other architects’ projects as examples. He hopes participants will learn “why clients’ needs are an architect’s greatest creative source; how attention to climate, wind patterns and hydrology can liberate architecture; and how the roots of sustainable design are found in our vernacular architecture.”

Bell’s seminar, entitled “The Creation of Sustainable Environments: The Genesis Of Two Projects,” will “shed light on what it takes to create an urban project of value within a sea of suburban mediocrity,” he said, “using two of my own projects as case studies.” Those projects are North Carolina State University’s “Brickyard” plaza and a proposed mixed-use redevelopment for Bell’s own Water Garden Office Park on Raleigh’s Glenwood Avenue. His objective is to give participants “a keen grasp of the fact that landscape architecture must encompass land planning within the natural systems it effects.”

ArchEx, promoted as “three days of learning, networking and exchanging ideas,” is open to architects, landscape architects, engineers, interior designers, contractors, planners, students and industry leaders. It includes 67,000 square feet of space of industry support exhibitions as well as Design Showcase, which features works by architects, landscape architects and interior designers. For more information and registration, visit the website: www.archex.net or contact Dr. Linda Halstead, Director of Professional Development by email: lhalstead@aiava.org.