awards and news

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

Frank Harmon To Moderate Atlanta Discussion, Present Lecture

Friday, January 15th, 2010

January 15, 2010 (RALEIGH, NC) – Award-winning architect Frank Harmon, FAIA, principal of Frank Harmon Architect PA in Raleigh, NC, will serve as moderator for a panel discussion entitled “Architecturally Speaking: Discussions on Staying Current in Architecture Curricula” during the Winter Symposium presented by American Institute of Architects’ Atlanta, GA, chapter.

The symposium, including a question-and-answer session following the panel discussion, will be held at the Georgia Institute of Technology’s College of Architecture on Tuesday, January 19th, from 6-8 p.m.

(more…)

Towards A Green Architecture, by Frank Harmon

Thursday, August 20th, 2009
TOWARDS A GREEN
ARCHITECTURE
Frank Harmon
Since the Industrial Revolution in the
1800’s, architects have firmly believed
in the power of technology to solve
environmental problems. Architects
solve problems of lighting, heating,
cooling and ventilation of buildings
mechanically. We no longer deal with
heat and humidity by opening the
windows. Just the reverse: we close
them up tight and crank up the AC. As
post-Industrial Revolution architects,
we have “transformed nature” by
creating artificial environments, what
the critic Reyner Banham called the
“architecture of the well-tempered
environment.”
Ironically, buildings built prior to the
Industrial Revolution were very much
in balance with nature and solved
problems in a very natural way: buildings
were smaller and, consequently,
used less energy; windows opened;
construction materials were indigenous
to the area in which they were used.
Today, instead of solving environmental
problems, architecture creates them.
Our buildings use over fifty percent of
all energy created in the United States,
consume one third of all the trees that
are cut, and siphon twenty-five percent
of the nation’s fresh water. As a result,
today’s architects are searching for
more high-tech ways to use less energy.
Yet to make our 21st Century buildings
more environmentally responsible,
we should not only look towards
technology, but we should start looking
backwards to lessons we can learn
from pre-industrial construction.
Speaking of pre-industrial… on an
August night several years ago, my
wife and I drove to Taxco, a silver
mining town on the central plateau of
Mexico. We got lost on poorly marked
mountain roads, swerved to miss a
truck while driving in a thunderstorm,
and arrived at our hotel at 2 AM,
shaken and exhausted. The night
watchman showed us to our room,
where we collapsed, barely noticing
our surroundings.
At dawn, however, we awoke to
discover sunlight saturating the
whitewashed adobe walls of our room
and illuminating a roof made of gnarled
tree trunks. Outside our room, a
terrace overlooked the town of Taxco.
And from that vantage point, we could
see thousands of adobe houses which
seemed to grow from the hillside,
melting into the rocky hills outside the
town.
Fastened to the terrace wall were
several green glass bottles of the
sort we throw away every day in the
United States. Someone was growing
vines in the bottles, obviously caring
for the plants each morning. We felt at
home in this place, in contrast to the
frightening night on the road leading to
it. In Taxco we were surrounded by the
“picturesque” and “ravishing.” And I
believe that what underlies its beauty
are three quite elemental principles, or
qualities: deference to the land, respect
for simple, indigenous materials, and
careful use of energy. The people who
built Taxco understood these principles.
Those who live there today still do. And
these three principles—indigenous
materials, energy conservation and
responsible land use—are universal
concerns for architecture today.
Sticks and Stones
Why do most of the ancient buildings
we admire so much seem so naturally
rooted to their places? Because prior
to the Industrial Revolution, buildings
were made of materials that were
Yet in 2004, we build quite differently.
The architect Glenn Murcutt creates
houses sublimely connected to the
land of Australia, yet he then uses
sunscreens built in Norway and
fireplaces imported from South Africa.
When I built my own house in North
Carolina several years ago, I was
surprised to see a truck arrive at the
construction site piled high with steel
roof beams manufactured in Texas.
How strange that a roof for my house,
so carefully designed for the climate of
Raleigh, came from 1500 miles away,
nearly in Mexico.
It was at that point, I believe, that I
began to think locally. For an outdoor
classroom on the Scuppernong River in
Tyrrell County I specified Atlantic white
cedar has been used for generations
in eastern North Carolina to make
shingled houses and shrimp boats
because of its strength and resistance
to rot. The classroom’s contractor,
however, wanted to use western red
cedar from British Columbia, 4000
miles away. It was cheaper, he argued.
But, I countered, using a local material
would reduce the pollution caused
by transporting the red cedar and
encourage the growth of sustainable
forests nearby. If the forests are nearby,
we’ll be encouraged to take good care
of them. Besides, who wouldn’t want
to create a building in eastern North
Carolina that is as familiar and friendly
as a shrimp boat?
Taxco is built of mud, sticks, and the
fronds of palm trees. Its buildings show
the marks of their making like a clay pot
shows the fingers of the potter who
formed the bowl. Since the Industrial
Revolution, we have become detached
from our environment and alienated
structures because
believe that, just as
clay pitcher when
shared physical world
our
to those
principles so evident
resources
turn to technology
energy, we will find
Photovoltaic cells
for example, can
warmth of the sun
below a factory
use the constant
to heat and cool
the workspace. My office is currently
designing an Ocean Science Teaching
Center to be located in Beaufort, North
Carolina, where for two centuries
traditional buildings have collected
the ocean breeze for by facing into
the wind. Our building faces into the
wind also, and with geothermal wells,
a photo voltaic rooftop, and a wind
turbine it will generate all the energy
the center needs for lighting, cooling,
and laboratory equipment. The teaching
center will use fifty percent less energy
than a normal building because its
windows open to porches that shade
the walls and catch the southwest
summer breeze.
Of course, buildings that conserve
energy cost more to build. The Ocean
Science Teaching Center will cost
about fifteen percent more than a
conventional building. But compare
that to what it costs for our military to
make oil safe for SUVs. The science
center will pay for its extra cost is less
than five years. How long will it take to
replace the trees that are being killed
on our Blue Ridge Mountains from
pollution from coal-fired power plants?
For many people, energy conservative
design is synonymous with thick
walls and small windows. “Efficient”
buildings mean boring buildings. Yet
nothing could be farther from the truth.
Sustainable design doesn’t mean
bland design. Look at the old houses of
Charleston, South Carolina, to see what
I mean. Charleston’s original planter
families wanted their brick mansions to
recall English country houses. Before
long, however, they noticed that their
slaves were more comfortable in the
hot, humid summer than they were.
Modeled on African houses, the
slaves’ cabins had porches and were
one room deep, allowing the evening
breeze to flow through the structure.
Unlike the brick mansions, those wood
cabins didn’t hold the heat at night.
Thus the Charleston “single” house
evolved: one room deep with porches
opening to walled gardens. And they
are as desirable and comfortable today
as they were then.
In Taxco, thick adobe walls temper the
hot summer sun and release it into the
rooms at night when the air is cool. As
we learn to use energy more wisely, the
air around us will be fresher and cleaner,
and we’ll want to open the windows.
In Taxco, the building sites were made
by man and donkeys. Each rock ledge
and declivity inspired creative building
because the earth could not be moved.
As individual as the houses are, the
town’s landscape enjoys a unity akin to
a vine growing over rocks.
In the South, rural fields contain houses
and barns built of flimsy materials, yet
they seem as at home in their place as
cows standing in a meadow. Farmers,
not architects,
designed and
constructed
these houses
and barns, yet
today we cannot
build as well as
those farmers,
who were forced
to respect the
land and the
natural landscape
without benefit of
bulldozers.
I believe that we,
as architects,
are ethically
challenged to design and build in such
a way that enhances the land—that
makes it better than the way we found
it. And I’m not arguing for a retreat
from technology, but, rather, for a more
profound use of it. So how can we, in
the age of the Internet, air conditioning,
and photovoltaics, create the sense
of wonder found in a thatched hut in
Mexico? Good architecture lives in
complicity with our senses. Ultimately,
architecture is measured by simple
things, like sunlight sparkling in a coffee
cup. For architects, the act of building
should be an act of caring. By building
sustainably, in the words of the late
Sam Mockbee, “What we build are
shelters for the soul as well as houses
for our bodies.”
CLICK ON THIS LINK – green_arch – TO READ THE ARTICLE

Frank Harmon Discusses Lessons Learned From Vernacular Structures On “The Story” with Dick Gordon

Sunday, August 16th, 2009

February 16, 2008 (RALEIGH, NC) – When architect Frank Harmon, FAIA, joined Dick Gordon on American Public Media’s “The Story” on January 28, the conversation revolved around “the beauty and wisdom in something as simple as the design of a front porch,” as Gordon said.

Gordon invited Harmon onto his show because the award-winning architect is nationally recognized for designing innovative, environmentally sensitive structures informed by principles of sustainability that he learned by studying old, Southern farmhouses and barns, and how they addressed nature.

“Frank realized old Southern farmers – and indeed, farmers everywhere – picked up cues from the light, the landscape, and the seasons,” Gordon says, “and built structures that snugly fit the unique qualities of both the culture and the place.”

“Farmers had an instinctive way of building,” Harmon explains. “They listened to the land.” He notes that they sited their structures to capture prevailing breezes, to maximize drainage, and to leave the best of their land for their crops. They knew to face their houses south to capture the warm, low sun in the winter, he says, yet they built deep porches their to shade the interiors in the summer. They dug ponds where the wind could pass over them and be cooled before entering their houses. And because they used locally available materials, their structures were always “appropriate,” he says. “They belonged to their particular place.”

To listen to Harmon’s segment of the January 28 episode of “The Story” with Dick Gordon, go to http://thestory.org/archive/?b_start:int=5 and click on the “Listen Here” icon next to the lead story. (Harmon’s segment follows one entitled “Attachment to Oil.”)

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

“The Story” is produced by North Carolina Public Radio – WUNC and distributed nationally by American Public Media. In North Carolina, the show can be heard on WUNC-FM and WRQM-FM (90.9) in Rocky Mount Monday through Friday starting at 1 p.m.

NC Architect Frank Harmon Featured In Dwell Magazine

Sunday, August 16th, 2009

November 27, 2007 (RALEIGH, NC) – Dwell, one of the nation’s leading monthly magazines covering modern architecture and design, has devoted its December-January “Conversation” section to Raleigh, NC-based architect Frank Harmon, FAIA.

Entitled “Let’s Be Frank,” the section is a Q&A-format discussion between writer Frances Anderton and Harmon. It addresses the architect’s decades-long work as a modern, “green” designer and how his approach to this sensibility is informed by regionalism: the vernacular specifics of site and climate.

“Harmon hews to the notion that a structure should be specific to its place in terms of materials and its relationships to geography and climate,” Anderton writes. The architect stresses, however, that “I am not interested in vernacular to be sentimental. I am interested in what it can teach us. All vernacular architecture is sustainable.”

Harmon answers questions about his influences (including the late Harwell Hamilton Harris, FAIA), professional evolution (from renowned architect Richard Meier’s New York office to his own firm, Frank Harmon Architect), and the “current green awareness,” as Anderton puts it.

Of the latter, Harmon offers: “I’ve been doing green stuff for 25 years, and over that time I’ve had to educate my clients, and that has been very difficult. Today they all come to me and want something sustainable.”

Projects featured with the “Conversation” include the Open-Air Classroom at the North Carolina Museum of Natural Science’s Prairie Ridge Eco-station in Raleigh, the Strickland-Ferris house in Raleigh’s Laurel Hills subdivision, and the Taylor vacation house in the Bahamas.

The December-January edition of Dwell is available on newsstands now. For more information on the magazine, visit www.dwell.com.

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

Frank Harmon To Present “America’s New Regionalism” During 2007 AIA National Convention

Sunday, August 16th, 2009

April 15, 2007 (RALEIGH, NC) – Raleigh, NC-based architect Frank Harmon, FAIA, principal of Frank Harmon Architect PA and an associate professor of architecture at the North Carolina State University College of Design, will present a seminar entitled “America’s New Regionalism” during the 2007 National American Institute of Architect Convention to be held in San Antonio, Texas, May 3-5.

Harmon’s seminar will identify principles of innovative regional architecture. The purpose of the seminar, he says, is to help architects across the nation learn how to: (1) discover the many influences a building derives from its region, from overall design to construction details; (2) identify methods for combining traditional building components and techniques to create new, sustainable buildings; (3) analyze systems for designing comfortable buildings that minimize damage to the environment and maximize the enjoyment of light, air, color, texture, and patterns; (4) comprehend public perception of regionally appropriate design; and (5) evaluate techniques for achieving design excellence on limited budgets.

Internationally acclaimed architects Ted Flato, FAIA, of Lake/Flato in San Antonio, Trey Trahan, FAIA, of Trahan Architects in Baton Rouge, LA, and AIA Gold Medal winner Antoine Predock of Albuquerque, NM, will join Harmon for the seminar and, along with Harmon, use their own work to demonstrate “America’s New Regionalism.”

Harmon’s work, which ranges from small sheds to 70,000-square-foot corporate headquarters, has won more AIA/NC awards than any other firm in the state and has been published in international, national and regional periodicals and books, including Architectural Record and Waterfront Homes & Design. His work has become synonymous with sustainable, or “green,” architecture, and his firm was named Top Firm Of The Year by Residential Architect magazine in 2005. In 2004 he received a Business Week/Architectural Record International Honor Award for his design of the Blacksmith Studio at the Penland School of Arts & Crafts, Penland, NC. His work is currently featured in the National Building Museum in Washington, D.C.

Harmon is a veteran design awards judge and speaker at regional and national design conferences, and an accomplished writer. He has presented seminars for past National AIA conferences and his writing on architectural issues has been published in numerous periodicals including the international Docomomo Journal.

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

Wood – The Ultimate “Green” Material: Frank Harmon To Address Canadian Wood Council

Sunday, August 16th, 2009

October 17, 2006 (RALEIGH, NC)Frank Harmon, FAIA, principal of Frank Harmon Architect PA in Raleigh, will present a seminar entitled “Wood: The Ultimate ‘Green” Material” during the Canadian Wood Council’s first annual Wood Design & Building Expo to be held in Anaheim, CA, November 6-8, 2006.

The Expo will bring together wood professionals, designers and architects from around the world to share their knowledge and expertise through education sessions focusing on specific professions and topic areas related to products, applications, and design.

Frank Harmon is well known for award-winning buildings of primarily wood construction. “Harmon’s portfolio is filled with small projects in which he has achieved a remarkable refinement with the humblest materials,” observed senior editor Sarah Hart in Architectural Record (February 2001).

According to Harmon, his seminar at thee Expo will teach participants three primary points: (1) How to observe and learn from traditional/vernacular techniques to inform a modern architectural application, (2) How to detail wood for durability in warm, humid climates, and (3) How to take advantage of wood as the ultimate “green,” common, renewable material.

“The vocabulary of construction in the South has been defined by wood for over 300 years,” Harmon said recently. “That was the only building material the settlers in North Carolina, South Carolina, and Virginia had. Yet when we gained access to other materials, wood endured. Why?” He counts six primary reasons – all of which, he said, point to wood as the ultimate ‘green’ material.

First, he said, wood is available locally and is renewable.  “It doesn’t have to be trucked in, and it can be replenished through careful forestry practices. Besides, if we harvest wood locally, we’ll take better care of our forests.”

Secondly, wood, especially old wood from historic structures, can be reused or recycled. “In the 19th century, the major commercial building types in North Carolina were textile mills and tobacco manufacturing facilities. They were made of virgin-growth long leaf pine. They are being torn down now, but their beams can be reused in many ways, such as flooring and trim, thanks to the advent of local sawmills that specialize in the reuse of old lumber.”

The third reason wood has endured as a building material for over 300 years, he said, is because “by using the correct species and by paying attention to construction methods, wood becomes extremely durable and permanent. Early settlers quickly learned that by building broad overhangs and raising their houses and barns up off the ground to keep them dry, they were not only making their buildings pleasant for inhabitants. They were also protecting the wood structure itself.

The fourth reason: “Wood is an economical material, compared to steel and concrete. It’s practical. And pound for pound, it is as strong as steel.”

The fifth reason: “Wood is familiar, friendly. People can connect with and relate to the look and feel of wood. We understand it. Its imperfect nature also makes it inherently interesting. And if we read those imperfections, we can use it to its best advantage.”

Finally, he pointed out that, “If it is used properly, would doesn’t need finishes, and some of our most toxic environmental substances are a byproduct of paints and stains.”

For the past 20 years, Harmon has been studying 100-year-old vernacular structures — farmhouses, barns, boats, and old textile mills — to learn how they were built and why they have remained intact all these years. “This has had a dramatic impact on the way I design and build,” he said. “I’ve been able to translate the lessons I’ve learned from these old, wooden structures into a modern architectural vocabulary.”

More information on the 2006 Wood Design & Build Expo is available on internet at www.wooddesignandbuilding.com. For more information on Frank Harmon, visit www.frankharmon.com.