Author: modernist

Modern Living Series: Robert C. Metcalf's Patterson House Tour – Sat., June 28th(this saturday!)

Modern Living Series: Robert C. Metcalf’s Patterson House Tour – Sat., June 28th
LOGISTICS UPDATE: The residence is located at 1605 Harbal, Ann Arbor. The homeowners have received permission to allow parking on both sides of the street on Saturday. So, you can park on Harbal even though it says no parking!

Also: You will be asked to leave shoes at the door, no interior photography and the owners ask that you do not excursion around the property due to the steep slope and poison ivy!

patterson

Currently, the UM Museum of Art is featuring an exhibit (through July 13th) titled “Three Michigan Architects.” This house is one of the fourteen projects in the Robert C. Metcalf exhibit. It was the goal of a2modern to coordinate an interior view of one of the projects featured in the exhibit, in a sense, to add the layer of time and living patterns and needs to the discussion.

a2modern is pleased to host a tour that offers homeowners and enthusiasts a rare opportunity to experience Robert Metcalf’s residential work. This home, designed in 1956 and built in 1957 for Kenneth and Elizabeth Patterson, is an excellent example of Metcalf’s site planning, use of natural materials, and blending the inside with the outside. Present homeowners Audra Wenzlow and Dave Hollinden will be in attendance to answer questions about the home and its history.

Time: 2:00-5:00 p.m. (note: 2:00 time is now sold out but there is room at 3:00 or 4:00!)
When: Sat., June 28th
Where: 1605 Harbal Street
Cost: $10/person
Space is limited, see registration link below.

Light refreshments will be served.

Registration
This event has limited space availability.
Registration is required.
REGISTER HERE

Logistics: The residence is located at 1605 Harbal. The homeowners have received permission to allow parking on both sides of the street on Saturday. So, you can park on Harbal even though it says no parking!

Questions? email: modernists@a2modern.org.

[Image source: Robert Metcalf Collection, Bentley Historical Library, University of Michigan]

Historic Ann Arbor: An Architectural Guide By Susan Wineberg & Patrick McCauley (update on booksellers)

Update: “Historic Ann Arbor: An Architectural Guide” by Susan Wineberg & Patrick McCauley and published by the Ann Arbor Historical Foundation can be purchased at:

Bookbound
Downtown Home & Garden
Museum on Main Street
(Washtenaw County Historical Society)
Nicola’s
The Mail Shoppe

It is a well researched guide to over 350 properties in Ann Arbor.

Modern Living Series: Tour of Detroit’s Mies van der Rohe Historic District

Modern Living Series: Tour of Detroit’s Mies van der Rohe Historic District

Time: 1:00-3:00 p.m.
When: Saturday, July 19th
Cost: $30/person, registration required

Detroit’s Mies van der Rohe Historic District in Lafayette Park includes 186 cooperatively owned Town House and Court House units, three apartment towers, an elementary school, a retail district, and a 13-acre park known as the Lafayette Plaisance.

The neighborhood has been hailed as “one of the most spatially successful and socially significant statements in urban renewal” and as a “prototype for future urban development predicated on human values.” The site contains the largest collection of buildings by the architect Mies van der Rohe in the world, as well as the only group of row houses built to his specifications.

The tour will be conducted by Christian Unverzagt and Neil McEachern, both long-time residents of Lafayette Park. Unverzagt is an Assistant Professor of Practice in Architecture at the University of Michigan’s Taubman College. McEachern, now retired, is a former Detroit Public Schools principal.

You can learn more at MiesDetroit.org

Space is limited, REGISTER HERE

LOGISTICS: Transportation is own your own. We will meet at the Mies van der Rohe Plaza in the Shops at Lafayette Park at 12:45 p.m. Parking is available in the shops (off Lafayette). Alternatively, public parking is available on Joliet Place and Nicolet Place (off Rivard) and the plaza may be approached from the north by walking through the Plaisance.

Questions? email: modernists@a2modern.org.

Modern Living Series: Robert C. Metcalf's Patterson House Tour – Sat., June 28th

Modern Living Series: Robert C. Metcalf’s Patterson House Tour – Sat., June 28th

patterson

a2modern is pleased to host a tour that offers homeowners and enthusiasts a rare opportunity to experience Robert Metcalf’s residential work. This home, designed in 1956 and built in 1957 for Kenneth and Elizabeth Patterson, is an excellent example of Metcalf’s site planning, use of natural materials, and blending the inside with the outside. Present homeowners Audra Wenzlow and Dave Hollinden will be in attendance to answer questions about the home and its history.

Time: 2:00-5:00 p.m.
When: Sat., June 28th
Where: 1605 Harbal Street
Cost: $10/person
Space is limited, see registration link below.

Light refreshments will be served.

Registration
This event has limited space availability.
Registration is required.
REGISTER HERE

Questions? email: modernists@a2modern.org.

Logistics: The residence is located at 1605 Harbal. There is limited parking. a2modern will email registered attendees on parking specifics closer to the event.

[Image source: Robert Metcalf Collection, Bentley Historical Library, University of Michigan]

a2modern is officially a 501 (c) 3 organization

(June 2, 2014)

a2modern is now a not for profit 501 (c) 3 organization! As of today, a2modern can accept donations, gifts, and other transfers to the organization. All proceeds from the organization are used for the mission of the organization which is to raise the awareness and appreciation of modern design and architecture. To date, a2modern has done this through programs, tours, research, lectures and printed materials like the a2modern map! Please consider giving to a2modern to continue the work we have been doing and to support new programs and projects!

Expanding the Line: Architectural Delineation (exhibit closes May 30th!)

Expanding the Line: Architectural Delineation

Exhibit: April 14th-May 30th

Location: Gallery One, Washtenaw Community College Student Center Building Room 108

This exhibition chronicles architectural drawing techniques from the 1920’s through the present day with illustrations of local buildings. Methods include drawing on vellum, mylar, and blueprint as well as sepia and blackline reproduction techniques. Technologies include a pin register drafting system, Computer-Aided Drafting, laser scanning, and Building Information Modeling (BIM).

Exhibits will include Hill Auditorium and General Motors Headquarters by Albert Kahn Associates, the Jean Paul Slusser home by George B. Brigham, the Dale Fosdick residence by David W. Osler, and the E. W. Reynolds home by Robert C. Metcalf.

Gallery One is located on the first floor of WCC’s Student Center building. Its hours are Monday and Tuesday from 10:00am to 6:00pm, Wednesday and Thursday from 10:00am to 8:00pm, and Friday from 10:00am to noon.

See WCC site for further information.

"Historic Ann Arbor: An Architectural Guide" Book signing this Thursday 5/22

For Immediate Release
May 10, 2014

The Ann Arbor Historical Foundation proudly announces the publication its new book Historic Ann Arbor: An Architectural Guide.
The book describes over 350 buildings in Ann Arbor, including 40 University of Michigan buildings. Style sections describe those of the 19th and 20th centuries including Mid-Century Modern. Superb examples of this style can be found in many parts of Ann Arbor.
The authors, Susan Wineberg and Patrick McCauley, will be signing books at a book release event on May 22 from 4-8 PM at the Ann Arbor City Club at 1830 Washtenaw Ave. Refreshments will also be served.

Contacts:
Patricia Austin, pkweaustin@comcast.net, President of the Foundation
Susan Wineberg, swines@umich.edu
Patrick McCauley, patrickmmccauley@hotmail.com

Book Flyer 3

Michigan Modern: Design That Shaped America, GRAM exhibit now open!

Michigan Modern: Design That Shaped America
Exhibit now open through August 24, 2014
Grand Rapids Art Museum, Grand Rapids, Michigan
For more information on the exhibit and video see: http://www.artmuseumgr.org/michigan-modern/

When Michigan’s industry and design intertwined, Michigan became an epicenter of modern design, with visionaries statewide turning from the simple generation of products to design that rippled throughout the country. Detroit’s automobile manufacturers styled automobiles synonymous with the American dream. The state’s furniture designers revolutionized the look of the American office and home. Michigan architects Albert Kahn, Eero Saarinen, and Minoru Yamasaki defined an era. Michigan’s industry, prosperity, and educational institutions attracted the design talent that formed the foundation for modern American design. This exhibition celebrates Michigan’s outstanding contributions to Modern design, and highlights the people who made it happen.

This exhibition was organized by the Michigan State Historic Preservation Office in association with Cranbrook Art Museum and curated by MPdL Studio of Ann Arbor, Michigan.

Also, see review article by Jeffrey Kaczmarczyk | jkaczmarczyk@mlive.com at: http://www.mlive.com/entertainment/grand-rapids/index.ssf/2014/05/how_michigan_designs_shaped_th.html#incart_river_default

Michigan Historic Preservation Network Conference "Michigan Places Matter"

a2modern was asked to participate in panel discussion at 2014 MHPN Annual Statewide Preservation Conference – “Michigan Places Matter”

On Friday, May 16, 2014 from 9:00 AM – 10:30 AM, a2modern will be participate in a panel discussion on Modernism at the Michigan Historic Preservation’s statewide conference in Jackson, MI. Michigan Modern: The Local Side to the Designs that Shaped America, will showcase the growth of local efforts to recognize and protect the wealth of Modernism in Michigan communities. It includes the efforts in Ann Arbor, Midland and Southfield.

The State Historic Preservation Office (SHPO) will provide an overview of how Michigan continues to redefine the influence it exercised as Modernism spread nationally. Following that presentation, each local community has been asked to present each has worked with their diverse resources to survey, research, and promote Modernism in their community. This includes discussing how their activities might apply to the communities of those participating in the session.

Tracy Aris is representing a2modern on the panel that includes Brian Conway, SHPO; Craig McDonald, Director of The Alden B. Dow Home and Studio; and Kenson J. Siver, City Council President, City of Southfield. Melissa Milton-Pung of the Washtenaw County Planning Office will be the Panel Moderator.

“a2modern is pleased to be asked to participate in this conference,” explains Nancy Deromedi. “It is a recognition for our activities and partnerships that highlight and promote Ann Arbor’s significant contributions to Modernism.”

New Michigan DoCoMoMo chapter to meet at MHPN conference May 15th

The newly formed Michigan Chapter of DoCoMoMo will hold a meeting during the Michigan Historic Preservation Network’s Annual Conference in Jackson next week. We hope you can join us for our first general meeting as a provisional chapter, all are welcome. Bring your own lunch, there is a food vendor at the conference location.

While you are encouraged to register for the MHPN conference , it is not required in order to attend this special DoCoMoMo Michigan Chapter meeting.

Thursday, May 15th, 12:15 PM

Commonwealth Commerce Center

209 E Washington, Jackson, MI

The Atrium Area-Second Floor

(across from the Deli outside room 299, use WEST entrance for easiest access)

Commonwealth Commerce Center

209 E Washington Ave, Jackson, MI 49201

Look for Amara, she will be standing with a DOCOMOMO sign, call her at 303-819-2486 if you get lost.