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DESCRIPTION
Selected architectural projects.
Citation preview
Mark S. HeSSelgrave, arcHitect
curriculuM vitae
EducationMaster of ArchitectureYale School of Architecture, 1985Bachelor of Science / ArchitectureCalifornia Polytechnical State University, 1980Senior Year Abroad, Florence, Italy, 1979-1980
RegistrationRegistered Architect, State of Connecticut, 1990
Professional Societies & ActivitiesLEED AP, 2009Honorable Mention, Michigan Vietnam Veterans Memorial, 1996Drawing Prize, Yale University, 1985
TeachingAdjunct Professor, State University of New York / Purchase 1986-1987Principal Teaching Assistant, Descriptive Drawing, Yale, 1984-1985Teaching Assistant, Descriptive Drawing, Yale University, 1983-1984
PublicationsRetrospecta Journal, Representative of Koeter StudioRetrospecta Journal, Representative of Drawing A-54Archetype Magazine, Outhouse Competition, Citation
Projects with Pelli Clarke Pelli Architects (2004 – 2009)Transbay Transit CenterSan Francisco, CaliforniaCooperative Arts & Humanities High SchoolNew Haven, ConnecticutCity Center Convention CenterLas Vegas, NevadaPrivate ResidenceLivermore, CaliforniaAdrienne Arsht Center for the Performing ArtsMiami, Florida
Projects with Fletcher Thompson, Inc. (2002 – 2004)Brien McMahon High School & Center for Global StudiesNorwalk, ConnecticutStudent Union Expansion
University of New Haven, ConnecticutLafayette School RenovationElizabeth, New Jersey
Projects with Flad & Associates (2000 – 2002)Connecticut Innovations Corporate HeadquartersRocky Hill, ConnecticutMarshak Building Renovation and AdditionCity University of New York, New YorkEli Lilly Building 88Indianapolis, Indiana
Projects with Cesar Pelli & Associates (1985 – 2000)Taussig Cancer CenterCleveland Clinic Foundation; Cleveland, OhioLerner Research InstituteCleveland Clinic Foundation; Cleveland, OhioSRB2 / Luck BuildingUniversity of California, Los AngelesHumanities and Social Sciences BuildingUniversity of California-RiversideMathematics and Science buildingTrinity College; Hartford, ConnecticutCenter for Molecular MedicineYale University; New Haven, Connecticut Ley Student CenterRice University; Houston, TexasMath Institute and Lecture HallInstitute for Advanced Studies; Princeton, New Jersey
Technology Mark is versed in AutoCad, having established tool palettes and CAD standards for several of his projects. He has some experience with 3D cad and Sketchup. Mark is also proficient in Adobe Photoshop, InDesign, and Acrobat Pro, as well as MS Word, Excel, Project, and Powerpoint. He is also handy with a No. 2 pencil.
repreSentative Work
tranSbay tranSit center, San FranciSco, ca
Mark was Quality Manager for the Transbay Transit Center, a large feder-ally funded transportation project in San Francisco. The building will take up more than 5 acres over 4 city blocks in the heart of the city. As Quality Manager for the project, Mark worked independently from, and paral-lel with, the project team. Consultant assigned Quality Representatives that reported directly to him. In his role as QM, Mark was instrumental in creating the Plan, developing measurable procedures that were true to the plan and to the design firms’ culture, and enforcing the procedures with the project team on an ongoing basis.
Transbay Transit Center; Aerial ViewTransbay Transit Center; View at Street Level
tranSbay tranSit center, San FranciSco, ca
Transbay Transit Center; Quality Assurance FormTransbay Transit Center; Quality Assurance Procedure
cooperative artS & HuManitieS HigH ScHool, neW Haven, ct
Mark was the Design Team Leader for the Cooperative Arts and Humanities High School in New Haven, Connecticut. In that role, he coordinated and produced bid documents for this complex building, while developing final details that enhanced the design intent. Through construction completion, Mark lead the design team to meet a tight budget and aggressive schedule.
New Haven’s Cooperative Arts and Humanities High School is a state-of-the-art facility for performance and education in the midst of the city’s bustling arts and entertainment district. It includes a full-sized public theater, a “black box” experimen-tal theater, and exhibition spaces and all of the elements of a traditional high school, including a gymnasium, cafeteria, and classrooms. To maintain a lively street presence, the building has retail stores on the ground floor and direct public access to the theater lobby and galleries.
The heart of the school is a 350-seat theater, complete with orchestra and balcony seating, an orchestra pit, scene shop, costume storage, dressing rooms, and loading dock. The theater features a sprung stage with a full fly loft, professional theater lighting, and a projection and control booth. In addition, the school includes rehearsal rooms, a ceramic studio, a photography darkroom, a graphic lab, a score library, a keyboard lab, a film and lecture hall, and creative writing rooms.
Coop High School; West Elevation
Coop High School; View from Northeast
Coop High School; View from Southeast
cooperative artS & HuManitieS HigH ScHool, neW Haven, ct
Coop High School; First Floor Plan
cooperative artS & HuManitieS HigH ScHool, neW Haven, ct
cooperative artS & HuManitieS HigH ScHool, neW Haven, ct
Mark was responsible for developing the design of the main facade of this 300,000 square foot convention center. Conceived as folded glass planes, the design solution eventually settled on architecturally exposed structural steel bow trusses to support the facade. The design went through several iterations, from vertical to horizontal trusses, each coordinated with the structural team to determine the best solution. The geometry was carefully mapped to insure the constructibility and cost-effectiveness of the form.
city center convention center; laS vegaS, nevada
City Center Convention Center; View across Pool PodiumCity Center Convention Center; Plan
City Center Convention Center; Rendering of InteriorCity Center Convention Center; Aerial View
city center convention center; laS vegaS, nevada
City Center Convention Center; Study of Vertical Truss OptionCity Center Convention Center; Study of Truss Connection
City Center Convention Center; Study of Truss Connection
private reSidence, liverMore, ca
Mark was the Technical Designer for the Livermore residence. In that role, he coordinated and produced bid documents for the building, while developing final details that enhanced the design intent. As with any small project, the details do much to form the character of the place.
The Livermore Residence is a private family home located south of Livermore, California, approximately 45 miles east of the San Francisco Bay Area. Built atop a 20-acre site amidst 15 acres of Chardonnay grape vineyards, the house is oriented to maximize the principal views to the north towards the greater Livermore Valley and Mount Diablo in the distance.
The main residence comprises a master bedroom, two children’s bedrooms, a great room, a dining room, a sitting room, a library/media room, a sew-ing room and a 3-car garage. The dining room and great room straddle a large trellised terrace. A sculptural guest house, referred to as the “Folly”, is a 2-story stone-clad structure with a cantilevered guest room overlooking the vineyard. Beneath the Folly is a large outdoor dining area.
The residence’s form is a simple rectangle in plan that has been eroded by a combination of courtyards and terraces on both the north and south sides of the house. The materials for the house have been selected to harmonize with the site and its surroundings. The roofing material is copper-clad shingles that will quickly patinate to a rich dark brown and ultimately to a green. The simple roof form is defined by a single ridgeline and is only punctuated by a single, massive stone chimney. Mahogany trellises cover the courtyards and terraces. The exterior of the facade facing south features integrally-colored cement stucco with deep-set mahogany windows; the north is predomi-nantly a mahogany and glass window wall system.
The principal architectural expression of the residence draws from the home’s structural system of finely crafted millwork. The structure consists of exposed glue-laminated rafters, topped with wooden decking, and glue-laminated beams and columns. All structural millwork will be fabricated from Douglas Fir and be exposed throughout. The interiors are intended to be crisp and modern in design. Interior elements and finishes, while remaining comple-mentary to the larger wooden volume, will exist within and float free of the wooden jewelbox.
Livermore House; Plan
Livermore House; View from southeast
private reSidence, liverMore, ca
Livermore House; View from northeast
private reSidence, liverMore, ca
Folly; Structural Axonometric SketchFolly; Photo of South Facade
private reSidence, liverMore, ca
Livermore House; Interior Photo at Entry
adrienne arSHt center For tHe perForMing artS, MiaMi, Florida
Mark was Technical Architect on many critical components of this complex project. The 500,000 sf Adrienne Arsht Center for the Performing Arts (formerly the Carnival Center) is the premier performing arts center in South Florida and the second largest in the United States, after Lincoln Center. The Arsht Center con-sists of two main buildings – the Sanford and Delores Ziff Ballet Opera House and the John S. and James L. Knight Concert Hall – separated by the outdoor Plaza of the Arts. The Arsht Center is home to the Miami Ballet and the Florida Grand Opera and host to guest resident orchestras and traveling productions.
The Ballet Opera House and the Concert Hall are each composed of a series of stepped masses clad in light-colored Sardinian granite. The forms, a modern interpretation of ancient stone ar-chitecture, project a sense of both permanence and excitement. The buildings are punctuated by large glass and steel curtain walls at their entries, adding to their contemporary, crystalline expression.
The Plaza for the Arts, which is bisected by Biscayne Boulevard, contains colonnades, cascading garden terraces, and a paving pattern based on Afro-Caribbean designs. A 1929 tower from a Sears store, the earliest example of Art Deco style in Miami, was preserved and incorporated into the Plaza design.
In addition to its 2,480-seat main stage, the Ballet Opera House includes a 200-seat studio theater for smaller productions. In the main house, a dramatic “acoustic dome” hangs over the audience – a 40-foot convex disc covered with sound-reflective bumps that bounce sound throughout the space. In the 2,200-seat Concert Hall, a spiraling acoustic canopy is suspended over the stage. Rings of custom light fixtures accent the flowing form.
In conjunction with the Miami-Dade Art in Public Places program, Pelli Clarke Pelli collaborated with five artists to create unique works that were incorporated into the architecture: Jose Bedia, Robert Rahway Zakananitch, Gary Moore, Anna Valentina Murch, and Cundo Bermudez.
Site Plan
Adrienne Arsht Center for the Performing Arts
adrienne arSHt center For tHe perForMing artS, MiaMi, Florida
Adrienne Arsht Center for the Performing Arts, Aerial Photo
Mark was Senior Design Leader for this 320,000 square foot public high school. His responsibilities included primary contact with the Building Committee and all user groups to determine program requirements, room layouts, and classroom utilization calcula-tions. Mark generated the design options from conceptual design through design development, and presented the options as they were developed to the building committee. He coordinated the work of the design team in the office, and worked with the en-gineers to resolve placement of major equipment and primary distribution paths.
The project began with program verification and a feasibility study to determine the most effective approach to the design. The work evolved into the full renovation of the existing school - 200,000 sf - and an addition of 120,000 sf. The renovation included a 900 seat auditorium, new entry lobbies, classrooms, and ad-ministration. An existing courtyard was enclosed to create a new double height media center. The addition holds new science labs, cafeteria, and a magnet school, the Center for Global Studies. The constrained site, complex existing conditions, and multiple client groups made the success of this project particularly rewarding.
brien McMaHon HigH ScHool; norWalk , ct
Existing Building; Entry Existing Building; First Floor
Existing Building; Second Floor
brien McMaHon HigH ScHool; norWalk , ct
Schematic Design Option C; Aerial Perspective
Schematic Design Option D; Aerial PerspectiveSchematic Design Option D; Site and First Floor Plan
Schematic Design Option B; Site and First Floor Plan
brien McMaHon HigH ScHool; norWalk , ct
brien McMaHon HigH ScHool; norWalk , ct
brien McMaHon HigH ScHool; norWalk , ct
brien McMaHon HigH ScHool; norWalk , ct
brien McMaHon HigH ScHool; norWalk , ct
Section at Media Center; Construction Document
Section at Media Center; Design Sketch
brien McMaHon HigH ScHool; norWalk , ct
Elevation Study at CGS Community Room
Plan Study at CGS Community Room
Senior Design Leader for this 18,000 square foot student center housing offices for a variety of on-campus clubs. The building is an addition to an existing student union, in a prominent location on campus, and includes office space for club organizations and a large assembly space. The massing and materials of the design mediates between the modernist expression of the existing stu-dent union and the traditional Georgian campus architecture.
Student union addition; univerSity oF neW Haven, connecticut
University of New Haven; Lower Level Plan University of New Haven; First Floor Plan
Student union addition; univerSity oF neW Haven, connecticut
elevation - SoutH
Student union addition; univerSity oF neW Haven, connecticut
Student union addition; univerSity oF neW Haven, connecticut
Mark acted as Project Manager and Senior Designer for this 620,000 gross square foot academic science and research build-ing. The programming phase was recently completed under his direction. The feasibility study that was part of that phase concluded that the existing structure requires total renovation, including replacement of all MEP systems, reinforcement of the structure, and re-cladding of the facade. A new research wing of approximately 280,000 gross square feet will be added and con-nected to the existing building with an atrium. The gross area of the addition and the renovation combined totals 900,000 square feet, with an estimated budget of five hundred million dollars.
The Marshak Tower is the major science and technology center for the City University system and houses offices, support spac-
es, lecture halls, seminar and conference rooms, break areas, library, computer center, and the school’s athletic facilities in
addition to the key research functions. The proposed building will be a state-of-the-art research facility incorporating some
of the latest advances in technology and energy management systems. The project was put on hold late in 2001.
MarSHak building; city univerSity oF neW york
City University of New York; Science Building Site Options Marshak Building; Photograph of Existing Facade
MarSHak building; city univerSity oF neW york
Marshak Building; First Floor Plan
Marshak Building; Typical Science Laboratory Floor - Addition
Marshak Building; Typical Science Laboratory Floor - Addition
MarSHak building; city univerSity oF neW york
Marshak Building; Typical Science Laboratory Floor - Addition
MarSHak building; city univerSity oF neW york
Marshak Building; Section through Existing Building and Addition
Srb2/luck reSearcH building; ucla
Mark was the Design Team Leader for this 225,000 square foot research building. He was responsible for all aspects of design during the site analysis, conceptual design, and schematic de-sign phases. Critical to the success of the design was maximizing efficiency, which was done through utilizing linear equipment rooms as circulation spaces. The facility houses generic wet labs, a vivarium, faculty offices, and administration offices.
The UCLA Biomedical Sciences Research Building and Orthopaedic Hospital Research Center form a new center for research on the UCLA campus. The combined buildings house the Orthopaedic Hospital Research Center, the UCLA AIDS Institute and the Eli and Edythe Broad Center of Regenerative Medicine and Stem Cell Research Institute. Together, the two buildings house more than 450 scientists and staff, with 12 to 14 groups of scientists sharing four labs on each floor.
The buildings are designed to encourage collaboration between researchers who may not ordinarily work together. Open laborato-ries are shared among departments and an open circular staircase connects the two buildings, allowing access across floors. The four above-grade floors of each building house laboratories, laboratory support, conference rooms and investigators’ offices. The vivarium and mechanical services are below grade.
The buildings occupy a prominent site between the historic north campus, with the Court of Sciences to the west and the Sciences Center to the southwest. They face the Mathias Botani-cal Garden to the south and an important campus entrance from Hilgard Avenue to the east. The design reinforces the connection between the Medical Center to the south and the remainder of the campus to the north. An inviting pedestrian walkway forges a strong east-west link from the Hilgard campus entrance to the Court of Sciences.
SRB/Luck Research Building; Site Plan
Luck Building; View from Court of the Sciences
Srb2/luck reSearcH building; ucla
Luck Building; View from Court of the Sciences
Srb2/luck reSearcH building; ucla
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UCLA The Orthopaedic Hospital- J. Vernon Luck,Sr., M.D. Center and Health Sciences-Seismic Replacement Building 2Cesar Pelli & Associates, Inc Architects, GPR Planners Collaborative, Inc
0 84 16
BASEMENT PLANSK-117
05 January 2001 Copyright 2001
SRB2/Luck Research Building; Basement Vivarium Level
Srb2/luck reSearcH building; ucla
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OFFICES3-O00
OFFICES3-O00
OFFICES3-O00
OFFICES3-O00
OFFICES3-O00
OFFICES3-O00
OFFICES3-O00
OFFICES3-O00
OFFICEL2-O00
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The Orthopaedic Hospital- J. Vernon Luck,Sr., M.D. Center and Health Sciences-Seismic Replacement Building 2Cesar Pelli & Associates, Inc Architects, GPR Planners Collaborative, Inc
UCLA 40 8 16
THIRD FLOOR PLANSK-120
05 January 2001 Copyright 2001
SRB2/Luck Research Building; Typical Research Floor Plan
Mark was Design Team Leader responsible for all aspects of the project’s design and management from conception through construction. He played a key role in developing a design that was both highly functional for the staff and welcoming for the patients and their families.
The 168,000 square foot Taussig Cancer Center provides outpa-tient facilities for cancer patients at the Cleveland Clinic. Linked to the existing Cancer Center by a pedestrian bridge, the new building provides 44 treatment rooms and 56 exam rooms. Support facilities include a bone marrow transplant suite, labs for blood and x-ray diagnostics, and a linear accelerator suite. Patient Support Services include a library, vending cafeteria and family consulting. Doctors have offices on the third floor. A large lecture hall, also on the third floor, was designed for ac-commodating the staff’s daily grand round meetings, as well as providing sophisticated audio/visual equipment for telemedicine and continuing medical education.
The building exterior is a continuation of the palette established by Cesar Pelli’s Crile Building, the primary outpatient facility at the Clinic. Both buildings are clad with a pale red granite, and their scale is modulated by subtle horizontal accents. However, where the Crile Building uses two species of granite to create its accents, the Cancer Center wraps the building with a silver metal reveal. The reveal is continuous, running between stones and through the window frame extrusion. The design of this sophisticated curtain wall was an aesthetic and technological achievement. The combination of warm granite and stainless steel relays to the patients and their families that this is a state of the art facility.
The interior is designed with the intent of providing a comforting setting for the patients. In public areas, the walls are paneled with a light wood, paint colors are subtle but vibrant, and a slatted wood ceiling with acoustical treatment provides a quiet envi-ronment. The clinical areas use practical and durable materials, with paint colors and natural light to soften them. The rooms are organized clearly and simply to facilitate both way-finding and the clinical operations.
tauSSig cancer center, cleveland clinic Foundation
Cleveland Clinic Foundation; Context Plan
tauSSig cancer center, cleveland clinic Foundation
Taussig Cancer Center; Rendering
tauSSig cancer center, cleveland clinic Foundation
Taussig Cancer Center; First Floor Plan
tauSSig cancer center, cleveland clinic Foundation
Taussig Cancer Center; Second Floor Plan
tauSSig cancer center, cleveland clinic Foundation
Taussig Cancer Center; Third Floor Plan
tauSSig cancer center, cleveland clinic Foundation
Taussig Cancer Center; Fourth Floor Plan
Taussig Cancer Center; View Towards Bridge to Existing Cancer Center Taussig Cancer Center; Exam Floor Reception Desk and Waiting Area
Taussig Cancer Center; First Floor Entry and Information Desk Taussig Cancer Center; First Floor Waiting Area
tauSSig cancer center, cleveland clinic Foundation
Taussig Cancer Center; Interior Rendering
tauSSig cancer center, cleveland clinic Foundation
Mark was Project Manager responsible for all aspects of the project, including oversite of technical details, construction docu-ments, and primary client contact and contractual negotiations.
The 420,000 square foot Lerner Research Institute houses the continuing education and basic research programs for the Cleveland Clinic Foundation in Ohio. Similar to the Mayo Clinic, the Cleveland Clinic is an internationally recognized hospital, supported by full research and education facilities. The Lerner Research Institute was a significant project for the Clinic. It was the second in a series of buildings designed by Cesar Pelli that would come to establish an architectural identity for the campus. Mark was the project manager for this job, maintaining primary client contact and team direction through the design documen-tation and construction phases.
The Institute is composed of three wings that shelter a courtyard; a pedestrian bridge completes the quadrangle. Like a traditional campus, the courtyard is a gathering place, a focal point for the facility.
The building’s West wing contains a 45,000 square foot medical library, classrooms, seminar rooms, and offices for the Cleveland Clinic Medical Education program. A building-wide network of video and data lines support the Clinic’s Distance Learning and Telemedicine programs. Finishes are commensurate with the Clinic’s status as a world class facility, with wood paneled walls and ceilings in the public areas of the building.
The South and East wings contain 280,000 square feet of research laboratories, and are occupied by the Clinic’s basic research pro-grams, including Molecular Biology, Cancer Biology, Neuroscience and Immunology.
lerner reSearcH inStitute, cleveland clinic Foundation
Lerner Research Institute; View from Street
Lerner Research Institute; Detailed View of Curtainwall
lerner reSearcH inStitute, cleveland clinic Foundation
Lerner Research Institute; Commons Dining Room
Lerner Research Institute; Classroom Corridor
Lerner Research Institute; Lecture Hall
Lerner Research Institute; First Floor Plan
lerner reSearcH inStitute, cleveland clinic Foundation
lerner reSearcH inStitute, cleveland clinic Foundation
Lerner Research Institute; Fifth Floor Plan
Mark was the Project Manager for this 115,000 square foot building for University of California, Riverside, involved in both the design and management of the project. The building provides a new home for the departments of Humanities and Social Sciences. Seven academic departments, including History, English, and Romance Languages, were brought together in a single complex, sharing resources such as classrooms and seminar rooms. The early stages of design coordinated the requirements of these user groups, and built consensus among them. In subsequent design phases, specific departmental criteria was ad-dressed. Each department required their own reception area, and clarity of circulation and way-finding was an important design parameter. Also, the upper floors of the building would primarily house offices, with each office requiring a window. These requirements, along with the context shaped the building.
The U.C. Riverside campus has a strong existing architectural style, with an equally strong group of project managers to see that new buildings relate to the old. Buildings on campus are typically long structures oriented East to West. Given the environment of this campus on the edge of the Southern California desert, buildings are detailed to prevent excessive solar gain to the interior. Many of the campus buildings incorporate deep roof overhangs and external sunscreens for the windows, and courtyards surrounded by two or three story buildings provide a shady respite.
As the design for the Humanities and Social Sciences building brought these factors together, a solution emerged – a courtyard building with colonnades. Departments are entered from along the colonnade, easing way-finding. Public rooms, such as classrooms and seminar rooms, are also entered from the colonnades. Rooms requiring large column free space are located on the ground floor, while the narrow plan of the upper floors provides a window to each 125 square foot office. Exterior materials lighten as they rise vertically, from brick to stucco to metal panels. Aluminum sunscreens shade the windows on the South side, as does the deep roof overhang.
HuManitieS and Social ScienceS building, univerSity oF caliFornia, riverSide
UC Riverside; Schematic Design Rendering
HuManitieS and Social ScienceS building, univerSity oF caliFornia, riverSide
UC Riverside; First Floor Plan
HuManitieS and Social ScienceS building, univerSity oF caliFornia, riverSide
UC Riverside; View of South Facade and Tower
HuManitieS and Social ScienceS building, univerSity oF caliFornia, riverSide
UC Riverside; View of North Facade and Stairs UC Riverside; View into Courtyard
Mark was Project Architect for this 30,000 square foot Mathemat-ics building, helping develop the design while leading the team during documentation and construction phases. The building is part of a private campus devoted to pure research. Originally headed by Albert Einstein, the Institute for Advanced Studies continues to provide fellowships for today’s thinkers to continue their theoretical research. The client’s primary functional require-ment was to provide an environment conducive to that pursuit.
The campus contains a range of architectural styles, from Geor-gian to Modern. The Mathematics building creates a courtyard with the Georgian Administration building, and so takes many of its architectural cues from it. The main materials are brick, limestone, and operable wood windows.
The building itself is composed of two parts. The primary part is a block of offices with supporting functions. Each Fellow is pro-vided with a large office, carefully detailed to provide acoustical isolation from its neighbor. The building also contains a Common Room, where the Fellows gather daily for afternoon tea and to share ideas. Carefull use of wood and slate in public areas gives the interior a sense of richness without high cost.
The smaller but more sculptural part of the complex is a recital hall. The recital hall provides a venue for lectures as well as musi-cal performances. This hall will be used for public events, and so received a higher budget for interior finishes. Acoustical proper-ties were also a primary design consideration. To “tune” the hall the design team used a combination of absorbative and reflective wall panels, curved to catch or reflect the sound. A fabric covered the curved panels, so that the acoustic treatment did not affect the room’s symmetry. Wood is used as an accent material on the side walls of the hall, with the stage and proscenium finished all in wood. We’ve been told by the client that the hall’s acoustical performance is superb.
inStitute For advanced Study, princeton, neW JerSey
Institute for Advanced Study; Auditorium
Institute for Advanced Study; First Floor Plan
inStitute For advanced Study, princeton, neW JerSey
Institute for Advanced Study; Exterior View of Auditorium and Common Room
Mark was Project Architect for this 45,000 square foot Mathemat-ics and Science building in charge of producing construction documents as well as shepharding the project through construc-tion. The project provides a new classroom and faculty office building for Trinity College. The building stretches out to create a fourth wall for one of the Campus Greens. A rich exterior pallette of brick and sandstone relates the building to early 19th century buildings on the campus. Mahogany window frames offer very good thermal performance, and the wood brings another level of richness to the interior spaces.
The program functions are divided by the central corridor. Class-rooms are on the South side of the building, faculty offices on the North. The ends of the building are expressed as towers; mechanical rooms are housed in the top floor. The towers also contain the building’s public spaces. These include large open stairways that serve as conversation areas as well as exit stairs. Across from the stairs at each floor are student lounges. The design of the lounges carries the mahogany of the windows into interior finishes, creating a comfortable club-like atmosphere.
MatHeMaticS and Science building; trinity college, connecticut
Institute for Advanced Study; Auditorium
Institute for Advanced Study; First Floor Plan
MatHeMaticS and Science building; trinity college, connecticut
MicHigan vietnaM veteranS MeMorial; lanSing, MicHigan
aerial vieW oF Model
Mark’s design for the Michigan Vietnam Vet-eran’s memorial was awarded an Honorable mention from a field of 200 entries. The me-morial contains a reproduction of one soldier’s last letter home before he was killed in action. A pool holds a meditation platform at one end, and a bronze statue of a soldier in a poncho at the other. Water from the pool cascades down beside the memorial, echoing the sounds of the jungle, carrying memories of life and death.
perSpective
MicHigan vietnaM veteranS MeMorial; lanSing, MicHigan
Holocaust MeMorial, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania
plan vieW
The memorial is located in a park by the side of the Susquehanna River. On the river side of the memorial, the ground is dished slightly, and contains stone slabs that recall the fallen victims of the Holocaust. A bronze casting stands above the slabs; the side facing the street contains facts describing the event, while the side facing the river is a relief depicting living victims. Beside a pool that runs to the river is the inscription “Who will give us water to wash the dead?”.
HolocauSt MeMorial, HarriSburg, pennSylvania
perSpective vieW FroM river
M a r k S . H e S S e l g r a v e , a r c H i t e c t