Windigo Architecture Wins 2017 Design Award from AIA New Jersey

Morristown, N.J. – Windigo Architecture, LLC in Morristown, N.J. has been awarded a 2017 Merit Award for superior design by the New Jersey chapter of the American Institute of Architecture (AIA New Jersey). The award was given in the “Built – Commercial, Institutional, Educational or Multi-Family Residential Design” category for the Edward P. Evans Academic Center at Eaglebrook School in Deerfield, Mass. 

The AIA New Jersey Annual Design Awards Program brings public and professional recognition to architectural projects which exhibit design excellence. Windigo Architecture was among only five architecture firms to be honored in this category; there were 87 total submissions across all categories. The awards will be presented at AIANJ’s awards & installation dinner on January 13, 2018. Windigo Architecture won a second award for a residential project in Connecticut as well.

The Evans Center, comprising 40,000 square feet, was conceived as a teaching tool for Eaglebrook’s science, art, and music programs. It opened in October 2016, replacing several outdated buildings on campus.

"Since Eaglebrook's founding in 1922, one idea has continued unchanged: the belief that the outdoors is an essential element in educating children and cultivating values,” said Andrew Chase, headmaster of Eaglebrook School. “The Edward P. Evans Academic Center is a remarkable building that captures the natural beauty of Eaglebrook and offers faculty and students new opportunities for teaching and learning."

The Windigo team developed a diversity of dramatic spaces meant to encourage an interdisciplinary community between the various departments that share the building. Key design goals were transparency, sustainability, integration with the school’s natural features and invitation to exploration.
“The major design challenge here was unifying disparate programs into one facility while maintaining the campus’s intimate scale and rustic character,” said David M. Spence, AIA, principal of Windigo Architecture. “The property offers many natural features in terms of topography and setting that we wanted to take advantage of; these factored heavily into the building’s design.”

Among the design features that brought this concept to fruition are: 

·         Learning space moves in and out of the building via ramps, open stairs, bridges, terraces, a green roof and amphitheater.
·         Tilting roofs provide generous natural light and channel rainwater into open spillways leading to the central pond, dramatizing the hydrologic cycle.  
·         The building’s edges extend outward into the central campus and unite the pond with a great lawn, while providing opportunities for outdoor instruction and play along its edges.
·         The building is clad in brick and wood, with prominent glass curtain walls; these elements connect it to existing structures and the surrounding woodlands.
·         Thirty-two geothermal wells underneath the building heat and cool the interior, and a rooftop solar array provides most of the building’s electrical needs.
·         Exterior wood sunshades and interior sun-shelves modulate seasonal daylight into classrooms, reducing the need for artificial lighting. When needed or at night, warm LED lighting provides a comfortable environment throughout.

A member of the U.S. Green Building Council, Windigo Architecture works with many clients to incorporate energy efficiency into projects.

“In an age where climate change and disharmony are dominating current affairs, we saw the potential for the Evans Center to bring unity to both the natural and manmade at Eaglebrook School,” said Spence. “The architecture and performance of the Evans Center provide students with numerous learning and collaboration opportunities in ways that are fresh and contemporary, yet are very organic to the overall environment throughout the campus.”

For more information or to view a portfolio of completed projects, visit www.windigodesign.com.

Featured

  • California High School Starts Construction on STEAM, Music Buildings

    Tamalpais High School, part of the Tamalpais Union High School District, recently broke ground on two new major facilities for its campus in Mill Valley, Calif., according to a news release. The district is partnering with Quattrocchi Kwok Architects (QKA) and Lathrop Construction Associates for the Science Technology, Engineering, Arts, and Mathematics (STEAM) and Music Buildings, both replacing their outdated counterparts.

  • How One School Reimagined Learning Spaces—and What Others Can Learn

    When Collegedale Academy, a PreK–8 school outside Chattanooga, Tenn., needed a new elementary building, we faced the choice that many school leaders eventually confront: repair an aging facility or reimagine what learning spaces could be. Our historic elementary school held decades of memories for families, including some who had once walked its halls as children themselves. But years of wear and the need for costly repairs made it clear that investing in the old building would only patch the problems rather than solve them.

  • Extron, CENTEGIX Partner for Comprehensive School Security Solution

    Professional audiovisual solutions provider Extron recently announced a partnership with CENTEGIX, which provides rapid incident response technology, to integrate two of their top products in the name of school safety.

  • Missouri State University Debuts Construction Education Center

    Missouri State University in Springfield, Mo., recently opened a new 10,000-square-foot addition and renovation to support the School of Construction, Design, and Project Management, according to university news. The Construction Education Success Center, built onto the existing Kemper Hall, provides academic space for the school’s construction managers and cost $9.6 million.

Digital Edition