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Design Expo Raleigh 2006

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  Hidden Gems: Great Design in Our Own Backyard  
 

to enter – architecture

 
 

There is some great Architecture here in the Triangle and Design Expo Raleigh wants to help everyone see it. If you are an architect, an architectural student, or work in an architectural firm and have a project you want to display, please submit it to us for review. We will evaluate projects in the six categories listed below. Download the Architecuture Entry Form and send it in. If our jury selects your project, you will receive a Letter of Offer to Exhibit your project in Exhibition '06. 

Categories:

  • Built
  • Unbuilt Commissioned
  • Competition Entries
  • Preservation/Renovation
  • Student Entry
  • Interiors: Please use the Interior Design Submission Process

All entries will be judged on the basis of their architectural design excellence. It is the intention of the Design Expo Raleigh program to promote design irrespective of project type. The jurors will be asked to consider important issues/ challenges particular to each project type, but all entries will be judged collectively.

Submission Requirements

  • You live, go to school, or work within the Research Triangle Region (i.e., the greater Raleigh-Durham-Chapel Hill area)
  • You are at least 18 years of age
  • You are the original creator of the design
  • You have not copied anyone else's work
  • If the design has been created for a second party, you have the rights to show the design to the public
  • If your entry is accepted, two to four 20 x 15 boards with images and project name and location will be required for display at the Exhibition. Images are to be dry mounted on 3/16 black gator board. Images should include plan and photographs of actual project.
  • Accepted entrants will also be required to furnish a B/W photo of the main designer(s), and a brief written statement about the project, as well as the designer(s). Submission details will be in the Letter of Offer to Exhibit.

What to Submit:

  • Each entry submission must include:
  • Entry Display Binder
  • Project Statement Form
  • Concealed Credits Form (in #10 envelope)
  • Photography Release Form (in #10 envelope)
  • CD with Publicity Images
  • Check with entry fee payable to Design Expo Raleigh

Fees:

Application review fees:
$15/entry for Student Submission
$25/entry for Professional Submission

Participation fee (due after project has been accepted with other paperwork and images):
$35/entry for Student Submission        
$75/entry for Professional Submission

Dates:

Submissions for 2006 now closed. We're looking forward to a fantastic exhibit. Check the calendar of events to plan your participation.

Download the Architecuture Entry Form

 

Judges:

Thomas Barrie, AIA
Director, School of Architecture NCSU

Thomas Barrie is the Director of the School of Architecture at NC State University. Before joining NC State in July, 2002 he was Professor of Architecture at Lawrence Technological University, Southfield Michigan, where he taught undergraduate and graduate design studios and courses in history-theory and design theory. His research focuses on alternative histories of architecture, and in particular the interrelationship of a culture’s architecture and its cultural/religious beliefs and communal rituals. His research has brought him to sacred sites around the world and he has published numerous articles and lectured extensively on his subject area.

Professor Barrie is the author of Spiritual Path, Sacred Place: Myth, Ritual and Meaning in Architecture (Shambhala Publications, 1996). Though it is a scholarly book, its adoption by the Book of the Month Club and international distribution have ensured a broad audience. It was a Finalist in the 1997 Small Press Book Awards and has been the subject of numerous reviews and notations. According to Rudolf Arnheim, in the “Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism," the book “may deserve to be called an instant classic,” and that “as an overall survey of sacred architecture, I cannot think of a better reference for advanced students.”

Thomas Barrie’s second (currently unpublished) book is titled Between Heaven and Earth: the Mediating Role of Sacred Architecture. The book provides a unique and detailed discussion of sacred architecture in the context of the traditional belief that sacred places had the power to connect religious aspirants with God. The author argues that sacred architecture was, and still is, an intermediate zone created in the belief that it had the ability to co-join earth and heaven. Its research was supported, in part, through a grant from the Graham Foundation.

Professor Barrie’s accomplishments in architectural education and the profession are demonstrated by published writing, lectures, numerous awards for teaching, design competitions and grant proposals, community and collaborative projects, and publications and exhibitions of his work. In 2002 he was received the Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture Creative Achievement Award and in 1997 he was awarded the ACSA/AIAS New Faculty Teaching Award. He holds a master of philosophy degree in architectural history and theory from the University of Manchester, England, and a master of architectural design from Virginia Tech

 
     

Betsy C. West, AIA
Chair for Instruction, College of Architecture, UNC Charlotte

Betsy West holds a Master of Architecture degree from Yale University and a Bachelor of Architecture degree from North Carolina State University. She is Chair of the College of Architecture at UNC Charlotte where she has been on the faculty since 1998. She is also a practicing architect whose projects have been recognized at local, regional, and national levels. Her teaching, research and practice activities explore the cultural, social, political and physical aspects of architecture and its relationship to landscape

 

 

 

 
   
 

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