Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Your Weekend . . .

On Saturday morning, I tour the exceptional Frank Lloyd Wright-style home designed by John Rattenbury, who became a member of the Taliesin Fellowship in 1950 and worked on sixty of Wright’s projects, including the Guggenheim Museum, the Gammage Auditorium, and the Marin County Civic Center. Following Wright’s death in 1959, he helped to establish Taliesin Architects, where he continued to serve as a Principal Architect and Planner, until 2003. He has designed over 250 projects around the globe.



Theilen Home Tour

The Theilen home offers an unsurpassed pedigree for those who appreciate Wright’s work. It was designed by John Rattenbury, who was an apprentice under Wright and senior architect at Taliesin West when he designed this secluded Preston Hollow residence. The home’s interior designer, Kay Rattenbury, had lived and studied with the Wright’s since she was 14 years old. The result is a stunning residence that is as close to a Frank Lloyd Wright house as one could possibly achieve in the 1990’s when it was built.

Located on a cul-de-sac minutes from Dallas’ most respected private schools, 9100 Guernsey is in harmony with nature and blends seamlessly with the surrounding wooded grounds of approximately 1.1 acres. Truly a rare find, it offers an architecturally significant home in a private and picturesque setting.



Friday, March 11, 2011

The Ten Commandments of Architecture

Thou Shalt not Compartmentalize: in addition to learning to design, thou should write well, spell correctly, figure out how to get jobs and keep clients happy, take out the trash, make a good cup of Joe, be able to build models, master sustainability as well as the latest technological tools. Do all this and more, EXCEPT … hire a really good professional to photograph your work. It will pay off in awards and in landing new jobs.

Don’t Be Disappointed When A Client Rejects Your Design: It only means another opportunity to design. In architecture there are many solutions to the same question and designing is what you do.
Always Exceed Your Client’s Expectations: The corollary is: establish attainable expectations.

Cost Counts: No matter what clients may say, or how deep their pockets, cost is foremost in the minds of all clients great and small. Make sure there is a clear, written understanding of the expected project cost and have a plan in case the budget gets out of whack.

Problems are Opportunities: Show them how good you are in a pinch.

Bad News Travels Fast: An unhappy client is your worst nightmare. The corollary is: Satisfied clients become good friends and good references.

Art First, Mammon Second: Make every project an artistic success, and you will thrive. If your first priority is making money, you will go broke.

Go Forth and Collaborate: Architecture is a team sport. Surround yourself with talented and enjoyable people, in the office and outside. Share the credit with colleagues and consultants. Run an open office. The fewer doors the better; and just one coffee pot where the designing herd can gather and ruminate.

Listen: Believe it or not, people besides you have good ideas and insights. This applies to clients, staff, consultants, building users, even your spouse. In the end it will be your client’s building, not yours. If you want to be a star, move to Hollywood.

Do Right, Have Fun: Clients are spending a lot of money; they expect something special. There also should be some fun in the mix, for your client and for you as well.

If there were an eleventh commandment, it would be: have a sense of humor.


-Created By: Childress, James