Posterous

Tim Love’s review published in the Harvard Design Magazine

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Tim Love’s review of the Harvard Design Magazine Symposium “Can Design Improve Life in Cities? The Cases of Los Angeles, London and Chicago” was published in the online version of the Spring/Summer 2008 issue of the Harvard Design Magazine. In the essay, Love critiques the emphasis on signature projects by American municipal leaders and looks to current developments in London as a model for a more nuanced integration of design with public policy. As Love comments, “most impressive was the presentation by Peter Bishop, Director of Design for London, a new governmental organization that “will coordinate the mayor’s architectural and urban design strategies.” The diagrams, plans, and renderings of the several ambitious but surgical urban design interventions in central London were unparalleled at the symposium and equal the best urban design work being done today.”

Click here to read the article.

Historic Treasure Trove Found in School Attic

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During the construction of Schoolhouse Lofts, Utile’s conversion of a 19th-century brick school in Worcester into 28 condominiums, the construction team discovered a file cabinet in the attic containing continuous school attendance records dating back to 1897, the year of the first class in the school. The early books, bound in twine and written in ink script, reveal not only each child’s address, birth date and birth location, but also the parents’ nationality, the teachers’ level of experience and salary. The development team contacted the Worcester Historical Museum, which has taken the school records and are cataloging them, as well as all ancillary materials found in the cabinet, for their archives and for the use of future researchers.

As the archivists noted, the remarkably seamless records track the life of one Worcester neighborhood through an entire century. A letter from President Herbert Hoover, entreating the teachers and children to “refrain from heedless eating” during WWI shortages, and an early version of the Pledge of Allegiance were copied from the archive and framed, and now hang in the converted school. Various media outlets carried the story, including NECN and the Worcester Telegram.

Christina Crawford Lectures at Rudolph House

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Christina Crawford gave a lecture on the residential work of late modernist architect Paul Rudolph at the New England Chapter of the Society of Architectural Historians (NESAH) event this past weekend. The talk was part of a tour of Rudolph’s 1956 Yanofsky House, in Chestnut Hill, one of the only remaining Rudolph Houses in New England. In her talk, she tested Rudolph’s written interest in “regionalist” architecture against this one work, comparing the house to other seminal modern houses in the Boston area which also expressed interest in contextual specificity. The house itself was a treat to see: only 2,500 sf at the main level, its highly obsessive edge detailing, varied sequence of spaces, and expansive interior to exterior vistas made for a rich experience. The owners’ long and somewhat tortured process to restore the house was covered in the New York Times.

Christina is an active member of NESAH’s Board of Directors, and in that capacity gave a talk on her research on Ukrainian Constructivism this past fall.

Utile exhibits work at the pinkcomma gallery

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Utile is one of ten firms collaborating on an installation and exhibition timed to coincide with the National AIA Convention in Boston. Entitled Parti Wall/Hanging Green, the installation will be hung for a week on a converted loft building on Wareham Street in Boston’s South End. The five-story piece will be visible from the pinkcomma gallery, where an exhibition of the collaborative design process and the works of the individual firms will be on display. The ten firms – all of which were formed in the past six years – joined together to form the Young Architects Boston Group in January. They have been meeting since January to conceive and plan the installation. The happy outcome of the process is a strengthened community of like-minded designers.  Click here to see a video of the installation.

pinkcomma gallery

81b Wareham Street in the South End, Boston

Exhibition Dates: Friday, May 16 - Friday, June 6th

SoWa Artwalk Weekend Hours: May 17th/18th, 11 a.m. - 5 p.m.

Gallery Hours: Monday—Friday, 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. or by appointment.

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Photos by Mark Pasnik.

Utile featured in Architectural Record

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Utile was one of six firms featured as Boston’s “Next Wave” in the May 2008 issue of Architectural Record. Hubert Murray writes “The firm’s approach is to develop a specific expertise in multi-family housing and leverage that into the development world and the expanded scope of developer-pragmatic urban design. Utile has now established itself as the leading proponent of edgy European-style housing throughout the Boston area. Teaching at Northeastern University and, with over,under, publishing the Urban Housing Atlas, are all facets of the firm’s single focused strategy. Now that the residential market is softening, the practice is taking a similar approach to the commercial market.”