2015 AIA-SWO Craftsmanship Awards Banquet, November 18, 2015 (all event photos by Steven Leuck)
The Lee Barlow
Giustina Ballroom at the University of
Oregon’s Ford Alumni
Center was packed this
past Wednesday as the Southwestern Oregon Chapter of the American Institute of
Architects honored the nominees for and recipients of this year’s AIA-SWO Craftsmanship Awards. The event was my
profession’s opportunity to honor fine craftsmanship and recognize those
considered by the jury to be deserving of special recognition. It was a
wonderful evening that celebrated the best of the best.
The overarching purpose of the awards program is to ensure the
time-honored ideals of craftsmanship are sustained and passed along. Its
success is dependent upon nominations of those individuals that local
architects believe exemplify the highest standards of craftsmanship.
The Southwestern Oregon chapter of the American Institute of Architects considers anyone in the building
trades—tradesmen and women, fine cabinet makers, job site superintendents, and
all the others—worthy of this recognition if they have consistently taken that
extra step to ensure a finely crafted building. The success of the most
excellent architecture would not be possible without the dedication and skill
of these individuals.
AIA-SWO invited its members, associates, and affiliates
to nominate individuals who have demonstrated outstanding skills in the execution
of their work. The jury—comprised of AIA-SWO
chapter members, past award winners, and other members of the construction
industry—received and reviewed 16 nominations.
The following is the complete list of
nominees for the 2015 Craftsmanship Awards:
- Noah
Barth – electrician
with Contractors Electric
- George
Bleekman – owner’s
representative for University
of Oregon Capital Construction
- Mark
Bruer – project
manager, Essex General Construction
- Bryce
Gardner – millworker/cabinet
maker, Advance Cabinets
- Mike
Gerot – landscape
contractor, Woodruff’s Nursery
- Robert
Havas – self-employed
finish carpenter
- Larry
Kovarik – carpenter,
Essex General Construction
- Mark
McGee – sheet
metal worker, Phoenix Mechanical
- Tim
McMahen – project
manager, Essex General Construction
- Patrick
Morgan –
millworker/cabinet maker, The Cabinet Factory
- Robin
Olofson – millworker/cabinet
maker, Yankee Built, LLC
- Nick
Pappas – construction
superintendent, Chambers Construction
- Dave
Quivey – construction
superintendent, Howard S. Wright, a Balfour Beatty
Company
- Kean
Rager – construction
superintendent, Fortis Construction
- Rick
Robertson – residential
construction, Six Degrees Construction
- Dave
Veldhuizen– residential
construction, Six Degrees Construction
The list reflects a broad spectrum of skill
sets and experience. All of the nominees should regard their recognition as a
testament to the skills they’ve contributed toward the realization of
successful projects. The pride exhibited in their work shines through. They all
should feel proud and honored, and all are deserving of our congratulations.
Regardless, the awards jury did choose to distinguish five of the nominees as
the recipients of this year’s awards: Noah
Barth, George Bleekman,
Robert Havas, Mark McGee, and Patrick
Morgan. By means of their craft, they and past honorees encourage
others to similarly excel and take the extra steps necessary to ensure finely
crafted buildings.
The 2015 Craftsmanship Awards nominees
AIA-SWO 2015 president Jenna Fribley, AIA, congratulates Noah Barth of Contractors Electric for receiving his award. Craftsmanship Awards committee chair Bill Seider, FAIA (left in photo) looks on. AIA-SWO president-elect Stan Honn, AIA (right) served as the evening's emcee.
This year’s Craftsmanship
Awards program was graced with a keynote presentation delivered by Esther Hagenlocher, Associate Professor of Architecture at the University of Oregon’s
School of Architecture and Allied Arts. Also a
member of this year’s Craftsmanship Awards jury, Esther proved to be an
inspired choice as the keynote speaker. Her background, upbringing, education,
and professional career trace the classic path of one destined to excel in
craft. She was born and raised near Stuttgart in
the state of Baden-Württemberg in Germany, an
area synonymous with craftsmanship (Mercedes-Benz, Porsche, Bosch, and Hafele
share roots there), trade guilds, and Lutheran ideals that equated methodical
work with religious duty. Her father, a cabinet-maker, instilled in Esther the
pride to be found in making things with one’s own hands. She learned the value
of working in different scales and with different media, and the years of
practice necessary to achieve mastery of one’s craft. She would go on to become
a certified cabinet maker like her father. She would also become an architect
and an educator.
Esther Hagenlocher
Esther teaches interior
architecture, architecture, and furniture design classes at the University of Oregon. Clearly a source of satisfaction
for her is seeing the joy and pride her students display in the process of
designing and building furniture pieces in her class. Her students regularly exercise
craftsmanship in the conception and execution of their projects. There’s little
doubt they learn true craft is a consequence of the quality of the intellect
and effort they apply to their projects. Esther’s influence is evident in the
professional work of her past students, who include among their number current
AIA-SWO chapter president Jenna Fribley,
AIA.
Esther struck all the right
chords in her presentation. Her personal history is a testament to the
persistence of craftsmanship in today’s world. Her teaching provides optimism
we may witness its resurgence in the future.
* * *
* * *
AIA-SWO conferred its first
Craftsmanship Awards in 1953. Today, sixty-two years later, recognizing the
virtues of craftsmanship remains as important as ever, if not more so. If all
goes to plan, we can look forward to another AIA-SWO Craftsmanship Awards
program in 2017. It’s not too early to think about the craftsmen and women we
work with on our projects who deserve to be nominated. Consider all the people
you have worked with recently who have helped make your designs a reality. Does
someone especially stand out? Was his or her contribution to your project
worthy of recognition?
As I previously noted, craftsmanship is an ideal to which to aspire, a means to assert an
essential humanity in the making of things regardless of the tools at hand.
It’s important for us to forever celebrate the pride and the dignity to be
found by people producing useful, beautiful objects, buildings, and
places.
* *
* * *
*
The 2015 Craftsmanship
Awards program was a great success due to the efforts of the organizing
committee (chaired by Bill Seider,
FAIA), the jury, and the generous support of the program’s sponsors—Willamette Graystone, Ideate, and the University of Oregon.
Congratulations to everyone involved especially the award recipients and
nominees!