Panel III
“Public Interest Design by Mainstream Firms” Panelists Anne Fougeron, Principal, Fougeron Architecture (San Francisco, CA) John Peterson, Principal, Peterson Architects (San Francisco, CA) Anoo Siddiqi, Director, Robin Hood Foundation L!brary Initiative (New York)
Moderator Brandy Brooks, Interim Director, Boston Community Design Resource Ctr.
At Fougeron Architecture,
the making of great architecture means designing spaces that people
occupy and that move them--rather than demonstrating purely theoretical
constructs. This insight has led to my conviction that principles of
design are integrally connected to principles of democracy in beautiful
spaces. This philosophy is clearly demonstrated in Fougeron
Architecture’s partnership with Planned Parenthood Golden Gate, a
collaboration that has lasted over a decade and produced a dozen
award-winning environments: from clinics and administrative offices to
call centers. We approach every job for PPGG with as much creative and
critical thought as possible. The challenge with the Planned Parenthood
work is to create beautiful, unconventional environments on limited
budgets; environments that support the full range of their inhabitants’
needs--their psychological and emotional responses to form and space as
well as their social and physical requirements. We believe that Planned
Parenthood spaces should reflect our society’s highest standards of
beauty They should delight all the senses and awaken the spirit. They
should live as perceptually rich spaces full of all the elements and
phenomena most often associated with great architecture for the
wealthy: light and transparency, richly textured materials and details.
This is not just architectural theory. A building that is exciting and
full of life communicates respect for all individuals within a
community; an environment that is harmonious and reassuring to everyone
within reinforces the principle of social equality. Good design should
belong to all.
Anne Fougeron
has provided architectural services in the Bay Area since her
graduation from UC Berkeley over 15 years ago. Prior to starting
Fougeron Architecture, she worked as an associate for the firm of
Daniel Solomon & Associates. She has also worked as an
architectural consultant and urban designer for the San Jose
Redevelopment Agency. Currently, her firm’s work ranges from
feasibility studies to new construction projects in commercial, health
care, and residential work. Anne has taught architectural design to
both undergraduate and graduate students at UC Berkeley and California
College of the Arts. She earned her Bachelor of Art from Wellesley
College and Master of Architecture from UC Berkeley. She has been a
registered architect in California since 1988 and is a member of the
AIA. Anne was raised in Paris, France.
Last April, Public Architecture received a phone call from Laurence
Kornfield, San Francisco’s chief building inspector, asking us to get
involved with an effort to build a house out of scrap and salvage
material. What started as invitation to be involved with the project,
quickly evolved into Public Architecture playing a leading role. And so
“ScrapHouse”
became a project of Public Architecture. Our challenge was to design
and build a temporary demonstration house on Civic Center Plaza,
immediately across the street from City Hall--in just six weeks. Six
chaotic weeks later, ScrapHouse opened its doors to the public, though
for just four days before it was disassembled. Overall, it was a clear
departure from Public Architecture’s typical project type and approach.
We would almost certainly never do it again, at least not under the
same circumstances. But for all of its challenges, ScrapHouse offered
us many important lessons. It brought people together--design
professionals and lay people alike—in ways we never could have
imagined. Today, ScrapHouse lives on in print, film, and soon as a part
of a 25,000 square foot community center outside of Seattle. John
Peterson will cover these lessons along with other increasingly
important, but less traveled paths that should be explored through the
architectural landscape.
John Peterson
is principal of Peterson Architects as well as the founder of Public
Architecture, both of which are based in the South of Market
neighborhood of San Francisco. Established in 1993, Peterson Architects
is a traditional architecture firm that has dedicated an extraordinary
amount of time to pro bono work, serving arts institutions, city
agencies, community development corporations, nonprofit organizations,
and social service agencies. This unorthodox pro bono work inspired the
creation of Public Architecture, a nonprofit organization that acts as
a catalyst for public discourse through education, advocacy, and the
design of public spaces and amenities. John serves as a member of the
San Francisco Mayor’s Office Green Vision Council, Urban Solutions
board of directors, South of Market Business Association board of
directors, and as a technical consultant to the Mayor’s Partnership for
Affordable Nonprofit Space. John earned his Bachelor of Fine Arts and
Bachelor of Architecture from the Rhode Island School of Design. He is
also a registered architect. During the 2005-2006 academic year, John
is a Loeb Fellow at the Harvard Graduate School of Design.
The Robin Hood Foundation
targets poverty in New York City by finding and funding the best
community-based groups and partnering with them to maximize results.
All administrative and fundraising costs are underwritten so 100% of
donations go directly to programs helping New Yorkers build better
lives. The L!brary Initiative seeks to reinvent the public school
library as a resource to encourage reading and improve the academic
performance of every child. The Initiative began with the notion that
by affecting 5-10% of a school’s real estate, you could affect 100% of
its students. In order to create places where typically underserved
children are challenged, supported, inspired to learn, and more
fundamentally, are invited to embark on an enthusiastic, lifelong
process of learning, a design vision for a new kind of “place” has been
developed and tested by some of the world’s leading architects. The
chief architectural objective is to make a library that more than
merely functions well; it invites, it inspires, it loosens the
imagination, and it relaxes the mind in order to allow it to grow.
Anooradha Iyer Siddiqi
is the director of The L!brary Initiative, a partnership of Robin Hood
Foundation and the New York City Department of Education, which brings
thoughtful, award-winning design to the poorest neighborhoods of New
York City by rethinking the function and architecture of the school
library. While in college, Anoo worked in homeless shelters and
befriended many people who were just looking for a place to sleep that
was protected, private, clean, and accessible. She would ride the bus
around DC, scoping out abandoned houses that looked like they had solid
foundations that might be rebuilt cheaply. This early spirited, but
misguided research led to the study and practice of architecture. After
many years in practice and teaching (in Bangalore, India, Philadelphia,
Boston, and New York) she feels fortunate to have the opportunity to
return to that original spirit, putting her experience to good use
serving people who don’t typically experience “architecture” and
teaching the discipline to younger people who are beginning to find
their way. Anoo earned her Bachelor of Arts in English from Georgetown
University and Master of Architecture from the University of
Washington. Born in Madras, India, Anoo is now a registered architect
in New York and lives there with her husband, Dr. Asif Siddiqi,
Professor of History at Fordham University.
Brandy Brooks
is the interim director of the Community Design Resource Center of
Boston. CDRC-Boston provides services and resources that assist
communities to envision, advocate for and implement high-quality design
solutions and ensure equal access to healthy, sustainably built
environments. CDRC-Boston achieves its mission through education,
technical assistance, collaborative design, and community service.
Brandy also works as the part-time Marketing & Communications
Director for Loheed Design Partnership, an architecture and urban
design firm in Somerville, Mass. She has attended Harvard University
and will receive her Bachelor of Design Studies in design computing
from the Boston Architectural Center this May. Brandy is a native of
Worcester, Mass., but travels frequently both nationally and
internationally. She loves being able to serve God and others through
her work in community design.
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SFI6 PAGE LINKS
Overview
Schedule
Keynote
Panel I
Panel II
Panel III
Panel IV
Panel V
Sponsors
SFI ARCHIVE LINKS
SFI1 (2000)
SFI2 (2002)
SFI3 (2003)
SFI4 (2004)
SFI5 (2005)
SFI6 (2006)
SFI7 (2007)
SFI8 (2008)
SFI9 (2009)

Initial SFI6 press release
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