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HomeMy WebLinkAboutMarker Application 101603 Historic Homes Calendar 1938-1988 College before 304 West Dexter 607 Old Jersey 200 Lee Street 716 Park Place 200 PerShing 1309 Walton Drive Former Homes 3O7 1700 601 ) 10: 1909) 304 West Dexter Artist Owner--Jerry Loving 50 years of service SUNDAY SMTWT F S S MTWT F S 2 5 4 5 6 7 8 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 9 10 1! lg 1} 14 15 11 12 1t 14 15 16 t7 16 17 18 19 20 2I 22 18 19 20 21 22 Zl 24 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 30 31 6 7 8 ~ 9 10 {11 ~ ..... 12 , :;E~ion Day: Ve~e an's D ~ 13 I4 15' I6 i7 18 ' 19 " 1975~imnce 1~74~h~1 Di~ric~ No, 983 ~mui~ing ,~ ~rd ~f Trust's p~a~ d~ cation w~ : ' ~'v'- ~" , Story by rchitecture is bad. Architects Bryan-College name his and to talk in the of what the 1300 Jersey re-use of an older finer one Some said chitecture ed (it) ought head." But there was The Rudder Other top 3833 Texas Ave, in Bryan, one of the finest ex- architecture ~ of the one Bryan-College Station Eagle Saturday, September 10, 1983 1973. In 1980, developer Don Mar~ll invited Wood to submit a design for a new office building. At the time, there was an old ranch house on Martell's property and Wood noticed it was facing not toward the roadway but at an exact, 4~.degree angle with the roadway m and, therefore, not directly into the hot, afternoon sun, The home, despite its age, was almost completely energy efficient. "The from the s noolI They liked architect. "But then they asked me if I had ever worked for a Houston firm," Wood says with a smirk, "and 1 said, 'of course.'" They approved Wood's design, but one big ques- tion remained. Would it be accep~ by the local clientele? Martell bet that it Would and, pushing his point a bit, charged rates well above what office complexes of comparable size were asking at the time. "Prevailing rates were 66 cents a square foot, but Don was asking 85 cents, and there was con* siderable question over whether he'd get it," Wood says. "But he got it." To Wood, it was chitecture would be i Temple Freda ~ J.W. Wood 1983 3 4 gri el ~A"Y~hifig iha~ isn°t energY efficient mq ks M0rleY ~ent!y d~igned agarden center in south a n~d to in~ C01lege S~fio. ~fivported by 52 w~den Poles and value to in4 SuS~d~ a~h~e frOm three to nine feet off the ~ makes use of natural Ventilation Morley , vent the air off the ground overnight That!s fine, bUt after a long 10,1983 First tilevered roof. ~ marble is a good use of onservatism, "I thinl with bad," how much sign. "And answer the build believe order t, creator of architects and that "Here, he says. he knows." ac- Hamblett Rudder Tower the 5 Bryan~College Station Eagle Saturday, Se!otember 10, 1983 Metro Centre arChi towa~: pUS, ~: to a~ isn't ~ you c up ' disast It Brook and is very will come on that We have to be to Even Ca, itt 6 Professor of environmental dasi~n, Texas EI.Sayed home, 1903 Bee Creek Drive, College Station -- "Very energy conscious with good natural ventila- tion. Set up off the ground ... away from the muck and mire. Metal roof reflects a lot of sun. Carefully sited to the ~rees around it." St. Thomas Episcopal Church, 906 Jersey St., College Station -- ' I like the scale (it's size relative to people), the setting and use of materials. The spaces and size seem just right." Brazos County Courthouse (the original), downtown Bryan -- "It seems to have a sense of' dignity, Access tO 511 University ~ve building, lege Station -- "Very nice ... with parking below and above. Wisely designed." Briarcrest Commons, 1735 crest Dr., Bryan -- "Nicely sited appropriately scaled. It has a informality that s~ms appropriate today's business environment." Heldenfels Building, Texas campus -- "Handsome design. Smarl use of color inside. Well proportion- doesn't have to be air conditioned." Texas A&M campus -- functional, well- s professor of environmental design at Texas A&M, Dnane Cote sees some ('pret- ty deplorable" examples of architecture on the A&M campus. "There's still an attempt to keep toward beige brick buildings on cam- pus, but it s~iil varies from one building to another," he says. "Ther~ really isn't much control o'er materials when you come right down to it." Cote needs little prodding to come up with examples of architectural ' 'lemons" on campu s. "The Reed McDonald Building is a disaster," he says. "You can't get through it. "The O&M Building is dangerous. It's hard to find the exits. And the man who designed the new librmy addition ought to have a T-square broken over A&M campus -- complexes work well. The good. Every seat is a l are good and acoustics are good." his head. It is tight, cheap and over- pOWering. The s~al~ is bad. And it's heavy-handed, not sensitively conceiv- And what about the Memorial Stu- dent Center? '(Banal," Cote replies. The building in which Cote works, the Langford Architecture Center, has caught its share of flack -- not the least from architecture students. Shortly after it was completed, one inhabitant draped a sign outside a window, say- ing, "Gosh, I'm ugly{" In his office, Cote can't peer out his window without standing up. It seems the windows were designed the same for the offices as they were for the s~and-up drafting areas upstairs. Seated, Cote is at eye level with his EI.Sayed window sit. But Cote sees signs that architecture is improving in the B~an-College Sta- tion area. "More bright tieing. a8 tries, with up away from the boean acceptance and encouragem~t f fresh design ideas." Bryan- Bryan-College S'tation Eagle Saturday, of the more like) now. i here. They used to let natural 1 Einse! is an Eagle staff 8 1983