Arboretum Wins 2023 NAIOP Award by Rick Schneider

We are proud to share that Arboretum Recreation Center is the recipient of the 2023 Award of Excellence for Best Institutional Facility from NAIOP’s DC + Maryland Chapter. Arboretum is DC General Services’ and Parks + Rec’s first #masstimber project. NAIOP, the Commercial Real Estate Development Association recognizes outstanding projects, firms, and members in the region.

The project integrates biophilic design principles, intertwined with strategies like daylighting, passive design, natural ventilation, and solar power to deliver a high-performance building that is ready to meet Net Zero Energy requirements. Mass Timber in the form of CLT and GLT was used as a design tool to get closer to Carbon Net Neutrality for a net carbon reduction of 30% while also bringing warmth to an otherwise often stark typology. Other green features include solar ready roof, green roof, rain gardens, and integrated stormwater management.

For more about Arboretum, Click Here. See the award announcement here: 2023 Awards of Excellence Winners - NAIOP DC | MD (naiopdcmd.org)

Part of the team, including Hamza Hamdeh, Tanja Werner, and Joseph Sandor

Detail of the bronze metal screen wall. Credit: Anice Hoachlander

Kingman Island Wins AIA Maryland Award by Rick Schneider

We are proud to announce that Kingman Island Environmental Education Center is the recipient of AIA Maryland’s 2023 Excellence in Design Awards! Winning an Honor Award in the Unbuilt Architecture, Non-Commissioned category, the jury (from AIA Connecticut) praised the graphic delivery and attention to natural materiality. In their comments, the jury wrote:

“Beautifully presented with elegant renderings and handsome diagrams, this theoretical project is an excellent response to its program and mission. Natural forms and materials combine as an essential aspect of its design demonstrating the intertwining symbiotic relationship between architecture and ecosystems.”

See the announcement and awards presentation here: AIA Maryland 2023 Excellence in Design Awards

Interested in the project? See more here: Kingman Island Environmental Education Center

Van Ness ES celebrated at NoVa AIA Awards by Rick Schneider

The Northern Virginia AIA chapter hosted a very well-organized evening honoring regional architecture and design - including an Award of Merit for the Van Ness Elementary School. The judges cited the team’s materials selection and architectural moves in creating “an incredible… academic campus environment.” Also celebrated were the “layered elements of space” and “the beautiful [rooftop] outdoor education space”. Many thanks to Lorin Boswell and Jaclyn S. Toole and the entire team for a wonderful event! For more about Van Ness, click here

For more see the video clip here: NoVa AIA Judge's Comments

Feature on Van Ness Elementary School by Rick Schneider

Check out this piece on Van Ness ES in the latest Metal Architecture. Said design award judge Yen Ong, FAIA, “The way they tie the brick and the metal is remarkable, and the relationship of the transparency of the perforated metal panel and then the solid metal panel and then the solid brick seems like the progression is done very well and it all ties together very well.” On the Design Path | Metal Architecture

Van Ness ES Wins Metal Architecture Design Award by Rick Schneider

Metal Architecture has announced the 2023 Design Awards - and Van Ness Elementary School is a winner! Rooftop Gardens, smart stormwater management, and a covered outdoor classroom define the design of this LEED-S compliant green school in Southeast Washington DC.

Judge Arnold Swanborn, AIA, LEED AP, design principal, CO Architects, Los Angeles, said, “There's just sort of a simple elegance about it. It has a scalar relationship to the neighborhood ... They have this very simple sort of elegant solution to the addition, and it is quite nice architecturally.”

photos by Kris Ilich and ISTUDIO

2023 Design Award Winners | Metal Architecture

At the 4 x 4 = 16 Exhibit by Rick Schneider

The team celebrates 4 women architects from Peru in the 4x4=16 exhibit. Hosted by AIA DC's Design Excellence Committee at the Catholic University Crough Center, events included a film screening and panel discussion.

Our own Maggie Dunlap helped organize the event - “We loved seeing the amazing contributions of these designers, and although their work spans a diverse range of typologies, we noticed how each panelist chose to describe themselves as "communitarians", dedicated to creating projects that honor their environment, culture, and communities - an ethos that we can relate to within our own work.”

Stay tuned for the next event in November, featuring designers from Chile...come join us!

Maggie Dunlap Joins the Studio by Rick Schneider

Welcome Maggie Dunlap to our team! With a Master’s degree in Architecture from Virginia Tech’s WAAC campus, Maggie has experience in a range of project types including multi-family, mixed-use commercial, and residential, as well as academic and cultural master planning. As a LEED GA, she shares ISTUDIO’s commitment to sustainability and believes in the importance of using research to make informed design decisions to create a more equitable, vibrant, and resilient built environment. Outside of work she enjoys hiking, travelling, finding new museums, reading, and napkin sketching!

Solar Chimneys are a First for DC Public Schools by Rick Schneider

Powell Elementary School boasts the DC public school system’s first solar chimneys – designed to emulate and improve on a similar system in the historic 1929 building. Each solar chimney is connected to a rooftop weather station with indicator lights in each classroom — telling the students to open the windows when conditions are right. Signage in the hallway explains how they work in levelled language for different grades. Passive strategies and energy-efficient systems impact operational carbon while reuse of the historic building helps reduce embodied carbon.

The solar chimneys were designed w/ the use of Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) models to provide cool fresh air without the use of any energy. Results for the classroom wing solar chimneys alone are an additional 5.2% savings on energy above the already high baseline or 2% to the overall project. 

Daylight and fresh air define the architecture of Powell elementary School – part of a biophilic approach that promotes connection with the cycle of the day and changing of the seasons.

For more about the project and the AIA National Award of Excellence see Powell Elementary School — ISTUDIO Architects

Powell ES Receives AIA National Honors by Rick Schneider

ISTUDIO’s own Powell Elementary School was honored with the Award of Excellence in this year’s Educational Facilities Awards. The award, given by the American Institute of Architects recognizes the best in today's learning spaces.

The jury had this to say about the project: “This is proof that watering the “seed” of a local community’s development can bear fruit well beyond its borders.”

2023 Educational Facilities Award - AIA

NBC News on the new EOC by Rick Schneider

Our latest project for DC Homeland Security is making national headlines. Here is what NBC news had to say about the new Emergency Operations Center we designed for wellness and collaboration:

‘Local and federal officials on Monday announced the opening of a law enforcement center in downtown Washington that is designed to better prepare law enforcement for the next public health emergency or Jan. 6-style attack. 

“We have learned a lot from the past three years,” D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser said at a ribbon-cutting for the Emergency Operations Center, in Southeast Washington. “Be prepared for anything and everything, whether that’s a global pandemic or an emergency at the U.S. Capitol.”

More than two dozen law enforcement agencies, including staff from the FBI, Secret Service, the U.S. Park Police, U.S. Capitol Police and D.C.’s Metropolitan Police Department, will occupy the 42,000 square-foot space. 

Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas said the Emergency Operation Center will enable DHS to “work seamlessly with our key partners.”’

Federal DHS, FEMA Praise New EOC by Rick Schneider

It was an honor to attend the dedication of the new Emergency Operations Center we designed for DC Homeland Security - and to hear such glowing praise for the facility. Designed for collaboration and wellness, Director Rodriguez called it “a major milestone” while Federal Dept of Homeland Security Secretary Mayorkas of the Federal Department of Homeland Security Secretary Mayorkas declared it “a shining example”.

US FEMA Administrator Criswell had this to say: “these wellness spaces are very thoughtfully done”, “a model the rest of the nation can follow” and “that is innovation, that is ingenuity”. Mayor Bowser invited federal and local partners then counted 1-2-3 and the ribbon was cut.

Workshop Night - District Architecture Center by Rick Schneider

Workshop Night at the AIA|DC’s District Architecture Center was a great opportunity for emerging architects from various firms to present design ideas before a group. Our studio’s own Sara Alkhatib talked about a new dining hall project exploring solar and Mass Timber. A terrific joint effort by the AIA DC Emerging Architects Committee (EAC) and the DC Small Firm Exchange (SFx).

A Green School by the Numbers by Rick Schneider

The modernization of Powell Elementary School combines new additions and sitework with renovation of an existing historic brick building in a predominantly Latinx community to provide room for a rapidly expanding program. The school was designed to meet LEED-S Gold while reducing both operational and embodied carbon – and provide teaching moments so students (and staff) can take the learning home with them.

5.2% energy savings from solar chimneys, 1

35% Green Energy, 2

37% Carbon Footprint reduction from baseline, 3

51% EUI reduction from baseline, 4

76% Stormwater managed onsite, 5

100% increase in ELA performance, 6

Passive design strategies are combined with energy-efficient electrical and mechanical systems to lower the EUI and attain LEED-S Gold while building reuse and recycling reduce the carbon footprint significantly. The team used tools like CFD and Tally to measure success and worked with school staff to develop lessons using the building as a teaching tool. The team gives tours and presents lessons learned in presentations around the country.

1  Solar chimneys designed w/ the use of Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) models provide cool fresh air without the use of any energy. Results for Building C solar chimneys alone are an additional 5.2% savings on energy above the already high baseline or 2% to the overall project.  Each solar chimney is connected to a rooftop weather station with indicator lights in each classroom — telling the students to open the windows when conditions are right. 

2  The school committed to purchase a minimum of 35% green energy, for a further reduction. 

3  Building reuse accounts for approximately 50% of total for large cost savings as well as carbon savings. The team used Tally LCA software to measure the carbon footprint. Based on Tally calculations the project has an estimated carbon footprint of 1,765 mT CO2 the project shows an improvement of 37% from a Build Carbon Neutral baseline of 2,795 mT CO2.

4  2.6M kBTU grid electricity, 701,801 kBTU gas power the building, representing a 51% reduction from the benchmark due to multiple passive strategies. Projected EUI of 37 kBTU/sf/yr is significantly less than benchmark of 75 – and is more likely to match performance upon completion of the school-delayed commissioning.

5  Powell’s newly constructed additions were arranged specifically around the outdoor space, making it an integral component and showpiece of the design. Green roofs on each addition further achieve the stormwater requirements, reduce the heat island effect, and double as open-air classrooms.   The outdoor green spaces are filled with native, drought tolerant species. 

6 Powell Elementary School has doubled its enrollment while seeing gains in academic performance. In mathematics alone the school improved to perform 10 percentage points higher than the city average while the number of students meeting or exceeding expectations in English Language Arts doubled from 14 to 28% according to the DC Office of the State Superintendent. The school won a Fight for Children Rising Star Award and Dual Language School of the Year Award.

Celebrating 23 Years of Design Excellence by Rick Schneider

Our studio is overjoyed to be celebrating 23 YEARS of Design for EQUITABLE, SUSTAINABLE, and RESILIENT Communities.

In 2022 alone we delivered the First Mass Timber Facility for the DC Department of General Services, with a 30% reduction in carbon - and we gave numerous tours of the building to the State Department, AIA DC, and USAID.

Our Vision Plan for the National Mall - which we developed with a team of Virginia Tech WAAC - students was published in ArchitectureDC. The rooftop gardens and outdoor classroom at Van Ness Elementary won Best in Show at the Potomac Valley AIA Design Excellence Awards. We received international design awards for Green City Blue City, Van Ness Elementary, and Twin Oaks Community Garden.

…and we had two weddings and a birth!

Welcome Hamza Hamdeh! by Rick Schneider

Welcome to our team Hamza Hamdeh. This Pratt Institute of Architecture graduate with a minor in Sustainability played both basketball and volleyball for his alma mater. Hamza enjoys working on his Italian and helping out with the family business importing olive oil from their home in Palestine.

National Mall Vision Plan published in ArchitectureDC by Rick Schneider

Green City Blue City

The latest issue of ArchitectureDC has published a terrific piece about Green City, Blue City, Old City, New City our vision for a more resilient National Mall in Washington DC. The Vision Plan - done in collaboration with the Virginia Tech Washington-Alexandria Architecture Center - is a culmination of years of study and planning for waterfront resilience on the Mall.

Read more here ArchDC_Winter 2022 (hbp.com)

Green City Blue City wins Gold Award by Rick Schneider

We’re thrilled that “Green City Blue City” our vision for the National Mall has won Gold in the international Global Design Awards! For this effort we collaborated with students from Virginia Tech’s Washington Alexandria Architecture Center on plans for resilience, sustainability, and equity. The project is part of our studio’s ongoing study in the future of our nation’s capital. Pictured here is a rendering by WAAC exchange student Armondo Dai.

Click here for more about the project…