Once again, the Marble Institute of America
(MIA) presented its annual Pinnacle Awards at a luncheon ceremony held on
October 17, 2008, during StonExpo/Marmomacc Americas, which took place at the
Mandalay Bay Convention Center from October 16 to 18. The Pinnacle Awards,
which are designed to honor stone companies from around the world for
residential, commercial and renovation projects that clearly stand above the
rest, are presented to projects whose beauty, creativity, ingenuity and
craftsmanship exemplify professional mastery in the use of natural stone,
according to the MIA.
The 2008 competition marked the
beginning of a new tradition for the Pinnacle Awards, as the MIA added another
category - “Best of Show.” Sponsored by Marmomacc, a leading international
stone exhibition held annually in Verona, Italy, the winner in the “Best of
Show” category received the Grande Pinnacle Award, which was designed by Tobia
Scarpa of Venice, Italy, who is an award-winning architect, designer and
restoration specialist whose designs have been displayed in some of the world’s
most famous museums.
The first winner of the Grande Pinnacle
Award was a project submitted by Walker Zanger of Charlotte, NC. The project,
which was a luxurious home spa in Winter Park, FL, and referred to as NeMo (New
Modern), piqued the interest of judges with its natural materials, neutral
colors, a water feature and an abundance of light, all of which combined to
create a harmonious, tranquil and resort-like master bathroom/spa suite,
according to the MIA.
The Grande Pinnacle Award was
presented to Leon Zanger, founder of Walker Zanger, by Mauro Albano, Manager of
the Marmomacc Trade Show. In addition to the award, Walker Zanger also received
an all-expense paid trip to Marmomacc 2009, which will be held from September
30 to October 3 in Verona, Italy.
The Pinnacle Awards are
open to all MIA member companies. Projects submitted must comply with MIA
standards as defined in the MIA Dimension Stone Design
Manual.
The 2008 Pinnacle Awards were judged by a
distinguished panel of four industry professionals in Austin, TX.
The panel of judges included:
- Stan Haas
of Nelsen Partners in Austin, TX
- Jack Seiders, Immediate Past President of MIA, of
Architectural Granite & Marble Inc. in Austin, TX
- Christian Pongratz of
Pongratz Perbellini Architects in Verona, Italy
- Chuck Muehlbauer, MIA Technical Director
Grand Pinnacle Award-Award of Excellence- Residential Interior/Exterior
Project Name: NeMo (New Modern), Winter Park, FL
MIA Member Company: Walker Zanger, Charlotte, NC, Stone
Distributor
Project Description:
Natural materials, neutral colors, a water feature and an
abundance of light combine to create this harmonious, tranquil and resort-like
Master Bathroom/Spa Suite. The simplified palette and consistent building
materials facilitate the transition from inside to outside.
Large, square, honed and filled travertine flooring tiles
run throughout the interior, across the lanai and around the pool deck. Massive
sliding window walls disappear into pockets to transform the master
bath/spa/pool areas into a single indoor/outdoor space.
The
suite’s volume is defined by the crisp, geometric shape of travertine tile
above the tub and on the shower walls. The spa-like atmosphere is created by
natural light playing on the neutral gray and sand color of the travertine and
the sand tone of the polished Crema Marfil marble slab countertop. All elements
combine to provide warmth and consistency.
A weeping wall
water feature at the end of the pool contributes the sound of tranquility to
the bath and spa areas. Water flows over a Golden Harvest ledge stone quartzite
wall into the beach area of the pool completing the resort/spa-like atmosphere
desired.
Other Project Team
Members:Designer and General Contractor: Phil Kean
Designs
Interior Designer: CRT Studio,
Inc.
Stone Supplier: Tile Market,
Inc.
Stone Installer: Tile Works Plus,
LLC
Judges’
Comments:“This is a beautiful example of how warm and soft
a natural stone can feel. A great residential space!”
“I
loved the straighter lines, the way the color tones of the stone blended with
the other finishes and the softness of the stone to achieve the spa
atmosphere.”
“An extremely soothing
environment. The smaller travertine mosaics are a pleasing contrast with the
larger format.”
Award of Excellence- COMMERCIAL EXTERIOR
Project Name: George A. Purefoy Municipal
Center, Frisco, TX
MIA Member Company: Dee Brown, Inc.,
Garland, TX, Stone Subcontractor
Project
Description:Designed by Malcolm Holzman, the George A.
Purefoy Municipal Center was designed to have elements in keeping with Richard
Clayton designs of the early 1900s. This LEED Silver Certified project utilizes
all natural stone materials sourced within 500 miles of the
site.
West Texas Hadrian limestone was utilized in six
different patterns. The patterns included a variety of machine-smooth and
split-face stone in varied sizes. The limestone was also utilized in
half-round, radial-face column covers, sills with hand-pitched edges and
copings.
The main entry feature and the south side council
chamber utilized 8-inch, coursed-height split-face Sunset Red granite. This
granite was also utilized in other locations as coping. Another unique feature
element included split-face granite wedges 1 ¼-inch in thickness cast into
precast column covers and hung at either side of the main
entry.
Stone installer performed all CMU, limestone, granite
architectural and granite-clad precast and stone-related moisture-control
iteAms on the project. Work was completed within the project
schedule.
Other Project Team
Members:Owner: City of Frisco,
TX
Architect: Holzman-Moss Architecture
General
Contractor: Lee Lewis Construction
Stone Suppliers: Cold
Spring Granite Co. (MIA Member); Texastone Quarries (MIA
Member)
Judges’
Comments:“I liked the use of split-face granite, which is
normally a throw-away bi-product, in combination with the split-face limestone.
Great design and clever use of
materials.”
“I love the way the
contrasting colors are bridged by the uniform texture - well
done!”
“This project was one of the best
in demonstrating the breadth of stone in finish and coursing. The beautiful
contrast between smooth and split-faced stone represents a rich palette that
will anchor this public building for many generations.”
Award of Excellence- COMMERCIAL EXTERIOR
Project Name: Adrienne Arsht Center for the
Performing Arts, Miami, FL
MIA Member Company: Titan Stone,
LLC, Fort Lauderdale, FL, Stone
Contractor
Project
Description:Upon completion, the Adrienne Arsht Center for
the Performing Arts of Miami-Dade County was the nation’s largest performing
arts center constructed in the last 35 years.
Originally
conceived as a relatively plain stucco facade, the mammoth project had the
distinction of a dramatic upgrade to natural stone
cladding.
Flamed Italian Sardo Beige granite was selected
for its silver minerals, which almost look like little “mirrors” at certain
angles. The other exterior granites are flamed Topaz Gold and honed Verde
Maritaca.
Natural stone contractor/fabricator, Titan Stone,
contracted MIA-member Curtain Wall Design & Consulting to provide the shop
drawings and the engineered installation details. Titan then selected
MIA-member Savema of Italy to perform the fabrication. The interior’s natural
stone counters were fabricated and installed by Titan
Stone.
Altogether, Titan Stone’s mason erected nearly 31,000
pieces and over 230,000 square feet of granite on the exterior skins of the
Center’s two enormous buildings.
Other
Project Team Members:Architect: Pelli Clarke Pelli
Architects
Exterior Plaza Designers: Balmori Associates with
EDAW
Exterior Wall Consultant: Curtain Wall Design &
Consulting (MIA Member)
General Contractor: Performing Arts
Center Builders, JV of Odebrecht,
The Haskell Company and Ellis Don
Construction
Stone Fabricators: Savema, S.p.A. (MIA Member),
GMT, S.p.A.
Judges’
Comments:“Very impressive convincing owners to switch from
stucco to granite and reap the long-term benefits of a durable, yet beautiful
material.”
“Wow! Layman or professional
- one cannot ignore this striking
form.”
“…from the ‘ordinary and expected’
. . . to the ‘extraordinary’ when the owners requested stone for exterior
cladding. This results in a landmark project which will endure.”
Award of Excellence- COMMERCIAL Interior
Project Name: 2101 L Street NW, Washington,
DC
MIA Member Company: Rugo Stone, LLC, Lorton, VA, Stone
Installer and Supplier
Project
Description:2101 L Street, NW is a renovation project where
the existing structure remained and the interior was modified for a new ground
level lobby design.
This is a modern design: clean, long,
narrow wall panels and pavers where alignment of stone joints between walls,
floors and doorways are critical.
The lobby paving consisted
of 4,000 square feet of Basaltina vein-cut stone quarried near Rome, Italy. The
lobby wall veneer consisted of 3,400 square feet of Statuario Venato marble
quarried in Carrara, Italy.
This entire project utilized
designer involvement - from the selection of blocks with the right vein pattern
to the placement of panels on the slabs, culminating with the factory dryset
over a five-day period to fully blend the
walls.
Other Project Team
Members:Architect: WDG
Architecture
General Contractor:
Balfour-Beatty
Stone Suppliers: North Carolina Granite
Corp.
Stone Fabricator: Santucci Armando,
srl
Judges’
Comments:“Stone always must be properly selected - this was
professionally selected.”
“Clean,
straighter lines and good combination of cool, contemporary colors. I really
liked the patterns of the Statuario marble in random viewing patterns, as
opposed to traditional book-matching, to achieve a very modern
look.”
“This sleek modern lobby interior
is spectacular in its simplicity. The elegantly veined marble is almost
sculptural in its planar contrast with the dark Basaltina sandstone floor.”
Award of Excellence-Renovation/restoration
Project Name: Old Red Courthouse Clock Tower, Dallas,
TX
MIA Member Company: Dee Brown, Inc., Garland, TX, Stone
Subcontractor
Project
Description:Constructed in the 1890s, the Old Red
Courthouse has always been an historic landmark for Dallas County. Construction
of Old Red is in the Richardson Romanesque style utilizing load-bearing brick
masonry and full-depth through-wall cubic stone.
Original
1890s construction included the bell tower, but it was dismantled in 1919 when
the building’s structure proved incapable of supporting it. In the 1990s, a
movement to restore Old Red began. Restoration was ultimately undertaken by
phase, resulting in the bell towers completion in
2007.
Modern construction allowed the new bell tower to be
supported by a steel structure, eliminating the source of the original bell
tower’s problems. Extensive research was undertaken to match the original
stone, resulting in the use of Torrey sandstone and Vermillion and Morning Mist
granites. Stone was fabricated in cubic through-wall pieces with hand-pitched
faces. It was laid in largely the same fashion as in the 1890s, but utilized
modern engineered anchorages to hold the 5,500 cubic feet of
stone.
Other Project Team
Members:Owner: Dallas County
Architect:
James Pratt & Associates
General Contractor: Thos. S.
Byrne, LTD
Stone Suppliers: State Stone Corp. (MIA Member),
Freshwater Stone & Brickwork, Inc., Granicor (MIA
Member)
Judges’
Comments:“This project is classic renovation/restoration,
matching stones and workmanship that are no longer in use. Well
done.”
“This is a true renovation
challenge - to match the material and craft from four to five generations also
is a remarkable feat.”
“A beautifully
crafted renovation to a magnificent building! The challenge is matching stone
and construction techniques from over 100 years ago.”
Award of Merit- Residential interior/exterior
Project Name: 25 Bond Street, New York,
NY
MIA Member Company: Walker Zanger, Charlotte, NC, Stone
Supplier and Fabricator
Project
Description:25 Bond Street is a new luxury residential
building located in NoHo, a neighborhood with many distinctive cast iron and
masonry structures. The design combines the qualities of these historic
building types in a muscular yet graceful composition very clearly of our
time.
Two types of stone were used for the facade, Benjamin
Gold from Israel and Oro Tocano from Egypt, to form a double-layered screen.
The qualities of the stone screen were studied to be similar in character to
the masonry context and in openness to its cast iron neighbors. The facade was
also carefully crafted and detailed, as evidenced by the hand-tooled,
medium-pointed chisel finish and pinwheel jointing of the stone. A total of
15,000 square feet of stone was crafted by hand. Several different finishes, on
the same stones, were used for the terrace and rooftop paving, lobby and courtyard.
Other
Project Team Members:Developer: Goldman
Properties
General Contractor: Ideal
Construction
Stone Installer: Expertise
Stone
Judges’
Comments:“The detail in the paving is remarkable - extremely
imaginative. Interesting use of textures in the
facade.”
“Not a traditional residential
entry, but an entry most New Yorkers would
appreciate.”
“The crisp geometry of the
facade of this building and the layering of the two planes of stone comprise a
strong solution to the urban fabric. The technology involved in the slabs used
in the sidewalk represented a Herculean effort coupled with a beautiful
result.”
Award of Merit- Commercial exterior
Project Name: Club Campestre Monterrey,
Monterrey, Mexico
MIA Member Company: Marble World, S.A. de
C.V., Garza Garcia, NL, Mexico, Stone Supplier and
Installer
Project
Description:The Club Campestre Monterrey is one of the most
important exclusive Golf Clubs in Mexico. In 2007, after consulting with the
entire membership, the Board of Directors decided to completely tear down the
old clubhouse and build a new one.
The architect desired uniquely
finished granite for the exterior and interior walls of the building and went
with a mixed bushhammered and honed finish for these vertical surfaces. These
exterior and interior walls consist of 80,000 square feet of Chinese G 862
granite. In the main lobby, the same Chinese G 682 granite was utilized, but
for the floors, bathrooms and lounge areas, 50,000 square feet of Tunas Green
Castor Brown Brazilian granites were utilized.
The 130,000
square feet of natural stone that was used in this project took four months to
be fully installed.
Other Project Team
Members:Architect: Bernardo
Hinojosa
Judges’
Comments:“I like architectural design that is out of
context with what you expect. Great design for a golf clubhouse and good
selection of exterior
granite.”
“Simplicity in design and
quality in craft combine for a pleasing
result.”
“The sophisticated stone
finishes on this project provide a strong design statement to this clubhouse. I
was impressed with the clean, strong sculptural lines of this building, and how
the stone reinforced them.”
Award of Merit- Renovation/restoration
Project Name: Utah State Capitol Podium, Salt
Lake City, UT
MIA Member Company: KEPCO+, Salt Lake City,
UT, Stone Installer
Project
Description:Incorporating six types of natural stone from
four different countries and utilizing the teamwork of four MIA-member
companies, the recently completed Utah State Capitol Podium project truly
embodies the stately elegance and international appeal of natural stone.
Constructed as part of the Utah State Capitol renovation, the 122,500 square
feet of natural stone encompassing the Podium offers an ornate public space
that can be used for ceremonies, demonstrations or
concerts.
Other Project Team
Members:Client: State of Utah Capitol Preservation
Board
Architect: Capitol Design
Team
General Contractor: Jacobsen-Hunt Joint
Venture
Stone Fabricators: Campolonghi Italia (MIA Member),
AGM (MIA Member)
and Bestview International (MIA Member)
Judges’
Comments:“The magnitude of this addition and renovation is
impressive. Beautiful job of matching original materials. Loved the carved
lions.”
“Utah State Capitol - this great
and stately building has been carefully renewed to its original majesty with
its new plaza and the state campus.”
“The
new blends with the existing seamlessly. An attractive result!”
Special Award- artistry and technology
Project Name: Solar Light Sculptures, Culver
City, CA
MIA Member Companies: Campolonghi Italia srl,
Massa, Italy, Stone Supplier and Fabricator; Dee Brown, Inc., Garland, TX, Installation
Consultant
Project
Description:“Illumination” is envisioned as a sustainable
artwork which combines sculpture, landscape, solar power and light.
“Illuminaton” alludes to both the physical and metaphorical sense of the word
and consists of a series of seven solar-powered light sculptures which define
the entrance drive to the new Symantec facility in Culver City, CA.
The
idea of harnessing the beautiful quality of light in Southern California and
using it as a synthesis of artistic expression and sustainability is the basis
of this “Carbon-Conscious” artwork. Energy from the sun is collected via
photovoltaic arrays which are incorporated into solid 18-foot-tall x 2-foot,
9-inch diameter free-standing, honed Carrara White marble columns topped with
horizontal 1-foot, 4-inch diameter x 12-foot-long “light tubes” fabricated from
translucent white marble. The “light tubes” house a striking interior lighting
component which emits a glow through the luminous stone. This project achieved
LEED Gold Certification from the U.S. Green Building
Council.
Other Project Team
Members:General Contractor: Webcor Builders
Artist/Stone
Installer: Brad J. Goldberg, Inc.
Stone Consultant: Giovanni
D’Angiolo (MIA Member)
Judges’
Comments:“Interesting combination of artistic lighting and
‘in your face’ solar technology.”
“A
graceful blend of technology and
art.”
“This is a unique combination of
artistry and technology. Brad Goldberg’s solution of ‘carbon-conscious’ artwork
features a great contrast of materiality - stone that’s massive for columns and
stone that’s translucent for light tubes - and all woven together with the
technology of the photo voltaic panels.”