DIA Plaza | Midtown Cultural Connections RFQ ARCHITECTURE COMPETITIONS

Register April 30, 2018 | Submit April 30, 2018 |

 

 

DIA Plaza | Midtown Cultural Connections RFQ

 

BRIEF

Thank you for your interest in the DIA Plaza | Midtown Cultural Connections Design Competition. This competition is a three-staged selection process to choose a world class design team. No design is required at this first stage.

Download the RFQ.

UPDATE | 4/12/2018:**The deadline for firms to ask questions in response to the RFQ has been extended from April 16 to **April 23, 2018, 5:00 p.m. EDT. Answers will be published no later than April 26. All questions and communication should be submitted to Dan Pitera at piteradw@udmercy.edu.

All responses to the RFQ are due 12:00 p.m. noon, EDT, Monday, April 30, 2018.

It is anticipated that the short list of eight (8) teams will be notified on Friday, May 18, 2018. Public presentations by the eight teams are tentatively scheduled for Thursday and Friday, June 13 + 14, 2018. Approximately three (3) teams will be notified by Friday, August 31, 2018 that they have advanced to Stage 1. Each team will be given a stipend to develop a design scheme to present publicly on Wednesday, January 23, 2019

 

SCHEDULE

Deadline: April 30, 2018

 

JURY

Salvador Salort-Pons
Director, President + CEO | Detroit Institute of Arts

Salvador Salort-Pons joined the Detroit Institute of Arts’ (DIA) curatorial division in 2008 as assistant curator of European paintings and served as head of the European art department since 2011, adding the role of executive director of Collection Strategies and Information in 2013. He also served as the Elizabeth and Allan Shelden Curator of European Paintings at the DIA and played a key role in the museum’s current strategic planning process. Salort-Pons was appointed director, president and CEO in October 2015, succeeding Graham W. J. Beal, who retired as director on June 30, 2015. With the tri-county millage in place and the City of Detroit’s bankruptcy successfully completed, Salort-Pons strongly believes the DIA is poised to move forward in engaging the museum’s local and regional communities as well as advancing its international profile. Ultimately, he envisions the DIA as the main square of the community where all will be welcomed, represented and united.

Follow Julie + her work with D.I.R.T. Studio:
www.dirtstudio.com
Julie Bargmann
Associate Professor Landscape Design | University of Virginia
Founder + Principal | D.I.R.T. Studio

Julie Bargmann is internationally recognized as an innovative designer in building regenerative landscapes and with interdisciplinary design education. Her graduate design studios and courses focus on the design potential for productive futures of fallow cities. Applying this research at her small design practice D.I.R.T., she explores the past and present industrial operations and urban processes in relationship to ecological systems, cultural constructs and emerging technologies. Along with a degree in sculpture from Carnegie-Mellon University, Bargmann earned a masters in landscape architecture at Harvard Graduate School of Design followed by a Fellowhsip at the American Academy in Rome. Bargmann’s work was awarded the National Design Award by Smithsonian’s Cooper-Hewitt Museum. TIME, CNN and Newsweek, along with national and international design publications have recognized Bargmann as leading the next generation in making a difference for design and the environment.

Follow Maurice on Twitter:
@MauriceDCox
Maurice Cox
Director, Planning + Development Department | City of Detroit

Maurice Cox served as Mayor of Charlottesville from 2002 to 2004. He was an architect on the faculty of the University of Virginia. Cox is a former design director at the National Endowment for the Arts and a two-term City Councilor. In August 2012, Cox left Charlottesville for New Orleans, where he accepted the position of associate dean of community engagement at the Tulane University School of Architecture. In February 2015, he was named as director of planning and development for the city of Detroit.

William Gilchrist
Planning and Building Director | City of Oakland, California

William Gilchrist has 35 years of planning experience. He was
director of place-based planning in New Orleans, focusing on the city’s design and development strategy, since 2010. He was previously a senior associate at AECOM in Atlanta and planning director in Birmingham, Alabama. He has a master’s degree in architecture, a master’s degree in management and a bachelor’s degree in design from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Follow Jonathan on Twitter:
@dr_jrm
Jonathan Massey
Dean, Taubman College of Architecture + Urban Planning | University of Michigan

Architect and historian Jonathan Massey is dean and professor at the Taubman College of Architecture and Urban Planning at the University of Michigan. In his previous position as dean of architecture at California College of Arts, his primary responsibility was for the vision, leadership, and administration of the CCA Architecture Division, which includes three accredited programs in architecture and interior design. At Syracuse University, he was the Laura J. and L. Douglas Meredith Professor for Teaching Excellence, where he chaired the Bachelor of Architecture program and the University Senate.

Massey holds undergraduate and doctoral degrees from Princeton University as well as a Master of Architecture degree from UCLA. His professional training includes practice experience at Dagmar Richter Studio, Brantner Design Associates, and Gehry Partners along with teaching experience at Barnard College, Parsons School of Design, Pratt Institute, and Woodbury University. In addition, he was a co-founder of the Transdisciplinary Media Studio and the Aggregate Architectural History Collaborative, which focus on the ways that history and practice of architecture and urbanism are understood and taught.

Follow Cara on Twitter:
@caramccarty
Cara McCarty
Curatorial Director | Cooper Hewitt, National Design Museum

As Curatorial Director, McCarty’s primary responsibility is overseeing the Museum’s collections and helping to shape the exhibition program. Major initiatives at the Museum are done collectively, with each division playing a role in decisions. One of the most visible outcomes of the newly renovated Museum is that they have 60% more gallery space for exhibitions, including one floor devoted to showing Cooper-Hewitt’s vast collections. McCarty has also been very involved in the Museum’s major renovation, which re-opened in Fall 2014.

Follow Juanita on Twitter:
@JuanitaMooreCHW
Dr. Juanita Moore
President + CEO | Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History

Juanita Moore is the President & CEO of the Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History (Detroit, MI), the largest museum of its kind in the nation. Prior to assuming her current post, she served as Executive Director of the American Jazz Museum and the Gem Theater located in the 18th & Vine Historic District (Kansas City, MO). Dr. Moore served as founding Executive Director of the National Civil Rights Museum (Memphis, TN). In that capacity, Dr. Moore oversaw the construction and opening of the museum located at the Lorraine Motel, the site of the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.

Follow Mario on Instagram:
@mariomooreart
Mario Moore
Artist

Mario Moore (b. 1987) is a Detroit native, currently residing in New York City. Moore received a BFA in Illustration from the College for Creative Studies (2009) and an MFA in Painting from the Yale School of Art (2013). He has participated as an artist-in-residence at Knox College, Fountainhead residency and the Albers Foundation. Moore’s work has afforded him many opportunities—from multiple exhibitions and featured articles including the New York Times. A few places his work has been exhibited include the Charles H. Wright Museum, George N’Namdi Center for Contemporary Art and the Detroit Institute of Arts. Some of his solo show exhibits have been seen at Winston-Salem State University’s Diggs Gallery and The Urban Institute of Contemporary Art. His work was also included in the Studio Visit Volume 31 (2015) and the Studio Museum in Harlem’s catalog, Speaking of People: Ebony, Jet and Contemporary Art (2014).

Richard L. Rogers
President | College for Creative Studies

Richard L. Rogers is president of the College for Creative Studies (CCS). During Rogers’ tenure, the College has more than doubled its enrollment and physical space, established seven new undergraduate departments, launched its first graduate programs, expanded to two campuses, and developed community outreach programs reaching 4,000 inner-city youth annually.

Rogers is chairman and president of Creative Urban Education Inc., the governing board of Henry Ford Academy: School for Creative Studies, a charter school of art and design founded in 2009 and operated jointly by CCS and the Henry Ford Learning Institute. He also co-supervises Design Core Detroit which champions design-driven businesses and their role in strengthening Detroit’s economy. Prior to CCS, Rogers served as vice president and secretary at the New School for Social Research (now The New School).

 

 

WEBSITE

https://www.midtownculturalconnections.com/