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Firm
members (left to right):
Cory
Hawbecker, Ann Noonan, James Dallman, Grace La, Brook
Meier, Doug Gerlach & Brian Wang
See
the Projects
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The
Firm
People are talking
about architecture in Milwaukee. To be sure, the soon-to-open addition
to the Milwaukee Art Museum (MAM) by Santiago Calatrava has more
than helped bring attention to good design. But while some in the
city are banking on the MAM addition to be the next Guggenheim Bilbao
or Sydney Opera House, the work of a couple fairly new to the city,
Grace La and James Dallman, has broadened the discourse and opened
a few eyes.
Milwaukeeans,
especially well-established architects in the city, are taking notice
of the widely varied projects of the husband-and-wife firm La Dallman
Architects. Why? Grace and James moved to the city from Boston less
than two years ago, and in that time they have received commissions
for a pedestrian bridge,
a pavilion for an environmental
education center, a few houses for local philanthropists,
a 30-story condominium tower,
and exterior improvement to the city's Harry Weese-designed performing
arts center. All this work for a couple that readily admit that
they are not good at selling themselves. "We don't fancy ourselves
as great marketers," says La. "I attribute the commissions
we've received to people who were looking for architects who could
produce a high level of design."
La
and Dallman learned how to create that high level of design while
studying at the Harvard Graduate School of Design (GSD), where they
met in the early 1990s. Dallman, a native of Milwaukee, came to
Harvard with a bachelor's degree in architecture from the University
of WisconsinMilwaukee (UWM) and experience in Chicago with
Stanley Tigerman and Margaret McCurry. La moved 13 times while growing
up but had lived in Boston since age 14. She earned a bachelor of
arts degree from Harvard in three years and immediately entered
GSD. They worked together at Kohn Pedersen Fox's London office in
summer 1992 and quickly formed a bond in which architecture was
central to their lives. "It's really quite difficult to identify
the moment we started to work together," La says, "because
it was so much a part of our initial relationship."
Upon graduating
from GSD, Dallman worked for nearly two years for Atelier Pichelmann
in Vienna, Austria, and returned to Boston to work for Peter Rose
for five years. With Rose, Dallman was project architect on a residence
in Stowe, Vt., [RECORD houses, April 1998, page 116], and Brookside
School at Cranbrook. La collaborated for a short time with Jonathan
Levi, her thesis adviser and mentor, before joining Perry Dean Rogers
& Partners. Shortly after turning 27, La became the youngest
person to be named an associate in the nearly 80-year history of
Perry Dean Rogers.
La and Dallman
married five years ago, started on their own with small side projects,
including furniture design, while keeping their day jobs with other
firms. They acknowledged that taking that big step, from working
for other architects to starting their own practice, was not easy.
"I think you have to have a leap of faith and that moment is
a very tense one," La says. "It's frightening, I'll
tell you."
La was teaching
as an adjunct at Roger Williams University when, in 1999, she accepted
a teaching position at UWM that brought the couple to Milwaukee,
the city Dallman had left 13 years before. They've built a
practice with a five-person staff since fall 1999, and it is generating
buzz in Milwaukee.
They are finding
that working in Milwaukee, within driving distance to a number of
building product manufacturers, is perfect for researching materials
for their craft. "Because we have an avid interest in detailing
and a high level of construction," La says, "I find it
really advantageous that we have all these things at our fingertips."
What sets this
firm apart from the others in the city? Perhaps Dallman has the
answer: "We're interested in understanding site conditions
and experiential qualities of a placeto find qualities that
we can bring out of these conditions rather than impose some strategy."
In their latest
commission, La Dallman Architects will examine the experiential
qualities of the Marcus Center for the Performing Arts, a 1960s-era
building by Harry Weese on the Milwaukee River that is home to the
Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra. La Dallman has been hired to design
both a new entrance pavilion on the riverfront side of the building
and an improved public plaza between the building and river.
The
Marcus Center project, condominium tower, viewing pavilion, pedestrian
bridge, and residential commissions add up to a rich, varied portfolio
of work and chance for Grace and James to put their design philosophy
to the test: "Architecture should be a modern progressive undertaking,
while celebrating local patterns of craft, climate, urbanity, and
landscape."
John
E. Czarnecki, Assoc. AIA
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Kilbourn
Tower
Milwaukee, 2003
La Dallman
Architects, with TDI Associates, won a city-sponsored competition
for a 30-story, $60 million condominium tower. The slender tower,
with a commanding view of Lake Michigan and the rest of downtown
Milwaukee, will have 59 units ranging in price from approximately
$500,000 to $2.5 million. Each unit will have views in at least
three directions. Construction begins in 2002.
This was not
a building type that La Dallman Architects was pursuing, yet the
young firm could not give up the opportunity for the commission.
Having never designed a high-rise tower before, according to Dallman,
kind of freed us up to think about it in a particular way
that wasnt based on precedents.
We wanted
a compositional strategy that broke down assumed relationships between
base, middle, and top. The
design could be thought of as a crystalline, faceted, interlocking
set of volumes that create kind of a top and base, but not in a
literal sense.
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Schlitz
Audubon Center Viewing Pavilion
Bayside,
Wis., 2002
Sited within
a ravine, this pavilion, which La Dallman Architects calls an
aperture in the landscape, allows controlled views of nature
at an environmental education center visited by more than 70,000
children annually.
In their description
of the pavilion, La Dallman wrote: Abutting a grove of spruce
trees, the concrete, steel, and wood pavilion unfolds into a set
of terraced platforms that offer a variety of resting places. At
one edge, the pavilion floor splits and unravels into an undulate
analogue of the ravine slope beneath, becoming a cradle. On the
opposite side of the ravine, the pavilion roof, a steel wing forming
a continuation of the adjacent land crest, will capture the rain,
gathering it in a pool slipped beneath the deck. The roof funnels
and directs water, much like the ravine itself, feeding the creek
beyond. {The pavilion} suggests a model for insertion into nature,
seeing the relationship between man and nature, between built form
and landscape, as a seamless continuum.
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