Press Releases


May_26

4240 Architecture and KSQ Architects to innovate new housing standards for University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign

4240 Architecture Starts Work on New Student Housing Facility

to Achieve LEED Silver Certification. (see attached release)

Champaign, IL, May 20, 2009

University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign hires the team of 4240 Architecture and KSQ Architects to innovate and improve upon the new housing standards developed for Ikenberry Commons.

"Serving the University's diverse population of students with facilities that are accessible and innovative is a high priority for University Housing," says John E. Collins, director of University Housing at the University of Illinois.

As the third phase of University of Illinois' ongoing housing redevelopment plan, the 4240/KSQ plans for the new 99,000 square foot building, providing for more than 340 new beds, will adjust the originally designed massing and revise internal communal spaces as well as address students' preferences for double occupancy, semi-private bathrooms, and air conditioned living environments. This new residence hall will also complete the final phase of facilities designed to integrate students with severe physical disabilities as part of the University's renowned Beckwith program.

"We value the University as a sophisticated, engaging client who in turn values 4240's research based design approach and creative solutions," says Tom Brauer, Managing Principal of the Chicago Studio of 4240 Architecture. A proud University of Illinois alumnus, Brauer is pleased that his studio has been engaged to contribute to the high quality of the campus environment and student life at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign Campus.

Joining 4240 is KSQ Architects, a well respected design firm with residence hall experience on campuses around the nation. The consulting team also includes Hoerr Schaudt Landscape Architects, KJWW Engineering (mep engineering) Matrix Engineering (structural engineering), Terra Engineering (civil), LCM Architects (universal design/accessibility consulting), Lerch Bates (elevator consulting) and Construction Cost Systems (cost estimating).

The design team will incorporate sustainable design principles and features into the building with the goal of achieving LEED Silver certification from the USGBC. Completion of the project is expected in the summer of 2012.

Background: 4240 Architecture is an award-winning team of architects, planners and interior designers. 4240 designs sustainable, high performance buildings, community frameworks, and spaces ranging from entire neighborhoods, resorts, public and commercial architecture to interiors and private homes. Established in 2003, the firm's studios in Chicago [located at 42° latitude] and Denver [located at 40° latitude] comprise "4240." The firm is an effective, visionary team of professionals who are equally fluent in designing for urban settings and high-mountain properties - and for just about every context in between.

For more information, please visit 4240 Architecture's web sites at www.4240architecture.com and www.listenresearchdraw.com.

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Contact for 4240 Architecture:

Jennifer Requiron 312.341.1155

jrequiron@4240arch.com

March_27

Federal Ceremony Room Built to Embrace Oath Takers and Represent Their Journey to Citizenship.

Proud US Citizens sworn in at grand opening of new facility for Citizenship and Immigration Services in Irving, Texas. (see attached release with photos)

Dallas [Irving], TX and Chicago, IL, March 26, 2009

"It's incredibly rewarding to witness the space we designed kindle the spirit and emotion" expressed Robert Benson, Design Director for Chicago's 4240 Architecture, "of not only those achieving citizenship, but of their loved ones and the Federal employees who aided their progress."

Benson warmly reflects on the February 25th Grand Opening of the new Citizenship and Immigration Services [USCIS] Building for the Department of Homeland Security [DHS] in Irving, Texas. "The light of that room was parallel to the emotions that washed over all of us in attendance. It was exciting."

Besides improving the USCIS's ability to provide full-service immigration and benefits services, the design of the Irving building (to achieve LEED Silver Certification) celebrates the experience of becoming an American Citizen. The architecture, standing as a beacon along Highway 114, embodies the rich citizenship process with its gracious, light-filled environment and surprising shifts in mass and contour.

The focal point of the building is the Ceremony Room, a light-filled, double-height glass space that is visible from adjacent Highway 114. The rest of the building has candidate interview rooms and administrative offices for 140 employees.

The location and L-shape layout of the office enables USCIS to improve its level of service. "We are very excited about the new building and how it supports the agency's mission," said Lisa Kehl, USCIS's Dallas District Director, "our customers are greeted by a friendly building and our employees enjoy their light filled offices. The Ceremony Room’s grandeur reflects the importance of the naturalization ceremonies. The functionality of the building has been beneficial in making our operation run smoother."

The new facility, designed by 4240 Architecture, houses the USCIS' Dallas office. Located in a growing office district, the two-story, 56,000-sf building replaces two separate USCIS offices. In 2003, the Department of Homeland Security absorbed USCIS, which is in the process of relocating or updating most of its approximately 250 headquarters and field offices around the world. The Irving facility's lease was procured under the U.S. General Services Administration's leasing program. This project is one of five DHS buildings to be completed or under construction by developer JDL Castle Corporation of Winston-Salem, North Carolina.

The design is consistent with federal sustainability policies and a candidate for LEED Silver Certification. Energy-efficient features of the building include architectural overhangs and sun shades to provide protection from the Texas sun. A pergola with sun-shading louvers protects the Ceremony Room and public lobby. Many materials, including brick, came from local manufacturers. Building systems and fixtures conserve energy and natural resources.

Background: 4240 Architecture is an award-winning team of architects, planners and interior designers. 4240 designs sustainable, high performance buildings, community frameworks, and spaces ranging from entire neighborhoods, resorts, public and commercial architecture to interiors and private homes. Established in 2003, the firm's studios in Chicago [located at 42° latitude] and Denver [located at 40° latitude] comprise "4240." In nearly six years, the firm has grown into an effective, visionary team of professionals who are equally fluent in designing for urban settings and high-mountain properties - and for just about every context in between.

For more information, please visit 4240 Architecture's Web sites at www.4240architecture.com and www.listenresearchdraw.com.

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Contact for 4240 Architecture:

Jennifer Requiron 312.341.1155

jrequiron@4240arch.com



Jan_6

Peter H. Dominick Jr., Prominent Architect and Planner

Denver, Colorado, January 5, 2009 - Architect and planner Peter H. Dominick, Jr., FAIA - a fierce steward of the land who combined his passions for nature, cities, art, and travel into a highly successful career - died New Year's Day after a cross-country skiing excursion in Aspen, Colorado. He was 67.

The cause was a heart attack, according to his business partners E. Randal Johnson and Thomas Brauer of 4240 Architecture, which is based in both Denver and Chicago, Illinois. Mr. Dominick had been the firm's president and chairman.

Over a 40-year-long career, Mr. Dominick founded two design firms and became design director and principal in another with which he merged his office. "His verve and impeccable connections gave him traction internationally with real estate developers, locally with politicians in his home city, and broadly in the design community," stated Mr. Johnson.

Johnson and Brauer, and the firm's six Associate Principals, plan to continue to operate the 80-person firm whose 2008 volume reached $10 million. No one has yet been named to the position Mr. Dominick occupied. While at 4240 Architecture and UDG, Mr. Dominick designed both the Wilderness and Animal Kingdom Lodges in Orlando, among six built commissions for the Walt Disney organization. He was also Principal in Charge of the revitalization of Vail, Colorado; the great Platte River Road Monument in Kearney, Nebraska, a museum

that is also a unique bridge across a highway; the new Town Center on the site of the former site of Stapleton Airport; and the transformation of the section of lower Denver called the Central Platte Valley from old rail yards into a thriving neighborhood now known as Riverfront Park.

Mr. Dominick was an active board member of several organizations, notably the Denver Art Museum, the University of Colorado School of Architecture, Whitney Museum of American Art, and the Yale University School of Architecture.

Donations have been suggested to the Yale School of Architecture

Peter H. Dominick Jr. Scholarship Fund, P.O. Box 2038, New Haven, CT. 06521

Noted architect Robert A.M. Stern, FAIA, dean of the Yale University School of Architecture, was a friend, sometimes a design-team member, sometimes a competitor. He stated: "Peter Dominick was a superb architect and a wonderful person. His deep understanding of and love for the landscape and building traditions of the Rocky Mountain region can be seen in his distinctive architecture. He was a regionalist in the best sense of the term. For those lucky enough to have known Peter, the sense of loss is immeasurable; he was full of vitality, generous with his time, optimistic, and caring-a great human being. I will miss him very much. He will not ever be replaced among the worthies who have brightened our profession; and not ever forgotten by those whose lives he touched with his special grace."

4240's long-standing client, developer Harry Frampton of East West Partners, former chairman of the Urban Land Institute, noted: "What an incredible person, who made many, many significant contributions to the world of design. He left his mark in so many ways!" In a mark of respect, the Rocky Mountain News said in its on January 3rd headline, "Peter Dominick left imprint on nation... 'one of the best.'".

History:

Peter Hoyt Dominick, Jr. was born in New York on June 9, 1941 and raised from the age of five in Colorado. He lived in Denver and on his ranch in the Sangre de Cristo Mountains near the town of Red Wing in southern Colorado. He was the oldest of the four children of Nancy Parks and Peter H. Dominick, who served two terms in the US Senate from Colorado and was appointed Ambassador to Switzerland in 1975 by President Gerald R. Ford. Following his father's educational trail, Mr. Dominick attended St. Mark's School in Framingham, Massachusetts for four years and continued on to graduate from Yale University with a Bachelor of Science in Architectural Studies in 1963. He pointed to his studies with legendary architecture professor and historian Vincent Scully as the first major influence on his decision to become an architect. His professional training took place at the University of Pennsylvania, studying with another design legend, Louis Kahn. He received his Master of Architecture degree in 1966.

After working his way around the world, he returned to Denver and joined William Muchow & Associates as a designer in 1973. In 1974 he founded Dominick Architects in Denver's lower downtown district, at that point a faded warehousing section. Rolling up his advocacy sleeves, he and some friends formed the Wazee Three and subsequently the Wazee Design & Development Company, a partnership that became a force in the "LoDo's" reconceptualization, planning, and renaissance. The next step in 1989 was to merge his firm with Urban Design Group. He became Director of Design and head of the Denver studio. That office and others in Dallas, Chicago, Tulsa, and Atlanta grew or were formed. UDG's extensive portfolio became the basis of an eponymous book published in Images Publishing Company's Master Architect Series about the firm's "commitment to stewardship and enrichment of the built and natural environments and everyday life." Thomas Beeby and Robert A.M. Stern wrote forewords. By the time that monograph appeared in 2003, Mr. Dominick and his colleagues Randy Johnson and Tom Brauer had left UDG and formed 4240 Architecture in Chicago and Denver, where Mr. Dominick was located.

[The name represents the geographic latitudes of both offices, "to imply a site-specific but global practice," Mr.Dominick wrote.]

Design philosophy

"To Peter, regionalism was a universal concept available everywhere - enabling the firm to create places and spaces that harmonize with their particular site, community, use, and culture," Randy Johnson explains. Citing the work done in Denver, notably in LoDo and the recent pioneering move to the RiNo [River North] section into a former foundry-warehouse that has just been honored with "Gold" status by the US Green Building Council, he said that, "Although much of Peter's work entailed new structures, he focused equally on preservation, renovation, infill, and revitalization - a bona fide champion of the value in existing structures and urban fabric."

Honors

A frequent speaker, occasional writer, and knowledgeable collector of contemporary art, Mr. Dominick was invited onto the Denver Art Museum Board of Directors; the University of Colorado, School of Architecture Dean's Advisory Committee; the National Advisory Board of the Whitney Museum of American Art [New York City]; and the Yale University School of Architecture's Dean's Council [the dean being his old friend, Robert A.M. Stern].

In 1994, he was elected a Fellow of the American Institute of Architects, the profession's highest honor, for excellence in architectural design. The Digest of Achievements cites his "abiding sense of responsibility to the culture of the West" and "extraordinary ability to articulate artistic ideas."

Engagement

Active in civic affairs, Mr. Dominick served in Denver on the Mayor's Council of the Arts, the Denver Partnership Civic Ventures Board, the Episcopal Diocese Art and Architecture Board, and the Colorado Wildlife Heritage Foundation Board of Directors. He also was a member of the Urban Land Institute and had been appointed to the US General Services Administration's National Register of Peer Professionals, an advisory group.

Personal background

Peter Dominick was both an urbanite and lover of outdoor life - an expert horseman, skier, and fly fisherman who traveled widely to fish for salmon and trout in the great rivers of the world. One friend wrote that "[Peter's] life resembled a perfectly cast fly line, unfurling with grace, delivered with purpose."

Mr. Dominick is survived by Philae Carver Dominick, his wife of 30 years; two grown children; his mother; and two brothers and a sister.

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Contact for 4240 Architecture:

303.292.3388

4240@4240arch.com