Tom Kundig

Tom Kundig

Tom Kundig in Olson Kundig Architects
Born (1954-10-09) October 9, 1954
Merced, California
Nationality American
Alma mater University of Washington
Occupation Principal/Owner
Practice Olson Kundig Architects
Buildings The Pierre, Art Stable, Outpost, Rolling Huts, Delta Shelter, Chicken Point Cabin, The Brain, Studio House
Projects Tom Kundig Houses 2, Tom Kundig Houses

Tom Kundig (born 1954) is an American principal and owner of the Seattle-based firm Olson Kundig Architects. His honors include some of the highest design awards, including a 2008 National Design Award in Architecture Design from the Smithsonian Cooper-Hewitt;[1] a 2007 Academy Award in Architecture from The American Academy of Arts and Letters; selection as a finalist for the 2005 National Design Award for Architecture; a MacDowell Colony Fellowship; and selection as an Emerging Architect by the Architectural League of New York. He has also received eleven National American Institute of Architects awards. In 2011, he was included in The Wallpaper* 150, Wallpaper (magazine)'s list of the 150 people who have most influenced, inspired and improved the way we live, work and travel over the last 15 years.[2]

In 2010, the Pierre was named World Architecture News' House of the Year[3] and in 2011, Art Stable was named Project of the Year by the Residential Architect Design Awards.[4] Architectural Record has chosen two of Kundig’s projects for Record Houses—the Rolling Huts and Delta Shelter.[5] Olson Kundig Architects received the 2009 National AIA Architecture Firm Award (as Olson Sundberg Kundig Allen Architects)[6] and has twice been named one of the Top Ten Most Innovative Companies in Architecture by Fast Company (magazine).[7]

In 2011, Princeton Architectural Press released Tom Kundig: Houses 2, the follow up to the 2006 book, Tom Kundig: Houses, one of the Press’s bestselling architecture books of all time.[8] Kundig has been published over 450 times in publications worldwide, including the Financial Times, The Wall Street Journal, Architectural Record, Dwell, Architectural Digest and The New York Times. Kundig’s undergraduate and graduate architecture degrees are from the University of Washington.

Early life and career

Tom Kundig was born on October 9, 1954 in Merced, California and raised in Spokane, Washington. As a teenager, he found early influences in his work at sawmills, his surroundings and his time spent hiking, skiing and climbing.[9] "I experienced being relatively humble in the landscape," Kundig says about his childhood. "Mountaineering and architecture have many parallels—they're about solving the problem in as clear and economic means as possible—it's not about getting to the top."[9] He also took inspiration from the sculptor Harold Balazs, who taught him that building a project is the most important part of the design process as well as how tough it is to be an artist.[10]

In college, Kundig originally trained as a geophysicist before switching to architecture, his father's profession. In an interview with the National Building Museum, he says:

When I left for college, I was more interested in the hard sciences—physics and especially geophysics. I was fascinated by the movement of Earth tectonics and geology. The idea of these large forces that shape our Earth is still a really fascinating sidebar interest. In fact, I’d almost say it is a focus; I’m often as interested in that as I am in architecture. Ultimately, I came to understand pretty early that I did not have a natural propensity for the larger geophysics requirements and I really missed what architecture is: the intersection between the rational and the poetic. I was just in the rational world of physics and I missed the poetic. Architecture lets me have both.[11]

After working for other firms around the world, Kundig joined Olson Kundig Architects in 1986. He first came to national attention with Studio House, a private residence that he completed in 1998. In 2002, he completed Chicken Point Cabin, a private residence that remains one of his most "iconic and poetic" designs that includes one of his most recognized gizmos: a 20-foot by 30-foot window-wall that opens with a hand crank.[12]

Kundig regularly serves on design juries and lectures around the world on architecture and design. He has been a university studio critic throughout the United States and in Japan, including at Harvard University and the University of Oregon, and has served as the John G. Williams Distinguished Professor at the University of Arkansas School of Architecture and the D. Kenneth Sargent Visiting Design Critic at Syracuse University’s College of Architecture. Recent lectures include presentations at the Royal Academy of Arts in London and the New York Public Library. His award-winning work has been exhibited at the American Academy of Arts and Letters in New York City, Syracuse University, and at the National Building Museum in Washington, D.C.. In the winter of 2010/2011, he was the sole North American architect chosen to represent the continent in an exhibit at TOTO GALLERY MA in Tokyo, Japan.

Quotes

Asked about the origins of Kundig’s interest in gizmos: “When I was a kid, I grew up amongst industry: mining, logging, farming. Naturally, with that there was a lot of machinery, a lot of practically-designed – and in its way, beautiful – machinery. And when I lived in Alaska, I would go way out in the country, hiking and mountain climbing, and I would see these pieces of machinery way the heck back there, powered by wind or by water coming off the side of a mountain. The guys who designed these were geniuses! As I was developing an architectural voice, I realized there was something similar about buildings that I found fascinating: that buildings could be changed by people using them. You can literally move walls or furniture and move it on a scale that reminds you that, in fact, you’re capable –with geometry and physics– of moving these things.”[13]

On the importance of detail: “Detail is important because it’s at that lever that you interact directly with the building. You touch, move, and handle detail at the most intimate levels. I think If you can’t walk into a house and smile about something, there’s something missing in that house. I want the people I build houses for to love their house to death, and hopefully to call me two or three years later and say the place is just getting better and better. It’s what I do this stuff for: to be involved with a landscape and with these personalities.”[14]

On the influence of artist Harold Balazs: “Sometimes you just luck out in life and you meet a force of nature. I benefited tremendously from my family’s friendship with sculptor Harold Balazs. A sculptor and humanitarian, Harold instilled in my youth a sense of courage and enthusiasm to embrace this lucky moment we have on earth. As a kid I watched fantastic sculptures being fabricated at his shop and home in Mead, Washington. I witnessed his experiments and ideas with different medium and materials and how all of it related to the culture and politics of our time. He said to me out of the blue: ‘If you want to see what art can be, look at hot rods.’ This was around 1968. The point he was making was they were challenging the status quo and re-inventing the commodities with their own ideas and craft. He saw their craft as an incredible source of inspiration for his work, and that left a lasting impression.”[14]

"One is tempted to label Kundig's architecture as an example of Northwestern regionalism, yet his houses built in other geographical and climatic settings respond appropriately to these different conditions."[15]

"I believe Tom's success is grounded in the relaxedness and centeredness of one that devoutly performs a strong and personal vocation, which allows him to master the personas that he chooses to present. Rejecting the self-indulgent, Tom doesn't shy away from the profession's extremes of making a personal work dedicating his efforts to his clients."[16]

"Tom's larger contributions should also be acknowledged; his public works of architecture will bring inspired spaces with intense connections of material and detail to the joy of a greater number of individuals in the future. His positive mental thoughts, his core values, perhaps these are the conception of a 'spirit of architecture', which is passed on and thrives in continuity and zeal."[17]

Recognition and Awards

Kundig is recipient of numerous awards and honors including the prestigious National Design Award in Architecture Design from the Smithsonian Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum (2008). Kundig was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Letters in 2007. 14 projects by Kundig have been recognized by The American Institute of Architects National Awards, including the AIA Honor Awards for Art Stable (2013), Outpost (2010) and Delta Shelter (2008). The AIA has also awarded Kundig's project with AIA Northwest & Pacific Region Honor Award for The Rolling Huts (2009), Montecito Residence (2008) and Delta Shelter (2007). Other awards and distinctions include several American Architecture Awards from the Chicago Athenaeum for Outpost (2009), The Rolling Huts (2009), Montecito Residence (2008), Delta Shelter (2007) and Tye River Cabin (2007). Also, Kundig was named the Architectural League of New York's, Emerging Architect in 2004.

Product design

In 2012, Olson Kundig Architects launched a steel accessories line, The Tom Kundig Collection, comprising over 25 hardware pieces that celebrate the kinetic moments that occur in buildings. The Tom Kundig Collection includes cabinet pulls, rollers, door knockers and knobs. Kundig collaborated with Seattle-based fabricator 12th Avenue Iron to manufacture the line.[18]

The architect explains in an interview in Dwell magazine, that the “simplest-looking pieces” (the Peel, Ear and Droop Ear cabinet pulls) are also the most rewarding—“they represent the collection at its most elemental.” He calls the higher-priced Roll and Disc rollers a “wink and a nod” to their complex fabrication. Their edited forms are, as Kundig says, “honest about how they are made and what they are made from.”

According to Kundig, this line is the very first of many; now that he has begun to focus in this direction, he wants to keep going. “There are so many other products that I can’t find in the commodity market. Designing them myself and putting them out there for others to use seems like the right evolution.” The Tom Kundig Collection won a 2012 “Best of Year” award in the hardware category from Interior Design Magazine.

In 2013, Kundig designed The Final Turn, a funerary urn, with Greg Lundgren, owner of Lundgren Monuments in Seattle. The urn consists of two halves of an eight- inch-diameter blackened steel or bronze sphere—the halves are threaded with a noticeable offset from one another when they meet. While the sphere implies perfection and eternity, the offset nature of the urn is inspired by the people left behind—those whose lives are thrown off-kilter by the passing of a loved one. “It’s a quiet reminder.” Kundig noted in a New York Times interview. A threaded cap atop the stem on the lower half provides access to the receptacle for the remains. The upper half includes a compartment designed to house mementos. Flat surfaces on the exterior accommodate inscriptions, if desired.

Films and Videos

In 2012, Tom Kundig and Jim Dow built a cabin on top of Flagg Mountain in Mazama, Washington that has been opposed[19] by a coalition[20] including a number of area residents and adjoining property owners, who claim that the building, which is cantilevered over a rock cliff, is visually obtrusive and breaks an unwritten agreement among residents not to build atop the ridgeline.[21] Those opponents have filed a lawsuit claiming that the structure violates protective viewshed covenants that were placed on the property by earlier owners.[22][23] The cabin's owners (including Kundig and Dow) assert that the cabin's location is legal, that it is not as visible as opponents claim, that placement elsewhere would have intruded on other neighbors, and that once its exterior siding is completed, it will blend in more with its surroundings.[21][24][25] The case is being heard in Superior Court of Okanogan County, Washington.[26]

Notable works

Publications

References

  1. Levine, Bettijane (May 8, 2008), "Cooper-Hewitt design awards go to Tom Kundig, OLIN", Los Angeles Times, retrieved August 18, 2009
  2. "The Wallpaper* 150". Wallpaper*. Retrieved 7 June 2012.
  3. "A stone by any other name". World Architecture News. Retrieved 7 June 2012.
  4. 1 2 Drueding, Meghan. "Project of the Year: Art Stable, Seattle". Residential Architect. Retrieved 7 June 2012.
  5. Kolleeny, Jane F. "Rolling Huts". Architectural Record. Retrieved 7 June 2012.
  6. Ostroff, Tracy. "2009 Architecture Firm Award Goes to Olson Sundberg Kundig Allen". AIArchitect. Retrieved 7 June 2012.
  7. Tischler, Linda. "Most Innovative Companies - Architecture". Fast Company. Retrieved 7 June 2012.
  8. Snider, Bruce D. "artist in residence(s)". Residential Architect. Retrieved 7 June 2012.
  9. 1 2 Bell, Jonathan. "Native Son". PrivatAir. Retrieved 7 June 2012.
  10. Gregory, Rob (May 2012). "Custom Made". Grand Designs.
  11. Andrew, Caruso. "Exploring the Nature of Nature". National Building Museum. Retrieved 7 June 2012.
  12. Welton, Michael J. "From Tokyo, Tom Kundig Goes Global". Architects+Artisans. Retrieved 7 June 2012.
  13. Welton, Mike. "An Interview with Tom Kundig". Architects and Artisans. Retrieved 19 July 2013.
  14. 1 2 Burdet, Julia (Autumn 2007). "Inspired by Tom Kundig". Bridge for Design: 56–65. Retrieved 19 July 2013.
  15. Juhani Pallasmaa, The Reality of the Image: The Microcosms of Tom Kundig, Tom Kundig: Houses 2, Princeton Architectural Press, New York, NY 2011.
  16. Rick Joy, A Delicate Refrain, Tom Kundig: Houses, Princeton Architectural Press, New York, NY, 2006.
  17. Steven Holl, Beginnings, Tom Kundig: Houses, Princeton Architectural Press, New York, NY, 2006.
  18. http://kontentpartners.com/work/the-art-of-series/
  19. Vedder, Tracy (July 21, 2014). "Residents say developer's odd cabin is 'extended third finger' to town". KOMO News.
  20. Cross, Midge. "Move the Hut". Retrieved May 25, 2013.
  21. 1 2 Celebrated Architect Tom Kundig Rouses Ire Over Ridgeline Cabin, Nina Shapiro, Seattle Weekly, June 26, 2013
  22. "Tom Kundig goes head to head with residents of Methow Valley". Mother Nature Network. June 27, 2013.
  23. "Celebrated Architect Tom Kundig Rouses Ire Over Ridgeline Cabin". Seattle Weekly. June 26, 2013.
  24. Mehaffey, K.C. (May 7, 2013), "Eyesore or environmental wonder? Depends on how you see it", Wenatchee World, retrieved May 27, 2013
  25. "The Big Problem with the Methow's Little Hut". Seattle Magazine. December 2013.
  26. Lacitis, Erik (October 12, 2014), "Tiny cliff cabin rocks the Methow Valley", Seattle Times, retrieved October 13, 2014
  27. Hanley, William. "Charles Smith Wines". Architectural Record. Retrieved 19 July 2013.
  28. "2012 Recipient | AIA Housing Awards". American Institute of Architects. Retrieved 7 June 2012.
  29. Gordon, Alastair. "La La Land". Wall Street Journal Magazine. Retrieved 19 July 2013.
  30. Bostwick, William. "A Minimalist Home/Studio by Tom Kundig". Architectural Digest. Retrieved 19 July 2013.
  31. Rus, Mayer. "Social Engineering". Los Angeles Times Magazine. Retrieved 19 July 2013.
  32. Bernstein, Fred A. (January 7, 2009), "Surrendering to the Landscape", New York Times, retrieved January 7, 2009
  33. Fairs, Marcus. "Montecito Residence by Olson Sundberg Kundig Allen Architects". dezeen magazine. Retrieved 19 July 2013.
  34. Kolleeny, Jane F. (April 2008), Record Houses - Rolling Huts, Architectural Record, retrieved August 18, 2009
  35. Russell, James S., Record Houses - Stilt Cabin, Architectural Record, retrieved August 18, 2009
  36. Viladas, Pilar (April 13, 2003), "Open House", New York Times, pp. 64–74, retrieved August 18, 2009
  37. Clair, Enlow. "Thinking Inside The Box". Pacific Northwest: The Seattle Times Magazine. Retrieved 7 June 2012.
  38. Moody, Fred. "The Natural". Seattle Met. Retrieved 7 June 2012.
  39. "Little Houses on the Prairie". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 7 June 2012.
  40. Cheek, Lawrence W. "Seattle's 10 Greatest Homes". Seattle Met. Retrieved 7 June 2012.

External references

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