Let's do a dive into this article, since David Jameson is working on the McMillan Sand Filtration site development project.
I have copied in the specific paragraphs that mention McMillan.
You can click on the link to read the entire article.
Modern Love
Architect David Jameson knows D.C.'s buildings don't have to be ugly. Now he's trying to convince the rest of the world, too.
By Kriston Capps • February 14, 2014
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Another project may go even further. Jameson’s plan for the multifamily-unit building that anchors the development for the McMillan Slow Sand Filtration Plant site may prove that condo mid-rise buildings—the 21st-century answer to the rowhouse—needn’t look like they were assembled by factories and dropped by drones all over the District.
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None of Jameson’s homes refers architecturally to the others—or to the BlackWhite Residence, or the Tea House, or the Jigsaw Residence, or the Matryoshka Residence (or to the growing roster of the firm’s projects outside the area, flung as far and wide as Southern California and Hanoi). And none of these homes is bound to resemble the McMillan project, whatever name that eventually takes.
“The developer wanted someone who would push the envelope,” says Anne Corbett, project director for Envision McMillan. For the multifamily project, Jameson is collaborating with MV&A, the firm that designed the mixed-use building anchored by a Walmart at 1st and H streets NW. “There wasn’t an architectural firm with the technical expertise who would push the envelope from a design standpoint. Obviously, this kind of building is not in David’s normal wheelhouse. Pushing the design envelope certainly is.”
While he has yet to release detailed designs, Jameson says that he is collaborating on the façade system with Bill Zahner, the Kansas City, Mo.–based machinist who has worked with Frank Gehry to execute most of that architect’s titanium tapestries. (That doesn’t mean he plans to drape twisted metal over the apartment building—he’d have more groups than Save McMillan Park after him if he did.) Jameson will say that the metalwork for the façade, which appear in renderings to be a series of fins, will be a specific callout to the site’s history as a sand-filtration site.
“He kind of took apart the DNA of the site,” Corbett says. “I think his process was good for the team as a whole, pushing the other architects to think a little bit differently about how they responded to the site.” Jameson’s involvement on the McMillan project may not be limited to one building, she notes; phase two calls for another mixed-use building, and while the work hasn’t been contracted yet, she says there’s no reason to think Jameson won’t be involved.
“We got the McMillan project because the process of the work is scalable. For many residential architects, it’s difficult to move from small to big or from inexpensive to expensive,” Jameson says. “But none of those things matter to scaling my work.”
There’s still a staggering number of hurdles for Envision McMillan to overcome before the design becomes a reality. The project cleared one by winning the approval of the Historic Preservation Review Board in October. Envision McMillan will come before the Zoning Commission in several public hearings in late April or early May. Then, with those recommendations appended, the plan goes before the Mayor’s Agent, who is involved because the project requires demolition to adapt the landmark.
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Nevertheless, Jameson’s involvement with Envision McMillan is an encouraging prospect—especially given that the surge in economic growth in D.C. has been met by such dreary design. Tedious condo buildings have choked 14th Street NW and other corridors in the last five years. Perhaps one new building with some design acumen will encourage developers to reconsider aesthetics as a strategy for creating investment opportunities.
There are signs that this is happening elsewhere. David Adjaye, the London star designing the National Museum of African American History and Culture on the National Mall, is converting the West Heating Plant into high-end condos for Georgetown, where the famed Mexican firm Ten Arquitectos is designing the West End Library. What Envision McMillan will test is whether compelling design from D.C. can be brought to bear on projects nowhere near 20037.
4 comments:
I agree Jameson is talented and has done some really interesting things ...but i don't see how in any way his designs for the rowhouses on McMillan have "pushed the envelope" (according to Corbett) of anything at all. They are merely vanilla colored boxes. I can't figure out anything i like at all about them... and a friend of mine who is an fairly well known architect told me that he finds them "abominable." So if they wanted Jameson to open up and show us what he's capable of why did we get these boxes that are being referred to as "sanitorium chic." Just more blah blah from VMP signifying nothing. T
@ Todd - I think he is for the condos, not the rowhouses. The rowhouses are made by EYA.
Sweet mother of gawd. I wasn't paying enough attention (all the architecture on this development is lackluster). I had it in my mind that Jameson had done the rowhouses...which was more of a sin of omission...humdrum yes, but not a direct visual assault on the senses. Now i see that Matt is indeed CORRECT and Jameson is responsible for the Multifamily/grocery building...which is an unforgivable sin of commission!!! This the is the building where "Brutalism collided with a Chipotle".... which looks like the whole entire building is a meditation on an Air conditioning vent. This building (although a step of from the giant black slag pile design that preceded it (also Jameson??) is one of the worst reviewed in the entire development. Not even the HPRB liked it. The single biggest architectural abomination in a whole collection of them. It makes the Brutalist medical complex look refined, warm and nuanced in comparison.
To be clear, the actual architects for this project are as follows:
Townhomes - Lessard Design
Multifamily/Retail - David Jameson Architects and MV&A
Medical Office - Shalom Baranes Associates
Proposed vertical developers for this project:
Townhomes - EYA
Multifamily/Retail - Jair Lynch
Medical Office - Trammell Crow
Although to be sure, each of these vertical developers have a myriad of LLCs registered in the District so it's unclear exactly what entity will be performing each phase of the proposed work (e.g. Jair Lynch is associated with over two dozen companies such as Lynch Development Partners, LLC; the Jair Lynch Companies, Inc.; JLC Development LLC, etc. etc.).
Mathew Bader
Bloomingdale Civic Association McMillan Advisory Group Representative
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