Friday, August 13, 2010

AIA Dallas EL Meeting – August 13


Our meeting was held in the community room at the historic 511 N. Akard building in Dallas.

The building is the first of its kind in Dallas and is one of the largest nonprofit projects in the state of Texas. The vertical housing complex has 200 high-quality affordable residences for low-income workers, 50 of which are reserved for the formerly homeless. The building is modeled after such projects in Seattle, New York, and Houston, all of which have experienced a high level of success in their respected communities.

511 North Akard is headquarters to both Central Dallas Community Development Corporation and Central Dallas Ministries. The ground-floor will house retail, the second-floor has multiple office spaces for lease, and located on the top floor are 6 condos that have already been sold.

Purchased in 2006, the building has undergone a massive transformation from being a former vacated 15-story office tower into becoming multiple residences, shops, and offices. Refurbished back to it’s 1950’s original luster, it boasts many unique features such as marble-walled lobbies, original intact flooring, the third-floor Hexagonal Community Room and exterior patio deck, stainless steel fixtures, as well as, community rooms located on each floor for tenant use.

Our First speaker was Mary K. Suhm, Dallas City Manager.

Mrs. Suhm is serving her fifth year as city manager for the City of Dallas. As city manager, Suhm is responsible for the daily operations of the municipal organization. She manages a staff of approximately 14,000 employees and a budget of nearly 3 billion. She was appointed city manager in June 2005, by the Dallas City Council. Prior to her appointment as city manager, Suhm served as interim city manager, first assistant city manager, assistant city manager, executive assistant director of Dallas Police, director of courts, assistant to the Mayor, and branch library manager for the City of Dallas.

During her three decades in municipal government, Mary Suhm has earned a national reputation among public administrators for creativity and innovation. Suhm, who earned master of business administration and master of library science degrees from the University of North Texas, has introduced performance measurement, customer service, benchmarking, strategic planning and other common business practices into municipal management operations to assure that Dallas city government runs efficiently, economically, and effectively. She received praise from all levels of government and the community for her leadership during Hurricanes Katrina and Rita after managing a large scale evacuation effort by establishing and operating two major shelters and a Disaster Recovery Center in Dallas.

Staring out the widow at the Margaret Hunt Hill Bridge, currently under construction, Mrs. Suhm sought to impress on our group the notion of patience in leadership. Having been one of her greatest passions, the bridge was originally approved by voters in 1999, but has faced an enormous amount of subsequent obstacles to this point. “Find your passion and you’ll make it work…it may take 25 years, but it will happen.”

When asked if she and other city staff looked to other cities as models for achievement, Mrs. Suhm responded “Dallas is a city that is very sure of itself. It doesn’t aspire to be a Chicago or New York.” She went on to discuss the role of the city and it’s interaction with people outside of it. “Often the perception within the city is that the public thinks we are too stupid, crooked or lazy to work in the private sector, and that can lead to a defensive posture.” When the city becomes involved in projects “you need to engage with the city. You would be surprised how many people who work for the city do so because they want to help with their community.” It is an interesting perspective, especially contrasted against the ususal persepective many in our profession have after less than ideal dealing with staff in any municipality. “The city can figure out how to do almost anything, you just have to engage them properly.”

We then asked Mrs. Suhm to elaborate on working with groups who sought to help change communities, both from inside and out. To her, the key is working with individuals, “you are not going to get to the global good without solving the interests of individuals.” Making note of several projects that had been intended for the betterment of a community but experienced a great deal of local opposition, she explained that far too many architects and developers think in a big picture that individuals, to whom this will affect, are not concerned with.

Speaking on some of her greatest challenges as city manager, Mrs. Suhm relayed a story of when several thousand Katrina evacuees where scheduled to be sent to Dallas and that she had 24 hours to organize a room, board and medical facilities for the individuals. “There are a lot of people and resources at the City. With enough of them, you can accomplish anything.” Though most of the people she contacted to help organize the effort where themselves overwhelmed with the reality of it initially, they found ways to make it work, and the effort succeeded. Now those who faced an almost impossible task and succeeded “have higher expectations and more confidence” as a result.

Our second speaker was Brent A. Brown, AIA, LEED AP.

Brent Brown is an architect working to bring design thinking to all communities. He is the Founding Director of the Dallas based community design center, buildingcommunity WORKSHOP, where his work has been recognized locally and nationally. Recently, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, in conjunction with the American Institute for Architects, awarded his Congo Street Green Initiative the 2010 National AIA/HUD Secretary Award for “Community-Informed Design.”

In October 2009, Brent was named the Director of the newly established Dallas CityDesign Studio. The Studio is an office of the City of Dallas, in partnership with the Trinity Trust Foundation, and works daily to connect all of Dallas through thoughtful urban design. This past November, Brent represented the southwest region as part of the President’s Forum on Clean Energy and Public Health at the White House. Joining Administrator Lisa Jackson of the Environmental Protection Agency and Secretary Kathleen Sebelius of the Department Health & Human Services the forum discussed linkages between clean energy to immediate and lasting public health benefits and the role of community design toward the promotion of healthier lifestyles.

Brent has had a long history of utilizing his professional expertise for the betterment of communities “as an architect, I have an ethic simply because of my profession.” Brent sees the profession of architecture, itself, as a natural role for leadership in communities. He spoke at length about how architects have a unique capacity for creating change “we synthesize information into a collection of opportunities.” With this skill set, and the moral imperative of the profession, he strongly believes that “we cannot just work in the abstract realm, but have to make something real.”

In his dual role, both as a private practitioner and a consultant to the city, Brent sees a role to help cities create a framework to facilitate successful development that transcends the bean counter in a office with a checklist. Because nearly 80% of the realm the city is in control of is public streets, Brent notes “The city should be an advocate for the street edge because the R.O.W. is one of the few places the city can impact development.” This then is the realm in which he works, helping the city and “liberating” the bean counters from their lists by offering new ways to think about projects from within the city itself. “Most people are not critical thinkers,” he notes, continuing to elaborate on the many assets and architect brings to the table, as well as out visualizations skills “Visualization is a tool of negotiation.”

In addition to our objective skills, Brent went on to speak of abstract leadership skills an architect has, offering the experience that many of us have had “how many times at a party have you been introduced to some one and they say ‘I thought about being an architect’? Admiration for architects is huge, and that can become an asset.”

AIA Dallas EL Meeting – July 16


This month’s ELP was focused on the topic of Project Leadership. The guests included

“I’m trying to build the city I want to grow old in.”

“You can do a lot by just showing up. Very few actually do, and every person multiplies good ideas.”

Jason Roberts is a community organizer, IT consultant, and musician living in the Oak Cliff region of South Dallas with his wife and two small children. Jason formed the non-profit organization, Oak Cliff Transit Authority in 2006 to revive the Dallas streetcar system; and in 2010 won a $23 Million dollar TIGER stimulus grant from the FTA to help reintroduce a modern rail system to Dallas. In 2008, Jason co-founded Bike Friendly Oak Cliff, a bicycle advocacy organization, whose model has been replicated throughout North Texas, and organized the ten day Cyclesomatic festival earning a City of Dallas proclamation. In April, Jason organized the “Better Block” project, taking a blighted block with vacant properties in South Dallas and converted it into a temporary walk able district with pop-up businesses, bike lanes, cafe seating, and kids’ art studios. The project was showcased at TEDx in Washington DC, and featured on GOOD magazine’s blog. Jason is co-founder of Art Conspiracy, past president of the Historic Texas Theatre Renovation, and member of the Congress for New Urbanism. He is passionate about community building, place making, and taking time out to perform in the indie pop band, the Happy Bullets.


“If you care about things, you are a political person.”

Betsy Del Monte, AIA, LEED AP, is Director of Sustainability and a principal in the architecture group at Beck, and has been focusing on issues of sustainability in commercially successful projects for many years. She is also an adjunct faculty member at the Lyle School of Engineering at SMU where she teaches a graduate program in sustainability.

Betsy was 2007 President of AIA Dallas and 2006 chair of the North Texas Green Building Council and has been named a Senior Fellow by the Design Futures Council. She frequently speaks at regional and national conferences on the subjects of green construction and sustainable building design.

Betsy received her Bachelor of Science degree in architecture from the University of Virginia, and a Master of Architecture degree from Rice University. Her experience includes work at architecture firms in Atlanta and Houston, as well as nine years with Philip Johnson and John Burgee in New York.


“In the workplace there are a lot of dynamics you have to deal with, but you can’t forget your goal.”

“Architects are visionaries, they see things that others don’t see. They know what the future needs to be.”

Clyde Porter, FAIA, IIDA, NCARB, NOMA is the Associate Vice Chancellor of Facilities Management and Planning/District Architect for the Dallas County Community College District, an organization that administrates and supports the traditional approach to design and construction contracting for the seven campuses, one institute and two administrative facilities of the community college system, serving over 100,000 students and faculty annually. During his tenure, he has completed over $700 million of district-wide new construction renovation and expansion projects, i.e. student centers, classrooms, administrative and infrastructure improvements. Presently, he is directing the DCCCD eight-year, long-range master plan $500 million program. Prior to that he served as the chief architect for the Dallas Area Rapid Transit $2.9 billion transportation project, where he completed 10 transit center designs and set the regional architectural vernacular for the DART rail and bus transit center program. In addition to being on the leading edge of introducing rapid transit to the Dallas region, he directed facilities design for the office products and business services division of the Xerox Corporation, southwest region.

Previously he served 11 years as facilities architect for the world-wide headquarters of the Army and Air Force Exchange Service, Dallas, Texas, where he was awarded an excellence award for improving the quality and cost-effectiveness of construction projects. Prior to this he served as a city planner for the City of Corpus Christi, Texas. Prior to the City of Corpus Christi, he served as a Captain in the US Army Corps of Engineers (combat), earning the US Army bronze star, US Army air medal, and the US Army commendation medal for heroism, and others. His tours of duty included Ft. Belvoir, Virginia; Fort Hood, Texas; Vietnam; and Oklahoma State University as assistant professor of military science, where he received a certificate of achievement for improved procedures that greatly enhanced ROTC operational efficiency. Clyde Porter has a B.S. in Industrial Arts Education and a Master of Architecture degree from Prairie View A & M University. He is a registered professional architect and registered professional interior designer in the State of Texas. He also holds a National Council of Architectural Registration Board certification. Throughout his career he has managed more than $ 5 billion in design and construction.

Clyde Porter is also active in the community. He is a regular guest lecturer at several area high schools, Dallas Independent School District middle schools and Prairie View A & M University School of Architecture, where he enhances student knowledge on architecture and engineering as a career choice. He also serves on the Dallas City Central TIF Board and is a Board member for the National ACE Mentor program. Mr. Porter is also active in several professional organizations and serves on the board of directors for the Dallas Architectural Foundation, former chairman of the Dallas AIA Minority Resource Committee and a member of the National Organization of Minority Architects. In 2002, Mr. Porter was awarded the Dallas chapter of American Institute of Architects citation of honor award and in 1999 awarded the outstanding man of minority business development by the Minority Business News for Dallas and Fort Worth

In 2003, he was also the first architect in the history of Texas to be honored by Governor Perry with the highest award Texas can bestow, a commissioned admiral in the Texas Navy, for his outstanding contribution to the State. This was preceded by honors from both the Texas House of Representatives and Texas Senate by resolution for his outstanding contribution in architecture as a premier public architect. He is also a Fellow of the American Institute of Architects. One of the highest honors the AIA can bestow upon a member. Again, he was honored by the State of Texas in 2007 by resolution for this achievement. In addition Mr. Porter, FAIA has been awarded the 2009 Whitney M. Young Jr. Award by the National AIA Board of Directors.