Monday, March 22, 2010

A Huge Success- ASID Showrise at Commerce Towers





Along with my partner, Scotti Campbell, we designed a room for children with ADHD. It was a huge success and a template for the community to follow for the very common disorders ADHD and ADD that are seen in so many children today. We couldn't have done it without the help of our instructors Diane Alexander, LEED AP, and Rex Spencer.

We were so honored to get the chance to work side by side with well-established interior designers in the Houston area. We all came together to give a fabulous display at the Commerce Towers last month.

I have learned so much from this research based design and hope to continue learning more as I get involved in yet another project dealing with children and research based design in the next couple months.

The above is the literature on our room and pictures of the finished space.

Award Winning Design Boards


I recently won 1st Place Residential Project and 2nd Place Sustainable Project for ASID Student Career Day, on March 5th. My residential board consisted of my National Award Winning kitchen design. My sustainable boards consisted of a project involving my church renderings.

My New Logo


It's simple, yet so complicated. It has taken me 2 months to perfect my new logo.

National Student Winner- SUB-ZERO/WOLF Kitchen Contest



This is a very big win for me! I couldn't say it better than the article below, written by Mike Morris for the Houston Chronicle.

Design Student Wins National Competition

By Mike Morris

A Humble student has bested 600 other competitors to win a national interior-design competition for a project he developed based on the needs of his large family.

Art Institute of Houston senior Frankie Dziedzic, 22, learned last month he had won the lone student prize in the biennial National Kitchen Design Contest put on by manufacturers Sub-Zero and Wolf Appliance.

One of 12 children, nine of whom are adopted and several of whom have learning or speech disabilities, Dziedzic designed the kitchen with his family in mind.

Dziedzic also is working with his father, Frank, a general contractor, to finish designing a new house the family hopes to build with the kitchen as a centerpiece.

The space, titled “Laughter Through The Rafters,” features two central islands and a wide cooking area flanked by two concealed refrigerators. Most of the appliances, in fact, are hidden within the green cabinetry, a color Dziedzic chose to give the space a light, fun ambiance.

“My whole intention was, by having the design clean and concealed, that the actual art of cooking and being in the kitchen is shown better,” he said. “That is the canvas for actually living in there.”

In the family’s current home on Pinehurst Trail Drive, small rooms with low ceilings make the space feel even smaller, so Dziedzic raised the ceilings to the rafters and removed most walls. Because those choices might raise the noise level, Dziedzic also included hanging fabric-coated disks that also would be lights, and cork flooring, both of which dampen sound.

“This is the first project I’ve done where I’ve actually looked at it and felt what I was trying to achieve,” he said. “I just picture my family in there and you hear kids laughing, and there are people sitting over there at the table. It looks beautiful to me.”

Dziedzic’s teacher Rex Spencer said his student is a mature, “one in 100” student with a special ability to think in three dimensions and has a unique understanding of lighting, the most crucial element of interior design.

“He lives design — it’s his passion,” he said. “He’s not just designing a project to be published or to win a competition. He’s designing it caring about the person who’s going to use the space. If you don’t have that humanity, you can’t be a great designer.”

Dziedzic’s father described his son as an organized perfectionist, with an impressive ability to mold designs in his head.

“He was able to take the ideals that I had, his mother and others, and he just put it all together,” Frank said. “A lot of people can do nice work. To take somebody else’s thoughts and put them down on the paper, that’s unique.”

Having worked as a general contractor and designed the family’s current home himself, Frank is in a unique position to appreciate his son’s talent, and says he’s tremendously impressed and excited about his potential.
“I’ve been around some talented people, and I compare him equal to a lot of these guys that have been around for years,” he said.

As part of the competition win, Dziedzic, with his mother as a guest, will travel to a Florida resort next week on an expenses-paid trip to enjoy the ocean and network with design professionals.

March 18, 2010

The Houston Chronicle






Glorious Way Church, located in Houston, Texas, has quickly outgrown is children and youth
ministry space. GWC built and new building several years ago, using Sprung Structures to create a remarkably unique and cutting-edge piece of architecture. Since the rise of steel prices, the option to add on to GWC using Sprung became less practical. They decided to add on using a metal building, but wanted to keep the same feel and similar architectural styles.

The architect seamlessly merged the Sprung buildings and the new metal addition with the curved roof and industrial materials. I suggested keeping the red window mullions to add continuity and repitition. I think it works well.

The church hired me to render several exterior views and to design several interior views. This project just broke ground several weeks ago and is in progress.


www.gwc.cc

IDEA Integration Award Winning Renderings






Houston/Florida based advertising and design company, IDEA Integration, was majorly outgrowing their leased space within the Phoenix Towers. They set out to find solutions to their design problems at The Art Institute of Houston. Under the supervision of Professor Stanko Gakovic, our Advanced Commercial Design class competed as 5 groups against one another to find the perfect solution for IDEA within their low budget of $100,000.

My group, consisting of me, Scotti Campbell, Brooke Bowman, and Whitney Hollis, worked seamlessly together to provide them with a package as you see in the renderings that I did. Special design features, such as the custom curved, modular desks add movement to the once bored space. Interesting "speech bubble" dry erase boards give the space flexibility and personality.

We were given 10 weeks to provide construction documents, renderings, and process documentations, as well as give 2 full presentations. Needless to say, our amazing group was chosen as the winners! We were each awarded with $500.00 cash, publication in their monthly newsletter, and given a luncheon in our honor.

http://www.ideaii.com/newsletter/2009/november/index.html

http://www.bizjournals.com/houston/stories/2009/12/14/tidbits1.html?s=industry&b=1260766800%5e2571971&page=1