Spector Group Book 1
Spector Group Book 1
Spector Group Book 1
Volume 2 1994-2012
dedication
To my wife, my life partner and best buddy Joan Thank you for supporting my 45 years of creating challenging architecture. To my sons Scott and Marc You have earned my respect and admiration of your individual talents, and I have enjoyed sharing your growth. To my daughter Jolie Who I am happy to say, has the experience of working in a building we have created. She is indeed a part of the Spector Group. To my grandchildren Alex, Charlie, Jake, Kellie, Adam, Sammie, Keith, Amy, Eli The future belongs to you. Michael Harris Spector, FAIA To my wife Abbe and our children Alex, Jake and Adam Who are my inspiration in everything I do and every choice I make. To my parents Michael and Joan Who always supported me in every endeavor. And to all the Spector Group architects that I have collaborated with over the years, Ive cherished those fulfilling experiences and look forward to future architectural challenges together. Scott E. Spector, AIA To my Mom and Dad Thanks for giving me a strong foundation of love and support upon which I build upon everyday. To my wife Karen You are the love of my life and I thank you for standing beside me throughout my career. You are my inspiration and motivation for continuing to improve my craft. To my kids Charlie, Kellie and Sammie I love each of you with all my heart and I hope you will read this book and absorb its passion for integrity into your own lives. To my colleagues at Spector Group All of your creative efforts are found on these pages and are a reflection of your continued commitment to excellence. And for that I am thankful.
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preface
My father, Architect Charles Sanford Spector, painted this stunning watercolor of the Parthenon while on a five-year fellowship in Greece 77 years ago. It graces the wall of our offices and is a constant reminder of our beginnings, as well as an everlasting inspiration for future generations. How amazed and thrilled he would be if he were here to witness the course of events that have catapulted first me, then my two sons, Scott and Marc, into the continuing and demanding challenges of the profession. And, perhaps, if we get lucky, a fourth generation will emerge. Michael Harris Spector, FAIA
Copyright 2013 by Visual Prole Books, Inc. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the publisher. Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data: Architecture as a Design Partnership ISBN 13: 978-0-9825989-7-9 ISBN 10: 0-9825989-7-1 Distributors to the trade in the United States and Canada Innovative Logistics 575 Prospect Street Lakewood, NJ 08701 732.363.5679 Distributors outside the United States and Canada HarperCollins International 10 East 53rd Street New York, NY 10022-5299 Exclusive distributor in China Beijing Designerbooks Co., Ltd. B-0619, No.2 Building, Dacheng International Center 78 East 4th Ring Middle Road Chaoyang District, Beijing 100022, P.R. China Tel: 0086(010)5962-6195 Fax: 0086(010)5962-6193 E-mail: [email protected] www.designerbooks.net Printed and bound in China Book Design: Michael Harris Spector, Linda Bauer, Martina Marie Parisi and Roger Yee
The paper on which this book is printed contains recycled content to support a sustainable world.
contents
10 12 18 22 26 32 40 44 52 54 60 62 68 70 72 74 78 80 82 86 88 Celebrating Architecture The First Forty Years New York CA European Headquarters United Kingdom CA World Headquarters New York CA Child Development Center New York Pall Corporation Corporate Headquarters New York Mercedes-Benz Manhattan New York Birch Wathen Lenox School New York Alfonse M. DAmato United States Courthouse and Federal Office Building New York World Financial Center Retail Transformation at Brookfield Place New York North Shore Hebrew Academy New York State University of New York College at Old Westbury New York East Williston Union Free School District Wheatley High School New York Westbury Union Free School District Westbury High School New York Nassau County Aquatic Center New York Center Moriches Union Free School District Secondary School Campus New York Port Washington Union Free School District Schreiber High School New York Temple Judea Holocaust Childrens Resource Center and Museum New York The Newark Public School District New Jersey Kings Point Village Hall and Police Station New York Campus for the New York State Office of Mental Health New York State University of New York Stony Brook University New York Volkswagen and Audi Manhattan Dealership New York Shui On Plaza China Sbarro New York Deutsch Inc California Deutsch Inc New York BWD Insurance Group New York Onassis Cultural Center New York Forrest Solutions Group New York HIT Entertainment New York Ivy Asset Management New York NASDAQ OMX Stock Exchange New York, California, Connecticut, Washington DC, Illinois, Maryland, London and Beijing 128 North Fork Bank (Capital One) New York 132 Weber Law Group New York 136 Brookfield Properties U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission New York 140 Acotel Group New York 144 SunGard New York 148 Milberg New York 152 ItSugar New Jersey 154 Luxottica Group New York 156 Mason Capital Management New York 158 Nathans Famous New York 160A First Eagle Investment Management New York 160 B Waterfall Asset Management New York 160D Time Warner Cable New York 161 PowerSpace and Services New York 162 Och Capital Management New York 164 New Mountain Capital New York 166 J. Goldman New York 168 Prudential New Jersey 90 93 94 96 101 106 107 108 114 118 122 170 174 176 180 182 184 188 190 192 195 196 200 202 204 208 210 212 214 216 217 218 220 224 226 228 230 234 236 240 248 New York - Presbyterian Hospital New York Mt. Sinai Medical Center New York Apax Partners New York Hellman & Friedman New York Copper Arch Capital New York First Empire Securities New York Lycos New York Active International New York Clarendon Insurance Group New York Atlantic Theatre Company New York Fish & Richardson New York Quirky.com New York Panthera New York The Lighthouse New York Beacon Pointe New Jersey Town of Riverhead Riverfront Downtown Redevelopment Project New York EPCAL Centre New York WA Luxury Condominiums New York Starlight New Jersey Residential Towers Connecticut Private Residence New York Glass Penthouse New York Private Residence New York Private Residence New York Private Residence New York Private Residence New York Stephen Weiss and Donna Karan Studio New York Private Residence New York Spector Group Manhattan Offices New York Spector Group Long Island Offices New York
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Bucharest Medical Center Romania The National Flight Academy Florida Jericho Plaza 3 New York Village of North Hills Cultural Center New York The Centre at 3400 New York Nassau County Police Department Center for Law Enforcement and Intelligence New York 266 World Jewel Capital Kingdom of Saudi Arabia 268 Zhong Hang Plaza Peoples Republic of China 269 S on the River Florida 270 Dalian Fashion City Peoples Republic of China 271 San Kei Commercial City Peoples Republic of China 272 The Centre at Garden City New York 273 Harbor Pointe Connecticut 274 North Shore-Long Island Jewish Health System & Nassau County Police Department Centre for Joint Training New York 275 Embassy New York 276 Battery Ice Arena New York 278 Engineers Country Club New York 280 Lower Broadway Mixed-Use Conversion New York 281 Georgia Centre New York 282 Renaissance at McGinley Square New Jersey 282A Elmont Town Crossings at Belmont Park New York 283 The New York Islanders Arena New York 254 256 258 260 262 264
foreword
My name is Jake Hunter Spector and I am proud to say that I hope to join this great line of professionals and keep the Spector name growing. The decision to pursue this discipline was not an easy one; in fact, in trying to determine how to structure my undergraduate experience, I decided that it would be bene cial to apply to a summer program in architecture that would introduce me to the coursework from a perspective other than that shared by my family. After attending the University of Miami for the summer, I knew that architecture was the profession I wanted to pursue. I have chosen the University of Virginia because it gives me the ability to harness my mathematical skills, my artistic talents and my ability to think outside the box. I hope that I am able to make my previous generations proud and keep the legacy going.
architecture
Celebrating Architecture
This exhibition of the first forty years of Spector Group architecture is designed speci cally to provide the viewer access to the creative process as it evolves. At the entry corridor, a timeline of milestones coupled with world events guides the visitor through the history of the practice. On the rst wall, black and white photographs of the sta impart the energy and camaraderie of the rm members. e next wall is a giant series of multiple images creating a vivid full color montage of the rms diversi ed projects. A third wall features a single plasma screen that screens an artistic, some say emotional, presentation of architectural form entitled Bringing Architecture to Life and nally, the last wall features eight monitors of interactive images that communicate the architectural process, from sketch to nal, completed work.
CA
CA European Headquarters |
e historic site and structures of Ditton and Appleton Park date back to 1086 as recorded in the Domesday Book, a survey of English landholdings made by order of William the Conqueror. e architectural team has preserved the exterior of the historical Manor House within the moated enclosure of Ditton Park, once connected to Windsor Castle via waterway. All 18thcentury gardens, courtly walls, gates and chapel will remain untouched. e 250,000-square-foot European headquarters includes a three-story building and training center. While most buildings in the United Kingdom o er a 40-foot oor plate, CA features a 100-feet-deep oor plate with the most up to date automatic environmental system specially employed for this increased core to window distance. e building is intended to be light and airy, an elegant structure enclosed entirely by glass with an interior courtyard, creating a transparency between the workspace and the landscape. e outdoor balconies, stairs, and large building openings at either end reduces the physical impact of new presence within the historical environment. ese corner details illustrate external terraces and framed views of the landscape. e oor-to- oor glass curtainwall system is detailed and technically up to date, with a computerized solar shade system for the entirety. e structural form of the building extends into the landscape by means of hedges and manicured lawn, with roads and paths merging with the plantings. Beyond, the land will be returned to a parkland setting with a tree lined gravel route leading to the historic Manor House.
Design Excellence; American Institute of Architects Award of Excellence; Society of American Registered Architects
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CA
CA World Headquarters |
is 400,000-square-foot expansion of Computer Associates World International Headquarters features new o ce and research-and-development facilities, a state-of-the-art technical training center, an international food court and an enlarged indoor/outdoor tness center as well as multiple parking decks to accommodate the escalating sta for this software giant. e 1.5-millionsquare-foot facility currently accommodates more than 8,000 employees with plans to grow to 10,000 plus in the coming years. Noted among the 100 Best Places to Work in the U.S. CA has won repeated awards for its workplace environment. Chairman Emeritus Charles Wang says, Creating a superlative work environment is good business. We have fantastic people in our employ, and they achieve phenomenal things. It simply makes sense to provide them with facilities that re ect excellence and attract talent.
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Pall Corporation
In consolidating Pall Corporations o ces, R&D and laboratories into one facility, Spector Group closely reviewed two Pall buildings to arrive at the optimal solution for programming and reorganization. Pall Corporation is a Fortune 1000 company who creates highly specialized lters for healthcare and high technology purposes. With an interior the length of three football elds and 35-foot-high ceilings, their Port Washington building features a two-story entry lobby (48 feet high) culminating in a Main Street type intersection where one can proceed vertically up elevators or stairs or horizontally in either direction to either end of the building. Glass-walled o ces encompass science groups and technology groups amidst open workstations bathed in natural light. Interconnecting staircases connect with conference rooms creating a downtown ambiance connected with a caf and galleries lit by skylights and light wells throughout the space. e two-story-high cafeteria is expressed on the exterior as a separate geometric form, connecting to an exterior terrace. A large park-like property extends to the water.
Design Excellence; American Institute of Architects
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Mercedes-Benz Manhattan |
e Mercedes facility is located on 11th Avenue between 53rd and 54th Street, and is part of Clinton Park, a mixed-use development currently under construction. e new dealership occupies parts of the rst two oors of the complex for showrooms and o ces, and three levels below ground for service facilities. It replaces Mercedes-Benzs former facilities on 41st Street. e Manhattan store is the only company-owned dealership in the country, and the agship of Mercedes Autohaus project, a new set of design standards geared toward optimizing the customers experience with the dealership. e new facility combines brand and architectural design elements that are oriented toward creating more transparency, comfort and convenience. It features state-of-the-art showroom technology and a service area two to three times the normal size for the brand. e dealership sells Mercedes-Benz, Maybach and Smart vehicles.
Lighting Excellence Award; American Institute of Architects
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e architecture of this private high school blends the traditional materials of brick and stone with teachings of Judaism within a modern day context. Physical and inspirational elements combine to create an environment that yields strength and dignity within the educational and architectural milieu. With an emphasis on technology, the Academy has been designed to encourage the interaction of student and teacher, and the pursuit of a variety of studies from the intellectual, artistic and athletic perspective. From the intimate classroom setting, to the Technology Center; to the traditional Library stacked with texts, students are encouraged to discover his or her own calling. e sanctuary, a central place for gathering and listening, is shaped in the round, and separates the participants from the academic areas. Its form and materials, being stone, ornamental masonry and glass are punctuated by a spacious skylight, allowing natural light and blue sky to penetrate the public gallery.
Design Excellence; American Institute of Architects Best Pre K-12 Education Project; New York Construction Magazine
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State University of New York College at Old Westbury | Westbury, New York
Spector Group was awarded by the State University Construction Fund (SUCF) contract to provide full design services to enhance and fully renovate the Campus Center building exterior envelope. e scope calls for removal and replacement of the entire faade. e faade of this 350,000-square-foot multi-story building has outlived its aesthetic and sustainable life and is in desperate need of replacement and revitalization. With a complete new exterior of metal panels, glass curtainwall, window systems and skylights, the new design will create a fresh theme and image for the largest single building on the campus. Spector Group has exceptional experience in revitalizing old, fatigued and technically de cient faades and leaving in its place state-of-the-art, environmentally, functionally, aesthetically exciting and timeless architecture that all can take pride in. e Spector Group is also providing architectural design services to create new entry bridges and pedestrian portals to complement their new enhancement to the entire Campus.
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East Williston Union Free School District Wheatley High School | East Williston, New York
At Wheatley High School, a new aluminum and glass Media Center adjacent to the main entry incorporates a library and full-sized computer classroom with additional ports outside placed throughout the Center. It houses a digital publisher and a teacher resource room to prepare PowerPoint presentations for classes, plus a student workroom. Exposed spiral ductwork and custom designed trusses enhance the ceiling. Four new classrooms and a multipurpose lecture room with sound system accommodate 150 students. Science rooms and a chemical storage room feature angled rectangular tables with sinks in-between. e athletic enhancements include a new track and four additional tennis courts. e Wheatley Media Center was designed to be the hub of the Wheatley High School, accessible to all students, in school or studying elsewhere, as well as community members. Multi-faceted in its functionality, the Media Center provides a futuristic environment that encourages the student to become a working part of the space. All ductwork, structural elements and wiring are exposed. is high technology, instructional environment allows the student to be integrated into and appreciative of the functionality of the space, inspiring interest and creativity. With a tinted green glass curtainwall amidst multiple layers of sunshading to minimize glare, the Media Center becomes a focal point of the school and of the community as well.
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Westbury Union Free School District Westbury High School | Westbury, New York
Westbury High School underwent extensive renovations including an 18-classroom addition, an expanded cafeteria space and an updated Library and Media Center. Major infrastructure replacements for the school include the boilers, windows, re alarms, ceilings, lighting and roof. Long closed and used for storage, the indoor Olympic-sized swimming pool was refurbished and is available to the residents of Westbury.
Restoring the 80,000-square-foot Nassau County Aquatic Centerhosting international and national swimming and diving competitions and providing a source of recreation for area visitors is what Spector Group has been charged with to design and execute.
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Center Moriches Union Free School District Secondary School Campus | Center Moriches, New York
A realignment of grades in the Center Moriches School District paved the way for the design of a 1,000-student Secondary School Campus which includes Middle School and High School, on the site which formerly housed just the High School. ough technically one building, the design architecturally separates the two schools, while allowing them to share the new auditorium and media center. Each school has their own dedicated cafeteria and kitchen and administrative areas. Separate entrances were designed and a recon guration of space created team clusters within the building. New locker rooms and a new gymnasium that can be separated into three basketball courts, and includes an indoor pole vault, was built in the High School. e students will share an all-weather track and four tennis courts complete with lighting for evening events. e new 5,500-square-foot Media Center is approximately three times the size of the old library. e Media Center was created from the original cafeteria. e Media Center is shared by both Middle School and High School students, and the community at large. e Media Center is prominently located adjacent to the main entrance. It features a curved faade and has its own entry to facilitate public access, while maintaining security within the school environment. e Main Street Facility was recon gured to accommodate the districts Administrative O ces, formerly housed in the elementary school, and a multi-purpose room.
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Port Washington Union Free School District Schreiber High School | Port Washington, New York
After a failed referendum vote by others, Port Washington selected Spector Group to not only review the districts educational space requirements, but also to create a design scheme that would unite a bitterly divided community and re ect a signi cant cost savings over the rst proposal. Passage of this referendum was crucial to this district as enrollment is expected to increase by nearly 25% in the next eight years, with 400 students at the high school alone, further burdening overcrowded facilities. By presenting well executed cost e ective design and continually keeping an eye on the dollar with every design shift made, Spector Group was able to meet the challenge, incorporating exibility and innovation into the design solutions. ree alternative schemes were presented sparking positive discussion, and allowing room in plan to add and subtract various elements. Schreiber High School received six new additions in total: A three-story classroom, library/media room addition and a science/lab addition; a new music and technology addition; a 6,000-square-foot gymnasium addition; a new athletic facility; multipurpose room and expansion of the cafeteria to double in size. A student commons was created from the old library to simulate a food court, alleviating crowding in the school cafeteria. Additions were threaded throughout the site and careful attention was paid to architectural detail and the communitys sensitivity to the existing architecture. Of all the work and multiple additions created for the school, the charge was for the new Media Center to be the jewel of the High School and the district. e location of the Media Center wing thrusting forward towards the main avenue of vehicular access to the campus pronounces its educational importance to the school and the community. e penthouse-like third story location allows for dramatic height, geometry and again visual prominence both from within and out, demonstrating the school districts desires, while at the same time along with its smaller sister additions, respecting the architecture and the environment of the existing school.
Excellence in Masonry; American Institute of Architects
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South Street School Located in the Ironbound section of Newark NJ, (bound by the railroad), South Street School is part of a two-building campus where children start out at one school (South Street, Grades Pre K-2nd) and then go on to the next (Oliver Street, Grades 3-8). e architecture is reminiscent of what the Ironbound district was, as well as its hopes and dreams for the future. Design elements represent the historic mills and factories, while symbolic towers rise above the streetscape and tie the two buildings together. Energy e ciency is key to the projects utilizing recycled materials, lots of natural light and spaces for planting. Oliver Street School e second of a two-building educational campus, Oliver Street School, with three levels and approximately 800-900 students, is the continuation for the South Street school population. Designed as a school within a school the grade levels are clustered and separated, with multiple entries and drop-o areas working to separate the younger children from the older students. Shared areas are located away from the educational classrooms, allowing for a great deal of community use of the auditorium, gymnasium, computer facilities and a Community Health Clinic without interferring with the secure areas of the school. Energy e ciency is paramount in the development of Oliver School, as well as extended educational spaces including outdoor learning areas and interactive arenas. Oliver Street and South Street also share parking elds and athletic facilities.
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State University of New York Stony Brook University | Stony Brook, New York
Spector Group was selected to provide full forensic architecture, interior design and construction administration services for a $45 million full-scale renovation that will transform Stony Brook Universitys former Student Union into a modern, multipurpose Student Services Building. Situated at the center of the Long Island campus, the 150,000-square-foot building will be converted in time for the start of the Fall 2015 semester. Working on behalf of the State University Construction Fund (SUCF) and the State University of New York (SUNY), Spector Group conducted an extensive forensic analysis of the facility, which was originally constructed in the 1960s. e building is being renovated utilizing funds from the SUCFs Critical Maintenance Project, which provides special nancial support to bring fatigued buildings up to current safety and environmental standards. e new Student Services Building will not only be LEED certi ed and handicapped accessible, but will also meet the modern technological needs of Stony Brooks growing student body. e buildings exterior will combine modernist and neoclassic touches to create a timeless style. Finishes will include a mix of brick, stone, metal panels and glass assemblies. e Students Service Building will also receive new roo ng, as well as completely updated mechanical, HVAC and electrical systems and energy-smart insulation. e facility will house o ces for: the Bursar; Financial Aid; the Registrar; and the admissions and counseling services center, along with several large multipurpose rooms, conference centers and a large lecture hall. It will also feature a street-front student caf that will face the new central pedestrian walkway on the campus Toll Drive, providing an ideal, technology-rich environment for the students to eat, work and socialize. Student clubs, media, campus ministry service centers and a TLT SINC site, one of Stony Brooks onsite technology and data centers for students and professors, will also be located in the building.
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Spector blended the existing and new exterior faade with the interior design as part of its work for the Volkswagen Group. Flexibility will be a key component of the design scheme, so that additional showroom or parking space can be easily converted from its existing use, as needed. e space will also boast the latest in eco-friendly technology, utilizing green materials in every nishfrom oor to ceilingand meeting or exceeding standard United States energy codes.
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Shui On Plaza |
Shanghai, China
Michael Harris Spector, FAIA had the privilege and opportunity to interact with the Mayor of Shanghai over a two year period. Shui On Plaza was developed by the Shui On Group of which its municipality was part of the development team. A multiplicity of functions are captured in this Shanghai high-rise, which is comprised of o ces, retail, a tness center, a conference center, an exhibition hall, six restaurants and a major subway station.
e plazas six-story retail arcade is accentuated by a grand colonnade and multistory windowed showroom. e main lobby rises above a four-story podium. e undulating glass faade encompasses a twenty-two story skylit atrium space. Enclosed in space frame, the structure appears as a glass pavilion with no visual means of support.
Design Excellence; Corporate Facilities, China
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Sbarro |
e four-story, 125,000 square-foot T-shaped Sbarro building, located at the Long Island Expressway and Route 110 was brought up to date with the addition of a new stone-like faade, full ve-story atrium, well-de ned front and rear entries (marked by a ve-story stone archway) and ne nishes and materials throughout. By virtue of the buildings shape, there is a greater window to oor area ratio allowing both more windows and more corner o ces. A fth level roof screen wraps around the building concealing mechanical equipment and allowing a chiseled stone signage for the owner.
Design Excellence; American Institute of Architects
Spector Group designed a space for the Sbarro organization that is in keeping with their sense of old world tradition. eir o ces are ripe with rich woods and classical brass inlays, reminiscent of European dcor. Warm wood cabinetry and limestone oors are akin to the old world nancial centers. Tradition meets modernism, however, in fabric selections, carpeting, and the wood and frosted wall. Each interior space is timeless in that elements of traditionalism are balance with modern geometry and innovative fabrics and nishes.
interior architecture
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Deutsch Inc |
Spector Group and Frederic Schwartz created the 100,000-square-foot predominantly open workplace, with daylight for all and abundant opportunities for informal meetings. A streetlike grid of custom workstations occupies much of the rst oor with seismic bracing providing another ordering component. Private o ceswith glass-grid fronts, sliding doors and rear windows for transparencyadjoin circulation routes allowing another layer of workstations to enjoy window adjacency. Semiprivate conference and war rooms appear throughout the rst oor. Other locations planned for spontaneous interaction are lounge areas signaled by curved acrylic screens, placed among workstations, and two new connecting staircases, eight feet wide. e second oor houses a trio of unique translucent acrylic enclosures jutting out over the oor below. e ink Pods are a response to Deutschs operational methods and culture.
Design Excellence; American Institute of Architects Design Excellence; Society of Registered Architects
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Deutsch Inc |
Spector Group created the 118,000-square-foot national headquarters for Deutsch Inc., using one of the biggest oor plates in New York City. Located at 111 Eighth Avenue in the New York Business & Technology Building, the space measures 800 feet from one end to the otherone city block. A space of unparalleled views, its possible to stand at its center and look one way to view the Empire State Building; turn the other way to gaze at the Statue of Liberty. Standing on its end, the building would rise 80 stories high. The open plan presents the concept Factory Meets Art Gallery. e black, white, natural and neutral interior space is a machine for people in a factory-like context. An exposed 14.5-foot ceiling integrates repetitive infrastructure elements of concrete beams, galvanized ducts, industrial lights, black iron sprinkler pipes, and re alarm systems against a background of gallery-like white walls, raw concrete oors and 200-foot-long sliding glass partitions. Street-wise circulation de nes an ordered organization ooded by natural light entering the space from multiple elevations. Its void of angles and rigorous, without any of the pretentiousness of the latest convoluted trying-too-hard, how-complexcan-we-get computer generated geometries.
Design Commendation; American Institute of Architects
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Deutsch, NYC
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In renovating the densely populated o ces of BWD, Spector Group sought to create a more open feeling for the insurer of AOL as well as the NBA and NHL. Glass walled corridors and an elliptical board room allow the penetration of natural light, courtesy of an interior courtyard that runs down the center of the U-shaped building. A center hall gallery features brightly colored autographed prints of athletes and celebrity paraphernalia, framed in succession. Dark cherry wood with brass insets convey a sense of richness within the executive and conference areas, allowing for con dential meetings and conversation. e cherry wood extends just short of the ceiling, capped by a glass panel, open to light. Glass showcases penetrate the millwork boldly displaying the product of BWDs clientele.
Spector Group has been selected by the Onassis Foundation to update the Public Plaza lobby and create a new state of the art entrance and museum space on the Gallery Level of Olympic Tower, one of the most notable buildings on Fifth Avenue. e Onassis Cultural Center is the main exhibition space of the Foundation. It carries out the mission of the Onassis
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Forrest Solutions Groupthe multi-award winning sta ng and onsite outsourcing companyhas strengthened its full-service o erings by moving into a state-of-the-art, customized o ce space designed by Spector Group. e New York based company has transformed over 20,000 square feet of o ce space to create room for their rapidly expanding organization that will provide a range of new facilities and amenities to clients, prospects, and candidates. ese include: cutting-edge audio and international boardroom conferencing capabilities, Wi-Fi equipped hotelling and virtual o ces for guest usage, the latest in multi-function print devices for the in-house marketing and strategy team, their own onsite facilities and operations team, an enterprise-wide communications center (replicating the services they o er their onsite outsourcing customers), and the latest in modern desk modules, phone and ling systems. e new o ces for FSG have been built to conform to Sustainable Green Practices with low energy consumption lighting throughout the o ce, all printers and multi-functional devices defaulted to double-sided printing to minimize paper waste as well as designated areas for recycling paper and trash to ensure the company is maximizing environmentally friendly practices.
Design Excellence Commendation; American Institute of Architects
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HIT Entertainment |
Creative energy ows at HIT Entertainment whose space re ects the energy generated by the child-pleasing licensed products they handle including Barney and Friends. Located in a turn-of-the-century building, the open space plan embraces the exposed structure of the building, revealing the original terra cotta roof deck, high ceilings and columns. Laminated, neon-like, glass panels are placed selectively throughout the space introducing an eye-opening wash of color on one wall or another. Contemporary workstations and furniture are juxtaposed with the raw, un nished elements complemented by a zigzag pattern of track and pendant lighting xtures. Brick-colored carpet uni es the color scheme and provides a contrast in texture. Upstairs, the Penthouse provides a display and showroom area with plenty of space for new product introduction. e elevator opens to a co ee bar/ lounge area contributing to the exible environment. A series of curved track lights and sky-like dome xtures light the space while select exterior windows feature colored inserts. Employees show their whimsy and creativity in naming each conference, dining and informal meeting space with title plates re ecting e Velvet Lounge, etc.
Benjamin Moore Color Award; American Institute of Architects
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A subsidiary of the Bank of New York, Ivy is one of the leading multi-manager alternative investment specialists in the world. With clients participating in niche styled and sophisticated investment strategies, it was important their new o ce space be re ective of their rm. Cherry wood wall nishes coupled with glass-enclosed o ces and conference rooms create an ambiance of trust and contemporary ideology in their gallery and conference area. Crystallized glass columns anchor the space and lend an air of majesty to the art- lled gallery. Sophisticated audio/video technology in the conference center allows continuous interaction with Ivys ve national and international o ces, as does the large on site IT room.
Furniture and Furnishings Award; American Institute of Architects
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New York, California,Connecticut, Washington DC, Illinois, Maryland, London and Beijing
During the course of an ongoing, ten-year relationship with NASDAQ, Spector Group has developed all sta and space standards used globally throughout NASDAQ o ces, and it has architecturally rebranded NASDAQs corporate culture. Its relationship with NASDAQ is built on Spectors ability to listen to client needs, then react to them in a collaborative way. e scope has been varied including facilities in Maryland, Connecticut, Chicago, and downtown and midtown Manhattan. e new brand involves exibility in the work space. ese locations went from being very corporate to more high tech with dynamic architecture incorporating open spaces, exposed ceilings and greater e ciency. Spector Group redeveloped all of the clients o ce standards and made their real estate more e cient. Additionally, Spector worked with the client to transform all of the functions of their brand, from design to a unique cube environment, which was incorporated in their London facility.
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North Forks branch bank is located on the rst oor of this headquarters building, where a hint of corporate philosophy is present. Gone are glassed-in teller booths; customers are seated in front of teller desks where transactions are carried out and new product conversations initiated. Management is seated on the opposite side with open desks and glass walled o ces. A circular element, nished in curly maple, allows a seating area and corporate signage at the branch banks entrance. As one enters the Main Reception on the second oor, North Forks philosophy of open interaction becomes immediately apparent. e elevator lobby opens to a suite of curly maple wood and glass elliptical shaped conference rooms surrounding the main reception desk. Contrary to the usual, private o ces are aligned down the center core space of the oor, while workstations line the perimeter against the exterior window wall, allowing natural light to penetrate the entire space. Private o ces are composed of glass, metal and fabric demountable partitions, ensuring exibility for future change. A communicating stair vertically links the rst and second oor in the back o ce area, adjacent to a seating area.
Design Excellence; American Institute of Architects Design Excellence; Society of American Registered Architects
is private law rm leads the region in real estate and zoning law. e client desired the integrity of a classical law practice but also had to communicate to its clientele a deep-seeded knowledge of its business. It had to be classical and forwardthinking at the same time. e design plan reveals organization and modularity. Elevator doors open and the visitor immediately enters the space. Natural light and panoramic views are accessible to all. Con dence and credibility are communicated through the pure, modern well-scaled interior space. e key to this space was to appeal to the clients the attorneys served. Enforcement of their business model and work function was critical to the productivity and success of the space.
Design Excellence in Lighting; American Institute of Architects
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Brook eld Properties U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission ree World Financial Center | New York, New York
Located in ree World Financial Center, one of the most recognizable buildings in Lower Manhattan, the US Securities and Exchange Commission comprises 360,000-square-feet throughout four oors. With warm woods, frosted glass and so t lighting, the space successfully projects an authoritative yet calming atmosphere. Areas for impromptu meetings between sta and clientele are spread throughout the four oors. As the headquarters for the Eastern District, the SEC space contains o ces, conference rooms, a hearing room and fourteen testimony rooms.
In association with the Settles Group of Washington DC.
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SunGard |
As associate architect, Spector Group worked with Hut Sachs, the design architect, to ensure that SunGard had a new U.S. headquarters that would consolidate various separate o ces in one location characterized by an open o ce environment conducive to collaboration and interaction between di erent departments. Starting with 120,000-square-feet of raw open oor plate over three oors, the design challenge was to provide the employees with a sense of place. A series of major roads were created that divide each oor into neighborhoods with distinct identities. A large, open central staircase with extra wide treads that function as open seating for casual meetings connect the oors. Numerous small conference rooms and casual furniture located throughout the oors promotes informal interaction between employees. Each oor has a "library," or quiet room, where employees can work without the interruption of mobile phones.
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Milberg |
As the nations legal industry leader in class action suits expanded their practice, Milberg opted to conduct business as usual as oors shook and walls came down around them. Client occupation of a space during construction presented unique challenges to both architect and builder. e project had to be phased in such a way that allowed Milberg to occupy swing space to enable work to continue and at the same time provide a safe and secure environment, says Spector Group Principal Marc Spector. We de ned paths of travel and maintained proper entrance and egress, carefully mapping out the details before work began. We guaranteed them an uninterrupted ow of operations. With 60,000-square-feet of space being renovated, moving people around was not unlike tting the pieces of a puzzle together. Moves took place ve times; 30 people at a time were moved, involving 20% of the o ce each time. Each time a sector was moved it propelled rm partners, associates, their administrative assistants and their workroom to a di erent location within Milbergs four oors at One Pennsylvania Plaza. A careful balance had to be maintained to not remove too much space at one time. Each phase required 10-12 weeks with a 2-week gap for nishing and preparing for the next phase. Five phases resulted in approximately 70 weeks in construction. The Founding Partner stated From day one, The Spector Groups commitment to the project was repeatedly demonstrated. e entire team had a clear understanding that we are a 40-year old rm prosecuting numerous important class and private actions throughout the country. ey understood that with over 120 attorneys and nearly 300 support sta , we had no time to waste. From ling complaints, writing briefs and conducting conferences and depositions to the necessary use of our technology, we had to be able to conduct business as usual throughout the renovation process.
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ItSugar |
Located at the Pier at Caesars, this two-story 6,000-square-foot department store of sweets contains more than 5,000 varieties of treats, including the worlds largest color assortment of M&Ms as well as the worlds largest avor pro le of Jelly Belly Beans. Outrageously fun items, such as slick candy bikinis and exclusive candy apparel, are surrounded by a make-your-own chocolate bar, a towering Sour Patch Tree and a twenty-foot elephant made from over one million Jelly Belly Beans. e second level of ITSUGAR nds ITSCREAM caf, serving candy-infused drinks, sundaes and over 300 avors of premium ice cream made in-house by famed Mark and Bruce Becker. e avant garde duo brings the daring and delicious, tried and true, soon to be Ice Cream Flavorites to Atlantic City.
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Luxottica Group |
Spector Group has designed an expanded showroom and modern corporate o ce space for Luxottica Group, a leader in the design, manufacturing and distribution of premium fashion, luxury and sports eyewear. Flexibility was a key factor in creating the design. Modular and movable pieces were incorporated into the plans so that the client can break the space down into smaller, functional showrooms and work spaces as needed. e conference room area, for instance, opens up into a larger gathering space for events and allows for interaction and recon guration for work-related projects or exhibits. Spector also designed private o ces, work areas, sample rooms and a large pantry for Luxottica, along with updating the common corridor to tie in with the brands look. e space also features state-ofthe-art ood and spot lighting, along with ceiling, glass and ooring systems. All of the materials selected, from carpeting to furniture, are sustainable and energy e cient.
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e client, a multi-billion dollar hedge fund manager, wanted a well-designed space that re ected its success in the industry. An image of authority and credibility and an environment that is respectful of each members contribution were important considerations. A comfortable reception area follows the elevator lobby. Conferencing areas are easily accessible o reception and work areas, o ces are lined at the perimeter for views and trading desks are situated in an open area next to the centrally located pantry. Well lit bomenite concrete ooring from the elevator lobby leads to reception. e main entry glass doors create a framed view of the reception desk and the limestone wall behind it which pierces through the wood ceiling above. Welded steel gives shape to the reception desk but is accentuated with a fabricated wood screen made of thin wood pieces. is is held by compression with stainless steel rods and all mounting is fully exposed. e composition of these continuous and cut pieces creates an engaging and warm appearance against the grey oor and the cold raw steel. e wood slat ceiling system with its spaces in between and its warm tones make it feel lighter. e wood ceiling, slightly angled, stops short of the walls exaggerating the vertical movement of the walls.
Furniture and Furnishings Award; American Institute of Architects
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Nathans Famous
Nathans Famous |
Spector Group completed a new corporate headquarters for Nathans Famous, known for its world famous Coney Island Hot Dog and curly fries. e NASDAQ publicly-traded international food franchise company, moved into its new facilities in the east wing of One Jericho Plaza in Jericho, NY in late December 2009. Spector Group designed the awardwinning Jericho Plaza campus, which is one of the regions premier o ce park developments. After spending more than 25 years at its previous location in East Meadow, NY, Nathans opted to relocate to a modern, cutting-edge o ce space designed to grow its business in a forward direction and adapt to its expanding needs. is prestigious assignment allowed Spector Group to bring a breath of fresh air into Nathans corporate o ces, putting a fresh twist on its traditional time-tested brand through a design scheme that links the past with the present. Nathans iconic logo colorsgreen, yellow and redare dispersed strongly throughout its new o ces, with a softer and yet more energetic color spin. Nathans new wasabi green and citrus yellow palate create a vibrant, more current feel. e completed space boasts a sophisticated conference center gallery with the latest in audio-visual and telecommunications technology. e idea of a Nathans Caf to service visitors and sta , as well as to showcase new products, was incorporated into the design. ere are also numerous executive o ces, team o ces and group work clusters, along with spaces for the companys in-house design team for its multiple franchises, sales group space and teleconferencing areas.
Furniture and Furnishings Award; American Institute o f Architects Honorable Mention; Floor Focus Vision Award
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When a brand new or expanding company needs o ce space instantly, theres a new place in town where they can go to ful ll all their needs at once and thats PowerSpace. Using cutting-edge design as a marketing tool, PowerSpace provides temporary o ce space and full services for executives forming their own start-up rms. Whether for successful breakaway partnerships or incubator dot.coms, PowerSpace supplies a fully equipped, high-technology, high-end o ce environment. Designed by Spector Group, the well-designed spaces for team interaction include the circular reception area; digital sandbox presentation space; think roomsnot your traditional conference space, but a zone of ergonomically sound furniture and white boards, accented with works of art; a cyber co ee bar for more relaxed interaction; training rooms equipped with state-of-the-art technology, oor-toceiling white boards and plasma screens; and small team rooms for close-up brainstorming. In addition to computer hook-ups, each private o ce is equipped with a fully wired cable TV set, bringing enhanced global access right to the executive desk. Flexible layout allows for the executive to reserve a single private o ce or a suite along a private wing.
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Och Capital Management recently expanded its o ces to include three oors of the prestigious 9 West 57th Street building. e design of the state-of-the art trading oor was approached as an extension of the 39th oor, while maintaining a unique design aesthetic. e programmatic approach included a conferencing center strategically situated throughout the oor, 13 private o ces, with an open trading oor that can support over 200 traders. e highlight of the space is the reception area, with white backpainted glass creating a sophisticated image accented by large French limestone tiles. e modern furniture accents the clean materials and the reception desk also manages the electrical and telecommunication infrastructure in the conference rooms.
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e assignment was to design new o ce space for New Mountain Capital, one of New Yorks top performing, private equity funds. is rapidly growing nancial concern wanted their space to be positively motivating to sta while instilling quiet con dence in its clients. A full palette of services including Interior Architecture, Design and Decorating, inclusive of customized workstations, tables, chairs and lighting was provided. is client has leased the Penthouse in the prestigious Equitable Building, a landmark on the Manhattan skyline, to house its newly expanded o ces. e Equitable Buildings base buildings have very large center cores thus dividing a single tenants o ce space into two separate spaces linked only by the elevator lobby. e challenge was to create a cohesive working environment uniting the entire sta . e solution was to allow the views of the New York skyline be the link to making this o ce feel as one. An all-glass elevator lobby allows one to see north-to-south while all-glass fronted o ces give the entire space a 360 degree view of the skyline.
e design of the exclusive club-like environment was achieved via decorative pendant light xtures suspended from 11-foot ceilings, an elegant palette of dark woods (macaser ebony), deep blue carpeting and rugs and sophisticated furniture and fabrics. Formerly dark o ces were opened with glass, allowing expansive views to be enjoyed throughout the space. Floor-to-ceiling glass windows on all four sides of the building were coupled with architectural glass o ce walls allowing full penetration of light to the interior open plan. Beechwood workstations and curly maple millwork on perimeter o ces were met with macaser ebony walls to create a strong, ne, club-like feeling. Custom pendant light xtures and oor lamps created soft, mood-setting accents of light throughout, while di used cove lighting above provided ample ambient illumination.
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e twenty- rst oor of the freshly completed 510 Madison Avenue has become the new location for J. Goldman, a fast growing nancial services rm. e space exudes con dence with its incredible Manhattan skyline views, 11 high nished ceilings, modern reception and waiting area, open trading workstations for 55 professionals, multiple custom private o ces and semi-private conference break-out areas, and an inviting open pantry and support spaces. One unique feature is the orange-colored seating highlighting the reception area and other speci c rooms on the oor, displaying a favorite color of the companys CEO. Classic modern furniture coupled with stateof-the-art trading systems furniture complements the interior architecture.
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Prudential |
Prudential is one of the worlds largest nancial institutions. e renovated corporate headquarters in Newark, just down the street from the highly acclaimed Newark Performing Arts Center, sends a clear message that this citys real estate is on the upswing. e 400,000-square-foot, multi-phased project included an exterior upgrade, a redesign of the main lobby and multiple executive oors. To accommodate large presentations, Dryden Hall was designed as a 300-foot long exible space capable of seating 600 or more people for lectures or converting to a banquet area. Fully equipped with audio-visual facilities and acoustic fabric panels, the exible walled space opens to a pre-function lobby used to relate a history of Prudential and its founders. Sculpture podiums and glass showcases house a collection of art and documents for sta and visitors to view. is executive area is nished in polished wood and brass giving a sense of old world authority. A series of seven executive dining rooms are nely attuned to the high level visitors they will host. A 25,000-square-foot cafeteria has a seating capacity of over 300. e servery is designed to o er a variety of specialty foods while allowing for a continuous ow of people.
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New York - Presbyterian Hospital Babies and Childrens Hospital Pediatric Intensive Care Unit | New York, New York
is completed facility is a 28-bed expansion of the existing Pediatric Intensive Care Unit. e unit design employs simple, rigorous, medical planning and overlays rich, decorative interior materials and elements to produce a distinctive, unique critical care environment. e project goal, simply stated, is to provide the most medically and architecturally innovative pediatric intensive care unit in existence. e medical planning criteria: large private patient care rooms (15 foot x 15 foot), with identical layouts, high visibility, decentralized nursing, and adequate equipment and sta support. Design criteria: comfortable and spacious family spaces with a broad range of amenities, safe wandering paths, and a range of environmental cues to reduce stress for both the family and patient.
Design Excellence; American Institute of Architects
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With the renovation of the Mt. Sinai Childrens Pediatric Center, Spector Group has created a healing environment of color and wonder, of discovery and revelation. Each oor features a unifying theme that carries through to the patient rooms. Warm woods and bright colors create a feeling of home rather than a hospital and lend an air of whimsy and create an environment of warmth and encouragement, a realm of brightness and hope where each day brings new possibilities. e pediatric oors of 1184 Fifth Avenue have been infused with color that brings new life to the Oncology, Transplant, and PICU departments. e Design Intent is to create an environment of warmth and comfort, color and encouragement. During the most critical and trying times of a young patients life, we need to delight each child; positively a ecting the impact of their healing process. e corridor consists of a ordable VCT used in an innovative oor pattern, in uenced by the paintings of Paul Klee. Easily discernible shapes are suspended in a colorful grid, which is further accentuated by the oor numbers being spelled out on the elevator lobby oor. e colored ooring of the patient rooms carries across the threshold and into the corridor to integrate with the corridor oor design. ree distinct color schemes of vibrant contrasting colors can be found in the patient rooms through the ooring and millwork nishes. A variety of playful elements heighten the energy levels for all who experience the space. e walls were painted neutral beige to act as a backdrop to the oor and colored glazing. e look of wood was introduced in the corridors and nurse station millwork and handrails as a subtle accent to add some warmth to the space. New ceilings and lighting throughout brighten these pediatric oors and make the patient rooms more e cient for doctor examinations. e front desk is lower than a standard reception desk to appear more inviting to the children. An ever-changing light box, illuminated by LED lighting, is built into the front desk to entice the children and peak their awareness.
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Apax Partners |
APAX moved into 25,000-square-feet corporate o ces in Citigroup in Manhattan. e o ces lean toward open space and minimalist design with exterior views open to the entire sta . Notched wall paneling with bronze ns de ne the Reception area creating a subtle, sculptural e ect as one enters the space. Panoramic views of Central Park span the o ces from one end to the other. Private o ces feature walls of glass to ensure privacy when needed but allow natural light to penetrate to the workstations. A custom board room table of African cherry dominates the conference room and is augmented by a sleek leather bench to maximize seating options. Unique translucent resin panels, suspended on cables, separate workstations from informal seating, de ning the interior without yielding open space. Nestled in the corner of the space is the caf featuring a sit-down bar with views in two directions, looking out to the Park and city beyond.
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In keeping with the idea that less is more, Spector Group designed high-end o ce space in Mies van der Rohes landmark Seagram Building at 375 Park Avenue in midtown Manhattan for this private equity investment rm. e Classical Modern architecture of the building is carried through from the exterior to the interior through the use of luminous ceilings and open glasswork. With the Park Avenue skyline as its backdrop, the design for this space re ects the clients appropriate level of sophistication through materials and lighting. Scale, adjacencies, clean lines and lighting were carefully studied to give the space its restrained but elegant character.
To take advantage of the views, glass fronts throughout the o ce perimeter were employed. Wood o ce furniture complements the wood workstations in the open areas, and all lighting is recessed or hidden into the ceiling for unobstructed views. Clean and well-de ned lines, warm materials and attention to detail, all complemented with energy e cient lighting; create this elegant and quietly con dent o ce environment.
Excellence in Furniture; American Institute of Architects
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Copper Arch is a 14,000-square-foot nancial services rm that successfully moved into their new o ces on two oors at 461 Fifth Avenue. In partnership with the client, basic requirements and a vision for the new space evolved. Natural light and the interconnecting stair were the focal points of the design solution. The stair would become a key factor in both allowing light to ourish with the space and encouraging interaction and open communication between all members of the Copper Arch team. e program featured a heavy demand for private o ces, an intermediate sized open o ce area and a small trading space requirement. e challenge was to maintain an open o ce environment between the two oors and to design a space that allowed natural light to reach all members of the rm. Glass partitions with light materials reinforced the natural light and aided the visual connections within the space. Traditional nishes applied in a contemporary method coupled with an e cient layout resulted in a successful solution ful lling the clients requirements.
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While perhaps starting their day in a stately conference room screened by engraved glass, the traders in this nancial services rm do not linger too long. eyll make their way to the trading oor where a high technology ticker board stretches across the room that will be fully occupied by 150 security and bond traders. Plasma screens hug the columns and walls in the 29,000-square-feet space allowing for continuous monitoring and visibility of the ever-changing markets. Working desks of light wood form a gently arched parade supporting computer monitors and telephones in the busy hub of this workspace. Support sta , operations and auditing are located in o ce suites each composed of a private o ce with two or three workstations and wall storage. e timeless design of light wood in the general o ce space and dark wood in the executive area also integrates a functional decorative stair, which allows immediate access from the ground oor.
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Lycos
Lycos
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Lycos |
In renovating a showroom space to maximize o ce work area for Lycos, Spector Groups design team allowed the existing span of Doric columns to de ne the circulation and axis of the space. An accent wall behind the reception area de nes and separates the workspace from the public area, while a ramp bridges the distance. O ces were placed on the side walls, separated from the work area by partitions of glass and maple. Windows spanning nearly the full height of the 15-foot ceiling allow natural light to ood the space. In the center, clusters of workstations were selected for space e ciency, featuring ample workspace and storage facilities. Above, up-lighting highlights the rippled ceiling spanning the o ces which stretch the length of a block. Lighting is then re ected down resulting in a natural parabolic e ect, which softens and minimizes glare upon computer screens. Running the length of the space is polished endgrain wood ooring yielding an industrial-like warmth to the space.
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Active International |
e worlds largest corporate trading rm, Active International, is an employee owned company with eleven o ces around the world. eir Pearl River headquarters was renovated to update and maximize their space and allow their sta to fully enjoy the panoramic vistas of the Hudson Valley. A palette of light wood, frosted glass and stainless steel was employed in creating an open oor plan with an air of sophistication. Stepping out of the elevator, visitors see that the workspace immediately unfolds on all sides. e main passageway of the o ce is the focal point of the space, and is a glass behind glass corridor, designed to conceal lavatories and electrical rooms behind a screen of glass and stainless steel. e curved, perforated metal ceiling, lit by contemporary wall sconces, gives an air of intimacy. e public space is punctuated with common areas to meet and chat informally. Workstations, composed of light wood, metal and glass, fall into a circulation plan that takes full advantage of the generous natural light and panoramic views. A full audio/visual conference room and presentation space allows full range telecommunication capabilities as well as the ability to conceal all screens, panels and hardware when not in use. Lighting throughout the space is a combination of stainless steel ambient and task xtures giving the space a high technology, futuristic orientation.
Design Excellence; American Institute of Architects Excellence in Lighting; American Institute of Architects Excellence in Furniture; American Institute of Architects
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Only the second tenant to move into Times Square Tower at Seven Times Square, Clarendon Insurances new headquarters for a sta of 150 are a consolidation of their multiple o ces in Manhattan. With the elevators opening onto the Executive Level (37), the space takes advantage of spectacular views while allowing natural light to penetrate the two high- oor spaces. Nine-and-a-half foot ceilings plus a color palette of lightwood accented by sky blue create an interior space that is light, airy and open to the entire o ce population. e main conference room is adjacent to the reception zone on one side with smaller conference rooms on the other. High ceilings enable the use of transom lights above, and sidelights to accent. With the cafeteria that looks out onto Times Square, the elements wrap the core of the space. A Teleconference Center oats in the space, picking up the access of Broadway below. Mesh screens and glass walls create a transparency to look out and through the o ces. Walls that stop short of the ceiling add to the open e ect of the space. Interior cross bracing, part of the original structure, is accented in blue and stands uncluttered as a decorative element. Circular forms and the occasional cutout add a somewhat playful element to this sophisticated business platform. Energy e ciency and sustainable design were employed throughout the space with the use of natural linoleum, paper wall covering, and recycled ooring of reconstituted oor tine in the reception zone and carpet from recycled materials elsewhere. e green theme was paramount in the selection of seating, workstations, case goods and furniture.
Benjamin Moore Color Award; American Institute of Architects
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Atlantic
eatre Company |
e 99-seat facilty is located in the sub-basement, 80 feet below grade, of 111 8th Avenue. Adjacent to the theatre are dressing rooms, studios, prop storage areas, restrooms and a patrons lounge. Street access is provided via a ground- oor entrance/ticket window adjacent to a passenger elevator. O ces, additional studio space and classrooms for the acting school are located on the buildings fth oor.
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Spector Group was given the challenge of taking the traditionally conservative appearance of this law rm and creating a space for expansion that re ected not only the tenant but its cutting edge clients as well. e Fish & Richardson sta specializes in the eld of Intellectual Property with a special focus on Internet Development. Quickly outgrowing its single oor o ces currently in Rockefeller Center, the rm leased a oor and a half in Midtown Manhattan. e new space included low ceilings, mahogany nishes, outdated ooring and wall coverings. Public areas were the main focus and include a communication stairway between the two oors. To bridge the gap of old to new, Spector Group kept the original mahogany doors and moldings, and used accents of lighter wood, new carpeting and stone ooring in the public spaces. Shallow vaulted ceilings were added to give the space height and a feeling of openness and light. To take advantage of the spectacular views of Central Park, glass walls were installed in the conference room, reception area and new elevator lobby allowing the user and visitors unlimited views of Central Park. e upper oor houses the Partners and Associates o ces as well as litigation and war rooms for strategic client planning. e lower level spaces focus primarily on training areas plus caf and carry through the theme of blending old and new with the use of the same mahogany and lightwood nishes as the upper oor. Existing furniture was refurbished to re ect the new design and new corporate identity of Fish & Richardson.
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Quirky.com |
Quirky.com, the social product development company, has relocated to the Terminal Stores Building at 606 West 28th Street. Quirky, moved from its headquarters at 628 Broadway, occupies approximately 27,000 square feet on the buildings 7th (top) oor. Spector developed o ce space that leverages unique, original elements of the Terminal Stores Building including its heavy timber, wide-planked wood oors, which Spector refurbishedwhile simultaneously re ecting the cutting-edge innovation and energy of Quirky. e space also comprises exposed beams, brick walls, concrete and skylightsgiving the new o ces a raw, edgy aesthetic. A highlight of the space is a glass-enclosed Clean Roomintegral to the creation of the prototype, three-dimensional models that serve as the basis
of Quirkys business. Spector also designed a series of large, collaborative areas; open-plan seating (known as the Pit) for employees; product showroom and display sections; and multiple conference rooms, phone rooms, libraries and media rooms, as well as a cafe/co ee bar. As a topoor occupant, Quirky has access to an approximately 1,500 square foot roof deck, featuring spectacular 360 views. e Terminal Story Building, constructed in 1875, has a storied historytransforming from a center for rail car deliveries in the late 19th century, to the location of the hugely popular Tunnel nightclub in the 1980s and 1990s, to a mini-storage warehouse to, nally, a prominent mixed-use facility today.
Design Excellence Commendation: American Institute of Architects
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Panthera |
Panthera is a charity founded in 2006 as an organization focused solely on wild cat conservation globally. Panthera saves in situ populations of the worlds 36 species of wild cats and the landscapes they inhabit in all regions of the world. ey achieve this by collaborating with, supporting and fostering the worlds leading wild felid conservationists in conducting rigorous scienti c research, planning and implementing conservation actions, and working with local, national and international stakeholders to advance wild cat conservation.
master planning
e Lighthouse |
e Lighthouse project was to be the transformation of the Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum site and surrounding area into a modern 24/7 suburban center. e centerpiece was to be a revitalized arena for the New York Islanders, surrounded by exciting residential neighborhoods with a variety of housing options, lifestyle retail and entertainment venues, Class A o ce space including an incubator for the sports technology industry, multi-purpose athletic complex, state-of-the-art conference and exhibition facilities, a minor league ballpark, and the rst 5-star hotel on Long Island. e estimated $3 billion project was expected to generate $80 million of annual tax revenues. An expected 50,000 construction and construction related jobs were to be created over the 8-to-10 year build out of the project. Once completed, 20,000 permanent jobs and many new businesses were to provide the opportunities and careers Long Islanders need and want. A transformed coliseum was to ensure that the New York Islanders have a state-of-the-art home for decades to come. e Lighthouse at Long Island, in the backyard of Americas rst suburb, was to create a destination for future generations of Long Islanders.
Beacon Pointe |
e concept for the development of Beacon Pointe was to create a new town with all the amenities, comfort, luxury and sense of a unique community. A portion of this major area of Beacon Pointe was to be dedicated to public access on a grand scale. e public and amusement zone located on the east coast of the property was to include a waterfront minor league ballpark, a state-of-the-art aquarium and marine center, a major glass enclosed amusement park, a waterfront hotel, marina complex, retail arcade and pier with structured parking. e entire area would be serviced by a shuttle bus, water taxi system and light rail.
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EPCAL Centre |
Located in the heart of Su olk County, EPCAL was to be a 755 acre Mixed-Use Family Entertainment Park. Formerly the Grumman/Calverton Development site, it was divided into six major venues: A family entertainment resort; Equestrian Centre; Athletic Fields and Fairgrounds; Motorsports Road Course and Country Club; and Raceway and Cultural Entertainment Centre at an estimated cost of $1 billion.
residential
WA Luxury Condominiums |
To capture the spirit of the Harlem Revitalization, this West Harlem mid-rise residential condominium developer wanted a building that would celebrate the fabric of city life and the spirit of the community. e owners grew up in New York City and, over the course of many years, became entrenched in the neighborhood, owning shops and smaller buildings, including a popular eatery purchased from Sidney Poiter and Harry Belafonte. eir allegiance to the neighborhood demanded a thoughtful and provocative design solution. Spector Group chose to express the New York cityscape in the building faade, as a complex element of urban fabric. Fragmented elements, such as irregular sized windows of di erent size and form, are placed within concrete and red brick walls, assembled and incorporated into a single, coherent design element. e Mondrian-like pattern is a blend of art and architecture creating a unity amongst the cast stone, brick and glass mesh faade. Maximized square footage was designed to create an ideal loft-like living space. e 33 residential units are studio, onetwo- and three-bedroom condominiums, with the larger units featuring wrap around terraces. Twelve-foot co ered ceilings, energy e cient glass, dark wood oors and stone and marble nishes encompass each unit. Upon entry, the slate lobby with oating free form ceiling and dark wood nishes suggest a Far Eastern in uence, while the buildings exterior coloration pays homage to the surrounding neighborhood. A tness room and rooftop pool with outdoor sundecks are designed to encourage mingling and entertainment for an interactive population.
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Starlight |
Residential Towers
Stamford, Connecticut
Two new gleaming mixed-use/residential towers have been planned comprising of two- and three-bedroom apartments. e lobby is a three-story atrium space where the two buildings will converge. A four-story podium will be comprised of town houses and retail space. Ten foot ceiling heights will increase the feeling of space within. e two top oors will feature luxury duplex penthouses. O the Rooftop Terrace will be a full Fitness Center complete with a swimming pool, locker room, cardio- tness center and sauna/steam amenities plus conferencing and common space lounge facilities. e towers span twenty-four oors and have 175 units per tower.
is 22-story high rise residential tower of 140 units is a luxury condominium complex with spectacular views north, south and west of the New York City skyline across the Hudson River. Adjacent to Weehawken, New Jersey, the tower features balconies, a rooftop pool pavilion, a tness center, concierge and indoor parking. e materials used are glass, stone, masonry, metal panels, and terra-cotta stone panels in a layered con guration emphasizing various elements within individual apartments. e materials and form make a strikingly timeless architectural statement on the New Jersey shoreline.
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Private Residence |
Originally designed in 1925, this American Style Mission Mansion in Kensington was the residence of architect Charles Spector and his family, including architect Michael Spector, from 1949 - 1959. Years later, his grandson Marc Spector was the Principal in Charge of restoring the house to its original state of grandeur. Upon entering the home for the rst time in over 40 years, Michael Spector felt as if he had stepped back in time. Touring the house and hearing stories of yesteryear was emotional for all.
Restoring the house to its original charm as when designed in the 1920s became the focus and required blending the character of the home with updated modern functionality. Marc Spector spent time screening 8 mm lm and old photographs depicting the home of long ago. e home needed to be upgraded and restored but to maintain the charm, look and vision of the original architect, Charles Spector. The house hadnt been updated for over 40 years.
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Glass Penthouse |
Hidden by ornate 20-foot-high parapets along the avenue and street sides of this corner, ten-story, New York City landmark apartment building built in 1908, is a new glass-enclosed home. e existing building is square in plan with a square inner court that provides light and air for interior spaces of the building. When Spector Group and the client, an entrepreneur, rst visited the rooftop site, they immediately glimpsed a vision of exterior glass walls along the two sides of the building, that do not have a parapet, providing panoramic views of Manhattans Upper East Side. A major construction project on the roof of a 1908 ten-story building presented many challenges for the architects, engineers, and contractors. Tapping into existing plumbing and steam risers without damaging the apartments below, one owned by a former mayor and the other owned by a standing ambassador, was tedious but ultimately successful. Spector Group didnt think twice about placing public areas such as living, dining, kitchen, and breakfast areas on the more public, sans-parapet sides of the building. e private space, family room, bedrooms and bathrooms were positioned on the more private, parapet, terrace sides of the building. In its mixture of materials and form this project distills the spirit of Miess 1929 Barcelona Pavilion, an exposed steel frame, glass curtain wall, and polished white stone oor, on the tenth oor of a New York City landmark apartment building, with precision. Clearly the architects have created a unique apartment for their client to live and entertain that considers the needs of these real New Yorkers.
Grand Award; Custom Home
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Private Residence
Private Residence |
Situated at the end of a long, undulating driveway, nestled in a two acre wooded area rests a contemporary version of an American Shaker style home. e purity of the architecture is the only detail. e modern Shaker home is an elegant structure with stark purity as opposed to a profusion of details. Its a pavilion-style home made up of ve buildings connected by varying common spaces. e site is triangular. One enters from the furthest point of the triangle and follows an undulating driveway to the main court. It gives a strong impression with striking symmetry and pure lines that are a blend of classical and modern.
e home is composed of ve separate pyramid roofed pavilions comprising the entry, living and dining areas, bedroom wings, kitchen and garage. e minimalist spaces are broken down into pockets of intimacy throughout the home. Symmetry is everywhere, including outside forms that stream in framed-in windows and skylights. e house does its own work as the primary focus, says the architect, allowing it to stand sans plantings at the primary elevations.
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Private Residence |
Situated on 6.5 acres, this private residence is reminiscent of a mansard style manor home. It is a hybrid of traditional and modern materials designed as a home for a family of ve. An 800-foot-long undulating driveway introduces the visitor to this 14,000-square-foot home where large, formal entertaining spaces abound. A large working kitchen is coupled with a twostory great room with exposed decorative wood trusses. It is a three-level home where the lower salon opens to a backyard of multi-terraced stone decks, sunken in nity edge swimming pool and tennis court that takes advantage of the changes of grade in the property. O the main living room is a formal, circular conservatory with oor-to-ceiling glass, which is additional entertaining space that links the front of the house to the rear and anchors the right side of the home. A two-story study is expressed as a tower element in the front.
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Private Residence |
A home with spaces for family interaction, as well as private places for husband and wife, the 1960s split ranch was totally gutted, completely renovated and expanded to accommodate a new kitchen and breakfast room and den. e kids bedrooms on the main oor were con gured for an enhanced layout and additional closet space and a guest bedroom was added. A new family room for relaxed interaction was designed and a second oor was added to the split ranch for the master bedroom suite. Modern yet timeless, the Nantucket Shingle Style home featured all cedar shingles with white trim and paneling. e interior of the house, with its white soaring ceilings in the living room/dining room/den, is linked together by a large two sided brick replace, juxtaposed against the more traditional kitchen with its bead board cabinetry.
e second-story master suite is designed as an oasis for husband and wife, complete with spacious bath and a large shared closet/dressing room. e sleeping and sitting area have warm soothing color tones and a vaulted beadboard ceiling. We have truly created a home that is enjoyed by our entire family. Its rich in timeless architecture and detail and will be enjoyed for many years to come, the owner.
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is existing split-level ranch, located in one of the North Shores most exclusive communities, was completely renovated and expanded. e site is a picturesque setting of fully mature specimen evergreens and deciduous trees on gently rolling topography. e end result was a 7,500-square-foot modern prairie style residence with such rich materials as natural stone, cedar shingle and cedar roof. e sweeping roo ine is the main design feature of the residence with intersecting roof pitches and extended eaves. e backyard elevation features a two and half story low e glass curtain wall overlooking the pool, pond and landscaped property beyond. With such an impressive existing piece of property, Spector Group was challenged to create the natural sense of openness the home demanded as well as taking full advantage of the panoramic views the property a orded. ese views are uninterrupted by the living rooms two-story glass enclosure, which is supported by massive vertical laminated wood columns. An open oor plan was selected as the basis for the design concept. e modernist style porte-cochere winged roof line provided functional dayto-day use for all seasons access to the garage and the homes support spaces with a direct relationship to the kitchen and rear patio. e split-level design of the new oor plan allowed the architect to create a sense of privacy for the childrens bedroom areas and the master bedroom suite, which occupies the entire third oor. Although the house is located on di erent levels, the architect managed to achieve a close relationship between the spaces, yet still provide adequate privacy.
Design Excellence; American Institute of Architects
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Private Residence |
Designed by Richard Meier & Partners, and now owned and recently renovated by Michael Harris Spector FAIA, the site of this house, an hours drive from New York City, is secluded and rural. e house is situated at the top of a meadow deep within a wooded property. e land slopes down gently across the meadow to a pond on the western edge of the site, and through a dense barrier of trees to the public road beyond. e house is oriented to allow the morning sunlight into the bedrooms, and to provide a pastoral view across the meadow to the pond, which drains the ground around the house of oodwater and provides a re ective focus to the dialogue between house and site. Approaching the house, a curved wall next to the entry and protruding into the portico helps to guide one into the house. Just inside, a thirdoor skylight admits a column of natural light, bisecting the axis of the circulation spine. is motif establishes a theme for the rest of the house: the in ltration of light from many di erent directions. A zigzag ramp, echoing the natural incline of the site, lends continuity to the interior, a ording a gradual system of movement from oor to oor. Passageways and stairs become events encountered at the landings of the long traverse, which, as it crosses and re-crosses the levels, progressively unfolds the interior volume of the house. is promenade is enclosed by a glazed arcade in one side, opening up views to the pond and meadow and making the space transparent to the outdoors while protecting it from the elements. Space, circulation, light and scale are engaged here in a uni ed but elaborate composition. e systems of movementthe interaction of ramps, stairs and passagewaysprovide a constantly changing experience for the inhabitants and a multiplicity of choices and spatial discoveries.
Design Excellence; American Institute of Architects
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Spector Groups move to larger o ces in New York City served to unite the sta on a single oor with an option to build out adjacent space as needed. e new o ce re ects the same design philosophy the rm uses to create vital open oor plans for its clients. In opening up the space the building structure was exposed. Design is minimal, keeping the space to the bare essentials. e layout functions as a communal open oor plan with huge window expanses, including one span of 28 feet, to allow natural light into the o ce. Low workstations foster a design-oriented, collaborative atmosphere. e workplace is anchored on both ends by key spaces: the principals o ce and conference room. e low semi-private working spaces are acoustically appropriate for private work while at the same time o ering opportunities for spontaneous communication. e main conference room is simple and clean, enclosed only by oor-to-ceiling glass doors. e custom conference table is a square of glass, welded together with steel bolts and plates. Caramelcolored leather seating surrounds the table. e 30-foot-wide, 16-foot-tall space features a photograph of a Heisman Trophy winner from the University of MichiganGo Blue!
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Bucharest, Romania
Pensacola, Florida
Jericho Plaza 3 |
e Centre at 3400 |
Scheme 2
Scheme 1
Scheme 3
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Nassau County Police Department Center For Law Enforcement and Intelligence |
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S on the River |
Miami, Florida
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Harbor Pointe |
Stamford, Connecticut
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North Shore-Long Island Jewish Health System & Nassau County Police Department Centre for Joint Training | Nassau County, New York
Embassy |
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Georgia Centre |
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e Institute for Community Health, Long Island Jewish Hospital New Hyde Park, New York 1971
3333 New Hyde Park Road North Hills, New York 1979/81
1998 Goodwill Games Aquatic Ctr. East Meadow, New York 1996
Alfonse M. DAmato United States Courthouse and Federal O ce Building Central Islip, New York 2000
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Temple Judea Holocaust Childrens Resource Center and Museum Manhasset, New York 2002
Center Moriches Union Free School District Secondary School Campus Center Moriches, New York 2004
St. Johns University New Athletic & Recreation Field House Queens, New York 2003
East Meadow Union Free School District East Meadow, New York 2003
East Williston Union Free School District Wheatley High School East Williston, New York 2003
Port Washington Union Free School District Schreiber High School Port Washington, New York 2005
Campus for the New York State O ce of Mental Health Bronx, New York 2006
Brook eld Properties U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission New York, New York 2006
Long Island University Freshman Learning Center Greenvale, New York 2007
Su olk County Community College New Learning Center Selden, New York 2007
Westbury Union Free School District Westbury High School Westbury, New York 2006
Great Neck Union Free School District Great Neck, New York 2007
Stephen Weiss and Donna Karan Studio New York, New York 2007
LAbbate, Balkan, Colavita & Contini New York, New York 2007
Su olk County Community College Science Building Selden, New York 2009
Temple Beth Sholom Early Childhood Center Roslyn, New York 2009
State University of New York College at Old Westbury Old Westbury, New York 2011
Nassau County Police Department Center for Law Inforcement and Intelligence Nassau County, New York 2012
State University of New York Stony Brook University Stony Brook, New York 2012
Volkswagen and Audi Manhattan Dealership New York, New York 2012
World Financial Center Retail Transformation at Brook eld Place New York, New York 2012
S on the River Miami, Florida 2012 North Shore-Long Island Jewish Health System & Nassau County Police Department Centre for Joint Training Long Island, New York 2012
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NASDAQ OMX Stock Exchange New York, California, Connecticut, Washington DC, Illinois, Maryland, London and Beijing 2012
Alan & Kathy Greenberg Sports Pavilion Wheatley Heights, New York 2012
awards
2012 Glass Penthouse Custom Home; Grand Award Quirky.com Design Excellence Commendation; American Institute of Architects 2011 Forrest Solutions Group Corporate Headquarters American Institute of Architects / Design Excellence Commendation Suffolk Community College Proposed Science & Technology Building American Institute of Architects / Design Excellence Commendation Mercedes-Benz Manhattan American Institute of Architects / Design Excellence in Lighting 2010 The Renaissance at McGinley Square American Institute of Architects / Design Excellence Commendation Private Duplex Residence Park Avenue American Institute of Architects / Benjamin Moore Color Award Nathans Famous Inc. Corporate Headquarters American Institute of Architects / Furniture & Furnishings Award Nathans Famous Inc. Corporate Headquarters Floor Focus Vision Award / Honorable Mention 2009 Pall Corporation Corporate Headquarters American Institute of Architects / Design Excellence North Shore Hebrew Academy American Institute of Architects / Design Excellence Private Residence, Old Westbury American Institute of Architects / Design Excellence Temple Beth Sholom Early Childhood Center American Institute of Architects / Design Excellence Commendation Hellman and Friedman American Institute of Architects / Furniture & Furnishings Award 2008 Spector Group Long Island Offices American Institute of Architects / Design Excellence Commendation New York Construction Magazine / Best New Office Project Bucharest Medical Center & Hotel Campus American Institute of Architects / Design Excellence Commendation awards Mason Capital Management American Institute of Architects / Design Excellence Commendation American Institute of Architects / Furniture & Furnishings Award Weber Law Group American Institute of Architects / Design Excellence in Lighting North Shore Hebrew Academy New York Construction Magazine / Best Pre-K Education Project Deutsch Inc. LA Society of American Registered Architects / Design Excellence 2007 Suffolk Community College New Freshman Learning Centre American Institute of Architects / Un-Built Commendation HIT Entertainment American Institute of Architects / Benjamin Moore Color Award Long Island Savings Bank American Institute of Architects / Silver Anniversary Award, 25 Year Project Merrill Lynch Operations Center American Institute of Architects / Silver Anniversary Award, 25 Year Project 2006 Computer Associates European Headquarters Society of American Registered Architects / Award of Excellence Schreiber High School American Institute of Architects / Excellence in Masonry 2005 Ivy Asset Management American Institute of Architects / Furniture & Furnishings Award 2004 Elizabeth Vocational School American Institute of Architects / Honorable Mention Alfonse M. DAmato United States Courthouse American Institute of Architects / Honor Award 2003 Deutsch Inc. LA American Institute of Architects / Interior Design Excellence Modern Language Association American Institute of Architects / Furniture Award Alfonse M. DAmato United States Courthouse American Institute of Architects / Honor Award for Architecture 2002 Deutsch Inc Advertising American Institute of Architects / Interior Architecture Commendation 2001 BMW Competition and Sports Cars LTD American Institute of Architects / Design Excellence Alfonse M. DAmato United States Courthouse American Institute of Architects / Design Excellence World Architecture / Regional Winner, North America ID Magazine Annual Design Review / Design Distinction Business Week / Industrial Design Excellence, Bronze IDEA Award PowerSPACE American Institute of Architects / Lighting Design Award 2000 Alfonse M. DAmato United States Courthouse US General Services Administration / Honor Award: Architecture Computer Associates International Natatorium American Institute of Architects / Design Excellence Stephen Weiss Studio American Institute of Architects / Design Excellence Spector Group Manhattan Studios American Institute of Architects / Award Commendation Scott & Marc Spector Long Island Business News / 40 under 40 1999 Active International American Institute of Architects / Design Excellence Sbarro American Institute of Architects / Design Excellence Active International American Institute of Architects / Lighting Excellence American Institute of Architects / Furniture Excellence 1998 Alfonse M. DAmato United States Courthouse US General Services Administration / Citation, On the Boards Columbia Presbyterian Medical Center Pediatric Intensive Care Unit American Institute of Architects / Design Excellence PennCorp Financial Group Corporate Headquarters Society of American Registered Architects / Award of Honor Golden Books Family Entertainment Corporate Headquarters Society of American Registered Architects / Architectural Commendation 1997 North Fork Bank Corporate Headquarters American Institute of Architects / Design Excellence Temple Judea Holocaust Resource Center Society of American Registered Architects / Award of Excellence North Fork Bank Corporate Headquarters Society of American Registered Architects / Architectural Commendation Olympus America Inc. Corporate Headquarters Society of American Registered Architects / Architectural Commendation 1996 Michael Harris Spector, FAIA American Institute of Architects / Lifetime Achievement Award for Architecture Zhong Hang Plaza American Institute of Architects / Architectural Commendation
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Cablevision Headquarters American Institute of Architects / Architectural Commendation 1995 Sony Western Regional Operations Center American Institute of Architects / Design Excellence Temple Judea Holocaust Resource Center American Institute of Architects / Design Excellence American Institute of Architects / Excellence in Masonry BMW of North America American Institute of Architects / Design Excellence F.A.O. Schweetz Chain Store Age Retail Store of the Year / Honorable Mention 1994 Computer Associates World Headquarters American Institute of Architects / Gold Award Woodbury Jewish Center American Institute of Architects / Masonry Award Sony Western Regional Operations Center Pacific Coast Buildings Conference / Award of Merit Sun/Coast Architect/Building Magazine / Award of Merit 1993 Hewlett Elementary School National School Boards Association / Exhibition of School Architecture 1992 Computer Associates World Headquarters Rhone Island School of Design / Juried Exhibition at International Design Center Grumman Data Systems Rhone Island School of Design / Juried Exhibition at International Design Center Roslyn Firehouse Rhone Island School of Design / Juried Exhibition at International Design Center General Accident Insurance Company World Headquarters Society of American Registered Architects / Award of Excellence Woodbury Jewish Center Masonry Institute of New York / Excellence in Masonry
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1991 Piazzale Roma Venice Biennale / Exhibition in International Design Competition Long Island Savings Bank Executive Headquarters American Institute of Architects / Award of Excellence The Century Condominiums BUILDER Magazine / Merit Award 1990 Grumman Data Systems Headquarters Society of American Registered Architects / Award of Excellence Islandia Pavilion Society of American Registered Architects / Award of Excellence Roslyn Highlands Firehouse Society of American Registered Architects / Award of Excellence 1988 Country Glen Retail Center American Institute of Architects / Silver Award Manhasset Lakeville Firehouse Masonry Institute of New York / Excellence in Masonry 1987 Merck & Company Headquarters American Institute of Architects 1986 Merrill Lynch Executive Group American Institute of Architects / Gold Award BUILDER Magazine / 1st Place Roslyn Highlands Firehouse American Institute of Architects / Gold Award Masonry Institute of New York / Excellence in Masonry NYNEX Headquarters American Institute of Architects / Gold Award 1985 Grumman Data Systems Headquarters American Institute of Architects / Silver Award
European American Bank Headquarters American Institute of Architects / Silver Award Merrill Lynch Offices Somerset Office Park New Jersey Business Industry Association / Gov. omas Keans Good Neighbor Award 1984 Hilton Hotel at Somerset Park New Jersey Business Industry Association / Gov. Manufacturers Hanover Trust American Institute of Architects / Silver Award Spector Group Studios / Offices American Institute of Architects / Silver Award Spector Group Studios / Offices Interior American Institute of Architects / Silver Award European American Bank Headquarters Long Island Forum Association / Golden Circle Award Stone Oaks Condominiums Westchester Builders Institute / Design, Energy & Construction Excellence 1983 European American Bank Headquarters Board of America / Award of Merit IBM Information Systems American Institute of Architects / Gold Award IBM Information Systems Interiors American Institute of Architects / Gold Award IBM Global Communications American Institute of Architects / Gold Award IBM Global Communications Interiors American Institute of Architects / Gold Award 1982 IBM Information Systems Builders Institute of Westchester and Putnam Counties / Certificate of Achievement & Recognition Avant Garde Optics American Institute of Architects / Gold Award
Cushman & Wakefield Corporate Headquarters American Institute of Architects / Gold Award 1979 Bikoff Building Borough of Queens Chamber of Commerce / 1st Prize Allstate Insurance Headquarters Concrete Industry Board of America / Award of Merit 1977 SoMar Dental Studios Borough of Queens Chamber of Commerce / 1st Prize 1976 Spector Group Studios American Institute of Architects / Silver Award 1975 Eastern Savings Bank American Institute of Architects / Silver Award North Hills Corporate Office Center American Institute of Architects / Silver Award 1974 Great Neck Library & Youth Facility American Institute of Architects / Silver Award Bank of Suffolk County American Institute of Architects / Silver Award 1973 Spector Residence American Institute of Architects / Silver Award Great Neck Shopping Tower American Institute of Architects / Silver Award Crossways Office Complex American Institute of Architects / Silver Award 1972 Hempstead Office Plaza American Institute of Architects / Silver Award
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photographers
Vincent Affenita Gil Amiaga Andrew Appell Andrew Batson Fernando Bengoechea Mert Carpenter Benny Chan Chuck Choi Dennis Degnan Anthony Doucet Peter K. Dowan George Erml Jeff Goldberg/Esto Ben Gancsos Andrew Gordon Robert Granoff Graham Gaunt Andrew Kramer Peter Kutscher Quirky Inc. Eric Laignel Thomas Leighton Ed Lederman Marco Lorenzetti/Hendrich-Blessing Michael Moran Colin McRae Gregory Murphy Peter Paige Peter Roth Mark Ross Mark Samu Garl G. Saporiti Ken Spencer Spector Group Guy Sussman Albert Vecerka/Esto Paul Warchol Nick Wheeler Tim Wilkes Roy Wright
collaborators
Mark Abramson Stacey Ackley Frank Adamowicz Carlos Acevedo Vincent Affenita Tunc Aksoy Anthony Albanese Paul Anderson Maria Anza Nina Anza Jairo Arevalo Alice Ascetta Melissa Aurrichio Kathleen Avino Harold Bade Victor Baerga Sergio Baluyut Bob Barbal Dionne Barborini Lear Barel Jay Baron Gloria Barsky Douglas Bartolomeo Greg Basmajian Rosemay Basmajian Meredith Batsford Linda Hart Bauer Sara Baume Eileen Beatty Steve Bello Erica Berkowitz Robert Bierman Thomas Bitnar Victoria Blau Peter Blitzer Edward Bolzan Lawrence Braverman Peter Braverman Robert Browne Erica Burk Kathi Burns Sean Burns Edward Butt Nick Caivano Chip Calcagni Joseph Calpo-Rivera Greg Campofranco Neil Cappana Dominic Cardone Kathleen Carey Keith Carlson Ianthe Carpen Denise Carson Mark Carthew Stacie Castilonia Desiree Santiago-Chavez Maureen Chavez George Chin Eunjoo Cho Christina Cohen Shari Cohen Rosellen Coogan Jaime Cortez Nancy Cottone Catherine Cotumaccio David Crawford Raymond Cristobal Charles Croigny Sean Cuddahy Lynn Cusimano Jaye Czyzyk Charles DAlessio Stephen Dargo Bill Davis Sam Davis Richard DeMarco Frank Demmerle Louise DePrimo Madeline Diano Rick DiFilippi Matt DiGiamio Anthony DiGuiseppe Andy DiLauro Roger Diller Mike diPiero Anthony Donatich Sylvia Donnelly Anthony Doucet Dick Eaton Peter Elkin Paul Erdmann Michael Farrell Danielle Felsen Denise Ferreira Mitch Fier Debbie Finkelstein Anthony Fiorvanti Brian Flannery John Fondrissi Tom Fraehmke Michael Francese Vincent Franchi Loretta Franklin Jun Frez Edward Friedman Jeff Friedman Christine Friello Catlin Gaffney Susan Gaskin Suzanne Geiss Terry Geller Arthur Gentile Jane Felsen Gertler John Giaccio Luigi Gileno Andrew Giocondi Maureen Going Charles Golub Jan Gould Joanne Graves John Gregorio Randal Grenier Kathy Grillo Richard Grunseich Douglas Guilfoyle Kathleen Haas Alex Hadaro Dov Hadas Albert Han Joe Handler Gary Hansen Nichole Hanson Sat Harish Kathleet Hart Regina Hartigan Karen Haslam Scott Hayden Chauncy Headd-Smith Jacqueline Hegmann Phillip Heller Paul Heretakis Michael Hirschkorn Golan Hod Richard Hong Allison Hopke Milan Hospodka Rafael Hoyos Kathleen Hynes Lauren Iannucci Zach Jacobs Arthur Johnson Jennifer Johnson Fequiere Joinville Marlon Juarbe Andrew Juiris Ketty Kalaria Inna Katz Kate Keating Patricia Kettle Mary Lou Klopfer Pamela Wright Knakal Marcelo Kohan Richard Komblath Constantina Koukotas John Kraft Roma Kucaj George Kuchek Gary Lawrence Mallory Lemienx Irene Hart Lennon Joan Liebman Erwin Lim Karen Lindie Alicia Lindner Paul Llopis Charles Lobell Donna Long Carlos Lopes Richard Lopez Donna Macchia Erwin Machol John Machovec Fabio Maciel Maria Mainolfi Patricia Manfre Jessica Mann Amato Michael J. Mannetta Joann Mannino Rosemarie Margino Ricardo Marquez Christine Martel Steve Martin Jim Martino Frank Martucci Gregg Matchton Arthur McDonald Ronald J. McDonald Brendan McHeffey Naila McLean Michael McNerney John McQuire Gilbert Medina William Medlow Frank Messano Schott Miller Lisa Milone Nicole Miskiewicz Khalid Mohammed Thomas Mojo John Monti Peter Moore Juan Morales Thomas Moran Jim Morel Victoria Morelli Danyel Moseley Frank Mrakovcic Nancy Mrowka Fay Munson Thomas Murawski Wai Ng Lisa Orlando Juan Ortiz Donald Oster Danita Otruba Ralph Ottaiano Lori Ottavio Patrick Owens Benjamin Pagan Brian Parnell Richard Paroly John Patey Gerry Pelliccie Thomas Penn Leda Pierce Kimberly Perico Ci Hang Ping Thomas Pirkl Michael Pitman Paul Ponce Alex Pugliese Zhang You Quan Kelly Quinn James Ramenthol Joseph Randazzo Renee Reichert Nancy Hart Reid John Reilly Joseph Reilly Jerry Rein Milton Reiner Ron Reisen Johnathan Reo Alexandria Reyes Louis Reyes Brian Richter Keribeth Rokeach Alexi Ronen Pia Rosario Irving Roth David Rozzi Jessica Ruane Gary Rudoren Michael Ruegammer Janet Ruggiero Mohammed Saadullah Gloria Sabella Jill Sabeno Jeanette Sabino Ellen Saito Zach Salzbank Joaquin Santos Ronilo Santos Patricia Schachter Ethel Schaffer Rhonda Scharf David Schefer William Scherer Thomas Scotto Edna Guilor Segal John Seifert Mindy Seldon Mercedes Sempliner Ed Shin Joni Shoueka Eric Singer Irwin Sirota Rhonda Siskin Charles Skronski Bob Smith Jeff Spanier Charles Sanford Spector Joan Spector Jolie Nan Spector Marc Brian Spector Michael Harris Spector Scott Evan Spector Mark Squeo Thomas Stack Chip Stadnyck Christine Stanzione Marjorie Stave Justin Stetzer Stanley Stevens Doreen Hart Stewart Mark Stumer Joseph Suserman Ben Sutton David Szczapa Chris Thibodeau Ted Tierney Dexter Tinapay Peter K. Toh Frank Tomaselli Gerard Torchio Stacy Travell Antonios Tsimounis Anatasios Tzakas Derek Ullian Steven Umansky Arnaldo Valero Tara Valone James Vandezande Kevin Van Hulse Harry Van Meter Roland Vasquez Christine Vassalo Robert Verbanac Ben Videna Rodolfo Villanueva Thomas Virzi Ray Vista Alexis Voloshin Peter Vonderleith Donna Walczuk Carey Walker Renate Walker Jason Walls Pauline Waney Kenneth Wattenberg Iwona Wegiel Dick Wey Christopher Wey Charles White Christopher White Jonathan Widyawardhana Marylou Wojtusiak Paul Wolfthal Scott Woolsey Robert Woytowick Kin Yan Yan Orhan Yesil Zeynep Yilanlioglu David Yu Irene Yu Omaira Zahabian Lu Zheng Zhong Carmela Zino Patricia Zinon
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acknowledgements
Ive truly enjoyed being intimately involved in the process of creating the second monograph of Spector Groups work and could not have accomplished it without many people who contributed to its fruition. In particular I want to recognize Linda Bauer who joined Spector Group in 1982 as my Executive Assistant. She has since advanced to the position of Director of Marketing & Communications. In addition to those efforts, she was the driving force in the development of this monograph. I would also like to thank Anna Katsavos for her editorial assistance. My gratitude to our staff is immeasurable. The list of collaborators is indicative of how many people have dedicated themselves to our firm and our profession. Michael Harris Spector, FAIA
afterword
Throughout my life, in one way or another, Ive been surrounded by storytellers. For instance, Im proud to be named after a fine artistic storyteller, Charles Spector. He was my great-grandfather, and the person who single-handedly started the tradition of practicing architecture that has lasted in my family for more that 70 years. Filmmaking, my passion, and architecture are more similar than one realizes. Both processes begin as simple designs on paper, and with enough time and structural development, begin to seem like a piece of tangible reality. Like a film, a building captures a multitude of things, a sense of time, a sense of place, and a sense of culture in which it was built. Although I will be leaving my generations pursuit of architecture in the more-than-capable hands of Jake Spector, the author of this books forward, and my cousin, I will be eternally grateful that my love of storytelling comes from a family of storytellers of a vastly different, yet astoundingly equal form. Charlie Harrison Spector
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