Quality + Quantity: a Conversation on Modern Furniture

Quality + Quantity

a Conversation on Modern Furniture

Friday, July 13, 2012 | 5pm | 1423 S. Main St Suite C

studioMAIN is proud to invite you our latest exhibition, Quality + Quantity: a Conversation on Modern FurnitureWe are excited to be exhibiting furniture designed by local UALR Applied Design students, and pairing it with several timeless furniture pieces that are being provided by Workplace Resource and Herman Miller.

This is an incredible opportunity to experience great local design and see some of the icons of furniture design at the same time. We owe many thanks to John Bruhl of UALR Applied Design and Karen Williams of Workplace Resource for helping curate this exhibt, great job guys! 

Doors open at 5pm, and with special thanks to Herman Miller, we will be hosting a wine and cheese tasting provided by Zin Wine Bar. Come early and stay late, we look forward to seeing you there!

Pettaway Pocket Neighborhood - UACDC

Project: Pettaway Pocket Neighborhood

Designer: UACDC (University of Arkansas Community Design Center) and students

Location: Little Rock, Arkansas

The nine-unit Pettaway Pocket Neighborhood galvanizes urbanization within low density development. A pocket neighborhood is an identifiable cluster of houses around shared outdoor commons and infrastructure─ideal for leveraging quality within an affordable housing setting. The pocket neighborhood capitalizes on smaller home footprints with shared amenities and services like a community lawn, playground, and stormwater management infrastructure…

Read More

”..many times communities are afraid of a modern building invading their neighborhood, but this is generally because their neagative experience with many buildings are based more on poorly designed architecture rather than style of architecture. It is hard to feasibly recreate the level of detail and craftmanship in many historic styles.  However, you can respect the pattern of the street and neighborhood, using the datum heights established by historic bases, cornices and parapets, bay spacings and setbacks to create modern architecture that is sympathetic to the fabric of the neighborhood..” 

-David Sargent, WER Architects

This evening was great! We hosted a community roundtable discussion with Fay Jones School of Architecture students and members of the neighborhood. There was a lot of great discussion about the neighborhood and where it wants to go. Russell Rudzinski’s studio will be studying the area of South Main between 12th and 17th street. Ultimately, the students will develop urban plans for the area and also design a Writers’ Retreat! We simple can not wait to see what the students produce this semester, hope you can join us when they come back later this spring to present their solutions!