UNT College of Visual Arts and Design Recognized by Critic
Mark Lamster, Dallas Morning News
Feature
News
Published
November, 2023
Tags
UNT College of Visual Arts and Design, Materials, The Arts
The College of Visual Arts and Design at the University of North Texas received a new addition in 2019 designed by Machado Silvetti, which was recently commended by architecture critic and writer Mark Lamster, in his latest piece in the Dallas Morning News.
Experimenting with Materials
View of the breezeway and main stair entrance of the Eastern addition, from the courtyard.
Lamster highlights many of the building’s unique features, including the main staircase on the first level, pointing attention to the grandness of the stair’s volume and materiality choices, combining a massive brick stair and a cast-in-place concrete run of stairs off the landing to reach the second floor. The building also features a dark steel stair to add to the material palette.
“[Machado Silvetti’s] inventiveness is dramatically demonstrated at its recent expansion of the University of North Texas’ College of Visual Art & Design in Denton. The project is a virtual masterclass in the use of materials...”
Photo of the southern façade of the CVAD building with the existing building furthest to the left.
A Teaching Tool in Itself
View from interior courtyard space
The project involves the renovation and expansion of the original mid-century brutalist art building, creating a generous new courtyard at its center which is accessible via three pathways carved into each of the three sides of the addition. Lamster calls attention to how the addition in itself a teaching tool for architecture and design students to notice these kinds of gestures and moves the building makes. Lamster continues, “The project is an exercise in teachable moments, beginning with how it negotiates its relationship with the school’s original art building… The changes effectively turn what was a rather imposing legacy building into an inviting work of urban design.”
Lamster also points out how the new addition meets the old building in a respectful but cohesive way, bridging the two with a transparent glass bridge over a pedestrian walkway.
“Machado Silvetti has given UNT a unique pedagogical tool, a building that is very much a classroom unto itself.”
Read the full review here:
“At UNT, Brutalist Architecture Remade with a Soft Touch,”
Mark Lamster, Dallas Times
[https://www.dallasnews.com/arts-entertainment/architecture/2023/11/01/at-unt-brutalist-architecture-remade-with-a-soft-touch/]
View of old building meeting new addition with a connecting glass bridge
Works on paper study and seminar room, with generous views out to the corner of Mulberry and Welch, that makes use of the Northen exposure
Students studying on second floor seating area overlooking courtyard
Printmaking studio
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