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3 results for Architects--Durham
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Record #:
5383
Abstract:
The L. Vincent Lowe, Jr., Business Award is the highest preservation award given to a state business for promoting protection of architectural resources in North Carolina. Durham architect G. Edwin Belk received the award for 2001 for \"successfully adapting historical buildings and industrial complexes for new uses.\" Among Belk's creations is Durham's Bright Leaf Square.
Source:
North Carolina Preservation (NoCar Oversize E 151 N6x), Vol. Issue 121, Spring 2002, p4, il
Record #:
29665
Author(s):
Abstract:
If you have been to a Durham baseball game, flown in or out of Raleigh/Durham International Airport, or worked in a lab on several North Carolina university campuses, then you are already familiar with the architectural work of Phil Freelon. Freelon, of the Freelon Group, wants the architecture firm to be known for its creative use of light and joy. This themes can also be seen in the Sonja Haynes Stone Center for Black Culture and History, the International Civil Rights Center and Museum, and the Durham County Human Service Complex.
Source:
NC Magazine (NoCar F 251 W4), Vol. 66 Issue 2, Feb 2008, p46-48, por
Record #:
29157
Abstract:
Durham, North Carolina-based architect Phil Freelon is the new internationally acclaimed architect of record for the Smithsnonian National Museum of African American History and Culture. Among the museum's artifacts are stools form the Woolworth's lunch counter in Greensboro, North Carolina where the fateful sit-in took place in 1960. Freelon also designed the International Civil Rights Center and Museum in Greensboro, that occupies that same Woolworths.
Source:
Our State (NoCar F 251 S77), Vol. 85 Issue 4, September 2017, p166-168, 170, por Periodical Website