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Abstract:
Architect J. Hyatt Hammond of Greensboro received the F. Carter Williams Gold Medal, the highest award given to a state architect. The medal is in recognition of outstanding accomplishments or a distinguished career. Hammond, 73, has spent almost fifty years in the field of architecture.
Abstract:
Charlotte architect and artist Jeffrey A. Huberman received the 2002 F. Carter Williams Gold Medal, the highest award given to a state architect in recognition of outstanding accomplishments or a distinguished career. Huberman and fellow architect Harvey B. Gantt founded Gantt Huberman Architects in 1971.
Abstract:
Wilmington architect Charles H. Boney, Sr., received the 2003 F. Carter Williams Gold Medal from the North Carolina Chapter of AIA. The award recognizes a distinguished career of extraordinary achievements as an architect.
Abstract:
Charlotte architect S. Scott Ferebee, Jr. received the 2004 F. Carter Williams Gold Medal from the North Carolina Chapter of AIA. The award recognizes a distinguished career of extraordinary achievements as an architect. Ferebee received his bachelor of architectural engineering degree from North Carolina State University in 1948. One of his most notable career accomplishments was the role he played in establishing the College of Architecture at UNC Charlotte.
Abstract:
The F. Carter Williams Gold Medal from the North Carolina Chapter of AIA recognizes a distinguished career of extraordinary achievements as an architect and is the highest honor the AIA accords its membership. North Carolina State University graduate and Research Triangle Metropolitan Area architect John L. Atkins, III, received the award for 2005.