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10 results for Architects--Raleigh
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Record #:
16804
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Williams graduated from what was then North Carolina State College in 1935, and received an architectural degree from the University of Illinois in 1939. He started his own firm in Raleigh in 1940, and before his retirement in 1991, he had designed and overseen hundreds of projects, including the NC Archives Library in Raleigh and buildings at East Carolina University. Lea describes Blue Haven, his personal home in Raleigh. Constructed in 1959, it is considered his signature work.
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Record #:
5155
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Architect John Atkins, III, is president and CEO of O'Brien/Atkins Associates, PA. The architectural firm was founded in Raleigh in 1975 and has won more design awards from the North Carolina Chapter of the AIA than any other state firm. Atkins is featured in NORTH CAROLINA magazine's \"executive profile.\"
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North Carolina (NoCar F 251 W4), Vol. 58 Issue 4, Apr 2000, p56, 58-59, il
Record #:
4334
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Raleigh architect Frank Harmon, founder of Frank Harmon, Architect, received three Honor Awards in Design in 1999. The Honor Award is AIA North Carolina's highest award for design excellence. In the forty-four year history of the Design Award, this is the first time that an architect has won three in the same year.
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North Carolina (NoCar F 251 W4), Vol. 57 Issue 10, Oct 1999, p27-28, il, por
Record #:
3555
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Raleigh architect Kenneth E. Hobgood is the 1997 Kamphoefner Prize winner. The award is named for Henry Kamphoefner, founder and dean of the N.C. State University School of Design. It is the most prestigious honor for architects in the state.
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North Carolina (NoCar F 251 W4), Vol. 55 Issue 10, Oct 1997, p26, por
Record #:
14317
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Devins profiles award-winning Raleigh architect Norma DeCamp Burns.
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Record #:
5588
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Kenneth Hobgood, AIA, of Raleigh, received the state's most prestigious architectural award for 1997, the Kamphoefner Prize. The award recognizes architects for their continuing contribution to the modern movement in architecture.
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North Carolina Architecture (NoCar NA 730 N8 N67x), Vol. 45 Issue 3, 1997, p23
Record #:
6873
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The Raleigh architectural firm of Pearce Brinkley Cease + Lee received the 2004 AIA North Carolina Chapter Firm Award. The award is given to the firm producing quality architecture and having a high level of customer satisfaction for a ten-year period. The firm was founded in 1945 and has been the recipient of numerous design awards. One of the firm's most acclaimed projects in the BTI Center for the Performing Arts in downtown Raleigh.
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North Carolina (NoCar F 251 W4), Vol. 62 Issue 10, Oct 2004, p42-43, por
Record #:
2577
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Frank C. Harmon, FAIA, received the seventh Kamphoefner Prize for his contributions to the Modern Movement in Architecture. The prize, named for NCSU School of Design founder Henry Kamphoefner, is the most prestigious honor for architects in the state.
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North Carolina Architecture (NoCar NA 730 N8 N67x), Vol. 43 Issue 4, Fall 1995, p9-11, il, por
Record #:
8723
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John Atkins III, incoming chairman of the North Carolina Citizens for Business and Industry (NCCBI) board, is profiled. Atkins is co-founder, chairman, and chief executive officer of O'Brien/Atkins Associates, one of the Research Triangle Metropolitan Area's largest architectural and engineering firms. Among his priorities are creating the best business climate in the nation and a world-class education system that produces a highly skilled, well-prepared workforce.
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North Carolina (NoCar F 251 W4), Vol. 65 Issue 3, Mar 2007, p22-24, il
Record #:
12952
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Celebrating the modern face of architecture in North Carolina, the N.C. Chapter of the American institute of Architects credited the following structures during their 6th Annual Honor Awards: the Sanford Brick and Tile Office Building in Colon, the American of Martinsville Furniture Display Center in High Point, the Milton Julian Residence in Chapel Hill, the Bank of Asheville Branch in Cander, the Ogden Elementary School in Wilmington, and the J. Gregory Poole Residence in Raleigh.
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The State (NoCar F 251 S77), Vol. 27 Issue 25, May 1960, p34-41, 47, il
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