Difference between revisions of "Reese Rowland"

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'''Reese Rowland''' is a principal at [[Polk Stanley Yeary Architects]].  
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'''Reese Rowland''' is architect and principal at Little Rock's [[Polk Stanley Rowland Curzon Porter Architects]].  
  
 
Rowland was lead architect of the AIA Institute Honor Award-winning [[Heifer International]] headquarters, the [[Greater Little Rock Regional Chamber of Commerce]] building, and the [[Acxiom River Market Tower]] in Little Rock, Arkansas. The Heifer building was designed to consume fifty percent less energy than a comparable office tower, includes a massive cistern for rainwater collection, and a parking lot made of recycled crushed building material. Said Rowland in 2003, "What we want to do is say buildings don't have to sit in a sea of asphalt. What we want this building to do is really challenge people to rethink what an office building can do."
 
Rowland was lead architect of the AIA Institute Honor Award-winning [[Heifer International]] headquarters, the [[Greater Little Rock Regional Chamber of Commerce]] building, and the [[Acxiom River Market Tower]] in Little Rock, Arkansas. The Heifer building was designed to consume fifty percent less energy than a comparable office tower, includes a massive cistern for rainwater collection, and a parking lot made of recycled crushed building material. Said Rowland in 2003, "What we want to do is say buildings don't have to sit in a sea of asphalt. What we want this building to do is really challenge people to rethink what an office building can do."
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Rowland was born in Pomona, California, raised in Paris, Arkansas, and graduated from the University of Arkansas at Fayetteville School of Architecture in 1990. He was inspired to become an architect by watching Mike Brady, fictional architect and father of the Brady Bunch. "Architecture really is a calling. You get beat up so bad in school. If you don't love it, you're not going to stick with it," he said in 2008. Rowland was a designer at [[Wittenberg, Delony, and Davidson]] from 1990 to 1996 where he created plans for Bailey Library at Hendrix College. Rowland joined Polk Stanley in 1996, rising quickly as an associate beginning in 2000, and since 2002 as partner.
 
Rowland was born in Pomona, California, raised in Paris, Arkansas, and graduated from the University of Arkansas at Fayetteville School of Architecture in 1990. He was inspired to become an architect by watching Mike Brady, fictional architect and father of the Brady Bunch. "Architecture really is a calling. You get beat up so bad in school. If you don't love it, you're not going to stick with it," he said in 2008. Rowland was a designer at [[Wittenberg, Delony, and Davidson]] from 1990 to 1996 where he created plans for Bailey Library at Hendrix College. Rowland joined Polk Stanley in 1996, rising quickly as an associate beginning in 2000, and since 2002 as partner.
  
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==References==
 
==References==
  

Revision as of 07:42, 3 July 2008

Reese Rowland is architect and principal at Little Rock's Polk Stanley Rowland Curzon Porter Architects.

Rowland was lead architect of the AIA Institute Honor Award-winning Heifer International headquarters, the Greater Little Rock Regional Chamber of Commerce building, and the Acxiom River Market Tower in Little Rock, Arkansas. The Heifer building was designed to consume fifty percent less energy than a comparable office tower, includes a massive cistern for rainwater collection, and a parking lot made of recycled crushed building material. Said Rowland in 2003, "What we want to do is say buildings don't have to sit in a sea of asphalt. What we want this building to do is really challenge people to rethink what an office building can do."

The Heifer site, which will eventually include a global village and education center is designed to form a circle. The inspiration for this layout came from the daughter of Dan West, founder of Heifer. Said Rowland in 2008, " "Almost in passing, she mentioned that her dad always said no matter where he went in the world, all the important decisions were made when people sat in a circle. ... It's almost like a pebble hitting a pool of water. You get these concentric circles of influence. It's the perfect setup for a little microcosm of the world on these 22 acres." In March 2008 Rowland said of the Murphy Keller Education Building: "The inspiration of the building is really a continuation of that larger circle of life idea that we set up for the entire plan for the campus. The design is influenced by the 'Heifer story.' When they give an animal to a family and they pass that animal off to the next family ... it just creates these concentric rings of influence throughout a village and throughout a countryside. We set up the entire master plan for their campus based on concentric rings from that idea."

Rowland is currently working on several projects, including the renovation and expansion of several historic River Market buildings into the Arkansas Studies Institute to open in the fall of 2008, the Acxiom Data Center and Bank of the Ozarks headquarters in west Little Rock, and a multipurpose conference center in El Dorado.

Rowland was born in Pomona, California, raised in Paris, Arkansas, and graduated from the University of Arkansas at Fayetteville School of Architecture in 1990. He was inspired to become an architect by watching Mike Brady, fictional architect and father of the Brady Bunch. "Architecture really is a calling. You get beat up so bad in school. If you don't love it, you're not going to stick with it," he said in 2008. Rowland was a designer at Wittenberg, Delony, and Davidson from 1990 to 1996 where he created plans for Bailey Library at Hendrix College. Rowland joined Polk Stanley in 1996, rising quickly as an associate beginning in 2000, and since 2002 as partner.


References

  • "Blue Ribbon for a Green Building," Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, January 13, 2008.
  • Samantha Friedman, "High Profile: Reese Cameron Rowland," Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, June 1, 2008.
  • Andrew DeMillo, "Heifer Puts the Shovel to HQ Site in October," Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, August 22, 2003.
  • Kane Webb, "Forward to the Past: Mister Roberts (Re)builds His Dream House," Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, February 24, 2008.

External links