EwingCole

EwingCole
Practice information
Key architects Architects, Engineers, Interior Designers, Planners
Founded 1961
Location Philadelphia, PA; Irvine, CA, New York City, NY; Washington, D.C.

EwingCole is an American integrated architecture, engineering, interior design and planning firm founded in 1961 as Alexander Ewing[1] & Associates.[2] Headquartered in Philadelphia, with offices in Charlotte, North Carolina, Irvine, California, New York City, New York, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and Raleigh, North Carolina, the firm provides services for project types including academic, corporate, cultural, government, healthcare, science + technology and sports & entertainment. They have worked on projects across the United States and internationally in countries such as Afghanistan, Germany and Japan.

History

In 1958, the George M. Ewing[3] Co.[4] was retained by Rohm and Haas (since 2009 a subsidiary of Dow Chemical Company) to design the expansion and renovation of their corporate headquarters in Philadelphia. George Ewing’s son, Alexander, a partner in his father’s firm, was assigned to the project; Rohm and Haas designated their in-house architect, Stanley Cole,[5] to serve as professional aide to the management committee overseeing the project.

During the early stages of design, however, it became clear that the existing site near Washington Square would not satisfy the company’s needs. Rohm and Haas worked with the Philadelphia Redevelopment Authority to exchange their existing property for a key site on Independence Mall just across 6th Street from the Liberty Bell. The exchange was beneficial to the city as well as to Rohm and Haas because the project ignited the subsequent further development of the Mall.[6]

In order to ease City Art Commission approval for design on such a prominent site, Stanley recommended adding renowned architect Pietro Belluschi to the team as design consultant. The resulting design was lauded for its respect to the nearby park and historic buildings; Philadelphia's city planners praised the Rohm and Haas Corporate Headquarters as a standard for all redevelopment buildings.[7] (The experience was so successful that the Belluschi, Ewing and Cole collaborated again in the late 1960s[8] on the University Lutheran Center;[9] in the early 1970s, Belluschi, then a consultant to the Federal Reserve Bank in Washington, DC, recommended EwingCole for the design of the new headquarters of the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia.

Stanley Cole served as project manager until the completion of the Rohm and Haas project, when he joined Alexander Ewing & Associates. Cole, Michael P. Erdman[10] and Joseph P. Eubank[11] became partners in 1970, and the firm was renamed Ewing Cole Erdman & Eubank.[12] By 1979, Robert Cherry[13] and Robert Parsky[14] had succeeded Erdman and Eubank in Ewing Cole Cherry Parsky;[15] this partnership continued until 1992, when Parsky’s departure resulted in Ewing Cole Cherry.[16] In 1993, M. Paul Brott[17] (who had worked in the Washington, DC office of the George M. Ewing Company from 1960–1978, rising to the level of partner) became Chairman and CEO of Ewing Cole Cherry Brott.[18] Following the death of Paul Brott and the departure of Bob Cherry, the firm emerged in 2003 as EwingCole.

Growth and expansion

EwingCole, in the interest of serving federal government clients, opened its Washington, DC office in 1995.[19] In 2002, the firm added an office in Irvine, CA.[20]

In 2009, Robert D. Lynn Associates (RDLA)[21] combined with EwingCole. A 40-person firm, RDLA brought a portfolio of healthcare projects which complemented EwingCole’s own healthcare design experience.[22][23]

EwingCole was the third largest in Philadelphia per the Philadelphia Business Journal’s 2010 Book of Lists,[24] and No. 158 in the Engineering News-Record (ENR) 2010 annual ranking of the Top 500 Design Firms.[25]

John Gerbner, AIA, became President and COO of EwingCole in 2005.[26]

S. Mark Hebden, AIA, LEED AP, succeeded Gerbner as President in 2011.[27]

Focus on sustainability

EwingCole’s integrates all aspects of the A/E/C industry into its work, including building design, mobility, natural resources, renewable energy, and land-use planning. Many of the company's projects are LEED rated or certified.

EwingCole led the development of the US Navy’s first sustainable facility in 1998. Their efforts in designing Federal projected positioned for LEED-certified accreditation crosses all areas of practice and continues through the development of Net-Zero facilities.

EwingCole is a member of the USGBC (U. S. Green Building Council) and 76 of the company's employees are LEED AP certified as of 9/28/15. Representing staff in the architecture, electrical, mechanical, plumbing/F.P. and interiors disciplines. Notable LEED-certified projects include:

LEED Registered Projects – Post Construction Tracking

LEED Registered Projects - Under Construction as of 2015

LEED Registered Projects - Design Phase

EwingCole Projects Considering LEED Certification

EwingCole Projects Using Other Sustainability Standards

Awards and Recognition

EwingCole's work has been recognized by the American Institute of Architects (AIA) and other building industry organizations for their designs in entertainment, healthcare, higher education, corporate and commercial applications.

ACADEMIC

Anne Arundel Community College, Andrew G. Truxel Library, Arnold, MD

Bryant University, Fisher Student Center, Smithfield, RI

Cooper University Hospital, Patient Care Pavilion, Camden, NJ

Drexel University, Recreation Center, Philadelphia, PA

George Mason University - Recreation and Athletic Building

Monmouth University, Multipurpose Activity Center West, Long Branch, NJ

Skidmore College, Arthur Zankel Music Building, Saratoga Springs, NY

CORPORATE

United Therapeutics Corporation Headquarters, Silver Spring, MD

ENTERTAINMENT

Nixon Theater at Jones Beach, Stage Replacement, Wantagh, NY

Scranton/Wilkes-Barre Railriders, PNC Field, Moosic, PA

GOVERNMENT

Eastern Market, Central Market Master's Office and Hall, Washington, DC

Keller Army Community Hospital Clinic Addition, West Point, NY

HEALTHCARE

Atlanticare Health System, Care Cancer Institute, Egg Harbor, NJ

Bayhealth Medical Center, Kent Campus Expansion, Dover, DE

Cooper University Hospital, Roberts Pavilion, Camden, NJ

Geisinger Health System, Hospital For Advanced Medicine, Danville, PA

Good Samaritan Hospital, Radiology Department, West Islep, NY

Memorial Sloan Kettering Ambulatory Cancer Center, Harrison, NY

Pocono Medical Center, Dale & Frances Hughes Cancer Center, East Stroudsburg, PA

SUNY Upstate, Upstate Cancer Center, Syracuse, NY

University of Pennsylvania Health System, Pavilion for Advanced Care at Penn Presbyterian Medical Center, Philadelphia, PA

SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY

Jefferson Lab, Technology & Engineering Department Facility, Newport News, VA

NASA National Aeronautics and Space Administration, NASA Explorations Sciences Building, Greenbelt, MD

Promega Corporation DaVinci Building, Madison, WI

Promega Corporation, Feyman Center, Madison, WI

Smithsonian Environmental Research Center, Mathias Laboratory, Edgewater, MD

Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History Q?rius, Washington, DC

United Therapeutics, Phase 2 B, Silver Spring, MD

SPORTS & ENTERTAINMENT

NY Giants and NY Jets Metlife National Football League Stadium, East Rutherford, NJ

Timex Performance Center, New York Football Giants Training Facility, East Rutherford, NJ

Notable designs

A number of EwingCole works and clients have received national recognition. In 2015, the White House announced that the Smithsonian Environmental Research Center's Charles McC. Mathias Laboratory was one of eight recipients to receive the GreenGov Presidential Award.[28] President Obama cited Geisinger Health System as a model for healthcare reform in the early stages of his efforts to pass the Affordable Care Act.[29]

References

  1. American Architects and Buildings database, Ewing, Alexander
  2. American Architects and Buildings database, Alexander Ewing & Associates
  3. Philadelphia Buildings, Ewing, George M.
  4. Philadelphia Buildings, George M. Ewing Co.
  5. American Architects and Buildings Database, Cole, Stanley
  6. Philadelphia Athenaeum, Independence Mall
  7. Clausen, Meredith L. (1999). Pietro Belluschi: Modern American Architect. MIT Press. Pages 313, 316. ISBN 0-262-53167-4
  8. Evers, Charles A. (1997). "A List of Philadelphia's Modern Monuments," The Philadelphia Architect.
  9. University Lutheran Center of Philadelphia
  10. Philadelphia Buildings, Erdman, Michael P.
  11. Philadelphia Buildings, Eubank, Joseph P.
  12. Philadelphia Buildings, Ewing Cole Erdman & Eubank.
  13. Philadelphia Buildings, Cherry, Robert.
  14. Philadelphia Buildings, Parsky, Robert.
  15. Philadelphia Buildings, Ewing Cole Cherry Parsky
  16. Philadelphia Buildings, Ewing Cole Cherry.
  17. Philadelphia Buildings, Brott, M. Paul.
  18. Philadelphia Buildings, Ewing Cole Cherry Brott
  19. Building Design & Construction, October 1, 1995.
  20. Building Design & Construction, September 1, 2003.
  21. www.rdla.com
  22. Building Design & Construction, "EwingCole to Merge with Healthcare Specialist Robert D. Lynn Associates."
  23. Medical Construction and Design, "EwingCole, RDLA Join Together, Creating A/E Firm with Largest Healthcare Focus in the Delaware Valley."
  24. Philadelphia Business Journal, 2010 Book of Lists.
  25. Engineering News-Record, "2010 Top 500 Design Firms."
  26. Contract Magazine, June 3, 2005. "EwingCole Names John Gerbner as President, COO."
  27. Globe Newswire, June 1, 2011. "EwingCole Names New President."
  28. "Science Spotlight – Smithsonian Science News –". smithsonian512.rssing.com. Retrieved 2016-01-12.
  29. "Geisinger's second century of innovation: Health system spreading best practices through new company". Modern Healthcare. Retrieved 2016-01-12.

Official website

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