Gisolfi Associates wins awards

Peter Gisolfi Associates, the architecture and landscape architecture firm with offices in Hastings-on-Hudson and New Haven, recently received three awards for design excellence.

 The American Institute of Architects Westchester/Hudson Valley Chapter and the New York Library Association”™s Public Libraries Section (PLS) each cited the firm”™s redesign of the Longwood Public Library in Middle Island in Suffolk County for its “dramatic transformation and bright spaces” in what had been a commonplace building. The AIA also designated a High Honor Award for the new Trevor Day School in Manhattan, which was cited for a “creative solution on a tight city site.”

At 31,000 square feet, the Longwood Public Library was the smallest building among Suffolk County”™s libraries serving similar populations. The site faces a busy state highway. Gisolfi”™s new design refocused the building toward a wooded area to the south, and enlarged the library to 48,000 square feet with a new wing to the west.

In order to create an energy-efficient library, the entire building envelope was insulated, all windows were triple glazed, and a new energy-saving heating and cooling system was installed. The building will receive LEED gold certification.

“The library director and I explored the woodland to the south, and I understood immediately that the building should take advantage of that setting,” said Peter Gisolfi, the firm”™s senior partner and lead architect for the project.

The AIA recognized the building”™s “generously-sized windows that provide transparency with its many daylit spaces, the appeal of the glass wall facing the natural woodland, the comfortable environment for library users, and the sustainability enhancements.” The New York Library Association noted the “impact on the library”™s ability to provide services to its community with cost effective and innovative solutions to space challenges.”

Trevor Day School, a coed independent school in Manhattan, commissioned Gisolfi to design a new high school/middle school building on a 100-by-100-foot site. The architects conceived a 15-story 110,000-square-foot vertical campus building with 10,000 square feet of rooftop open space on three levels. The building is 210 feet high, with an 85-foot-high masonry base for most of the public and larger group spaces, including the auditorium, gymnasium, cafeteria, library, and music rehearsal spaces. The school is heated and cooled with a closed loop “energy pile” geothermal system, one of the first systems of its kind in the U.S.

In addition to praising the school”™s architecture, the AIA jury which bestowed the High Honor Award declared, “It looks like a fun place to learn.”