Choose Your Language Preference:

2022 Pinnacle Awards

Pinnacle Award Category: Kitchen/Bath

Natural Stone Institute
Member Company

Ceramic Harmony
Huntsville, Alabama
Stone Consultant/Installer

Other Project Team Members

Matheny Goldmon Architecture
Architect

Antolini
Stone Suppliers

Stone

Calacatta Macchia Vecchia marble
Cedar marble

Judges Comments:

This kitchen entry immediately impressed due to how the veining of the stone was treated, not only on the island, but specifi- cally in the backsplash. That is the first thing you are going to see, and they did a really good job with a wild material choice. It isn’t necessarily matched as much as blended and not distracting. The sink is a really nice element. You can see it is consecutive slabs of the same material that they glued together and hollowed out. That was a big effort and a beautifully executed feature.

 

Pinnacle Award Winner for Kitchen/Bath Category: Boyce Residence Kitchen


Pinnacle Award Winner for Kitchen/Bath Category: Boyce Residence Kitchen

Kitchen/Bath
Boyce Residence Kitchen

Huntsville, Alabama

This project is a private residence for a chef/restaurant owner in Huntsville, Alabama. The couple values the quality and beauty of materials that this earth provides. The goal for this kitchen was to feature the unique characteristics of natural stone. In this case, it was Calacatta Macchia Vecchia imported from Italy. It was also important to the clients to create a high-end timeless design with handcrafted features.

The scope of the work involved an island that necessitated two slabs which meant that a book matched seam was needed.  The size of the island called for mitered edges to increase its visual weight. These were cut with a 5-axis angle cutting waterjet. The sink portion of the countertop included a custom fabricated Cedar marble sink with drain boards fabricated to the client’s specifications. The sink was fabricated by laminating several layers of the waterjet cut marble and then hand working it to achieve a seamless finish. Moreover, the backsplash features curved moldings to give the high-end finish and detail that the project required.

A challenge presented by this project was the pattern and flow of the material. With a material as vibrant as Calacatta Macchia Vecchia, seams that flow well visually can be a challenge.

The client was very meticulous in her wishes for how the material was laid out. Using a digital layout program with 3D options proved to be a crucial part of the process.





Pinnacle Award Category: Renovation/Restoration

Natural Stone Institute
Member Company

Euromarble
Carrara, Italy
Stone Supplier

Wilkstone
Paterson, New Jersey
Stone Installer

Other Project Team Members

MdeAS Architects
Architect

Gilsanz Murray Sefticek
Stone Engineer

Stone

Thassos marble

Judges Comments:

This is an unusual project in that the building was renovated to create a new lobby within an existing building and the stonework is new. A split-face Greek marble was selected for the wall installation with texture and shadowing that is pretty, unique. What stands out is the control of the texture. They basically pitched everything to lines and controlled them across multiple stones, which is a traditional stone craft. Something done a lot, but not with this tight of a joint. Such control of the profiles. There were some interesting solutions to get that split face to line up with the stone next to it. An impressive combination of pneumatic splitting and hand chiseling on four sides. It’s unusual to find a Greek Thassos marble in this finish.

 

Pinnacle Award Winner for Renovation/Restoration Category: Two Bryant Park New York, New YorkRenovation/Restoration: Two Bryant Park New York, New York

Pinnacle Award Winner for Renovation/Restoration Category: Two Bryant Park New York, New YorkRenovation/Restoration: Two Bryant Park New York, New York

Renovation/Restoration
Two Bryant Park

New York, New York

Two Bryant Park sits at a crucial location in the city, directly between Bryant Park and Grace Plaza; however, the existing building cut the two parks off from one another and had a small, poorly positioned lobby. To better connect these spaces, the central column bay and structural slab were removed from the first and second fl oor, creating a double-height lobby concourse linking the two parks and pulling pedestrians from one space to the other.

Disparate textures of rugged stone and highly refl ective fi nishes were chosen to distort and complement the natural landscapes at either side. A black and white palette consisting of Thassos marble, a large aggregate terrazzo, reflective painted aluminum, and blackened stainless-steel balances the refinement of a premium offi ce lobby with the rustic simplicity of Thassos, the Greek island where this project’s marble was quarried.

The lobby entrances are flanked by white brushed Thassos marble that flows into a luminous white ceiling surface. These large glistening slabs bring in the soft light that filters through the trees outside.

To achieve this diffuse quality, a leather finish was applied that enhanced the inherent glittering of the marble while concealing discoloration and other imperfections.

Adjacent, framed by contrasting dark metallic portals, the cleft Thassos marble feature wall stands as the centerpiece of the lobby. The splitting process had never been done with Thassos marble before and required extensive research and experimentation. Every slab had a unique splitting characteristic, and each was carefully placed in relation to the other. The edges were then hand chiseled to maintain consistency between panels. The resulting feature wall is a quarry in microcosm, embodying the tension between mechanical precision and natural chaos, and reflecting the quality and proportions of the quarry from which it was mined.





Pinnacle Award Category: Architectural Carving/Lettering/Sculpture

Natural Stone Institute
Member Company

Rugo Stone
Lorton, Virginia
Stone Consultant/Fabricator/Installer

Other Project Team Members

Euromarble
Stone Supplier

Stone

Carrara Acqua Bianca marble

Judges Comments:

This was a very complex project — first, in matching the stone, and second, there was no way to use a machine to help carve the letters that could replicate the style. They made templates of each letter and created an alphabet of letters and used them to add to the existing names. A lot of effort went into this. The replacement stone match worked really well even though it came from a different quarry. This was beautifully executed—a great achievement and very well documented in the submission. It’s difficult to tell where the existing lettering stops, and the new letters start. I don’t think it could have been done any better.

Pinnacle Award Winner for Architectural Carving/Lettering/Sculpture Category: John F. Kennedy Center Hall Of Nations Engraving

Pinnacle Award Winner for Architectural Carving/Lettering/Sculpture Category: John F. Kennedy Center Hall Of Nations Engraving


Pinnacle Award Winner for Architectural Carving/Lettering/Sculpture Category: John F. Kennedy Center Hall Of Nations Engraving

Architectural Carving/Lettering/Sculpture
John F. Kennedy Center Hall of Nations Engraving

Washington, DC

This project involved replacing 12 large 5´x5´ marble panels on the existing donor wall in the building, including re-engraving the existing names as well as adding new names on the replacement marble panels.

The first challenge was to match the existing white marble as the original quarry was closed. The Rugo team found a closely matching white marble from the Carrara region and special ordered slabs for the project.

The second challenge was to match the existing engravings. The original inscriptions on the wall were hand drawn, calligraphic Roman typeface which was designed by the original carver. There is no digital equivalent for the original font and the original font had certain nuances and inconsistencies which would not be present in any computerized font.

The carving team first traced all the existing names using carbon paper, and each of the names were cut and organized in the order of appearance they would go on the new wall. Using the traced names, Rugo Stone also created a library of characters to draw the new names needed. Then all the names were transferred to long sheets of white paper. The new stone panels were set up on a temporary wall specially built for this project at the studio in the same sequence that they would go on the building.

The paper drawings were then taped on the stones with the names in their respective positions for final approval and then transferred on to the marble panels using carbon paper. This process is called pouncing of letters.

After the names were pounced, master carvers carved the letters onto the marble with great care to reproduce some of the nuances and hand-touched characteristics of the engraved lettering. The letters were also painted with appropriate color to closely match the existing names.






Pinnacle Award Category: Architectural Carving/Lettering/Sculpture

Natural Stone Institute
Member Company

Rugo Stone
Lorton, Virginia
Stone Consultant/Fabricator/Installer

Other Project Team Members

Skidmore, Owings & Merrill
Architect

Grupimar
Stone Supplier

Stone

Absolute Black granite

Judges Comments:

The work that this project took was really something. Certainly a state-of-the-art process. A wall like this may not exist anywhere else or with the extraordinary amount of lettering. The panels are enormous, and the stone was impeccably selected. Black stones are never fun to work with but the attention to detail and control measures were extraordinary. Extremely well done. Don’t know how anyone could have done this better.

Pinnacle Award Winner for Architectural Carving/Lettering/Sculpture Category: National Museum of the United States Army


Pinnacle Award Winner for Architectural Carving/Lettering/Sculpture Category: National Museum of the United States Army


Pinnacle Award Winner for Architectural Carving/Lettering/Sculpture Category: National Museum of the United States Army

Architectural Carving/Lettering/Sculpture
National Museum of the United States Army

Fort Belvoir, Virginia

For the museum dedicated to the US Army, the Rugo Stone team sandblasted, engraved, and installed the Medal of Honor wall with roughly 3,000 names, the Lobby Honor Wall with over 250 names, and the Focal Point wall with hand V-cut letters. The selected granite is the purest black granite with no tonal color range or veining, which allows expert engraving to read in a very legible manner on the reflective surface.

The engraving on this project came with several challenges. The font selected by the owner was a custom font, which was not ideal for engraving, and the height of the text was considered small for sandblasting. The size of the panels was too big to fit inside the automatic sandblast machine.

The Rugo team performed numerous mockups to test, study, and finalize the best materials and process to use to achieve the best results. The depth of the engraved letters was mocked up and an ideal depth was approved by the owner, considering the legibility of the letters and the shadows cast on the letters as light hit the stone panels. The team used a special “photo mask” process to cut and mask the fine text on the polished black stone, which had a high gloss finish similar to glass, and used very fine sandblast media for engraving.

They fine-tuned several parameters, such as the size of the sandblast nozzle, distance from the stone panel, pressure of the air to use for sandblasting, and the number of passes needed to achieve the right results, to avoid burning or piercing of the mask, and to avoid potentially causing permanent damage to the finish on the stone. Each panel was engraved in two phases to complete the engraving on large sized panels.






Pinnacle Award Category: Architectural Carving/Lettering/Sculpture

Natural Stone Institute
Member Company

Rugo Stone
Lorton, Virginia
Stone Consultant/Installer

Other Project Team Members

Pedrini Mario
Stone Supplier/Fabricator

Stone

Bianco Carrara Campanili marble
Giallo Siena marble
Bardiglio marble

Judges Comments:

Complexity of the project is great. They did a really great job with the expression of the carving. The advent of CNC carving technology has improved the ability to do restoration and new work, especially in the US. The process is so exacting, and it takes out hundreds of hours of carving. We appreciated the balance of the technology and the hand finishing. The handwork is really well done. The variation in textures, particularly the robe versus some of the more textured areas, were just quite beautifully done.

Pinnacle Award Winner for Architectural Carving/Lettering/Sculpture Category: Venerable Cornelia Connely Shrine

Architectural Carving/Lettering/Sculpture
Venerable Cornelia Connelly Shrine

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

This small but highly artistic project was designed to honor the accomplishments of Sister Cornelia Connelly, the American-born foundress of the Society of the Holy Child Jesus, a Roman Catholic religious institute.

Rugo Stone installed a beautiful 3´ tall Bianco Carrara statue of the Holy Child Jesus in the shrine.

Working with a client supplied digital rendering, Rugo’s stone fabricator created a full-scale clay model which was 3D scanned to produce a digital model and then programmed into a CNC machine.

While the CNC carving process completed about 80% of the carving, an experienced marble sculptor performed the rest of the carving by hand using hammer and chisels, especially for the most intricate details of the statue.

This shrine features raised hand-carved floral details, hand-cut letters, hand-carved relief, a small coat of arms carving, and an elegant canopy with book-matched Giallo Siena wall panels and accents of Bardiglio marble. The completion of the statue involved multiple discussions with the client to finalize appropriate finishes for each part: face and skin received a smooth honed finish; the hair received a much more textured finish; and the robe over the body received a fine finish to mimic the texture of a fabric.

Designing the support system for this project was quite challenging. Rugo Stone’s team worked closely with their fabrication partner to develop a stainless-steel bracket design to be installed on the back wall to take the load of the canopy stone, while the rest of the stone assembly below was tied to the wall with stainless steel wires and plaster. 3D renderings were reviewed and approved for support systems and a pair of hidden channels were cut at the bottom of the canopy in order to receive the brackets projecting from the wall.






Pinnacle Award Category: Commercial Interior

Natural Stone Institute
Member Company

KEPCO+
Salt Lake City, Utah
Installer

Other Project Team Members

Skidmore, Owings & Merrill
Architect

Bestview International
Campolonghi Italia
Stone Suppliers/Fabricators

Stone

Lasa marble
New Black Rain granite

Judges Comments:

It’s the horizontal vein match of the stone that makes this project impressive. Any time a setter is doing a job with this kind of vein matching, they know that if they ruin one piece, they can’t replace it. To manage that across this many pieces should be applauded. Even the transition from the walls to the paving – with the jointing and alignment – it was beautiful.

Pinnacle Award Category for Commercial Interior: 95 State Street

Pinnacle Award Category for Commercial Interior: 95 State Street

Commercial Interior
95 State Street

Salt Lake City, Utah

The 95 State Street lobby features 220 foot long Lasa marble walls that stretch over 40 feet high and maintain a continual linear veining pattern across all courses. Before a single stone was even fabricated, it had already been assigned a specific location on the wall to ensure vein alignment over both concave and convex curvatures and recessed walls. Through value-engineering, the installer was able to decrease the specified stone thickness by 2 cm and re-engineer the attachment system to accommodate open joints while utilizing back anchors on the thinner stone. The underlayment was then painted black to add visual depth.

To maintain the pristine color of the stone in an interior installation, the installer sealed each piece prior to setting. A 50 foot by 40 foot tented clean room was constructed in the structure’s basement, where each individual stone was cleaned, sealed, and suspended upside down. A HEPA filtration system and evacuation system were utilized to remove the fumes and ensure dust did not settle on the stone while drying. The next day, individual pieces were handset with exacting precision so that the wall joints aligned perfectly with the joints in the granite flooring, wooden ceiling, and surrounding windows.

Travel restrictions resulting from the global pandemic required that the team employ innovative coordination methods to review stones, including Zoom calls across continents and the use of drones.

The stone installer acted as liaison between the design team and the stone team to ensure all parties were well-informed despite the unprecedented conditions.

In addition to the 8,900 square feet of white Lasa marble used on the lobby walls, the project also features 13,000 square feet of New Black Rain granite flooring, creating a striking visual contrast. Completed in December 2021, the project stands as a testament to what can be accomplished through the trusting collaboration of stone professionals.






Pinnacle Award Category: Commercial Exterior

Natural Stone Institute
Member Company

IMS Masonry
Lindon, Utah
Stone Installer

Other Project Team Members

David M. Schwarz Architects
Design Architect

Bybee Stone Company
Silvara Stone
Stone Suppliers/Fabricators

Wasco, Inc.
Stone Installer

PICCO Group
Stone Engineer

Stone

TN Crab Orchard sandstone
Indiana limestone

Judges Comments:

A really solid project. The scope is enormous, and we appreciated the different uses of stone – not only traditional ones seen in typical brick masonry construction, but elements they used to make it unique. The intricacy of the detailing, especially from a very human scale at ground level, had a balanced approach. A pleasing blend of traditional and modern uses, with intricate detailing. There is a lot of work in the layout for installing strips and bands. The ashlar piers and columns look great and compliment the more traditional trims in this kind of masonry work.

Pinnacle Award Category for Commercial Exterior: Nicholas S. Zeppos College Vanderbilt University

Pinnacle Award Category for Commercial Exterior: Nicholas S. Zeppos College Vanderbilt University

Commercial Exterior
Nicholas S. Zeppos College Vanderbilt University

Nashville, Tennessee

The 260,000 square-foot Nicholas S. Zeppos College houses 335 students and features a state-of-the-art dining hall, great room, study lounges, and several other event spaces. It was designed with a red brick blend cladding, along with sandstone and limestone trims.

Stone detailing was a major area of design assist. As a masonry subcontractor aiding in stone selection, drafting, and engineering, IMS Masonry was able to devise a strategic plan to enable building schedule and sequencing and to ensure proper fi t of the stone elements that added to the overall project success.

Much of the exterior is inspired by the Collegiate Gothic architecture. Native Tennessee Crab Orchard sandstone and variegated Indiana limestone were used. The Gothic style was evident in the use of stone in vertical piers, groin vault ceilings along with ogival arches. Multiple stones were carved with features unique to Vanderbilt University. Particularly unique to the Zeppos College is the 22-story tower which extends 310 feet. The upper tower is composed of slender stone column lanterns which give a display of verticality. The crown of the tower is capped with stone cupolas and topped with stone finials.

Stone arches were created from an arch profile much smaller than a loadbearing arch. This method allowed the brick masonry to cross over each arch without having to wait for the typical cure time of a traditional arch. Each stone has its own individual anchor, which was custom designed by the engineering firm. The use of the different stones with many complex angles helped portray the Gothic style architecture.

The finished product amounted to over 4.5 million pounds of cubic stone.






Pinnacle Award Category: Renovation/Restoration

Natural Stone Institute
Member Company

Mario & Son
Liberty Lake, Washington
Stone Fabricator/Installer/Designer

Other Project Team Members

Bonotti Stone Trading International
Stone Supplier

Stone

Bianco Carrara marble
Grigio Carnico marble
Bianco Altissimo marble
Azul Bahia granite

Judges Comments:

Appreciated the great before and after photos which proved this was incredibly a 100 percent transformation from what it was. Remarkable. We have had a lot of church or sanctuary renovation submissions lately, and for this one, I can’t find anything that wasn’t well done. This is an intricate combination of different materials. The story is really well documented, and they did a great job illustrating some of the onsite design challenges – not just for the stone fabrication but for the setting process. There is a really dramatic change from before and after, all with good craftsmanship.

Pinnacle Award for Renovation/Restoration: Cathedral of Our Lady of Lourdes

Pinnacle Award for Renovation/Restoration: Cathedral of Our Lady of Lourdes

Renovation/Restoration
Cathedral of Our Lady of Lourdes

Spokane, Washington

The Cathedral of Our Lady of Lourdes has graced downtown Spokane, Washington for well over a century. The church features Romanesque Revival architecture in ornate Carrara marble embellished with a variety of other stones. It includes an impressive back altar, pulpit, and bishop’s chair of the high liturgical craftsmanship typical of the era, sculpted and installed by Italian stoneworkers.

Poor remodeling left this once magnificent Cathedral a victim of changing styles over the decades.

The church’s new leaders wanted to restore the Cathedral to its original grandeur but figured that level of craftsmanship did not exist locally and working with contractors in Italy was beyond their comfort level.

A minor repair to a damaged fresco recently set an opportunity for the church to regain its former glory. Discovering the level of local stone fabrication had been more than capable all along, the church set a series of projects in motion, including a new altar, bishop’s chair, slab stairway, baptismal font, and various niches. Lastly, a shrine to Saint Peregrine was the pièce de résistance, completing the four-year project.

Slabs of Bianco Carrara and Grigio Carnico were cut in Italy as thick as 8 inches to achieve the carvings and columns.

Azul Bahia was placed as accents, complementing the magnificent European stained-glass windows for which the church is known. The project features solid turned columns, a complex domed roof in Grigio Carnico, and a baptismal font restoration and fabrication of an ornate statue niche out of Bianco Altissimo.

The fabrication features a perfect synergy of high technology, multi-axis machining coupled with the finesse of experienced hand sculpting and finishing. The result is a wealth of new work and restoration that blends seamlessly with the original architecture and style of the Cathedral while meeting the current needs of the modern church.






Pinnacle Award Category: Renovation/Restoration

Natural Stone Institute
Member Company

Galloy & Van Etten
Chicago, Illinois
Stone Supplier/Fabricator

Other Project Team Members

Klein & Hoffman
Architect

Reed Quarries, Inc.
Stone Suppliers

Central Building & Preservation
Stone Installer

Stone

Indiana limestone

Judges Comments:

A monumental project. It’s an iconic structure in Chicago and must have been a daunting task to remove the exterior of this building. The sheer size and scope of the work required was complex and challenging, and they did a great job with it. Even the swing stages working at that height – that is challenging enough. The matching of the new stone to the original was exceptional. Any time you remove a stone on a building of this age, it’s always a surprise what one will find. So, with that challenge in mind, this was really well done.

Pinnacle Award for Renovation/Restoration: Tribune Tower

Pinnacle Award for Renovation/Restoration: Tribune Tower

Renovation/Restoration
Tribune Tower

Chicago, Illinois

Few buildings in America have been designed with more care to every detail of its surroundings and architectural effect than Chicago’s Tribune Tower. Constructed in 1925 and designed by architects Raymond Hood and John Mead Howells, this majestic structure soars 36-stories above Chicago’s Michigan Avenue. Clad in Indiana Limestone, it’s an architectural masterpiece gracing the city skyline with permanence and beauty.

In 2018 planning began to convert this historic landmark from offices into luxury condominium units, all the while respecting its Chicago landmark status.

The entirety of its exterior limestone was reviewed up close, with hammer sounding of the stone surfaces used to identify deficiencies. Distress conditions including spalling, deterioration, and cracks were identified, as was stone displacement and eroded mortar joints. Ultimately, the façade conditions were documented for use in planning repairs. Some 6,000 individual pieces of limestone were replaced, including a variety of types and sizes. The stone was carefully selected to match the existing, then sandblasted in the shop after fabrication and water blasted on site to match the existing weathered finish.

Key facets of this project included rebuilding the unique, eight-story high stone flying buttresses as well as the reconfiguration of the masonry openings throughout the lower three floors of the tower’s five buildings to accommodate the storefront modifications. With the goal of salvaging as much of the original stone as possible, stone was reused throughout the building and replacement pieces were seamlessly integrated into this nearly century old landmark.

Project challenges included accessing the different areas of the building, especially the towers and flying buttresses. This was accomplished using swing-stage scaffolding, mast climbers, pipe scaffolding, and aerial lifts. Additionally, many of the elaborately carved pieces of Gothic ornamentation were beyond repair and needed to be replaced so existing stones were removed and sent to the stone shop to be used as templates for carving the new stones.






Pinnacle Award Category: Public Landscapes/Parks/Memorials

Natural Stone Institute
Member Company

Western Tile & Marble Contractors
Redmond, Washington
Stone Installer

Other Project Team Members

ZGF Architects
Design Firm

Savema
Stone Supplier

Keuhn Drafting
Stone Consultant

Stone

Zimbabwe Black granite
Wuchuan granite

Judges Comments:

At a scale over one and half football fields, its impressive. Then getting down to the attention to detail—the turning of the individual cobbles compared to the CNC machined stones to the flamed finish on the perimeter collar, it celebrates the simplicity of black granite being used in so many ways — differing textures. Absolutely love the design. Since water is a 50% participant in how this feature looks, it’s about the quality of the installation of the stone, that if not placed correctly, can create a different kind of wave. This was a really good installation job.

Pnnacle Award for Public Landscapes/Parks/Memorials Category: Expedia World Headquarters Water Feature

Pnnacle Award for Public Landscapes/Parks/Memorials Category: Expedia World Headquarters Water Feature

Public Landscapes/Parks/Memorials
Expedia World Headquarters Water Feature

Seattle, Washington

Expedia World Headquarters in Seattle, Washington boasts a 480-foot-long stone water feature, architecturally designed to emulate a shallow waterway.

The basin includes 3,000 square feet of CNC Zimbabwe Black granite panels and 13,000 square feet of Wuchuan granite cobbles. The water first moves over approximately 75,000 pieces of 5˝x5˝ Wuchuan split-faced granite cobbles; every other cobble is set at a tilt with one corner of the cobble raised to disrupt the water flow. The water then flows over 233 CNC panels which were designed to mimic the waves of the campus’s neighboring landscape, the Puget Sound, with each distinctive 3 foot x 5 foot CNC panel having to conjoin to its neighboring panel for a puzzle-like assembly.

Detailed crate logs were created for all 38 containers, allowing for crucial tracing for sequential pieces as necessary for installation.

In combination with the sloping design, the project was also afflicted by the Seattle rainy season, making it imperative to construct both tents and dams to prevent the water from flowing into the working area.

Tents and dams were subsequently moved as each area was completed.

Surrounding the water feature is the “collar,” comprised of 640 pieces of Zimbabwe Black granite measuring 2.5 feet x 5 feet by 5 feet thick, weighing more than 1,000 pounds each, and installed during the COVID-19 6-foot social distancing rule. The team was able to overcome this challenge by assembling a small gantry and chain fall hoist, enabling a three-person crew to do the install while maintaining 6-foot social distance.

With an access road causing a deficit in the workable space at the logical starting point for stone installation, a survey was required to assess an alternate site. Installation began 12 pieces in from the preferred start location. Subsequently, when the road was opened, the corner installation was completed to the original starting point, which was within ¾ inches of the original calculation.






Pinnacle Award Category: Public Landscapes/Parks/Memorials

Natural Stone Institute
Member Company

Bestview International
Glenview, Illinois
Stone Fabricator

Other Project Team Members

Place Landscape Architecture
Landscape Architect

KEPCO+
Stone Installer

Stone

Obsidian Black basalt
Platinum Black granite

Judges Comments:

This project overall has a nice appeal – a space that people will go and sit and enjoy. The planter curbing is very complex in its fabrication and the work is well done. Complexity is also apparent in the Serena wall with the in and out of its carved letters against the flatness of the wall. The layout and alignment of the battered walls has a high level of difficulty – they are curving in plan and are battered. We know the technology we have today certainly makes this kind of work easier, but it is not a straightforward job. It appears to be precision work. Beautifully done.

Pinnacle Award Category for Public Landscapes/Parks/Memorials: Garden of Serena Williams Nike World Headquarters

Pinnacle Award Category for Public Landscapes/Parks/Memorials: Garden of Serena Williams Nike World Headquarters

Public Landscapes/Parks/Memorials
Garden of Serena Williams Nike World Headquarters

Beaverton, Oregon

The LEED Platinum-certified Serena Williams Building is the largest structure at Nike World Headquarters in Beaverton, Oregon, spanning more than 1 million square feet and nearly three city blocks. Located in front of this massive complex is Serena’s Garden.

The focal point of the Garden is the thirteen battered walls with flamed and waterjet Obsidian Black basalt cladding as well as the large “SERENA” stone letterings, which reflect aspects of Serena as an athlete. The shapes of this garden are inspired by the notion of the game of tennis. Place Landscape Architecture said: “Seeing these curved, massive stone structures rising up out of the ground evokes a sense of power and dynamism that a great athlete has.”

These high and low stone walls look like many musical notes placed on the various lines of the staff.

They rise out of the ground with 3/12 pitch to the ground and the top of wall cap slopes in two directions from the peak to both ends. References to Serena crop up throughout campus — even the slash on the top of the garden walls is modeled after her tennis stroke. The six lettering stones made from Platinum Black granite are wedge-shaped and there is a continuous ridge crossing them on the surface, which seem like the ball trajectory after Serena’s tennis stroke.

The entire project team worked closely from design to pre-construction, to fabrication and finally installed over total 45,000 sq ft of granite pavers, steps, benches, and staircases to clad this beautiful campus. The stone pieces create a very bold appearance. This project is an excellent example of using natural stone to transform an amazing design into an iconic campus.






Pinnacle Award Category: Renovation/Restoration

Natural Stone Institute
Member Company

Swenson Stone Consultants
Hanover, New Hampshire
Stone Consultant

Miller Druck Specialty Contracting
New York, New York
Stone Supplier/Fabricator/Installer

Tennessee Marble Company
Friendsville, Tennessee
Stone Supplier/Fabricator

Other Project Team Members

A. LaCroix Granit
Coldspring
Granites of America
Marmo di Covelano 
Miller Druck Italia
Stone Suppliers/Fabricators

Skidmore, Owings & Merrill
Architect

Stone

Academy Black granite
Botticino marble
Madison Rose granite
Covelano Bluette marble
Quaker Gray marble

Judges Comments:

An aggressive New York City restoration project of monumental scope that ranks high in implementation of design. The virtual dry laid approach and the use of the drone was an innovative use of technologies available in the industry today. There are literally acres of Tennessee marble here that are blended well. The stairway is lovely. It’s hard to find any fault and the overall layout is quite beautiful.

Pinnacle Award for Renovation/Restoration: Moynihan Train Hall

Pinnacle Award for Renovation/Restoration: Moynihan Train Hall

Renovation/Restoration
Moynihan Train Hall

New York, New York

The Moynihan Train Hall project is a comprehensive plan to transquare footorm the iconic James A. Farley Post Office Building and Pennsylvania Station into a world-class transportation hub.

The total renovation, ultimately expanding Penn Station’s floor space by more than 50 percent, includes the construction of the new 255,000 square foot Moynihan Train Hall, waiting areas, and ticketing areas for the Long Island Railroad and Amtrak.

For exterior stone areas, work involved identifying and determining present-day sources for the granites used on the original Farley post office building, as well as advice on cleaning the existing façade. Indoors, the project incorporates carefully sourced and selected stone materials and artwork that unify the entrances and concourses. Quaker Grey marble was used extensively in the Train Hall for entrance floors at both 31st and 33rd streets in a honed finish and in a sandblasted finish for the walls. For ticketing areas, white Botticino marble in a honed finish was used for floors, walls, and soffits.

The Grand Staircase is comprised of four-wide Quarry Grey marble treads and landings, each 7 ft wide, that were vein matched and carefully blended.

Renovating an historic building came with its challenges including an ambitious schedule, the need for additional quarrying equipment, outsourced quarry personnel, and an additional fabricator. The owners also required dry lays of all the stone for blending and review, which took place at two facilities in North America and one location in Italy. Every piece of stone for the project was dry laid, totaling nearly100,000 square foot of installed stone.

Despite the monumental endeavor to maintain the project schedule while conforming with all the owners / architect’s demands, requirements, changes, and a global pandemic, Moynihan Train Hall opened to the public January 1, 2021, as scheduled.




Pinnacle Award Category: Residential Interior/Exterior Single Family

Natural Stone Institute
Member Company

QuarryHouse
San Anselmo, California
Stone Installer

Other Project Team Members

Tucker & Marks Design
Interior Design Firm

Skurman Architects
Architect

Zeterre Landscape Architecture
Landscape Architect

Citco
Atlantide Marmi
Stone Suppliers/Fabricators

Stone

Botticino Classico marble
Emperador Medium marble
Oro Toscano marble
Navona travertine
hala Beige marble
Travertino Noce
And many more

Judges Comments:

Incredibly extensive and complex stonework for a residence that was pulled off beautifully by both the fabricator and installer. Despite the challenges with using two teams – one in the United States and one in Italy – it was very well executed. The staircase was especially nice, with the curving aspect of the ramp and twist, done with such fine craftsmanship. In the old days, only the best stone carver in the shop would get to work on a piece like that. Nowadays, with CNC technology it may not be such a big deal, but when you isolate a piece like that and look at it in three dimensions, it’s basically a bent piece of stone. What a great project.

Pinnacle Award for Residential Interior/Exterior Single Family: Pacific Heights Palazzo

Pinnacle Award for Residential Interior/Exterior Single Family: Pacific Heights Palazzo

Residential Interior/Exterior Single Family
Pacific Heights Palazzo

San Francisco, California

A Fiesole Palazzo inspired this Renaissance-style residence in San Francisco. Henry Clay Smith, known as “The Hillside Architect,” designed the historic mansion for industrialist Milton S. Ray in 1927. After a businessman purchased the 6,848 square foot estate in 2012, it took eight years and a team of experts to restore and renovate it. The challenges were not just aesthetic but structural for the stonemasons, as anything built needed to be earthquake resistant.

A lyrical three-story Botticino Classico marble staircase winds ribbon-like up through the spine of the building. The Bay Area-based stonemasons worked on the specifications with their partner company in Verona, Italy. A 3D model of the staircase in the CATIA program addressed the challenges of fabricating large stone pieces with tight turns. The model allowed the US and Italian teams to coordinate the marble with the staircase’s massive steel frame. Onsite, the crew installed the stairs precisely.

In the grand entry, an intarsia marble floor features Oro Toscano medallions etched in Emperador Medium on a field of Botticino Classico. The stonemasons also worked on the estate’s many existing fireplaces, replacing them with antiques or carving reproductions in Italy. They sourced the appropriate materials for the antique mantels’ inner stone and hearth installations. Other highlights of the stonemasons’ interior work are the seven and a half baths, including intricate intarsia.

The villa showcases a subterranean grotto and pool inspired by ancient Roman architecture. A hand-laid mosaic set in Navona travertine creates a Neptunian ambiance. Outside, the stonemasons complemented the Italianate Garden with a courtyard centered by a fountain of intertwined dolphins.

For the fountain sculptures, urns, and rosettes, they selected Thala Beige marble. Travertino Noce served as the foundation for the paving, walls, and stairs. Scala del pesce cobblestone in golden granite covers the driveway and motor court.






Pinnacle Award Category: Commercial Interior

Natural Stone Institute
Member Company

SMG Stone Company
Sun Valley, California
Stone Fabricator/Installer

Other Project Team Members

Yabu Pushelberg
Design Firm

Gensler
Pei Cobb Freed & Partners
Architect Firms

Stone

Blue Fusion quartzite
Calacatta Gold marble
White Wood marble
And many more

Judges Comments:

A lot of coordination with the quarry with everything cut to size there, rather than on the job site. It creates complexity. The digital ability of the dry laid technology and the documentation of it were impressive. This is a relatively large-scale project with a diversity of stone material, textures, and patterns. The stonework was well done, confidently cut and installed using 350 masons. That’s unheard of and impressive. Just managing a project like this is award worthy.

Pinnacle Award for Commercial Interior : Fairmont Century Plaza Hotel and Century Plaza Towers


Pinnacle Award for Commercial Interior : Fairmont Century Plaza Hotel and Century Plaza Towers

Commercial Interior
Fairmont Century Plaza Hotel and Century Plaza Towers

Los Angeles, California

A rebirth of an iconic hotel in Los Angeles becomes the centerpiece of the city. A city within a city, pedestrian walkways connect the new hotel to outdoor spaces and new living spaces. The project is set over six acres of landscaped gardens, shopping areas, and dining establishments.

This historic one square mile project encompasses the renovation of the exiting hotel re-envisioned to the Fairmont Century Plaza and the construction of two new North and South forty-four story towers.

The project totals 731 units divided between 400 hotel rooms, sixty-three hotel condo units, 143 North tower units and 125 South tower units. The project has been under construction for fi ve years including the duration of stone installation over a three-year period, completed in 2022.

The completion of the project in its entirety was executed solely by one stone fabrication and installation contractor. At one time, two hundred laborers were working on the project. The vast scope of work in the hotel encompassed the guest rooms, condominium units, level one and two public areas, restaurants, bars, and a 14,000 square foot spa. The historic backdrop of the hotel, which was often referred to as the “Western White House” and served as host to every modern American president during their visits to California, set the bar high for excellence and elegance.

Both the North and South tower materials were procured from four different countries (Brazil, Greece, Italy, and China), using five different suppliers; two from Italy. Ordering material became logistically complex while in-person material inspection trips were necessary and vital to the integrity of the project.

All tower bathrooms were digitally dry laid overseas prior to fabrication. The public area bathrooms required field verification and were required to have an end match design during the installation. This left no room for in-field adjustments.



See more Pinnacle Awards in the May Issue of Slippery Rock Gazette