Michelle Kaufmann

Michelle Kaufmann is an American architect and designer. In 2002, Kaufmann founded Michelle Kaufmann Designs, a full service architecture firm specializing in sustainable design. The firm designed and built single-family and multi-family green homes using prefabricated modular technology. The firm was closed in May 2009 and Kaufmann started a new design firm, Michelle Kaufmann Studio. Her firm offers customers a variety of prefabricated homes, as well as options for completely custom built homes as well. Kaufmann is also a co-founder of Flux.io, a company developing collaborative design software for the building design and construction industry.[1]

Michelle Kaufmann presenting at Cusp Conference 2010, Chicago, Illinois

Personal life

Kaufmann grew up in Iowa where she developed an understanding of the relationship between humankind and the environment. Kaufmann received her undergraduate degree from Iowa State University and her Masters from Princeton University. Prior to founding Michelle Kaufmann Designs, Kaufmann was an Associate with Frank O. Gehry and had worked with him in Santa Monica. She also worked with Michael Graves.

Kaufmann relocated to Northern California, where she founded Michelle Kaufmann Designs. She has been a lecturer and keynote speaker for numerous events, and has taught at Iowa State University and Woodbury University.

Kaufmann currently lives with her husband and their two dogs in their Glidehouse in Marin County, California.

Projects

The first project, titled Glidehouse, was designed by Kaufmann and her husband Kevin Cullen in 2004. A full-size replica of this home was built for the National Building Museum in Washington, D.C. from May 2006 through June 2007 as a part of the exhibit The Green House: New Directions in Sustainable Architecture and Design. The style is influenced by "Japanese homes, along with Eichler and Eames, as well as the rural farm buildings from my childhood in Iowa".[2][3]

The first Sunset Breezehouse, was designed by Michelle Kaufmann in collaboration with Sunset magazine in 2005.

The first MKLotus was designed by Michelle Kaufmann and was built in front of San Francisco's city hall in 2007 as a part of West Coast Green conference on sustainable building. This design is among the smallest of the open-space homes offered by MK designs. It includes a "front wrap-around deck and enclosed meditation garden" and is "Intended as a vacation or small stand-alone home".[4] It uses the same sleek, geometric shapes as her other designs.

The MKSolaire was exhibited at the Museum of Science and Industry (Chicago) within a show titled "The Smart Home: Green and Wired", which was open from May 2008 to January 2009.[5] The Solaire has been "redesigned to reflect the lifestyle of a couple looking to minimize home maintenance, maximize efficiency and settle in to a space that not only is beautiful, but functional".[6]

Awards and honors

In 2007 Kaufmann was named the "Henry Ford of green homes" by Sierra magazine, published by the Sierra Club.[7] Kaufmann’s work is widely published and her homes have been showcased in a number of museums, including the National Building Museum, the Vancouver Art Center, the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles,[8] and most recently, in the "Smart Home: Green and Wired" exhibit at Museum of Science and Industry (Chicago).[9]

Other awards include:

Written Works

  • Prefab Green (published by Gibbs Smith, ISBN 978-1-4236-0497-6)
gollark: Although I never added dict access.
gollark: Well, you could just give it access to Flask, probably.
gollark: No. What would that even involve?
gollark: It's very annoying. Even though we use osmarkslisp™-2038 and HeavLisp8 on many of our things, we still use BCPL as a backend for some things.
gollark: `'()`

References

  1. "Flux Factory". Crunchbase. Retrieved April 12, 2015.
  2. Stephanie Kinnear (May 1, 2008). "Green Tour: Michelle Kaufmann's Very Own Glidehouse". Re-Nest. Retrieved November 27, 2010.
  3. "Tour of the Glidehouse". National Building Museum. October 5, 2006. Archived from the original on December 3, 2010. Retrieved November 27, 2010.
  4. "mkLotus". Prefabs.com. Retrieved May 9, 2012.
  5. http://www.msichicago.org/whats-here/exhibits/smart-home/
  6. "Museum of Science and Industry | Smart Home: Green + Wired". Msichicago.org. April 19, 2012. Retrieved May 9, 2012.
  7. "Innovators: The Henry Ford of Green Homes – July/August 2007 – Sierra Magazine". Sierra Club. Retrieved May 9, 2012.
  8. http://www.moca-la.org/museum/exhibitiondetail.php?&id=385
  9. "Museum of Science and Industry | What's Here | Exhibits | Smart Home: Green + Wired". Msichicago.org. April 19, 2012. Retrieved May 9, 2012.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.