Masonry Camp 2003 Hit the High Notes
The 2003 session of IMI Masonry
Camp had numerous highlights. Marking the 10th year of
the innovative program for young BAC masons and designers,
this year’s two sessions also involved some high
profile architects joining the end-of-the-week design/build
critique. These architects will revisit with BAC and IMI
this October, as participants in the “Masonry Variations” exhibition
at the National Building Museum in Washington, DC.
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Week One’s Orange Team
shows off its element. BAC members include Tom Heniser,
Jr., Local 9 MI (2nd from left), James Cosgrove, 1
NY (3rd from left) and Charlie Whitbeck, 2 NY (2nd
from right).
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Tile instructor Bob Perry, left,
looks on as Laurie DaForno from NJIT, and bricklayer
Greg Robertson, center, of Local 9 PA try a new skill. |
The highest
achievement, however, was the impression left by BAC
apprentices and IMI instructors on the participating
architects and graduate students, who came away in awe
of their level of training and professional pride.
The two
professions work as members of the same team, with a
mix of each divided by teams and assigned to a design/build
challenge. That team challenge requires both professions
to experience each other’s job, both in the design
studio and on the construction site, when building a mockup
of the plans.
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BAC apprentices experience the
architect’s profession firsthand. Here, Bonnie
Aldrich of MI 9 shows off some of her team’s
handiwork.
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BAC apprentices become adjunct
instructors. Anthony Nuzzi of PA/DE 1, helps Danielle
Matuch from Syracuse University. |
“Masonry Camp helped me appreciate more of the architect’s
perspective,” says stone mason Lowell Glodowski from
BAC Local 1 WA. “The studio process gave me the chance
to learn and appreciate the architect’s job and what
they deal with,” says Glen Bruette, a plasterer
from BAC Local 9 WI.
At the same time, Masonry Campers get intensive
exposure to masonry crafts throughout the one-week session:
brick
and block, tile, terrazzo, stone, plaster, and restoration/PCC,
plus an architecture tent. For many, it is their first
exposure to all the BAC crafts.
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Using stone drawn right from
underfoot, campers gained experience with various materials
in the stone tent, with instructor Matt Redabaugh.
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At the end of the week,
each team presents their designs and a built element.
Each team then receives a constructive
design and workmanship critique by the visiting architects
and IMI staff.
The critique phase allows team members
to discuss the learning process they experienced throughout
the week.
The mind
shifts are nothing less than dramatic. “Along with
exposure to materials and methods, it was the first time
I understood how masons think about the same building
that we do as architects,” says Roma Agrawal, whose
firm Jeter, Cook & Jepson Architects in Hartford,
CT is working on the Empire State Building.
“I knew nothing about the union before,” says
University of Cincinnati graduate student Heather Singerman. “Now,
I have a whole new respect for what they do. It broke
a lot of stereotypes.”
Mission accomplished.
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