Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
Caples Jefferson Architects
American design and architecture firm From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
Caples Jefferson Architects is an American design and architecture firm founded in 1987 in New York City by principal architects Sara Caples and Everardo Jefferson.[1] The firm focuses on architecture in a public, cultural and community context, and is unique for its dedication to designing approximately half of its projects in communities underserved by the design profession.[2]
![]() | A major contributor to this article appears to have a close connection with its subject. (February 2025) |
Remove ads
Biography
Sara Caples attended Smith College and received a Master of Architecture from Yale University. She has taught at schools of architecture at CCNY, Syracuse, and University of Miami.[3] Everardo Jefferson attended Pratt Institute and received a Master of Architecture at Yale University. He has taught at schools of architecture at Columbia and Syracuse. Caples and Jefferson were invited to teach as the Louis I. Kahn Visiting Assistant Professors at Yale University in Fall 2015.[4] In 2019, Jefferson was appointed Commissioner at the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission.[5]
The firm has garnered numerous awards, including the AIANY President's Award 2017,[6] AIA New York State Firm of the Year in 2012,[7] NYC MWBE Firm of the Year in 2009[8] and was a Mies van der Rohe Crown Hall Prize of the Americas nominee.[9] Jefferson was the 2020 recipient of the Rowena Award, designated by the Rowena Reed Kostellow Fund at Pratt Institute.[10]
Remove ads
Work
Summarize
Perspective
Caples Jefferson's body of work includes projects: Weeksville Heritage Center, Queens Theater in the Park addition and renovation, Marcus Garvey Community Center, Motion Pictures Editors Guild, Heritage Health & Housing Headquarters, Columbia University's Starr East Asian library renovation.[11]
Weeksville Heritage Center is a cultural center and urban design project that was completed in 2014 in Crown Heights, Brooklyn. The elegant new Modern structure is a two-story, 23,000 sq ft space that includes art exhibition, performance, education facilities, offices and green spaces for staff, visitors and the local community.[12][13][14][15][16][17][18] The L-shaped building frames the historic houses that once belonged to 19th-century African-American freedmen.[19] It is certified LEED Gold, and includes geothermal wells, and storm water gathering and percolation on site. Weeksville Heritage Center has been awarded multiple awards, such as AIA New York State's Design Excellence Award 2014 & Best in New York State 2014, Municipal Art Society's Best New Building 2014, Historic Districts Council’s Design Award 2014, and Chicago Athenaeum's American Architecture Award 2014.[13][20][21][22]
In The Architect Newspaper, Allen Blake notes that "Caples Jefferson has performed an art of architectural archeology, excavating, revealing and framing history through spatial expression. […] [Weeksville] is a visual and sensory interplay between past and present."[12]
In 2010, Caples Jefferson Architects completed a 600 person reception room by the Queens Theatre in the Park, an addition to the 1964 New York World's Fair Site in Queens, New York. The project features a transparent "nebula room" which looks out upon the large observation towers surrounding it. "The 'transparent "nebula room' allows visitors to view the observatory towers...the reception room's festive atmosphere is created by the rich color palette derived from the area's culturally diverse surroundings."[23] This project received several awards including the 2010 New York Construction Cultural Project of the Year,[24] a Queens Chamber of Commerce Award, a National Organization of Minority Architects (NOMA) National Award of Excellence in Architecture[25] as well as the 2011 MASterworks Award for Best Restoration by the Municipal Art Society.[15][16][17][18][26]
Projects in construction or in design include: The Africa Center, Louis Armstrong House Museum, ongoing Columbia University projects, ongoing New York City School Construction Authority projects, and ongoing US Department of State projects.[11]
Remove ads
Selected design and renovation projects
Summarize
Perspective
Museums
Educational Institutions
Theatres
|
Community centers
Religious centers
Treatment centers
Urban design and infrastructure
Offices
Industrial
Residential
|
Remove ads
Awards
- Mies van der Rohe Crown Hall Americas Prize, Nominee[41]
- National Medal for Museum and Library Service, the Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS)[42]
- 2nd place, Institutional, Cultural, Government, Urban Design and Planning, AIA Queens Design Award[43]
- Entertainment, NYCxDESIGN Award presented by Interior Design Magazine[44]
- AIA Archi Award Long Island, Commendation, 2023[45]
- Rowena Award, Rowena Reed Kostellow Fund at Pratt Institute, 2020 [10]
- AIA NY President's Award, 2017 [6]
- The City of New York City Council Citation Weeksville Heritage Center, 2015
- Built By Women New York City Award Weeksville Heritage Center, 2015 [46]
- AIA NY COTE Institutional Award Weeksville Heritage Center, 2015 [47]
- Chicago Atheneum American Architecture Award, 2014[22]
- AIA New York State Best in New York State, 2014[48]
- AIA New York State Design Award of Excellence, 2014[20]
- MASterworks Award, Best New Building, Municipal Art Society, 2014[49]
- Historic Districts Council, Design Award, 2014[13]
- Mies van der Rohe Crown Hall Americas Prize Nominee, 2014[50]
- Building Brooklyn Awards, Best New Civic/Institutional Building, 2014[51]
- Architect Magazine Annual Design Review Best Cultural Project Citation, 2013 [50]
- NOMA Honor Award for Excellence, 2013[52]
- Architect Magazine Top 50 Sustainable Firms, 2013[50]
- AIA New York State Firm of the Year, 2012
- MASterworks Award for Best Restoration, Municipal Art Society, 2011 (Project)[53]
- AIL Design Award with special citation Best Use of Color, 2011[54]
- Cultural Project of the Year, New York Construction, 2010[24]
- CWB Design Portfolio Award, 2010[50]
- City of New York MWBE of the Year, 2009[55]
- First Prize Award for Excellence in Design, Queens Chamber of Commerce, 2008[55]
- NOMA National Awards for Excellence in Architecture, 2004, 2008, and 2009 [25][55]
- NY Chapter AIA Design Awards Citations, 1995, 1996, 2006 and 2007[25]
- New York City Art Commission Design Award, 2006[25]
- NY Chapter AIA Honor Award for Architecture 2004[50]
- AIA National Honor Award for Architecture, 2003[55]
- New New York 3, Architectural League of New York, 2002[50]
- Emerging Voice, Architectural League of New York, 1998[25]
Remove ads
References
External links
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads