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For Immediate Release: May 9, 2011
Media Contact: Marketing and Communication Department

National Building Museum Presents 25th Annual Honor Award


Media Contacts:
Carol Abrams, cabrams@nbm.org, 202.272.2448, ext. 3402
Stacy Adamson, sadamson@nbm.org, 202.272.2448, ext. 3458
Event Contact:
Jessie Cochran, jcochran@nbm.org, 202.272.2448, ext. 3150

Request a press pass to the program

What do IBM, The Rockefeller Family, Major League Baseball, and the US Department of Energy Have in Common? 


WASHINGTON, D.C.— Since 1986, the National Building Museum has presented its Honor Award to leaders who shaped America’s heritage, defined its culture, developed its communities, and crafted its built environment. Individually, they advanced the building arts and sciences. Collectively, their legacy is profound. On May 17, 2011, a special 25th anniversary celebration of the National Building Museum’s Honor Award is planned to reexamine the vast contributions made by its esteemed honorees and consider the potential future of the built environment.

One past honoree, for example, is The Associated General Contractors of America: the oldest construction trade association in the United States. Founded at the direction of President Wilson in 1918 to advance the country’s infrastructure and development, AGC’s near-century-long legacy includes projects such as the Hoover Dam and the interstate highway system. Today, the influential association of 33,000 is a central part of the nation’s economy and competitiveness.

Other honored organizations have had a similarly striking, and positive, impact across the nation. Among them, the National Building Museum has recognized United Technologies, DuPont, and Forest City Enterprises for their contributions to the improvement of the systems, materials, and investments necessary for the world we design and build.

And while such organizations represent the powerful accomplishments of the many, the National Building Museum has also bestowed its top honor in celebration of what one person can achieve. For instance, Majora Carter, founder of Sustainable South Bronx, not only offered a promising vision for a threatened community, but then set out to realize it by transforming open spaces, creating green jobs, and attracting investments in her hometown. Today, Carter works with communities around the country to help bring about the healthy and viable green planning she led in the Bronx.

Other individual recipients of the National Building Museum Honor Award include Lady Bird Johnson, Michael Eisner, James Rouse, Cindy and Jay Pritzker, and Mayor Richard Daley.  And then, of course, there was Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan.

Moynihan is considered by many to be the country’s patriarch of historic preservation and advocate of federal architecture and urban revitalization. His passion for great design and building led to his spearheading an initiative to save the 19th-century US Pension Office Building. In an innovative move of adaptive reuse, Moynihan crafted legislation to restore the building and create the first national cultural institution for the building arts—establishing the National Building Museum in 1980.

The 25th anniversary celebration of the National Building Museum’s Honor Award will highlight collaboration across the many professions—architects, engineers, planners, public officials, landscape designers, builders, financiers—to develop and sustain the country’s built environment. In addition, the National Building Museum plans to celebrate the inspiring possibilities of the next 25 years during the May 17th gala in its magnificent Great Hall. David Rockwell of the Rockwell Group has been tapped to discuss his visionary ideas with guests. Rockwell and the Museum first collaborated on future visions in building in an acclaimed exhibition in 2007. A special performances for the evening is planned by residents from the New Orleans Habitat Musicians’ Village (the Museum honored the founders of Musicians’ Village—Harry Connick, Jr., Branford Marsalis, Ann Marie Wilkins, and Jim Pate—in 2010). 

Guests at the National Building Museum gala will enjoy Build Up!, a playful, collaborative, interactive installation by the LAB at Rockwell Group. Using Build Up! guests will create a virtual cityscape that is projected onto a suspended structure in the Museum’s Great Hall. Guests can generate colorful buildings at iPad-embedded pedestals, and then can "push" them up into the projected cityscape. The more buildings that guests add to the city, the more the environment comes to life. Build Up! builds off the concepts and technologies that the LAB has been exploring, as well as Rockwell Group's fascination with story-telling, play, and spectacle.

Complete list of Honor Award recipients:
 
• 2010  A Salute to Civic Innovators
Perkins+Will
The Founders of New Orleans Habitat Musicians' Village—Harry Connick, Jr., Branford Marsalis, Ann Marie Wilkins, and Jim Pate
The U.S. Department of Energy Solar Decathlon

• 2009  A Salute to Visionaries in Sustainability
S. Richard Fedrizzi and the U.S. Green Building Council
Mayor Richard M. Daley and the City of Chicago
Majora Carter
Louis R. Chênevert and United Technologies

• 2008  The Associated General Contractors of America

• 2007  Related

• 2006  Clark Construction Group, LLC

• 2005  Forest City Enterprises

• 2004  General Services Administration

• 2003  Major League Baseball and The National Football League

• 2002  DuPont

• 2001  Michael D. Eisner and The Walt Disney Company

• 2000  Gerald D. Hines

• 1999  Harold W. McGraw, Jr., Harold McGraw III and The McGraw-Hill Companies

• 1998  Stephen and Riley Bechtel and The Bechtel Group

• 1997  Community Builders of Washington, D.C.
Morris Cafritz, Charles E. Smith, Charles A. Horsky, and Oliver T. Carr, Jr.

• 1996  Cindy and Jay Pritzker 

• 1995  Lady Bird Johnson 

• 1994  James A. Johnson and Fannie Mae

• 1993  J. Carter Brown

• 1992  The Civic Leadership of Greater Pittsburgh

• 1991  The Rockefeller Family

• 1990  IBM Corporation

• 1989  Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan

• 1988  James W. Rouse

• 1986  J. Irwin Miller


The LAB is Rockwell Group’s digital interaction design team. The ambition of the LAB is to explore, experiment, and demonstrate interactive experience augmented with digital technology in objects, environments and stories. This activity includes in house design and creation of interactive environments/objects, scripting software, science and technology consultation, and maintaining networks of technology solution providers. Visit www.rockwellgroup.com.

The National Building Museum is America’s leading cultural institution dedicated to advancing the quality of the built environment by educating people about its impact on their lives. Through its exhibitions, educational programs, online content, and publications, the Museum has become a vital forum for the exchange of ideas and information about the world we build for ourselves. Public inquiries: 202.272.2448 or visit www.nbm.org. Connect with us on Twitter: @BuildingMuseum and Facebook.

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