Journal & Periodical Articles Refereed/Professional

 

  Mark Anderson, Peter Anderson and Cameron Schoepp. “Prairie Ladder.” Journal of Architectural Education. “Installations by Architects” 59.4 (2006): 48-52.
This is generally regarded as one of the most rigorously selective refereed journals for publication by architecture faculty. This article was invited by the issue editors and then independently refereed in a blind selection process. The article was written by Mark Anderson about a large-scale landscape intervention collaboration designed and built by Mark Anderson in collaboration with Peter Anderson and Cameron Schoepp.
  Anderson, Peter, and Mark Anderson. “Playing in Traffic.” OffRamp, Journal of the Southern California Institute of Architecture, “Offramp 7: Detours and Dialogues,” 1.7 (May 2000): 110-128.
Invited essay is accompanied by journal editor commentary with reaction to the ideas set forth by Mark Anderson and Peter Anderson. See also essay in this same volume authored by Michael Speaks, SCI-Arc Graduate Program Head, and the editors of the journal critically reviewing this essay.
  Anderson, Peter, and Mark Anderson. "Trains in the City." Design project commissioned for publication. San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, Design Matters February 1997.
This was a design project and essay commissioned for the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art by Aaron Betsky, Curator of Art and Design and the editor of Design Matters. The project was developed in digital drawings, models and film animation, and was based on my research and proposals for creative new forms of construction documentation. The text took the form of a prose poem created as an interactive web-based construction document.
  Anderson, Peter, and Mark Anderson. “On the Boards: Ishida Ferrari Gallery and Residence”, Arcade Summer 1997: 19.
  Anderson, Peter, Mark Anderson, and Cameron Schoepp. “Thinking Making.” Arcade Summer 1997: 36-37.
Invited article republishing an earlier theory text by Mark Anderson that had guided a decade of Mark Anderson’s creative work, with new critical text reflecting upon the essays impact in the work, accompanied by graphic presentation of some of Mark Anderson’s theory-based design projects.
  Anderson, Peter, Cameron Schoepp, and Mark Anderson. "HotPlateColdPlateMudMapSnowBlindBladderBladder." Arcade XV, no. 1 (1996): 20-23.
In 1995 Mark Anderson, in collaboration with Peter Anderson and sculptor Cameron Schoepp, was invited to participate in a series of projects and presentations at the Anchorage Art Museum sponsored by the Alaska Art and Architecture Forum with funding from The Alaska State Office for the Arts, and The National Endowment for the Humanities. Other artists in the series that year included Andy Goldsworthy, John Patkau and Rem Koolhaas, and in the immediately preceding and following years included Mary Miss, Antoine Predock, Bryan MacKay-Lyons, Peter Eisenman, Will Bruder, Richard Fernau, and Glenn Murcutt. This installation, exhibition, seminar and lecture produced a great deal of new work, a number of publications and texts, and invitations to write critical presentations reflecting on our work for this organization’s publication, Simultaneous Landscapes: Alaska Journal of Design/Culture.
  Anderson, Peter, and Mark Anderson. "Anchorage Urban Reconceptualization Project." UIA Barcelona Conference, Barcelona, Spain. July 1996. Conference proceedings.
  Anderson, Peter, and Mark Anderson. "HotPlateColdPlateMudMapSnowBlindBladderBladder and the City." Simultaneous Landscapes: Alaska Journal of Design/Culture No. 8 (1996).
  Anderson, Peter, and Mark Anderson. "Jet Construction: Urban Reconceptualization Project for Anchorage Alaska." Simultaneous Landscapes: Alaska Journal of Design/Culture No. 7 (1995).
 

Journal & Periodical Articles Containing Reviews & Citations presenting the work of Anderson Anderson Architecture Refereed/Professional

 

  I.D. Magazine. “Annual I.D. Design Awards”. July/August 2006, pages 152-163 (released June 2006). Coverage of award for, and critical review presentation of “Hot White Orange” project.
I.D. Magazine is one of the premier professional international industrial design and architecture journals. The I.D. Design Awards are among the most prestigious and competitive international design awards.
  Anderson, Mark. “Organic Urban Living Fields.” Getting Real: Design Ethos Now, Renee Cheng and Patrick J. Tripeny, eds. Washington, DC: Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture, 2006.
Papers from the 94th annual meeting of the Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture, April 2006, Salt Lake City, Utah. Conference proceedings.
  Anderson, Mark. “Chameleon House.” Getting Real: Design Ethos Now, Renee Cheng and Patrick J. Tripeny, eds. Washington, DC: Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture, 2006.
Papers from the 94th annual meeting of the Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture, April 2006, Salt Lake City, Utah. Conference proceedings.
  Russell, James S, ed. “Building a Better Gulf South: High Density Housing Honor Award, Anderson Anderson Architecture.” Architectural Record June 2006: 118-119.
Presentation of Anderson Anderson’s award-winning design for a mixed-use, high-density, landscape- and place-specific, sustainable, storm water absorbing housing complex and adjacent public waterfront park in New Orleans
  Padjen, Elizabeth S., ed. “Unbuilt Architecture Awards: Anderson Anderson Architecture.” Architecture Boston Jan.-Feb., 9.1(2006):90-91
Presentation of the award-winning Wurster Hall workshop and courtyard addition design for UC Berkeley, designed by Anderson Anderson.
  Anderson, Mark, with Anthony Vizarri, photographer, and UCB seminar students. Hot White Orange. Cover and inner leaf.
Presentation of design/build community service seminar project of solar-heated, portable, inflatable outdoor amphitheater.
  Anderson, Mark. “Portfolio: Tinkers Workshop.” Frameworks (Berkeley Environmental Design, The Regents of the University of California), issue 1, Spring 2005. Journal editor is Harrison Fraker.
Invited essay on the design/build community service projects that Mark Anderson has led with students from UC Berkeley working with community groups.
  Bussel, Abby, ed. “53rd Annual P/A Awards: Arboretum of the Cascades, Anderson Anderson Architecture.” Architecture Jan. 2006: 32-35.
Presentation of the award-winning Anderson Anderson design for a 300-acre arboretum and series of remediating interpretive buildings to be built on clear cut logging land in the Cascade Mountains near Seattle.
  Bussel, Abby, ed. “53rd Annual P/A Awards: Wurster Workshop, Anderson Anderson Architecture.” Architecture Jan. 2006: 36-37.
Presentation of the award-winning design for the Wurster workshop addition at UC, Berkeley, College of Environmental Design.
  Gerfen, Katie. “Rendering Reconsidered.” Architecture Jan. 2006: 56.
Article on the digital technologies employed in Anderson Anderson’s work.
  Competitions, “ Urban Habitats Competition Winners”. 15-3; Fall, 2005.
International publication covering architecture competitions
  Newman, Kathy, ed. “AIA Seattle 2005 Honor Awards for Washington Architecture—Built Entries.” AIA Seattle Firm Profile 2006 : 5-6
Hot White Orange, Chameleon House projects. This is a professional organization publication, substantial and well-presented, but not critically reviewed
  Sweeney, Sidney, ed. “2005 AIA East Bay Design Awards.” ArchNews—East Bay Chapter of the AIA 2006 : 4-5.
Orchard House, Chameleon House projects.
  Cephas, Jana, ed. “Urban Habitats.” CRIT—Journal of the American Institute of Architecture Students Fall 2005, Issue 60: 20-25
Review of international competition prize winning Organic Urban Living Field project, high-density, sustainable, mixed-use urban housing and landscape design for Habitat for Humanity, Charlottesville, VA.
  Wagner, Andrew. “On a Rock in a Hard Place.” Dwell April/May 2005: 152-159.
Features the Cantilever House. (please see note in my “Statement of Activities” on the extensive relationship between Dwell magazine and the professional discipline of architecture in several important areas of practice, such as prefabrication technology, and on the professionally refereed basis on which our projects have been included and presented in this magazine, which has significant professional impact as well as significant popular readership).
  Arieff, Allison. “The Dwell Home.” Dwell July/Aug. 2003: 85.
Presentation of invited affordable housing design proposals for invited exhibition, including “AB Parts House” by Anderson Anderson Architecture. Other architects invited included Ralph Rapson, Wes Jones.
  Arieff, Allison. “Introducing the Dwell Home Architects.” Dwell March/April 2003: 78+.
Presentation of Anderson Anderson profile among small number of international architects invited to participate in New York exhibition and competition review of affordable housing proposals.
  Anderson, Peter. “The Future of Wood Construction in China.” U.S. China Builder March 2003.
Anderson Anderson has worked extensively with governmental and industry projects in the U.S. and Asia focused on affordable housing production. This essay presents some of this design work in a critical context assessing the future of wood construction methods applied to China.
  Maynard, Nigel. “Some Assembly Required: is modular construction an answer to the affordable housing problem?” Residential Architect Nov.-Dec. 2002.**Nelson, Christina. , “Assembly Required.” Home Building XI, no. 3 (2001): 46-47.
  Kroloff, Reed, ed. “48th Annual P/A Awards: Detroit Community Pavilion, Mark Anderson and Andrew Zago.” Architecture April 2001: 83-85, 92-95.
Presentation and critical review of PA Honor Award-winning design by Mark Anderson and Andrew Zago, for a community building in a distressed area of Detroit. This was one of just two prestigious PA Honor Awards given this year, from among hundreds of international entries. Project was highly regarded for both its aesthetic quality as well as its provocative social, political stance.
  Zeiger, Mimi. “Prototype Prefabricated Design by Anderson Anderson.” Dwell April 2001: 44-53 and cover photograph.
Includes a primary focus on two houses, one in the U.S. and one in Japan, discussing the prefabrication ideas and practice of Anderson Anderson Architecture. The Kennedy residence was again the cover photograph, and one of Anderson Anderson’s most widely published and internationally recognized projects, continuing to be very influential in design, affordable construction, and prefabrication technology circles for over ten years.
  Weiss, Glenn, ed. “Plan and Section.” Arcade Summer 2000: 14-34. Invited participation in special issue of Northwest design journal.
Article about prominent Seattle architects’ drawings featuring two projects by Mark Anderson and Peter Anderson, the Courtyard House in Washington and the Ishida Ferrari Gallery in Japan.
  Geoxavier, Leon. “Earthwork/Framing/Plumbing.”
Lecture review of Mark Anderson and Peter Anderson lecture at Tulane University. Crit, Journal of the American Institute of Architecture Students, June 2000.
  Speaks, Michael, Alan Loomis, Tricia Sanderin, and Yuval Yasky. “Design Your Detour.” OffRamp, Journal of the Southern California Institute of Architecture, “Offramp 7: Detours and Dialogues,” 1.7 (May 2000): 006-016.
Introductory essay to this volume of the journal, presented as roundtable discussion between Michael Speaks, SCI-Arc Graduate Program Head, and the editors. Discussion of the work of Mark Anderson and Peter Anderson in the context of the theme of this volume, which is concerned with architects’ engagement with society, politics and the economy through self-initiated critical design and construction projects. See also essay in this same volume authored by Mark Anderson and Peter Anderson, with interleaved commentary on the essay by journal editors.
  Park, Jin Ho. “Anderson Anderson Architecture.” POAR (Seoul, Korea) April 1999: 58-67.
Presentation and critical article on the work of Anderson Anderson Architecture in one of Korea’s leading critical journals of architecture. Presents a wide range of Anderson Anderson projects, built and theoretical, along with translations of critical text by Mark Anderson and Peter Anderson reflecting on theoretical concerns in the work.
  Olson, Sheri. “Designs That Hug the Trees: The Forest Canopy Study Center.” Architectural Record Nov. 1998.
Presentation and article on the wheelchair accessible, tree top research and learning center and aerial canopy hike design commissioned from Anderson Anderson by the Evergreen State College in Olympia, WA.
  "Local Design Awards." AIArchitect (Washington, D.C.) Nov. 1996: 13.
Article on Seattle AIA Honor Awards including award-winning work by Anderson Anderson (I have probably had work appear in articles on awards programs in this and other American Institute of Architects publications in most years covered in this CV, but I have not typically tracked these, so this mention is representative. While not an inherently prestigious publication, this sort of regular national news presence is suggestive of having some recognition and significance in the discipline of architecture).
  Landecker, Heidi. "Export Housing for Japan." Architecture Magazine October 1996: 171-175.
Article on U.S. architects working on affordable housing projects in Japan, including interview and presentation about Anderson Anderson work in Japan.
  Cramer, Ned. "Honoring Wood: Prefabricated House Prototype." Architecture Magazine April 1996: 121-125
Article on international awards in wood construction, including presentation and critical text on the award-winning work of Anderson Anderson. Other winning projects were by prominent architects from the U.S., Japan and Europe.
  "Bay Pacific Construction." Yunyu Jutaku [Tokyo] Dec. 1995: 36-37.
Presentation of Anderson Anderson work on prefabrication and affordable housing designed for and built in Japan. Japanese language publication.
  Brown, Glen R. "Studio View: Jet Construction." New Art Examiner (Chicago) Oct. 1995: 34.
Critical review and photo presentation of the “Prairie Ladder” public art and landscape project designed and built by Mark Anderson in collaboration with Peter Anderson and sculptor Cameron Schoepp in Texas. This publication is one of the leading avant-garde art journals in the U.S. Glenn Brown is an art critic that has followed our work for many years.
  Kuroiwa, Izumi. "George and Edna Rue Residence." Japan Builder Magazine (Tokyo) Dec. 1995: 4-7.
Photo presentation and article on a significant Anderson Anderson courtyard residence and garden designed and built by Anderson Anderson in Seattle. This is a prominent Japanese language professional publication covering the design and construction industry in Japan.
  Harada, Kenji. "Making Housing Affordable in Japan." Asia Pacific Economic Review 3.3 (1995): 25-27.
Article on Anderson Anderson’s work in Japan, in the context of the construction industry trade relationship between Japan and the U.S. At this time Anderson Anderson was prominent in construction industry trade initiatives between the two countries, and was commissioned by government agencies in both countries to lead a number of affordable housing-related planning, education, design and construction management projects.
  "Bay Pacific Construction." Professional Builder, 1994.
Presentation and review of Anderson Anderson’s “Technology House” demonstration project, a project selected by the NAHB research council to be the first computerized demonstration project of an industry-consortium initiative to reinvent residential wiring and control systems using new digital technology. Designed and built by Anderson Anderson, it was a very advanced digital technology project for its time.
  Jones, David A. "Cutting Edge." Builder Magazine Nov. 1993: 126-127.
Presentation and review of Anderson Anderson’s “Technology House” demonstration project, a project selected by the NAHB research council to be the first computerized demonstration project of an industry-consortium initiative to reinvent residential wiring and control systems using new digital technology. Designed and built by Anderson Anderson, it was a very advanced digital technology project for its time.
  "A House on the West Coast." Our House International (Tokyo) Vol. 102 Autumn 1993: 72-75.
Presentation and review of Anderson Anderson’s “Technology House” demonstration project.
  "Smart House Technology." Journal of Light Construction 1993.
Presentation and review of Anderson Anderson’s “Technology House” demonstration project.
  Anderson, Mark. "Program for an Exhibition," and "Thesis on Making Shelter." The Harvard Architecture Review VII, “The Making of Architecture,” (1989): 9-11.
These two essays are Mark Anderson’s earliest published theory writings, written as an introduction to the journal while he was a member of the editorial board of The Harvard Architecture Review (above), and as a critical essay on his own work (Jet Construction essay, below). Both of these essays focus on the artistic and political importance of dealing with material reality in society, architecture and the arts. His writing was influential in setting the direction of this issue of the journal and, one could argue, helped to generate and focus continuing influence both in his own career and in the creative focus of other young architects working on The Harvard Architecture Review at that time, such as Frano Violich and Sheila Kennedy, who have helped establish “making”, material research and experimentation, as a central creative thread for a generation of young architects.
  Anderson, Mark. "Jet Construction." The Harvard Architecture Review VII (1989): 38-39.
 

Journal & Periodical Articles Containing Reviews & Citations of the work of Anderson Anderson Architecture Popular Media

 

  Hartle, Heather Luplow, ed. “2006 American Institute of Architects San Francisco Design Awards.” California Home + Design May 2006: 133, 140-141.
Presentation of three award winning projects by Anderson Anderson: Chameleon House, MI; Organic Urban Living Field, Charlottesville, VA (Habitat for Humanity, mixed-use, high-density sustainable urban housing); and Arboretum of the Cascades, Seattle.
  Kaplan, Michael. “Build your Own Paradise.” Men’s Journal 14.12 (Jan.) 2006:: 80-84.
Another odd but extensive popular article on healthy, sustainable construction and prefabricated, affordable housing.
  Landi, Ann. “Prefab.” Plenty Magazine Winter 2005.
Article on health-promoting, sustainable, prefabricated affordable housing prototypes including the Cantilever House and the Fox Island House, from a social progress perspective.
  Mazzoleni, Gian Emilio. Article including Chiba apartment building and the Lake Michigan residence (Chameleon House). Gulliver Winter 2005.
  Copeland, Ken. “Dream Homes on Demand: A New Breed of Architects Rely on Prefabrication, Green Materials and Techniques, and Computer Aided Design to Imagine the House of the Future.” Acura Style Winter 2004.
  Davidson, Justin. “Prefab-ulous: A Cadre of High-Style Architects Brings Designerly Ambitions to the Mid-Priced, Kit-Built Home.” Newsday 24 Nov. 2003.
  McKee, Bradford. “The Impossible Dream?” Metropolitan Home May/June 2002: 120-124.
  Dunlop, Beth. “Hello Mother, Hello Father.” House and Garden May 1999: 88-90.
  Whitely, Peter O. “Sunny Bay Residence Interior Details.” Sunset Feb. 1998.
  Whiteley, Peter O. "The Changing Western Home: Display Wall with Depth." Sunset Feb. 1996: 88-90.
  Whiteley, Peter O. "1995-1996 Western Home Awards." Sunset Oct. 1995: 89+ [130].
  "The Bright Stuff." Come Home Magazine 3.4 (Winter) 1993: 6-11.
Anderson Anderson “Technology House” experimental research prototype house featuring early but highly advanced digital control systems.
  Hengstler, Laura. "Projects: Rue Residence." Luxury Homes Summer 1993: 16-20.