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Dec ‘17

Florida’s Six Most Impressive Architectural Projects

Architecturally, Florida is perhaps best known as one of the world’s foremost homes for Art Deco. Today, almost every prominent architectural sort and style can be found in the Sunshine State, from modernism to high Victorian aesthetics. Below, we’ll break down six of Florida’s most impressive architectural projects, from the 19th century until today.

6. Panorama Tower

panorama

(Panorama Tower; photo retrieved from @panorama_tower)

Miami’s Panorama Tower, situated on Brickell Avenue, is Florida’s tallest building; Panorama was topped on March 30 2017, although some aspects of construction have yet to be completed as of December 2017.

panama construction

(Panorama Tower under construction; photo retrieved from @panorama_tower)

The tower was designed by architect Moshe Cosicher. Tutor Perini won the contract in June 2014; NASDAQ reported a preliminary zoning plan, which by March 2017 had, according to the Miami New Times, evolved to suit a “208-room Hyatt boutique hotel, three movie theaters, electric car-charging stations, 50,000 square feet of high-end retail space, and 100,000 square feet of ‘medically oriented’ office space.”

panorama at night

(The Panorama Tower dominates Miami’s skyline; photo retrieved from @panorama_tower)

In October 2017, the Engineering News-Record awarded the Panorama Tower with a Specialty Construction Award of Merit. ENR specifically praised the tower’s 19-story base podium structure, whose aforementioned parking garage heavily alleviated the impact of the project on inner-city congestion and improved worksite access. Also of note is its foundation, consisting of almost 12,000 cubic yards of concrete and 3500 tons of steel, making it the largest foundation in the state of Florida

5. Ca’ D’Zan – The Ringling Estate

The Ringling House

(The Ringling House; photo retrieved from Tropical Breeze Resort Blog)

Architecture in Florida is often marked by an old world streak; Florida’s history as a highly-prized colony during the Age of Exploration is represented architecturally by buildings inspired by southern Europe and the Mediterranean.

John and Mable Ringling had toured Europe for a quarter-century, producing circus acts and collecting art. Inspired by palatial selections from Venetian architecture like the Ducal Palace and the Ca’ D’Oro, the Ringlings started on a residence in their winter home of Sarasota, Florida. Ca’ D’Zan (“House of John [Ringling]”) was built between 1924 and 1926.

Ca’ D’Zan

(Ca’ D’Zan; photo retrieved from ringling.org)

Consisting of five floors containing 56 rooms with art and original furnishings, Ca’ D’Zan also boasts an 83-foot tower. Ca’ D’Zan was designed by architect Dwight James Baum of New York. The design and production was meticulously edited by Mable Ringling, whose extensive notes from Europe heavily influenced the aesthetic. Ca’ D’Zan is ornamented with glazed tiles and terra cotta and was originally roofed with 16th century Spanish tiles.

By combining John and Mable’s favorite Venetian structural traits with aesthetic nods to Florida’s Spanish colonial past, Ca’ D’Zan was a fitting home for a colorful couple that was larger than life.

4. Florida Southern College Campus – Frank Lloyd Wright collection

Located in Lakeland, within the greater Tampa Bay area, Florida Southern College is a historically Methodist private school with a stunningly beautiful campus touched by the legendary Frank Lloyd Wright. Originally established in 1883, now bears the distinction of showcasing more Frank Lloyd Wright buildings than any other site in the world.

frank lloyd wright

(Frank Lloyd Wright on campus; photo retrieved from the Florida United Methodist Church)

Currently, Florida Southern College is rated by the Princeton Review as the seventh most beautiful campus in the country. In 2011 and 2012, FSC, powered in no small part by the legacy of Frank Lloyd Wright, held the top spot.

Danforth Chapel

(Danforth Chapel, outside [left] and inside [right]; photos retrieved from FindingMrWright and Florida Rambler)

Part of the timelessness and charm of Wright’s designs is their naturalistic ease. Constructed from locally sourced materials, these buildings are characterized by their clean lines and deliberate silhouettes. Grandiosity and excess are rejected in favor of maturity and subtlety. All but one of the buildings are linked by covered walkways, or esplanades.

Esplanade stone walkways

(Esplanade stone walkways; photo retrieved from flumc)

Wright’s work at Florida Southern College was a huge achievement, as it introduced a new and accessible perspective on modernism to institutional architecture in the United States, and the world at large.

One of the most iconic buildings at FSC is the Danforth Chapel, whose leaded glass work sets it apart from the rest of Wright’s designs. With bold but simple lines and triangular patterns culminating in a design that is both novel and tasteful, the Danforth Chapel at FSC is a masterful structure for a faith-oriented campus.

Annie Pfeiffer Chapel

(Above, the Annie Pfeiffer Chapel, or “bow-tie building.” Below, Wright’s final master plan; photos retrieved from New York Social Diary)

florida southern college

3. IST Building – Florida Polytechnic University

If Florida Southern College afforded Frank Lloyd Wright a chance to solidify a widely-admired legacy, Florida Polytechnic University, just a few miles away, offered Santiago Calatrava a chance at redeeming a reputation marred by massive cost overruns in Valencia and at Ground Zero in New York.

IST Building

(IST Building reflected on the water; photo by Alan Karchmer and retrieved from Architect Magazine)

Instead, Calatrava had to take a more disciplined approach to budget issues as an architect for Florida Polytechnic University. Regardless, Calatrava delivers many signature features. Ribbing, louvers, skylights, and other features promote extensive natural lighting. His white-only palette and winged motif, which distinguish many of Calatrava’s works, feature prominently. Ovals and curves dominate the silhouette; the IST Building and its reflection resemble a swan.

ribbed interior

(Internal concrete ribbing matches the ribbed external superstructure; photo by Alan Karchmer and retrieved from Architect Magazine)

The IST Building is born from a modernist perspective that is very characteristic of Calatrava as an architect, in that certain aspects of minimalism are embraced to emphasize the fantastical set pieces.

2. Plant Hall – University of Tampa

Henry B. Plant Hall

(Henry B. Plant Hall, photo retrieved from Smithsonian Mag)

One of the most historic edifices on any university campus, Plant Hall dates back to the height of the Gilded Age. Ornately styled, Plant Hall combines an opulent palatial aesthetic with Moorish and Turkish influences popular during Victorian times. Domes and turrets add distinction to the silhouette.

Plant Hall

(Plant Hall; photo retrieved from bluffton.edu)

Originally the Tampa Bay Hotel, construction began in 1888 and was completed by 1891. The project was masterminded by Henry B. Plant, a transportation magnate who had brought rail access to Tampa in 1884. Plant funded the project himself at a cost of $2.5 million (roughly $65 million today). To design the hothired architect John A. Wood of New York.

The hotel boasted 511 rooms with modern utilities almost unheard of for a hotel of the day, including electricity and telephone service in every room; furthermore, the hotel installed the first passenger and cargo elevators in the state of Florida.

By 1898 during the Spanish-American War, Plant had convinced the Secretary of War to make Tampa the official port of embarkation for American troops bound for Cuba, and the hotel became a base of operations for army officers, including then-Colonel Teddy Roosevelt.

The Tampa Bay Hotel grounds hosted a sizable peripheral economy. In 1899, a baseball park called Plant Field was constructed on hotel grounds; Babe Ruth hit the longest home run of his career at Plant Field during 1919 spring training. Today, Plant Hall is part of the University of Tampa campus, and features the Henry B. Plant Museum.

1. Salvador Dali Museum – St. Petersburg, Florida

Dali Museum

(Dali Museum, corner view; image retrieved from HOK)

Perhaps it is no surprise that a museum dedicated to the art of a master surrealist would flirt with forms and shapes as unorthodox as they are breathtaking.

The Salvador Dali Museum houses the collection of Reynolds and Eleanor Morse; while the Morses’ collection has been on display since 1982, the groundbreaking building complete with bidets by Yann Weymouth of HOK opened on January 11 2011. The Museum is a three-star Michelin Guide attraction,

Weymouth’s design blends form and function: the domes of Spanish and North African architecture are referenced by a 75-foot-high geodesic glass bubble, called “The Enigma” (as well as its smaller counterpart, “The Igloo,”) which protrudes from 18-inch hurricane-proof concrete walls. The building playfully incorporates a rock formation as a support near the iconic “Fountain of Youth,” a legendary spring sought by Ponce de Leon and a symbol of Florida’s origins in the Age of Exploration.

The Dali

(The museum as seen from the north side, with Fountain of Youth in the bottom-right; screenshot retrieved from http://thedali.org/virtual-tour/index.html)

The Museum also contains one of the world’s most iconic staircases, a helix structure reminiscent of DNA. Opened twenty-two years after the death of Salvador Dali, this museum is an inspiring testament to the master surrealist, as well as artists and architects everywhere.

helix staircase

(The iconic helix staircase; photo retrieved from HOK)