Saturday
May102014

Matthew Lutz

Matt 4-upI teach courses that introduce students to passive environmental design, building systems, and design studio work. I’m a licensed architect and have been working for over a decade on projects that involve both solar powered mobile dwellings as well as alternatives to low-income housing. A re-occurring theme in my work involves exploiting design constraints to reveal new opportunities.

I received a B.F.A. in Historic Preservation from the Savannah College of Art and Design and have a keen interest in historic material culture and industrial design. I'm a graduate of the Masters of Architecture Program at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University and am a former Assistant Professor in the College of Architecture and Urban Studies there.

My projects with students have included solar powered dwellings for the U.S. Department of Energy’s Solar Decathlon as well as portable research stations and garden follies.

As well as teaching, designing, and building, I’m an aspiring farmer and occasional beekeeper. A typical spring day might include helping birth a calf in the morning, giving a presentation about computer rendering in the afternoon, and participating in a campus master planning session in the evening. For me, being an architect means being invested in the landscape and keeping my hands on the soil.

Philosophy

“ In all societies there are off-casts. This impure part serves as our precursors or pioneers.”

J. Hector St. John de Crèvecœur

When I read Letters from an American Farmer by J. Hector St. John de Crèvecœur I learn, in part, what our nation might have been like to the new immigrant in the 1700’s; how these immigrants ventured into a very radical and very new American world.  I believe that architecture is a discipline only sustained by pioneering spirits and I'm inspired by the combination of curiosity and bravery held by these New Americans. As Goethe said “There is no Past that we can bring back by the longing for it, there is only an eternally new Now, that builds and creates itself out of elements of the past as the past withdraws”.

mlutz@norwich.edu

Friday
Dec182009

Ye Olde Vemonty Barney 

Lutz experiences Design / Build, the Vermont way. 

 

This small post and beam structure was the first design / build project Professor Lutz did in Vermont. Built on his homestead in North Calais, it accommodates typical tractor shed / barn functions below, with a pottery studio above. All material [except metal] was sourced from local sawmills.  

 

 

Wednesday
Mar112009

PLUG's Jungle Research Station

Photo: Dwell Magazine, March 2009When veterinary doctor Taranjit Kaur, her husband and molecular biologist Dr. Jatinder Singh, and their three-year-old daughter, Simran set out to live and do research for a year in the remote Mahale Mountain National Park in western Tanzania, they knew they would need a home that could do some serious architectural and scientific heavy lifting.

They'd previously been working out of a tent, but upon meeting architect Matthew Lutz...[they] set about ameliorating the situation. (read more)