January, 2012. Kevin Harris, FAIA, Architect, was recently appointed as a member of the Internal Code Conference (ICC) Consensus Committee on Residential High Wind for the development of the 2013 edition of the upcoming Standard for Residential Construction in High-Wind Regions (ICC 600). Harris’ term is effective immediately and will end upon completion of the standard. As a member of the committee, Harris will be responsible for the review of the standard and public comments submitted to update the standard in an effort to determine if the standard should be re-affirmed, revised or withdrawn.
The estate at Lynnstone is the result of a 5 year collaboration with Kevin L. Harris, FAIA. Featured in the December issue of Robb Report, the 27,000-square-foot Tuscan-inspired estate is comfortably tucked away on 160 acres, with rolling green hills and treetop views. Reclaimed handmade 17th-century clay tiles top the roof while within repurposed wood and rustic stone compose the countertops, backsplashes, and flooring. The meticulous attention to detail and a near-obsession with historical accuracy (don’t move that elephant!) are hallmark Kevinisms.
Hallelujah! New Orleans-based Union Bethel AME celebrates Easter Sunday in their newly restored church. Sunday marked the first time services could be held in the historic structure since Hurricane Katrina damaged the building in 2005. Kevin Harris, Architect, LLC is blessed to play a role in the restoration of the building, its congregation and community. […]
We’ve always said that “good design is timeless.” Today, thanks to the good folks at My Home Ideas, we have a demonstration using one of our very own renovation projects. We subscribe to the My Home Ideas design newsletter, read it regularly, recommend the site to clients looking to find inspiration images to help define […]
The current issue of the Greater Baton Rouge Business Report just arrived. We are tickled that Kevin is featured in the “Entrepreneur” column. For complete text, visit the Greater Baton Rouge Business Report. Thanks to David Jacobs for the text and Brian Biamonte for the happy architect photo!