
Birdhaus Studio (Kevin Le, David Hurtado, Woodbury University)
Second Place:
Studio 2B (Kosal Pan, Cindy Davila, Woodbury University)
Third Place:
Awesome Possum! (Teresa Chan, Grace Chen, Jeffrey Lee, Cal Poly San Luis Obispo)
Honorable Mention #1
Dinah + Juff Juff (JDiana Tran, Jeff Dahl, Woodbury University)
Honorable Mention #2
Habitat for Aviary (Ryan Spalding, Justin Day Jez Alogala, Columbus State Community College)
Photos of the competition: http://picasaweb.google.com/csiindy/CONSTRUCT2010StudentCompetition#
This year’s design competition will be for the birds - literally, and will focus on sustainable design and place. It will also continue a strong grassroots tradition within CSI to support you in your professional and scholastic growth toward your chosen professions in the design and construction industry. You are the future of the profession, and it is part of CSI’s mission to make sure you achieve your goals. Teams are participating for the:



If you guessed this year's project is a bird house, you'd be correct. This year's competition project is indeed designing a bird house, designed for the species of your choice, local to the area in which you are attending university. We have chosen this unique project for several reasons, and especially because it focuses on knowing your client, sustainability and place. We also hope to promote critical research and evaluation skills, necessary for any successful sustainable building project.
Birds are instinctive, and this determines what they look for in a home, whether already existing or built from the branch up, as well as what features will be necessary. Thus, a birdhouse should adequately address location preference, size, bird nesting habits, raising and protection of young, protection from elements and predators, perching habits, feeding habits, to name just a few parameters you will need to know and understand. In addition, birds are by nature environmental designers and builders. They use readily available materials, often salvaged, and undoubtedly take into consideration durability and efficient use of materials. After all, if the nest fails, guess who has to rebuild it.
There may also be opportunities to consider other functions the house could serve for the bird species, beyond just housing. Take this into consideration in your design, as well as determine whether or not it is appropriate to the species of choice. It could end up being a pricey and ill-used add-on. Birds may be interested in style as well, so feel free to incorporate stylistic attributes into the birdhouse design as well. In short, know your client – each bird species is unique in what it looks for in a home, just as we are when we shop for or build a home.
It is our hope too that your birdhouses will be installed somewhere on your campus, or elsewhere in the local community, for the enjoyment of all – and especially of course, the birds!
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The competition is now full!
