![]() His exceptional design ability, project management and client services traits make him invaluable to our clients, and to the success of each project. ![]() With two young daughters, Chris has immersed himself in the local community and academia, sharing his experiences and knowledge at his children¹s schools.Ĭhris has a sharp eye for detail and translates that orientation into every aspect of the design execution. Throughout his 18 years of experience, his project work has encompassed commercial, hospitality, retail, mixed use, interiors, multi-unit housing projects, custom homes, historic rehabilitations, as well as master planning projects. Working primarily as a Designer and Project Manager, Chris was involved with projects from concept design through construction ensuring design intent and sustainability was maintained throughout. As a USGBC LEED Professional, and as a rain-or-shine bicycle commuter, Chris is a long-time advocate for sustainability and day-to-day environmental stewardship.Īs a graduate of Architecture at California State Polytechnic University, Pomona, where he continues to guest instruct and is a regular lecturer, Chris began collaboration with artist and architect Peter Tolkin and joined his firm in 1998. His approach to design considers the local and contextual conditions, and assimilates them into a concept that is both fundamentally functional and an authentic expression of place. The most efficient (and easiest) size per prisoner employed you can have for a cleaning cupboard is a rectangle (or square) whose area is divisible by 4. A licensed architect in California, Chris has been creating expressive and conceptually intriguing interior, architectural and urban spaces for over 20 years. You can have 1 prisoner working in the Cleaning Cupboard for every 4 square metres of space, up to a maximum of 100 prisoners per room (at a room size of 400 squares or more).
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