Copy of intensive study of the ANP carriage road system involving transfer of land ownership, natural resources, trail and road planning & design, costs, labor
Description: Copy of intensive study of the ANP carriage road system involving transfer of land ownership, natural resources, trail and road planning & design, costs, labor
Description: Looking along Somesville's Main Street with Harbor at left. Same scene as item 5011/photo 1403. Taken for "Mt. Desert: an Informal History"
Otter Creek causeway from eastern shore. Lobster boat moorings accessed from Park Loop Road. Lobstermen from Otter Creek. Bridge and causeway are part of Acadia National Park. Photograph taken for "Mount Desert: an informal history".
Description: Otter Creek causeway from eastern shore. Lobster boat moorings accessed from Park Loop Road. Lobstermen from Otter Creek. Bridge and causeway are part of Acadia National Park. Photograph taken for "Mount Desert: an informal history".
Description: Exact same photograph as Photo 1429/item 5037 taken to show changes from 1914 to 1988. Building at right is current restaurant and post office.
Looking south on Main Street with Brown's Hardware, Northeast Plumbing, the Post Office, Swan Agency Real Estate office, and the Holmes Store on left. On right is the Bar Harbor Bank and Trust Co. Autos in Photograph.
Description: Looking south on Main Street with Brown's Hardware, Northeast Plumbing, the Post Office, Swan Agency Real Estate office, and the Holmes Store on left. On right is the Bar Harbor Bank and Trust Co. Autos in Photograph.
Description: Looking toward the head of Northeast Harbor. Taken from Savage boat builders, of pleasure and working boats on mooring. Town dock is on left.
MDES band, under the direction of Don Wood, marches down Main St., Northeast Harbor in the Memorial Day Parade. Students in front row (L-R): David Hawes on Tuba; Chris Tracy, Eric Ordway and Louisa Pyle on Trombones.
Description: MDES band, under the direction of Don Wood, marches down Main St., Northeast Harbor in the Memorial Day Parade. Students in front row (L-R): David Hawes on Tuba; Chris Tracy, Eric Ordway and Louisa Pyle on Trombones.
Description: Northeast Harbor's town dock with yachts and work boats moored in the harbor and, in distance, a sail boat race. Clifton dock is right center.
House in Seal Harbor for David Rockefeller Jr. Site plans, foundation plan and details, elevations, sections, floor plans. Architect: Venturi, Rauch and Scott Brown, Philadelphia, PA. Project Manager: Roc Caivano, Bar Harbor, ME. Structural Engineer: Keast and Hood, Philadelphia, PA. Mechanical Engineer: Basil Greene, Erdenheim, PA.
Description: House in Seal Harbor for David Rockefeller Jr. Site plans, foundation plan and details, elevations, sections, floor plans. Architect: Venturi, Rauch and Scott Brown, Philadelphia, PA. Project Manager: Roc Caivano, Bar Harbor, ME. Structural Engineer: Keast and Hood, Philadelphia, PA. Mechanical Engineer: Basil Greene, Erdenheim, PA.
One of a series of topographical maps issued by the United States Department of the Interior, Geological Survey. Waterville Quadrangle, Maine. Scale 1: 24 000. Compiled from aerial photographs taken 1976. Field check 1979. Mapped and edited 1982. Control by USGS, NOS/NOAA, and Maine Dept. of Transp.
Description: One of a series of topographical maps issued by the United States Department of the Interior, Geological Survey. Waterville Quadrangle, Maine. Scale 1: 24 000. Compiled from aerial photographs taken 1976. Field check 1979. Mapped and edited 1982. Control by USGS, NOS/NOAA, and Maine Dept. of Transp.
One of a series of topographical maps issued by the United States Department of the Interior, Geological Survey. Clinton Quadrangle, Maine. Scale 1: 24 000. Compiled from aerial photographs taken 1976. Field check 1979. Mapped and edited 1982. Control by USGS, NOS/NOAA, and Maine State Agencies.
Description: One of a series of topographical maps issued by the United States Department of the Interior, Geological Survey. Clinton Quadrangle, Maine. Scale 1: 24 000. Compiled from aerial photographs taken 1976. Field check 1979. Mapped and edited 1982. Control by USGS, NOS/NOAA, and Maine State Agencies.
One of a series of topographical maps issued by the United States Department of the Interior, Geological Survey. Burnham Quadrangle, Maine. Scale 1: 24 000. Compiled from aerial photographs taken 1976. Field check 1979. Mapped and edited 1982. Control by USGS, NOS/NOAA.
Description: One of a series of topographical maps issued by the United States Department of the Interior, Geological Survey. Burnham Quadrangle, Maine. Scale 1: 24 000. Compiled from aerial photographs taken 1976. Field check 1979. Mapped and edited 1982. Control by USGS, NOS/NOAA.
One of a series of topographical maps issued by the United States Department of the Interior, Geological Survey. Fairfield Quadrangle, Maine. Scale 1: 24 000. Compiled from aerial photographs taken 1976. Field check 1979. Mapped and edited 1982. Control by USGS, NOS/NOAA, and Maine Dept. of Transp.
Description: One of a series of topographical maps issued by the United States Department of the Interior, Geological Survey. Fairfield Quadrangle, Maine. Scale 1: 24 000. Compiled from aerial photographs taken 1976. Field check 1979. Mapped and edited 1982. Control by USGS, NOS/NOAA, and Maine Dept. of Transp.
Soft blue binder pertaining to the economic structure of MDI. This was prepared in response to the state's call for comprehensive planning. Reports address current conditions.
Description: Soft blue binder pertaining to the economic structure of MDI. This was prepared in response to the state's call for comprehensive planning. Reports address current conditions.
elevations, floor plans, site plans, details, sketches Roc's Comment: First renovation of the abandoned Turrets building at COA. 1979 thru 1981. Work done by students and faculty and a large selection of local sub-contractors. Design and construction managed by Roc, Harris and Sass. Dick Reinhardt and Roc went to Washington and received a grant with further assistance from the State to repair and re inhabit the building.
Description: elevations, floor plans, site plans, details, sketches Roc's Comment: First renovation of the abandoned Turrets building at COA. 1979 thru 1981. Work done by students and faculty and a large selection of local sub-contractors. Design and construction managed by Roc, Harris and Sass. Dick Reinhardt and Roc went to Washington and received a grant with further assistance from the State to repair and re inhabit the building.
Sketches, site plan, foundation plan, floor plans, elevations, details, schedules, electrical, mechanical, framing plans, plumbing, fireplace details, museum display cabinet plans Roc's Comments: Wendell told us he wanted the museum to have his workshop in the hopes it would inspire others to carve. After he died his son chose to auction the items in his shop off to the highest bidder. The audience knew of Wendells wishes and no one bid except the curator of the Museum who acquired all of the items for a reasonable price. I was then asked to design a room to display his shop and a workspace for carvers and a small auditorium. We had not realized how popular the place would become and needed space for expansion. I did this work from my home studio in Philadelphia and John DeFazio a fellow employee at Venturi, Scott Brown helped with the drawings.
Roc Caivano, Harris Hyman
1980
65 sheets
8 diazo, 30 mylars, 20 paper vellum, 7 tracing papers
8 diazo, 30 mylars, 20 paper vellum, 7 tracing papers
Condition:
good
Description: Sketches, site plan, foundation plan, floor plans, elevations, details, schedules, electrical, mechanical, framing plans, plumbing, fireplace details, museum display cabinet plans Roc's Comments: Wendell told us he wanted the museum to have his workshop in the hopes it would inspire others to carve. After he died his son chose to auction the items in his shop off to the highest bidder. The audience knew of Wendells wishes and no one bid except the curator of the Museum who acquired all of the items for a reasonable price. I was then asked to design a room to display his shop and a workspace for carvers and a small auditorium. We had not realized how popular the place would become and needed space for expansion. I did this work from my home studio in Philadelphia and John DeFazio a fellow employee at Venturi, Scott Brown helped with the drawings. [show more]
These are drawings of an Auditorium for College of the Atlantic. They are a good example of the extent of the COA campus and future plans in the early 80's. Stewart Brecher was hired to replace me as the teacher in Environmental design. He went to Judy Swazey, the president who had just replaced Ed Kaelber, and complained that I was still involved in the College. Judy decided to use nether of us for the design and hired Dan Sculley as their new architect for the project. There was a faculty member, Paul Dubois, who was an arsonist and Paul for unexplainable reasons burned down the original Campus building. Dan then designed the new Kaelber Hall- dining, library and classroom building and the College prospered from that point on. Long story. Toward the end of my work teaching and establishing a program in Environmental Design at College of the Atlantic I was asked to design a new auditorium for them. Sort of a swan song and thank you gift from the College. Harris Hyman and Barbara Sassaman and I did this. There were a number of alternative schemes presented and they settled on the one included here. There is a clever little 1/8th scale model with removable roof that goes along with these drawings. After I left the College, Stuart Brecher became the design teacher and complained to the new president of COA, Judy Swazey, that he should be the one to do the project. Judy took me to lunch and, while picking up the check, said she had decided to have neither of us do the project but put us on a committee to hire a third architect. Our committee hired Dan Sculley, an old friend, to do the new auditorium. Within the year Paul Dubois, a disgruntled COA teacher set the original Kaelber Hall on fire and it was totally destroyed. Sculley then did an excellent job designing a new Library/student center and Dining Hall in its place. By the time of its completion I was working in Philadelphia for the firm Venturi, Rauch, Scott-Brown and the college of the Atlantic decided to hire Turner Brooks (another friend and Yale classmate) to do a new Auditorium/Classroom building. When we returned to MDI in 1990 I was finally asked to do a project for COA, the reason we moved to MDI in the first place. The building we eventually completed was the Blair/ Tyson Dormitory. Sculley, Brooks and I sat within 2o feet of each other in graduate school and have been friend ever since. We went on to each do projects for Marlboro College in Vermont. The "three amigos" of New England architecture:)
Roc Caivano, Harris Hyman
1981-1982
Eden Street
48 sheets
19 mylars, 6 diazo, 9 tracing papers, 14 paper vellum
19 mylars, 6 diazo, 9 tracing papers, 14 paper vellum
Condition:
good
Description: These are drawings of an Auditorium for College of the Atlantic. They are a good example of the extent of the COA campus and future plans in the early 80's. Stewart Brecher was hired to replace me as the teacher in Environmental design. He went to Judy Swazey, the president who had just replaced Ed Kaelber, and complained that I was still involved in the College. Judy decided to use nether of us for the design and hired Dan Sculley as their new architect for the project. There was a faculty member, Paul Dubois, who was an arsonist and Paul for unexplainable reasons burned down the original Campus building. Dan then designed the new Kaelber Hall- dining, library and classroom building and the College prospered from that point on. Long story. Toward the end of my work teaching and establishing a program in Environmental Design at College of the Atlantic I was asked to design a new auditorium for them. Sort of a swan song and thank you gift from the College. Harris Hyman and Barbara Sassaman and I did this. There were a number of alternative schemes presented and they settled on the one included here. There is a clever little 1/8th scale model with removable roof that goes along with these drawings. After I left the College, Stuart Brecher became the design teacher and complained to the new president of COA, Judy Swazey, that he should be the one to do the project. Judy took me to lunch and, while picking up the check, said she had decided to have neither of us do the project but put us on a committee to hire a third architect. Our committee hired Dan Sculley, an old friend, to do the new auditorium. Within the year Paul Dubois, a disgruntled COA teacher set the original Kaelber Hall on fire and it was totally destroyed. Sculley then did an excellent job designing a new Library/student center and Dining Hall in its place. By the time of its completion I was working in Philadelphia for the firm Venturi, Rauch, Scott-Brown and the college of the Atlantic decided to hire Turner Brooks (another friend and Yale classmate) to do a new Auditorium/Classroom building. When we returned to MDI in 1990 I was finally asked to do a project for COA, the reason we moved to MDI in the first place. The building we eventually completed was the Blair/ Tyson Dormitory. Sculley, Brooks and I sat within 2o feet of each other in graduate school and have been friend ever since. We went on to each do projects for Marlboro College in Vermont. The "three amigos" of New England architecture:) [show more]
Floor plans, sections, elevation Roc's Comments: This was my first job. It was for Neva Goodwin who has remained a good friend ever since. The work began back in the 70's and was first a kitchen renovation with bay window addition. Bob Patterson who suggested me to Neva was cajoled into designing the beautiful garden in front. Neva and I worked well together and she truly enjoyed the new space when it was completed. Edgar Walls did the construction and Barb Sassaman helped with the drawings. We went on to do about 5 or six additional tasks for Neva there including moving and renovating the Jordan house across the road.
Description: Floor plans, sections, elevation Roc's Comments: This was my first job. It was for Neva Goodwin who has remained a good friend ever since. The work began back in the 70's and was first a kitchen renovation with bay window addition. Bob Patterson who suggested me to Neva was cajoled into designing the beautiful garden in front. Neva and I worked well together and she truly enjoyed the new space when it was completed. Edgar Walls did the construction and Barb Sassaman helped with the drawings. We went on to do about 5 or six additional tasks for Neva there including moving and renovating the Jordan house across the road. [show more]