Greenbook: A Local Guide to Chesapeake Living - Issue 8 | Page 16

Barrel Vault Room designed by Purple Cherry Architects for a residential design on Melvin Road in Annapolis pany that is a little bit bigger, you have to be willing to let go and to collaborate with other people. My first hires were all young people and I felt like I was building a team, a business. I wasn’t scared at all until the day I hired someone with twenty years experience! My second hire was a part time office manager. I am a big believer in systems and in hiring people to work within their gifts. To have an architect do invoicing is not to use their gift. When I am surrounded by talented people who are each using their gifts, then I have the space to do my very best work. I have always been entrepreneurial, so I just put the right team in place and worked hard and did a good job and used my gifts. GB: WHAT ARE SOME OF YOUR FAVORITE PROJECTS FROM YOUR CAREER? CPC: When clients allow you to be creative, when somebody allows you to just go for it: that is the epitome of architecture for me. It doesn’t mean you don’t limit yourself, but that you are being asked to do your best. Those times when my clients allow me to express my skills and passion through 16 GREENBOOK | SUMMER 2016 design are my favorite. I am especially proud of our work for non-profits. We just finished Hospice of the Chesapeake. Hospice is on a whole new journey to educate the public on palliative care. They are pioneering ways to help patients before the end of life. We made a very warm, welcoming, comforting and inspirational building and met the budget goals of the organization. It is not easy to make a beautiful building when you have a tight budget. I take a lot of pride in that. We also had to find ways to build deeply spiritual places without overtly mentioning any deity. Two artists were able to articulate my vision in the chapel, or meditation room, which is truly beautiful. Opportunity Builders is a 42,000 square foot rehabilitation and vocational day facility for adults with disabilities. Non-profits have a real challenge in establishing a presence and therefore in raising money. Having an actual headquarters and a building is the number one thing for public recognition that a non-profit organization can do. Opportunity Builders used to be housed in a warehouse. They had been providing amazing services in Anne Arundel County for thirty to forty years, but nobody knew about them. It was the same for Arundel Lodge. Both of these projects helped put important community organizations on the map, literally, and in a better position to serve clients. I am just finishing up one of my all time favorite projects. We were hired as consultants to design The Pilot School, a K-8 progressive, green private school in Delaware that will be completed in early 2017. Every non-profit is challenged by budget, but this particular project had the desire and willingness to create the best space for the children. It was close to my heart. GB: WHAT ABOUT YOUR FAVORITE RESIDENTIAL DESIGNS? CPC: In particular I recall designing a 14,000 square foot home on Melvin Road. The first thing we built on the property was a large detached structure to house a collection of automobiles and motorcycles. Behind that we were honored and blessed to design a magnificent home. The clients allowed us to explore and integrate our creativity on every single level of three floors and that is very unusual. In custom residen-