WEBSITE UPGRADE
Environ's website got a face-lift. We've added more projects, information on CityWorks, and recent portraits of staff. Check it out here: www.environarch.com.
RESTORATION OF SEABORG HOUSE
The City of South Gate has engaged Environ Architecture to assist in the restoration of the historical landmark known as Seaborg House. Its notable distinction is due to its famous resident Glenn T. Seaborg.
Glenn Seaborg was a Nobel Prize winning Chemist, famous for the discovery of ten transuranium elements, including plutonium. He was a member of the Manhattan Project and is one of a few scientists joining Einstein and Fermi to have a periodic element named after him while still living (Seaborgium). He was a Professor at UC Berkeley, Chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission and advised many of our country's Presidents on nuclear policy.
Environ's Alan Burks and Leticia Mimila are working with City of South Gate's Paul Adams to coordinate the restoration of the significant building. The Seaborg House was moved from its original location on San Antonio to behind the South Gate Museum, where it has sat boarded up until now. It will be moved to a permanent site along Glenn T. Seaborg Way at the south side of City Hall, where it can be viewed and appreciated by the public.
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Wednesday, July 5, 2017
Newsletter July 2017
Thursday, March 9, 2017
Cultural Heritage in Long Beach
A city is only as
rich as its culture. How do we maintain that richness? Well, there's a Cultural
Heritage Commission (CHC) in Long Beach that strives to do just that.
Today, we sit down for a Q&A with CHC Chair and Environ Architecture
President Alan Burks.
How and when did you
first get involved with the CHC?
In the mid 1970s I
participated in the first survey of significant structures in Chicago for the
Illinois Landmarks Preservation Council. Since then I was always interested in
preserving and reusing the historic buildings that create places. In 1980 I
co-founded Environ, Inc. Some of our early projects in Chicago repurposed
warehouse and factory buildings into grocery stores, spas, housing, and
offices. We also designed renovations at several National Register sites,
such as the Chicago Academy of Sciences and the Field Museum of Natural
History.
My interest in historical buildings continued after I established Environ
Architecture, Inc. in Long Beach. While serving as President of the
Community Redevelopment Agency of the City of Los Angeles, we provided the
design for many building improvements in the historic Pico-Union district, as
well as the Westlake and Mid-Wilshire districts. We also renovated the Watts-Wilmington
Train Depot and created the restoration plan for the Chinatown Gates. Knowing
about our work, Amy Bodek asked me if I would be interested in serving on the
Cultural Heritage Commission. I agreed, and then-Mayor Bob Foster appointed me
in 2012.
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"Architecture belongs to culture, not civilization." Alvaar Alto 1898-1976 |
Wednesday, February 15, 2017
The Significance of Branding in Your Workplace
Most small and medium sized businesses overlook an important first step when they start their company: their workplace branding. Existing businesses need to revisit their workplace branding from time to time as well because their products, employees or services change and the marketplace does too.
· How does workplace branding differ from branding in general?
· Why is it important?
Workplace branding is an extension of your personal or your company’s brand. Your workplace (skyscraper, office, warehouse, desk, etc.) is where you do your work. The simple branding model is YOU + your passion and knowledge or a company’s collective passion and knowledge. For companies of any size successful branding begins with the honest appraisal of your company’s main business, your strengths and your customers’ needs…and how you address them. Workplace branding is like putting the clothes on the model.
If you have not chosen the location for your business, or if you’re thinking of moving or upgrading, make sure your workplace and the company’s culturally distinct workspace inside it are a direct extension of the simpler branding ideal. Be it a warehouse, an office or a trendy loft, your workplace brand should reflect who you are and how you want both your employees and your customers to perceive you.
· How does workplace branding differ from branding in general?
· Why is it important?
Workplace branding is an extension of your personal or your company’s brand. Your workplace (skyscraper, office, warehouse, desk, etc.) is where you do your work. The simple branding model is YOU + your passion and knowledge or a company’s collective passion and knowledge. For companies of any size successful branding begins with the honest appraisal of your company’s main business, your strengths and your customers’ needs…and how you address them. Workplace branding is like putting the clothes on the model.
If you have not chosen the location for your business, or if you’re thinking of moving or upgrading, make sure your workplace and the company’s culturally distinct workspace inside it are a direct extension of the simpler branding ideal. Be it a warehouse, an office or a trendy loft, your workplace brand should reflect who you are and how you want both your employees and your customers to perceive you.
Saturday, October 1, 2016
What the FORK are you throwing away? How you CAN end hunger by EATING UGLY.
CANstruction is an annual competition in which participants
create large structures out of canned food. The purpose of the contest is help
end world hunger. Winners are announced and after a brief exhibit of the structures,
all the cans are donated to local food banks.
For this year’s CANstruction competition, Environ’s Vice
President Willetta McCulloh came up with a concept that promotes a simple
message: “EAT UGLY.”
Her inspiration was an article by National Geographic in
which the statistics of food waste were astounding:
Nearly 800 million people suffer from hunger.
46% of fruits and vegetables never make it from farm to fork.
According to the largest grower of mandarins in Peru, 30% of
his crop won’t be exported because it won’t be the right size, color, or
sweetness, or it might have blemishes or scars.
Thursday, August 4, 2016
Time Well Spent with Environ's Barbara Hordyk
This month we celebrate Environ's Project Designer Barbara Hordyk, who has been with the company for ten years.
Barbara's talent for design first showed itself in high school, when her mom gave her a budget to redecorate her room. Though she loved the experience so much that she came away feeling this could be her career, she opted to study International Business in college. But after a couple years, she yearned for a more creative experience. Recalling the feeling she got from redecorating her room, she changed her major to Interior Design.
Environ originally learned of Barbara through Alan's wife, who worked with her at the Getty Center. After the project at the Getty Center was complete, Barbara took time off to raise two boys. When she was ready to return to the industry, Environ happened to be looking to hire another associate for its Interiors Department. Perfect timing.
Barbara maintains her credential with the National Council for Interior Design Certification. The certification requires three exams that test one's knowledge of theory, principles of design, building codes, project management and running a business.
As Barbara says, "There's more to it than just picking pretty colors."
Friday, April 15, 2016
Spring 2016 Newsletter
Our client California Resources Corporation recently moved into their fresh offices in Ventura, CA. The new space now serves as a consolidated facility bringing multiple departments and disciplines together. Improvements included glass entry doors, new finishes, playful pendant lights and blue accent walls. Previously a maze of high panels, Environ's Willetta McCulloh and Barbara Hordyk worked with the client to achieve a more modern and open look. |
Tuesday, January 19, 2016
Hats Off to Environ's Aimee Mandala!

Aimee Mandala sits below Environ's mission statement in the reception area of its downtown Long Beach office. It's an apt place for this eight-year employee, as she embraces the company's philosophy in everything she does as Environ's Director of Operations.
In college Aimee studied English and creative writing, never imagining she would end up in a position like the one she holds today. But coming from four generations of architects whose work stretches back to the 1800s, it seems unsurprising that Aimee wound up in the same field.
As a child, she and her siblings tagged along to work with their father to his architectural office above the famed Bake 'n Broil in Bixby Knolls. It's a formative experience that took hold: her sister is an architect, while her brother is a BIM manager for a construction company. During college Aimee waited tables at Bake-N-Broil, and post-grad she worked for a prominent property management firm in Orange County, but found herself yearning for something more. In 2007, it clicked. Aimee's enthusiasm and excitement for the architectural profession was clear, and she decided she needed to be a part of it.
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