DLR Group
File:DLR group.jpg | |
Employee-owned | |
Industry | Architecture, Engineering |
Founded | 1966 |
Products | architecture, engineering, planning, interior design |
Revenue | $116 million (FY 2012) |
Number of employees
|
600+ |
Website | www.dlrgroup.com |
DLR Group is an architectural design firm providing architecture, engineering, planning, and interior design to clients throughout the United States. The firm's focus is corporate (mixed-use, hospitality, and workplace), higher education, K-12 education, justice (courts, civic spaces, and detention), and sports design.
In September 2012, Architect magazine, the official publication of the American Institute of Architects, ranked DLR Group as the #1 firm in the United States in its annual ARCHITECT 50 ranking of U.S. firms. The ARCHITECT 50 list is compiled by weighting three key components of practice: design excellence and pro bono, sustainability, and business. DLR Group has ranked in the top 10 of U.S. firms each year since the ARCHITECT 50 debuted in 2009.[1]
DLR Group was founded in Omaha, Nebraska in 1966 as Dana Larson and Roubal and Associates. The founders were Irv Dana and Bill Larson, both architects, and engineer Jim Roubal.[2] The firm has 19 offices in the United States and an office in Shanghai, China. Its home office is in Omaha.
In February 2010, DLR Group merged Southern California-based design firm WWCOT into the firm. The transaction added DLR Group office locations in Los Angeles and Riverside, and the office in Shanghai.[3] In July 2010, DLR Group announced the acquisition of Minneapolis-based design firm KKE Architects. KKE offices in Minneapolis, Las Vegas, Tucson, and Pasadena, Calif., were merged into DLR Group.[4]
In its January 2012 rankings, United Kingdom based BD World Architecture ranked DLR Group's Education practice #1 in the world, its Criminal Justice practice #2, its Sports Stadia practice #4, and DLR Group Engineering #7 in the world.[5] DLR Group also ranks as the 26th largest firm in America by revenue according to Architectural Record.[6]
DLR Group is a member firm of Architecture 2030 and supports the 2030 Challenge. The firm also is a signatory of the American Institute of Architects’ 2030Commitment.[7]
DLR Group building designs
- Clackamas Town Center - Clackamas, Oregon[8]
- Overland Park Convention Center and Hotel - Overland Park, Kansas [9]
- Tucson Convention Center and Hotel - Tucson, Arizona[10]
- Edward R. Roybal Learning Center - Los Angeles, California [11]
- Betty H. Fairfax High School - Phoenix, Arizona [12]
- Lincoln High School (Tacoma, Washington) [8]
- Oak Ridge High School (Oak Ridge, Tennessee) [13]
- Panorama High School - Los Angeles, California [14]
- Rosemont High School - Sacramento, California[15]
- Alex Box Stadium - Baton Rouge, Louisiana[16]
- Bowling Green Ballpark - Bowling Green, Kentucky[17]
- UFCU Disch–Falk Field - Austin, Texas[16]
- Fluor Field at the West End - Greenville, South Carolina[18]
- Morrison Stadium - Omaha, Nebraska[19]
- PK Park - Eugene, Oregon[16]
- CenturyLink Center Omaha - Omaha, Nebraska[20]
- ADX Florence - United States Penitentiary Administrative Maximum Facility - Fremont County, Colorado[21]
- Coffee Creek Correctional Facility - Wilsonville, Oregon[22]
- Wayne L. Morse United States Courthouse - Eugene, Oregon[23]
- Wyoming Medium Correctional Institution - Goshen County, Wyoming[24]
- Provident Bank Park - Ramapo, New York[25]
- Village of Lisle-Benedictine University Sports Complex and Benedictine University[26]
Office locations
- Chicago, Illinois
- Colorado Springs, Colorado
- Denver, Colorado
- Des Moines, Iowa
- Honolulu, Hawaii
- Las Vegas, Nevada
- Lincoln, Nebraska
- Los Angeles, California
- Minneapolis, Minnesota
- Omaha, Nebraska
- Orlando, Florida
- Overland Park, Kansas
- Pasadena, California
- Phoenix, Arizona
- Portland, Oregon
- Riverside, California
- Sacramento, California
- Santa Monica, California
- Seattle, Washington
- Tucson, Arizona
- Shanghai, China
References
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External links
- ↑ Architect, The Architect 50, Sept. 2012
- ↑ Us. Sept. 2012, DLR Group website, accessed June 27, 2010
- ↑ Architect, WWCOT to Become Part of DLR Group, March 2010
- ↑ Architect
- ↑ BD World Architecture, 2012 World Architecture 100, January 2012
- ↑ June 2012
- ↑ American Institute of Architects web site, AIA 2030 Commitment, List of Committed Firms [1]
- ↑ 8.0 8.1 AIA Seattle Website, Firm Finder
- ↑ DLR Group Website
- ↑ PRWeb Newswire, June 17, 2009, DLR Group to Design Headquarters Hotel in Tucson [2]
- ↑ American School & University Website, Feb. 1, 2009
- ↑ Architectural Record, Jan. 2009, Schools of the 21st Century
- ↑ Education Design Showcase, Green Project of Distinction Winner 2008
- ↑ Education Design Showcase, Honorable Mention Winner 2008 Education Design Showcase [3]
- ↑ SchoolDesigns.com
- ↑ 16.0 16.1 16.2 Baseball America, College Preview, Ballparks Feature, Feb. 23, 2009
- ↑ ballparkdigest.com
- ↑ ballparkdigest.com
- ↑ DLR Group Website
- ↑ DLR Group Website
- ↑ DLR Group Website
- ↑ Hoffman Construction Co. Website
- ↑ [4] AIA Seattle Website, Firm Finder
- ↑ "Wyoming Medium Correctional Institution Opens." The Layton Companies. Retrieved on December 12, 2010.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
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- ↑ DLR Group web site, Locations