Home of the Year Should Have Broad Appeal
Victor Mirontschuk is president and chairman of EDI Architecture Inc., which he founded in 1976. The 2002 BALA judge spoke with PB from his New York office.
PB: Can you tell us about the home you made a case for in the judging? Does it represent a particular value, in your mind?
Mirontschuk: It has all the things the American home is supposed to have. It's got a front porch, it's got a nice presence on the street, it's light, it's airy, it's not garage-dominated, and it just feels nice. It's a stand-alone house. It has good curb appeal.
The Home of the Year also should be adaptable for multiple markets. I think you could take this house and put it in the Northeast market. It would sell in Houston, Denver and Chicago. It has, to me, broad appeal across the country, and that's why I was pushing for this type of house.
PB: What about design excitement? A criticism might be that it's not particularly exciting, that it's something we've seen before.
Mirontschuk: Sometimes it's better just to take something that's tried and proven and make it better. There's nothing wrong with that.
There's a comment about the Japanese — they are not truly innovative. They take an existing concept and try to improve and enhance it.
Americans try to be inventive and create new ideas, but I think this home just improved on existing concepts and did a spectacular job with that.
There's only so much you can do with production housing. There's only so much you can do when the home buyer is the final judge. They're the ones who are going to buy it. If they like it, they understand it, then they will purchase it. That's why a lot of builders are afraid to innovate — what if it doesn't sell?
If we understand truly what Home of the Year is, it's good production housing. It's good execution, it's concept — both of those things wrapped up together. I just don't think it's going to be an off-the-wall house that knocks your socks off.
I may be wrong, but I've been judging [design competitions] for 15-20 years, and I can't remember seeing anything that blew me away.