Vol. 97, No. 175
Thursday, September 2, 2010
Published for 26,674 consecutive weekdays
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2010 March 4th
3/4/2010 headlines...
Forecast predicts over $200 million deficit for City in five years
Inside the artist and architect’s loft
FOP honors Good Samaritan
Measure would change speedy trial rules


The window in architect Michael Dunlap’s workspace looks out over West Adams Street near the W.A. Knight Lofts and Chew restaurant. See what’s in the rest of his adaptive reuse-style office on page 3A.

The hard drive from Dunlap’s first computer, one of the original IBM PCs. “I remember taking the rest of it to Goodwill. I wish I had it today,” he said.

This is a calendar poster for Southlight Gallery, the “Off the Grid” space Dunlap shares with several other local artists. Copies are available at the gallery on Forsyth Street for a $40 donation.

Dunlap maintains a small traditional library in the conference room. “You can’t find everything on the Internet,” he said.

This former Atlantic National Bank conference room is Dunlap’s main work area and where the architect’s printers and plotters are installed.

One of the pieces in the office’s architectural elements collection.

Three glass walls in Dunlap’s office overlook the atrium at the Schultz Building.

A rendering of a project at the corner of Ashley and Julia streets near the new County Courthouse site.

The entry door was originally intended for a project at the beach. It didn’t happen so Dunlap made the door the first thing he sees when he gets to work.

The hallway next to the office has become an art gallery for some of Dunlap’s travel photos. Mounting the color prints on clipboards makes it easy to change the exhibit. “Every time I pass by them it reminds me I need to get on an airplane,” said Dunlap.

This clock in the reception area actually runs backwards. The time is read in the mirror on the left.

The office’s formal conference room is also a lighting showroom. All the fixtures are incandescent and equipped with dimmers to demonstrate how light can change a space.

Inside the artist and architect’s loft

Architect and artist Michael Dunlap

by Max Marbut
Staff Writer

For the past 12 years Michael Dunlap has designed residential and commercial buildings, interiors and other more personal things in an office that occupies the front half of the second floor of the Schultz Building on West Adams Street. The office mirrors Dunlap’s specialty since it’s a classic adaptive reuse project.

The building was once used by the Atlantic National Bank and Dunlap’s main work room is in what used to be ANB’s conference room. One of the features is a glass-walled atrium that was once almost wide open. Dunlap said when he leased the space, he was concerned about safety so he negotiated with the landlord who agreed to fully enclose the space. That gave the office an impressive three-sided centerpiece with a view down to the building’s entryway and lobby.

While the half of the office nearest Adams Street is virtually the same as it was when the bank had the space, the other half of the office has been equipped with all the modern elements, including a drop ceiling and track lighting.

Architects don’t sign their creations like artists do, so you may not be aware of some of Dunlap’s work you pass by every day. In addition to many office buildings and residences, he’s also the designer behind Bistro Aix in San Marco and Shelby’s Coffee Shop in Neptune Beach, which is one of Dunlap’s favorite projects.

“It’s traditional neighborhood infill. We took it from single use — it was at one time the Ed Smith Lumber Company — and converted it to mixed-use,” he said.

The architect also has an artistic side, from the standpoints of both appreciation and production. Dunlap uses his eye for design in his hobby, fine art photography. Many examples of his work behind the camera decorate the office and the hallway outside alongside pieces by local artists Dunlap has collected over the years.

He’s also one of the artists who exhibit at Southlight Gallery, an “Off the Grid” location along Forsyth Street facing the Bank of America Tower. The former ground floor of Gold’s Gym has become one of Downtown’s most popular art galleries. It has also evolved from a space open only for First Wednesday Art Walk into a gallery that’s open most days during the week and always by appointment. It was inspired by the one-day shows Dunlap and his fellow local artists put together from time to time years ago in Riverside.

“I enjoy being part of the art uprising Downtown,” he said.

mmarbut@baileypub.com

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