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Leskosky brings an artists eye to the challenge of designing
a building. His aim is to create a satisfying composition in which
all the parts work together, down to the smallest detail. His canvas
includes the building's interior, to which he always devotes meticulous
attention. The client's desires and the building's specific function
are, of course, where his design concepts begin. An avid painter and
sculptor whose work has been exhibited at New York's Cooper-Hewitt
Museum, the Cleveland Museum of Art's May Shows, the Cleveland Center
for Contemporary Art and SPACES Gallery, among other venues, Leskosky
goes on to consider such formal issues as the organization of foreground
and background, depth and openness, the relation of interior to exterior,
shapes and colors, as well as the textures and the fabrics chosen
to complete his spaces. (In fact, he received an award from the Institute
of Business Designers and the Cleveland chapter of the American Institute
of Architects [AIA] for the interior design of the Amethyst Grille
in Shaker Heights.) Leskosky also thinks deeply about how his design
will make its users feel and how it might enhance their activities
and interactions.
A
kidney dialysis center becomes a light-filled, reassuring, and healing
environment that uses tall clerestory windows to connect patients-who
must remain in treatment for many hours-with the outside world:
clouds moving overhead, birds circling, even rain. Instead of the
vinyl-covered furniture of the sort typically found in clinics and
fast-food restaurants, warm, comfortable fabrics and interesting
textures were chosen for the appointments. Instead of cold tile
floors, Leskosky opted for a germ-free plastic laminate that looks
like wood, while jettisoning institutional pink and pale blue-green
in favor of stronger or more saturated colors that stir the spirit
and massage the senses.
Commissioned
to design a research facility for University Hospitals of Cleveland,
Leskosky interviewed its future occupants, asking researchers such
practical questions as how they would work at their benches, and
with what kind of equipment. Angles, textures, and light were employed
to mitigate stress, and workspaces were configured to maximize the
potential for interaction, while research areas were made flexible
to respond cost-effectively to constantly changing pursuits.
The
satisfying whole, for Leskosky, includes a building's
relationship to its setting. Hemmed in on one side by an 18-story
apartment building and a parking garage on another, the Kirkham
Townhouses he designed for Cleveland's Warehouse District were angled
to face a spectacular view encompassing the Cuyahoga River, the
Main Avenue Bridge, and Lake Erie. The presence of so many windows
aimed down at the sidewalk helps make the neighborhood a safer place
to live, Plain Dealer architecture critic Steve Litt noted,
and raised masonry terraces create a semi-private zone. Finally,
the squash-colored tile Leskosky used for the façade gives
them a visual warmth and fine-grained detail sympathetic to
the district's 19th-century roots, while decorative bands
of split-face concrete blocks emulate early 20th-century commercial
architecture.
As
a principal and senior project designer at van Dijk Westlake Reed
Leskosky with 22 years of experience, Leskosky brings a wealth of
knowledge to his projects, which have included everything from a
new facility for Banner Health System's Thunderbird Samaritan Medical
Center in Glendale, Arizona, to the Ohio Motorists Association's
corporate headquarters on a bluff overlooking I-77 and I-480, one
of the busiest intersections in the state. Although he took courses
in art and photography at Youngstown State University while still
a student at Boardman High School, the Youngstown native found himself
drawn more and more to his first love as a boy, architecture. He
went on to pursue a master's in architecture at Kent State University,
where he served as teaching assistant to Thom Stauffer, winner of
the 2002 Cleveland Arts Prize for Architecture. (Leskosky himself
would teach evening classes in architectural design theory at KSU
from 1982 to 2000.) Upon his graduation in 1980, Leskosky was brought
into a new firm being established by Stauffer and Neil Guda, who
had directed Leskosky's thesis. Leskosky joined van Dijk Pace Westlake
in 1982.
Perhaps
Leskosky's most unusual assignment was designing the prototype for
a chain of 125 truck stops spread across 36 states being newly built
or converted by Travel Centers of America to serve both professional
drivers and four-wheelers (truckers' slang for regular
motorists). The open, welcoming feel of the prototype-which evokes
the family-friendly Big Boys and original McDonald's of the post
World War II and early '50s era-is achieved with bold shapes, bright
colors, neon signage, a façade of glass and ribbed aluminum,
and huge striped awnings, jazzy elements that impart what has been
called the wow factor. Inside: a comfortable, natural-light-filled
restaurant, shopping center, massage rooms, and marble shower stalls
(for the long haulers) modeled after those at the Ritz-Carlton.
The New York Times pronounced Leskosky's imaginative design
the first re-imagining of an American institution, the
truck stop, since it was introduced 80-some years ago.
text
by
Dennis
Dooley
1986
Winner of the Cleveland Arts Prize for Literature
Fall
2003
http://www.vwrl.com
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The
interior of the award-winning Amethyst Grille (1988), conceived
by Leskosky in collaboration with van Dijk Westlake partner Ron
Reed, uses geometric shapes and colors inspired by the large gemstones
displayed throughout the restaurant to break up the long space into
comfortable, distinctive areas.

The
New York Times described Leskosky's Travel
Center prototype (1999) as "the architectural equivalent of
a double-decker cheeseburger with pickles on a sesame bun."

Oversize
alphabet blocks-echoed in the gentle-hued square patterns of the
parking lot's façade (2001)―reassure children arriving
at Rainbow Babies and Children's Hospital in Cleveland's University
Circle.

The
inviting Kirkham Townhomes (1998), subtly angled to afford a dramatic
view of river, bridge and lake, have contributed to the revitalization
of Cleveland's historic Warehouse District.

The
Center for Dialysis Care of Cleveland-West on West 25th Street (1998)
was designed to take maximum advantage of natural light and to help
patients focus on the beauty of the world outside.

Instead
of burying scientists deep inside a windowless, gray building, University
Hospitals of Cleveland's Research Institute, completed in 2003,
proclaims itself a vibrant generator of bold new ideas.
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