Spa People in the News
Samuel
Pitnick (University of Southern California/USC), Nazim Kahraman (Istanbul Technical
University) and Natalie Schull (USC) Take Home Top Prizes in 2010 Spa Architecture
Competition at the Global Spa Summit's 2nd Annual Student Challenge
New York, NY - July 19, 2010 - The Global Spa Summit
(GSS), the leading annual event for the spa and wellness industries, has formally
announced the winners of its Student Challenge competition - which
annually enlists students from major universities worldwide to create the spa
concepts of the future. For 2010 the spotlight was on architecture, and students
from the University of Southern California (USC) and Istanbul Technical University
competed to design innovative, environmentally- and culturally-aware plans for
a new spa/wellness destination.
Each year students first compete
against others at their respective universities, and this year eight finalists
were selected to present their concepts before a distinguished panel of judges
and the Summit delegation, recently assembled in Istanbul, Turkey. The finalists
competed for both cash prizes and global industry recognition.
The
Winners:
1st Place: Samuel Pitnick, University of Southern California ($1,000)
2nd Place: Nazim Kahraman, Istanbul Technical University ($500) 3rd Place: Natalie
Shull, University of Southern California ($250)
A host of factors
shaped the decision to keep the competition tangible and local, by situating it
at a real Turkish site. Turkey boasts extraordinary natural spa resources, (ranking
2nd in the world in thermal springs, with 1,300), but only 5% of the nations
thermal resources are currently being utilized. And the Turkish medical/wellness
and thermal tourism industries are surging, as the modern traveler increasingly
seeks authentic, indigenous spa experiences and traditions. The specific site
chosen, the town/region of Kula in western Turkey, provided an exceptionally rich
context for the competition: a traditional 5th-century Ottoman settlement - famous
for its volcanic landscape and geothermal resources - with spa traditions dating
back to the Roman period - and a geothermal national park already being proposed.
Professor Richard Corsini (Director of the student projects
at USC) described the Challenge: In their architectural designs for a new
spa/eco-tourism destination at Kula, the students were tasked with addressing
the critical question of how a global market can interface holistically and constructively
with a local culture and environment. And how creative new ideas for spa
and wellness could really help revitalize a regional economy.
The Winning Projects:
Samuel
Pitnick (USC): Pitnick inventively split the project into two components,
spanning an in-town cultural/educational and spa/bathing center (featuring mineral/geothermal
pools, traditional hamam and organic garden) to benefit local residents - integrated
with a luxury destination spa situated on an extinct volcano north of town. Judges
praised the design as unique in successfully bridging the divide between the community
and the official spa destination, and sensitively taking into account
the local economy and infrastructure.
Nazim
Kahraman (Istanbul Technical University): Imagined as a 20-room spa hotel/healing
center, the design focused on the free play between the inside and
the natural setting without: interiors are exposed to lava flows and basalt columns,
etc. while natural thermal water resources are channeled through a series
of healing/activity pools. The dominant shell-like roof allows fissures of light
and exterior exposure throughout large spaces are entirely open to lava
flows - and trees walk into the building. Judges praised the deft
handling of the environmental context and the formal inventiveness of the design.
Natalie
Schull (USC): With her concept AgriSpa, an agri-tourism spa and
culinary school situated on a dramatic plateau between Kula and the proposed geothermal
park, Schull suggested bold new ways to imagine cultivating, eating and
living in nature. (I.e., guests participate in local farming - cook organic
lunches together - energy is generated from solar/biomass sources, etc.) Designed
as a prototype for the resurgence in local culinary, farming and cultural traditions,
the judges praised its conceptual originality, and allowing the creative vision
to define the architecture.
Other finalists presenting at
the 2010 Summit included: Joe Martin Garcia and Whitney Joslin from USC; and Ufuk
Kucukyazici, Emre Multu, and Naciye Nilay Kabas from Istanbul Technical University.
All presentations/project images are available at: http://www.globalspasummit.org/index.php/summit-2010/presentations
The distinguished panel of judges included Anthony DiGuiseppe (President/CEO,
DiGiuseppe Architects, USA); Dzigbordi Dosoo (CEO, Allure Africa, Ghana); Gustavo
Filguieras (CEO, Emiliano Hotel/Architect, Brazil); Jeff Matthews (President &
COO, Mandara Spa, Bali); Elmar Nagele (CEO/Owner, Thermarium, Austria); Oktay
Orhon (Architect & Member, Board of Directors, Aksoy Group/Richmond Hotels,
Turkey). The collective delegate audience (voting via audience response system)
counted as the 7th judge.
This years invitation-only
Summit was held at the historic Ciragan Palace Kempinski Hotel in Istanbul in
mid-May, and attracted a record number of delegates from the spa, hospitality,
design, tourism and medical/wellness sectors hailing from a record number
of countries.
The 2010 Student Challenge was sponsored by
Mandara Spas (a division of Steiner Leisure), which operates 45 branded spas in
luxury resorts across Asia, Micronesia, the Middle East and North America. Each
students registration fees, as well as travel to/from Istanbul and lodging,
was sponsored.
About Global Spa Summit: The Global Spa Summit
is an annual event that attracts top-level executives and leaders from around
the world with interest in the spa and wellness industry. Delegates from diverse
sectors, including hospitality, investment, finance, real estate, medicine, manufacturing,
technology, consulting, product, and other related industries attend this intimate,
high-level gathering focused on advancing the spa and wellness sectors. With increased
attendance by delegates from more countries each year, the Global Spa Summit was
sold out (at 250 attendees, from 40 nations) in 2010.