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Schenectady has a new rising
star, and within a relatively short period of time, it has
become a shooting star. Synthesis Architects LLP on Jay Street
in Schenectady appears to have a clear vision of where it
wants to go and is working aggressively at making that vision
a reality. The team of architects just celebrated its 10th
year as a business in Schenectady. Within the last year its
staff has doubled and it is up to its drafting tables with
big money jobs.
The Jay Street office of
Synthesis Architects is housed in an older building that has
been renovated. The interior office was designed by the firm.
Partners John Senisi, Michael Szemansco and the most recent
addition, landscape architect Richard Eats, have a unique
commitment not only to their work but to the community in
which they live and do business. Mayor Al Jurczynski said
Synthesis is very much involved in the community. “They seem
to have their ear to the ground and know what is going on,” he said. “Because of that, they get in on the ground floor.”
“John [Senisi] invested
in downtown when it wasn’t trendy to invest in downtown.
Now it is becoming fashionable,” Jurczynski said. The
mayor cited the recent investments made in Schenectady by
Omni Development Co. Inc. of Albany and Rye, Westchester County,
and the Rotterdam-based Galesi Group. “These are developers
traditionally investing in Albany.”
With the redevelopment of
Schenectady still in its infancy, Synthesis Architects is
tapping into what it sees as incredible potential for growth,
not only for the firm but also for the city. The enthusiasm
of this partnership flows into the firm’s relationships
with city officials.
George Robertson, president
of Schenectady Economic Development Corp., the economic developer
for the County, can’t say enough about the firm. “One,
we deal with them on a professional basis and we hear nothing
but outstanding reports regarding their quality of work and
their attention to detail,” he said. “Two, from
a community standpoint, there is not another firm around that
has donated more time and services than Synthesis in the last
five years.”
Robertson is quick to point
out that others also have donated their services, but none
to the degree that Synthesis has.
“Synthesis did all the
Schenectady 2000 concept work pro-bono. It is that work which
got us the $5 million from Gov. Pataki and Sen. Farley for
downtown redevelopment. Their commitment to this community
is incredible,” he said.
From making sure they are
involved in various aspects of the development process to
ensuring a top-quality design, the owners have input on virtually
everything produced in the office.
Eats, the new partner, thinks
that what sets Synthesis apart is the personality of the firm.
The principals take a hands-on approach when it comes to each
job. “They work with the project from day one,”
he said. “They present, they draft, we do everything.”
Eats previously was a founder and principal and of The Environmental
Design Partnership, an engineering and landscape architecture
firm in Clifton Park, and a city planner for Schenectady.
Milton Mitchell, commissioner
of public works and city engineer for Schenectady, agrees
that Synthesis is very supportive of the community both in
time and effort, whether they are getting paid or not.
“They are willing to
work around the clock to meet tight time constraints. Recently,
we had to put together an MVP [Health Plan] proposal within
a week and it required a great deal of extra effort on the
part of Synthesis to get the proposal out on time,”
Mitchell said. “They worked one night right through
to the next morning. There is just a lot of effort on their
part to make sure things get done. The quality of their work,
their renderings, is Class A.”
Partner Senisi believes that
their committed and talented staff is one of the forces behind
the success of the firm. “We are really able to trust
the work to them, and we have a system that helps keep us
informed on the projects,” he said. With weekly project
scheduling meetings and careful screening of prospective employees,
the leadership of this firm is not taking anything for chance.
“At times, we have been
understaffed and we work long hours because we are trying
to get the right mix and not just fill the office with warm
bodies,” said Szemansco, the third partner. Nevertheless,
within the last year the firm’s staff has doubled, with
20 on the current payroll and more office renovations under
way to allow for expansion.
Senisi and Szemansco started
the firm in 1989. In college, Senisi had no idea he was going
to become an architect. He was an art and English major with
a specialty in Shakespeare. His wife, Ellen, helped him figure
out where his true talent lay. Senisi went back to school
to study architecture at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and
now has 20 years’ experience in the profession.
Szemansco, on the other hand,
knew from childhood what he wanted to be. “I always
enjoyed building things. I loved it,” he said. “To
take something from the beginning and bring it to its completion
is very satisfying.” Szemansco, with 15 years’
experience, said that to be a successful architect, you need
to be flexible and be able to work with your clients in establishing
appropriate budgets and building designs.
He thinks impediments can
be opportunities. “The art is making the best out of
the conditions you are working within,” Szemansco said.
“If we don’t look at the projects that way, you
end up turning out mediocre architecture.”
Currently, the firm is working
with Union College to renovate some recent acquisitions in
the Seward Place area of Schenectady. The college is beginning
to bring its campus more into downtown through the purchase
of 38 dwellings to use for student housing. Synthesis is involved
in the renovation of a number of those homes.
A multi-discipline firm,
Synthesis is also expanding its areas of expertise. With the
recent addition of Eats, landscape architecture now is a part
of what is becoming a one-stop-shop approach to architecture.
Synthesis also does interior design.
“We wanted to round
out the firm, to have control over the entire appearance of
a project from the outside to the inside,” Szemansco
said. While they don’t pick out curtains and vases,
the staff does choose colors, commercial furnishings, lighting
and carpeting. The firm also specializes in code evaluations,
construction management, residential design along with site
planning and what the firm is fast becoming known for: urban
design.
Some of the projects recently
completed by Synthesis are the $1.5 million design of the
Cancer Center at Albany Medical Center, and the $1.5 million
renovation of the Schenectady Day Nursery, one of the oldest
continuing day care facilities in Schenectady. The design
of the Central Park Pavilion in Schenectady was donated by
Synthesis and won the 1994 American Institute of Architects
award.
Szemansco believes that donating
services helps to cultivate working relationships. “We
have developed several projects that many would have seen
as ’pie in the sky’ kind of ideas, such as the
State Street streetscape. We were instrumental in getting
it started,” he said. Senisi credits the Schenectady
2000 program and the State Street streetscape project with
helping to speed up the master plan for downtown. Hunter Interests,
Inc. of Baltimore, is overseeing the redevelopment of downtown
Schenectady. Synthesis has been chosen as a subcontractor
for the project.
“Bringing the city back
is truly exciting. I grew up here and I can see resurgence.
I want to be a part of that,” Eats said.
It appears that Schenectady has a committed advocate in Synthesis
Architects — one that just may go the distance in making
a vision Schenectady’s future reality.”
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