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“The past five years
have seen many changes to the city’s landscape, and
most of them began on drawing boards in a hip, airy, second-floor
suite of offices on Jay Street.
Pick a development, from
the amphitheater in Central Park to the makeover of the old
Maqua building looming over I-890, and you’ll find a design
by Synthesis Architects.
The firm, led by John Senisi,
Michael Szemansco and Richard Eats, has had a role in virtually
every significant project in Schenectady since 1996. Their
projects tend to inspire oohs and ahhs from the public that
uses them and the politicians that commission them.
“I think one of the things
that they’ve got going for them is their involvement in the
community,” said Mayor Albert P. Jurczynski, calling Synthesis
a “good-quality organization.”
“They’re pro-Schenectady,” the mayor said. “I know that they do work outside the city,
but you always know that they understand the dynamics involved
in Schenectady when they work on a project, and I think that
has contributed to their success.”
The firm has designed, or
is designing, projects including the reconstruction of State
Street, Seward Place, upper Union Street and the Jay Street
pedestrian mall.
Senisi and company have
produced renderings, sometimes at no charge, for the Schenectady
city government and Schenectady 2000 as the community works
toward a clear vision for its future downtown.
Outside Schenectady, examples
of Synthesis work include the new Progressive Insurance building
in downtown Albany, the corporate offices of the General Electric
Research and Development Center in Niskayuna, the Cancer Center
at Albany Medical Center Hospital, and a cafeteria at the
Pittsfield, Massachusetts GE plant.
The company has been hired
to re-design Lark Street in Albany, and to write design guidelines
for buildings in the city’s C-1 commercial districts.
Along with another Schenectady
company, Transportation Concepts, Synthesis will do a study
of how to best use 265 acres along South Troy’s waterfront,
and is working on a study of how to improve vehicular and
pedestrian traffic on the campus of Rensselaer Polytechnic
Institute.
But it is here that the
Synthesis vision dominates. The firm is leaving its mark on
Schenectady in a way that no firm has since Feibes & Schmitt
designed some of downtown’s most prominent buildings in the
1970’s.
Its influence will go much
further if the newly released downtown master plan is adhered
to, because Synthesis was deeply involved in researching and
writing the plan.
The company also does less
glamorous, lower-profile private-sector work for clients such
as the New Country chain of auto dealerships. But Senisi,
45, and Eats, 52, said they are drawn to the municipal design
work out of civic pride.
“I wanted to get into something
that was different, the urban design stuff, high-profile projects,” said Eats, a Mont Pleasant native who joined Synthesis in
January 1999. “And truly, I saw the city coming back and I
wanted to be part of that.”
“We truly care about the
city,” Senisi said. “We’re on the verge of really expanding
what the city can be like in the next 10 or 20 years.”
Senisi is a designer of
buildings, exterior and interior. Eats is a landscape architect.
Expertise in the two disciplines broadens the services Synthesis
can offer and results in better projects, the principals said.
The firm’s Jay Street office,
stylish enough for Boston or San Francisco, is a quietly busy
place, with young architects drafting on large computer screens.
The staff has grown from around a dozen a year ago to 21 today,
and Senisi and Eats said they are almost out of room. (They
promised to stay downtown when they move to bigger quarters.)
The firm wants to be busier.
The Synthesis of the future will be a builder, not just a
designer: “We really want to expand into construction,” Senisi
said.
Senisi, a New York City
native who grew up in Poughkeepsie, graduated from Syracuse
University with a degree in English in 1976 and went back
to school to study architecture at Virginia Tech.
After college, he worked
a series of jobs before landing in the Capital Region and
working for Stracher Roth Gilmore, now a competitor whose
own Jay Street office is almost directly across the street.
Senisi founded Synthesis with Szemansco in 1988.
Eats graduated from West
Virginia University with a degree in landscape engineering
in 1971. He was a planner for the city of Schenectady for
a year and a half, worked at CT Male Associates after that,
then founded Environmental Design Partnership in 1977. He
left that company to join Synthesis.
Eats’s Environmental
Design Partnership drew up the plans for the Stockade Gateway
project at Erie Boulevard and Union Street, and worked with
Synthesis on the Jay Street reconstruction.
Eats is a nephew of a political
titan, Dr. Fred Isabella, the former state senator and city
councilman.
Senisi said the firm’s
philosophy is that any project can be designed well, that
less expensive need not mean less attractive. He lamented
the tendency of developers to sacrifice beauty to save money.
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