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Scott C Wilson,
AIA
Director
If you sampled
many of our pages, you'll see that I have the longest resume. That is
because, frankly (besides Tony, Barbara and Jannie), I'm the oldest (and
have the least amount of hair). Reading it reminds me of all the significant
accomplishments that I have professionally achieved. My partner, Scott,
and our gang of creative collaborators consistently protest my attempts
to "over-achieve" and my insistence on near-perfection. Despite their
disapproving looks, they stay the course, we achieve the improbable and,
in the end, they too are proud of what we do each and every day. At the
core of my drive is a notorious "mid-western Lutheran work ethic." If
you haven't met one of us before, we have never learned how to "just relax"
and we learned at an early age to look disapprovingly on idle time (you
know, "the devil's playground"). So, for me to just lie about on the beach
is a real challenge. Therefore I always seek easier challenges that involve
dust and sweat. When not working professionally, my evenings, weekends,
and holidays have always been filled with projects, large and small. My
folks taught me to teach myself any needed skill and to attempt anything,
so I have. I've rebuilt auto engines, fixed antique clocks, remodeled
many houses, including the full restoration of our circa 1870's Victorian
townhouse, and am now about 3/4 through the restoration of our 1959 wooden
cabin cruiser.
The running
joke with my children, Hannah, Berkley, Kristin* and Brad, is that I've
had a table saw in my living rooms for more years than I haven't (it is
now properly parked in my workshop).
*and three grandchildren, Parker, Spencer, and Liana Kristina
But hard work and motivation alone didn't get me to where we are today.
One has to believe in destiny or even the existence of a larger Grand
Plan that must have a pre-charted course for our lives.
27 years ago, I was coerced into designing a stage set for a community
theater in Deer Isle, Maine (an island where I lived for 4 years). The
assignment included, unbeknownst to me at the time, building them, painting
them, being the rigger and then running the stage crew. The next year,
I also dabbled in lighting and helped with costumes. The third year, I
stepped in front of the curtain and attempted to dance and sing. My singing
was OK: my dancing was pathetic (and still is). From this humble beginning,
20 shows and 27 years ago, I began a professional career that now specializes
in design for the performing arts. And because of this specialization,
I met my near perfect wife Celeste (former Marketing and PR Director at
the Broward Center for the Performing Arts).
But, back
to destiny. In high school, 1967 to be exact, I dreamed of becoming a
naval architect. And while I had never seen an ocean, and this is an odd
dream for a country kid from Illinois, at the age of 16, I built a 33
foot long houseboat. Though the steering often failed, and she never exceeded
2 or 3 knots (running downstream), it didn't sink. I became an architect
instead. So, here I am, having come full circle, and my dreams of building
boats ("ships" I've been taught to say) have merged with my passion for
theater design. Some story, huh? Mere coincidence? You decide.
I love what we do. Each day is filled with creative challenge and a great
deal of comic relief. Come join us in the fun.
Scott (the architect formerly known as "Willy")
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sign:
type:
beer:
tool:
tree:
hero:
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Gemini
Cat
Single malt scotch
Roller-ball white-out
Climbing & treehouse trees
Buzz Lightyear
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