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KRISTIN Z. WLAZLO - TESKE

ArchitectKristin Z. Wlazlo-Teske

AIA / NCARB

Kristin Z. Wlazlo-Teske


AIA, NCARB, RID, IIDA
Registered Architect
Registered Interior Designer
Atlanta, Georgia

Kristin is a licensed architect and is NCARB certified; she is currently registered in Georgia and South Carolina and has reciprocity to all states not imposing a jurisdiction specific exam. Kristin has over 25 years of experience in planning, programming, design, and construction of commercial architecture projects including collegiate sports and recreation facilities, government and military facilities, K-12 education and higher education facilities, hospitality, and high-rise office buildings.  Kristin is also a licensed interior designer and has a flair for selecting just the right finishes and often specifies the interior finishes for most of the smaller projects in which she contributes.

 

Specialties

IDP (Integrated Project Delivery), Lean Project Delivery, BIM (Building Information Technology), Project Management, Project Coordination, Production Coordination and Construction Detailing, Construction Administration Coordination, Document Control, Programming and Planning, and Interior Design.

 

Software

Revit (Certified Professional); Bluebeam; Lumion; AutoCAD; Microsoft Office, including Microsoft Projects; Adobe Creative Suite, including Photoshop, Illustrator, and InDesign; Newforma.

Experience

Owner | Principal

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ZOE Architecture Design & Interiors, LLC
January 2021 – Present
Atlanta, GA


Architect

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Pond & Company
June 2019 – September 2020
Atlanta, GA


Associate | Senior Project Manager / Senior Project Architect / Contract Administrator

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Rosser International, Inc.
May 2007 – June 2019
Atlanta, GA


Senior Project Manager / Project Architect / Contract Administrator

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Leo A Daly
September 2003 – April 2007
Atlanta, GA


Senior Architectural Technician V

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HOK
January 2002 – August 2003
Atlanta, GA


Architect

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Stang & Newdow
January 2001 – December 2001
Atlanta, GA


Architect

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Smallwood, Reynolds, Stewart, Stewart
July 1994 – January 2001
Atlanta, GA


Education

University of Miami

School Of Architecture

BARCH; Major: Architecture / Minor: Fine Arts
Graduated Cum Laude
Provost’s List, Dean’s List
Member AIAS

Publications

Between Two Towers

The Drawings of the School of Miami
by Vincent Scully
……
Featured Drawings by Kristin Z. Wlazlo-Teske: Hibiscus Wallpaper and The Sinking of the Maine

This elegant publication combines the work of the students and faculty of the school of architecture at the University of Miami with a text by the school’s distinguished visiting professor, Vincent Scully. The school is known for its spectacular analytical and whimsical drawings of architecture, urban planning, and landscape design. Imaginatively designed, Between Two Towers features a horizontal, sketchbook-like format and gatefold pages, capturing the incredible detail, complexity, and scale of the original drawings. Scully’s informative and fluid text recounts the school’s special history, documents the distinctive teaching presence of such professors as Elizabeth Plater Zyberk and Andres Duany, and fully explains each illustration.

This book is neither a history of the School of Architecture of The University of Miami nor a detailed analysis of its pedagogical method. Those topics are touched upon only enough, it is hoped, to put the drawings of the school in context. Those drawings are, in my opinion, much of the most beautiful being produced by any school of architecture at the present time. They can be enjoyed as works of art in their own right. They have also played a central part in re-creating a kind of architecture long lost and much needed today, and they are, finally, the only contemporary architectural drawings that have, however unconsciously, been done in large measure in the spirit of John Ruskin – in the spirit, at least, of the Ruskin of The Two Paths and the drawings from nature. That spirit as Catherine Lynn points out, has played much less a part than it ought to have done in the formation of Modern architecture and has, moreover, come down to us in a seriously distorted and diminished form. These drawings do, I think, put a lot of things right concerning contemporary architecture as it might have been and perhaps ought to be.
Vincent Scully
Coral Gables, 1995