Starnet Design Awards 2023: – June 2024
By Jennifer Bardoner
Hospitality used to be the primary segment where flooring contractors could really show off their skills through sophisticated designs, says Mark Bischoff, president of the Starnet Worldwide group of commercial flooring contractors. But these days, many sectors offer that opportunity by incorporating bold patterns and multiple flooring materials-as evidenced by this year’s submissions for the Starnet Design Awards. “Every segment is getting more interesting,” he says. “This year, even the most conservative entries had obvious patterns in the carpet or complex layouts of hard surface and resilient modular products.”
The flooring that goes into commercial projects says a lot about the economy, Bischoff notes. “When the economy is good and/or original budgets are strong, you see a lot more pattern, not only in the products’ visuals but also in the layout because there is money there for the installers to do intricate patterns,” he explains. It can take years for commercial projects to go from a concept to completion, so this year’s approximately 100 submissions, completed in 2023, reflect the enthusiasm that accompanied the office boom and low-cost financing prior to the pandemic.
“This year we were pleased to see our Starnet Awards entry count reach levels we saw in 2019, which is impressive,” Bischoff says. “Those years were some of the greatest for commercial interiors that we have ever seen.”
In the time since this year’s entries were specified, the world has changed. The pandemic sent office workers home, and the sector continues to evolve amid today’s hybrid schedules and reduced headcount. In its wake, multifamily became the engine for many commercial flooring contractors. With those projects now slowing as financing gets harder and more expensive to secure, contractors are turning to healthcare, education and senior living, Bischoff reports.
Just as installations across the board get more technical, the skilled workforce has dwindled. With flooring one of the last components of a project to be installed, those contractors are now facing often unrealistic timelines and budgets set years prior, while also straining to execute complex installation designs. And in the flexible open-concept environments favored today, any mistake is glaringly obvious.
“The big open spaces are more technical because you can’t hide things,” says Bischoff. “If you’ve got highs and lows or the pattern is off, you can see it a mile away because the sightlines are longer.”
Bischoff reports that many members say they still have near-record backlogs, adding, “We see good momentum in healthcare, education, laboratories, senior living, hospitality and retail. In addition, several progressive thinkers in our cooperative are expanding into exterior applications with sports surfaces, landscape turf and pavers. We are hopeful these trends will boost the prospects for our growth-oriented members to maintain peak capacity out to 2030.”
GRAND PRIZE WINNER
Gold in Corporate
MEMBER: Consolidated Flooring
PROJECT: CIBC New York Headquarters, New York, New York
ARCHITECT/DESIGNER: IA Interior Architects
STARNET PREFERRED VENDORS: Ardex, AHF/Armstrong, Bostik, Johnsonite by Tarkett, Mohawk, Roppe
Category Winner-Education
MEMBER: Cornerstone Commercial Floorings
PROJECT: Magnolia Trace Elementary, Mandeville, Louisiana
ARCHITECT/DESIGNER: Greenleaf Lawson Architects, Sydney Taylor
STARNET PREFERRED VENDORS: Daltile, Flexco, Mapei, Mannington Commercial
Category Winner-Hospitality/Public Spaces
MEMBER: Universal Metro
PROJECT: Pendry Hotel, Newport Beach, California
ARCHITECT/DESIGNER: WATG, Studio Munge
STARNET PREFERRED VENDORS: Ardex, Bostik, C/F Data Systems, EcoSurfaces, RFMS, Spec-ID, Tarkett, Tred-Mor
Category Winner-Healthcare
MEMBER: Bonitz
PROJECT: Rupert Huse Veteran Center, Greenville, South Carolina
ARCHITECT: DP3 Architects
STARNET PREFERRED VENDORS: Ardex, Daltile, Johnsonite by Tarkett, Mapei, Milliken Commercial, Protect-All Flooring
Category Winner-Unique Installation
MEMBER: DCO Commercial Floors
PROJECT: Duke Energy Plaza, Charlotte, North Carolina
DESIGNER: Gensler
STARNET PREFERRED VENDORS: Ardex, RFMS, Spec-ID
Category Winner-Mixed-Use Development
MEMBER: H.J. Martin & Son
PROJECT: Ascent Apartments, Milwaukee, Wisconsin
ARCHITECT: Korb & Associates Architects
STARNET PREFERRED VENDORS: Bostik, Daltile, Eco-Surfaces, Henry Adhesives, Johnsonite by Tarkett, Mapei, Milliken Commercial, RFMS, TEC, Uzin Utz North America
Category Winner-Single-Source Interior Contractor Award
MEMBER: Midwest Floor Covering
PROJECT: Skutt Student Center at Creighton University, Omaha, Nebraska
STARNET PREFERRED VENDORS: Ardex, Daltile, Johnsonite by Tarkett, Mapei, Mohawk, Six Degrees, Wagner Meters
Category Winner-Canadian Project of the Year
MEMBER: Contemporary Office Interiors
PROJECT: John Q Daycares, multiple locations in Manitoba, Canada
DESIGNER: Sequence Interior Design
STARNET PREFERRED VENDORS: Ardex, Johnsonite by Tarkett, Mapei, Mohawk, Tarkett
Category Winner-Rob Starr People’s Choice Award
MEMBER: Universal Metro
PROJECT: Pomona Valley Hospital Medical Center’s Women & Children’s Center, Pomona, California
ARCHITECT: HMC Architects
STARNET PREFERRED VENDORS: Ardex, C/F Data Systems, Daltile, Johnsonite by Tarkett, Milliken Commercial, RFMS, Spec-ID, Tarkett
Copyright 2024 Floor Focus
Related Topics:Lumber Liquidators, Bostik, Starnet, Armstrong Flooring, Tarkett, Mohawk Industries, AHF Products, Mannington Mills, Daltile, Roppe