Spacesmith Brings Sustainable, Socially Just Buildings Upstate SPRING 2019 | BY ANNE PYBURN CRAIG | PORTRAIT BY JESSE TURNQUIST
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n 2005, Manhattan-based architect Jane Smith, principal of Spacesmith, started taking frequent drives upstate, visiting friends. She didn’t know it yet, but she was beginning the journey from visitor to weekender to flextime commuter— and eventually to opening a second Spacesmith office in Hudson with the intention of helping to shape the region’s built environment with an eye on sustainability and social justice.
“I spent a lot of time driving up there, falling in love with the eastern side of Columbia County,” says Smith, whose roots lead back to rural Wyoming. ”I was amazed at the changes happening in Hudson. When the recession hit, she opted to live most of the time in Hudson and take the train as needed, giving up her city apartment. Becoming more than a weekender deepened Smith’s connection to her adopted community. She served on the Historic Preservation Commission for two years and worked with the Olana State Historic Site’s landscape commissioner to curate “Follies, Function & Form: Imagining Olana’s Summer House,” an exhibit for which 21 architects and landscape architects were invited to imagine and sketch the summer house that was identified by its builder, the painter Frederic Church, on the master plan for Olana, but which he never designed or realized.