PROFILE Sam Van Dam - MARCH 2008
By Joshua Bodwell
Photography Darren Setlow
Architect with an artist's heart
The odd angles of the
abandoned

At the edge of the front lawn, warmed by the sun’s heat, a celebrated doctor and
his ten-year-old son observed and rendered the scene before them in delicate
watercolors.
“I’d
been painting with my father since I was five,” remembers architect Sam Van
Dam. “But on that day, for the first time I think, I was really observing the
farmhouse not just to paint it; I was observing the
place—how
it was put together and what qualities made it wonderful.”
While
few of us are lucky enough to remember in such crystalline detail those
rarified moments that came to define who we are, Van Dam—now the principal of
Van Dam Architecture and Design in
For
the architect, art and home are inextricably interwoven. While painting remains
a passion, Van Dam has spent most of the past 30 years refining his
architectural vision across
the Architect as a Young Man
Born on the cusp of the
1950s, Van Dam grew up in metropolitan
Sam
Vam Dam attended
During
his year at Sasaki, Van Dam solidified his passion for the built environment
before enrolling in the Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s architecture
program. In 1976, he earned a master’s degree in architecture and, after
spending two weeks at Pemaquid Point in late September, decided to settle in
“What
I didn’t even realize then,” Van Dam admits today, “is what a tremendous place
A
After four years at
Terrien, Van Dam struck out on his own and spent eight years working on a
variety of commercial, institutional, and residential projects in the greater
Portland area. Through the late 1980s and 1990s, Van Dam partnered with Richard
Renner and Bradford Woodworth, and worked on several high-profile projects,
including the Maine Audubon’s
In
2003, Van Dam opened Van Dam Architecture and Design on
The Architect as Sociologist
Like his father, Sam Van
Dam has an empathetic bedside manner that he considers indispensable to his
work. “The key to everything we do starts with our willingness to engage and listen,”
says Van Dam. While his firm has gained a reputation for its ability to work in
a variety of styles and continually execute innovative designs, Van Dam
believes that the true source of their success is an ability to listen.
“If
you listen carefully enough, everyone has good ideas to share in the design
process,” says Van Dam, noting that every observation counts, no matter how
small. He says good design can and does include compromise. “In our firm, we
talk about the value of listening to all ideas and responding with careful
consideration.”
Van
Dam strives to understand how people relate and interact, and what motivates
and inspires them. “I love my exchanges with clients—finding out what makes
life great for them,” he says. If a client loves to peel carrots from their
garden more than anything else, then Van Dam will design a home with a
wonderful porch that faces the garden and catches the afternoon sun. “All good
design begins with use,” he insists. “That sounds so basic, but it’s often
forgotten. Good design is about combining the practical with the sublime.”
Luckily
for the craftsmen who work with Van Dam, the fact that someone will eventually
have to execute his thoughtful designs never strays far from his mind as he
draws and dreams. He gained this appreciation for the practical application of
design during his time in the Built Form architecture group at MIT. “As a Built
Form student,” Van Dam explains, “I learned that good design begins with a full
understanding of how a space is to be used, and how the materials used to
design it are assembled.”
The Community Architect
With several residential
and institutional projects on the boards, including a new community center for
Islesboro, Van Dam finds that his involvement with

On
a recent trip to
Van
Dam says he is perpetually heartened by observing and being with people who
have almost no material wealth, and yet have found a way to be happy. “It makes
me ask myself: ‘How much do we need? What is important?’”
The Architect at 58
With more than three
decades of experience behind him, the process of editing out the unnecessary
has become a central tenet in Van Dam’s work. In his personal lexicon, “edit”
does not mean stripping down a design to antiseptic starkness, but it refers to
the gradual process of questioning and revising that draws out the aesthetic
and utilitarian details that truly matter. And he revels in the details: Will
the sun blanket the kitchen in light and warmth as the homeowners sip their
morning coffee? How will the rain look from the living room sofa as it runs off
the gently pitched roof?
And
perhaps Van Dam even wonders: How will a father and son see this house when
they show up 100 years from now to render it in delicate watercolors?



