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Marc Asmus is a registered architect living in St. Paul, Minnesota. After being a Founding partner in Yunker/Asmus Architecture, Inc. for twelve years, Marc established Marc Asmus Architects, Inc. in 2004. Later that year, Marc also became a founding partner of Hive modular, LLC with Paul Stankey and Bryan Meyer.
Like Marc's former company, Marc Asmus Architects, Inc. is an architecture and interiors office With an emphasis on fine residential architecture.
Hive Modular is a modern, modular home design and contracting company providing a line of prefabricated home designs. Hive modular specializes in diverse types of prefabricated construction, from modular to shipping containers to precast concrete
Marc holds an architecture degree from the University of Minnesota (1986). He has worked on a diverse range of commercial, institutional and residential projects with several firms and as a founding partner of Yunker/Asmus Architecture, Inc.
Early, experimental work was produced as a founding partner in AnArch, a, collaborative architecture and public art studio. Marc has collaborated with other public artists on several large-scale works, including projects with artists Richard Posner and Cliff Garten.
Marc's work has focused on thoughtful projects with attention to fine detail and has been published in Metropolitan Home, Renovation Style, Progressive Architecture, Midwest Home and Design, and Architecture Minnesota. Awards include Minnesota AIA Honor Awards for the Pillsbury Conservatory, General Mills Employee Recognition Court and Cowles Farmhouse while at MS&R architects (1988-1992) and for the YA office building and Windsong Farms Golf Club while at Yunker/Asmus Architecture (2002, 2005). Marc Also received a Minnesota Brick Institute Award for the Woodhill Country Club Poolhouse (1996).
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A 1996 graduate with a Bachelor of Architecture from the University of Minnesota, Bryan has
worked in Minneapolis architectural firms SALA and YA Architecture before joining m.a ARCHITECTURE in March, 2004. More recently, Bryan co-founded HIVE Modular, a modern modular home design and contracting company.
Experienced in high quality residential design, Bryan's interest lies in exploring a transitional contemporary influence within traditional domestic architecture. He has completed a variety of projects throughout Minnesota and Wisconsin including renovations of houses by distinguished Minnesota architects, Edwin Lundie and Clarence Johnson. Bryan was project lead on the Windsong Farms Golf Club which received a 2005 AIA Minnesota Honor Award. His work has appeared in Architecture Minnesota, Renovation Style, Midwest Home and Garden as well as Twin Cities newspapers and the book Cabin by Dale Mulfinger and Susan E. Davis.
Bryan and his architect-wife Anne Ryan spend their free time investigating design ideas through the construction of small buildings at their cabin in northern Minnesota.
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Paul Stankey is an Intern Architect living in Minneapolis, Minnesota. He has extensive hands-on experience in design-build stemming from work in Minneapolis and Bozeman, Montana as a designer, craftsman, and teacher. Paul was a founding employee of Ridgeline Builders in Bozeman, later worked with the Montana Arts Council, and more recently as an Intern Architect in the office of YunkerAsmus Architecture in Minneapolis. At YunkerAsmus he collaborated on the Windsong Farms Golf Club which received a 2005 AIA Minnesota Honor Award. He has also worked with Alchemy Architects in St. Paul developing the weeHouse and other residential work. While at Alchemy he had several projects published in Dwell, Metropolitan Home, Wallpaper, and Ink. He is currently working with m.a ARCHITECTURE in Minneapolis and is a Co-Founder of HIVE Modular, a modern modular home supplier and designer.
Paul has a Bachelor of Environmental Design and a Master of Architecture from Montana State University with a focus in concrete technology. While there he worked with Architect/Professor, William Massie helping develop his integration of CNC machining with architecture. He is continually exploring the inherent aesthetics of natural and manufactured materials and objects. Paul's construction of his families' cabin is an exploration of ready-made products, recycled materials and shipping containers within a very tight budget.
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