PBK Architects Inc

PBK Architects Inc

PBK Inc is a multidiscipline architecture/engineering firm headquartered in Houston, Texas with offices in San Antonio, Dallas, Fort Worth, League City, McAllen, Austin, El Paso, Texas, Tulsa, Oklahoma and Baton Rouge, Louisiana. The firm was established in 1981 and is currently headed by founder and president/CEO, Dan Boggio. The firm has a long history of design practice in the K-12 and higher education markets, but also specializes in sports, healthcare, corporate and civic facilities.

With over 200 employees in 10 offices, PBK is one of the largest architecture and engineering design practices in Texas and the southwest United States. The firm specializes in multiple disciplines including architecture, mechanical engineering, electrical engineering, plumbing engineering, civil engineering, structural engineering, technology consulting, interior design and construction administration services.

The firm was the innovator behind the programming and design of the multi-campus "education village" in the Clear Creek Independent School District in League City, Texas. The village combines an elementary school, intermediate school and high school — all on one site with shared buildings and a centralized courtyard. The complex is strategically configured to allow shared access between facilities while maintaining safe and secure division between different grade levels.

The firm's sports division, PBK Sports, designs and builds athletic stadiums, natatoriums, arenas and multipurpose play fields.

PBK has the distinction of being named one of the "Best Places to Work" by local Business Journals in Houston, San Antonio and Dallas for several consecutive years. The firm has also received numerous planning and design awards for its work.

Read more about PBK Architects Inc:  Notable PBK Buildings

Famous quotes containing the word architects:

    Perchance the time will come when every house even will have not only its sleeping-rooms, and dining-room, and talking-room or parlor, but its thinking-room also, and the architects will put it into their plans. Let it be furnished and ornamented with whatever conduces to serious and creative thought. I should not object to the holy water, or any other simple symbol, if it were consecrated by the imagination of the worshipers.
    Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862)