• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer
Legat Architects Main Logo

Legat Architects

  • About Us
    • Our Story
    • Services
    • Special Projects
    • Team
  • Careers
  • Insights
  • Contact Us
  • Projects
    • Learning
    • Wellness
    • Community

Architects and COVID-19: emerging from the quarantine

July 9, 2020 Employee Insights, Learning, News, Wellness by Dennis Paben

Étouffée, perfect circles, and fresh air: Legat Architects employees share COVID-19 quarantine experiences

Legat employees have begun to gradually return to our Illinois and Ohio studios while adhering to CDC-recommended guidelines for reducing the spread of COVID-19. One thing we can’t refute (nor can anyone else): the last three months have been unlike any other.

During the quarantine, we’ve become more observant, more reflective, more appreciative, and more willing to try new things. Our employees’ newfound or revived hobbies range from cooking and puzzle making to birdwatching, carpentry, and gardening. One employee even took up the lute, while another started rating movies based solely on their architectural elements. Below we share a few of those experiences.

Tianye Zhou reignited his passion for cooking.

Tianye Zhou: You Are What You Eat

Tianye, an associate in our Oak Brook studio, allowed his inner chef to emerge during the quarantine. One of the best dishes he made was a crawfish étouffée. Tianye has an appreciation for distinct regional foods based on French, Italian, Mexican, and Chinese cuisines. He considers Cajun and Creole cuisine one of America’s most localized regional foods . . . and it tastes great. Étouffée reminds him of an East Asian cuisine called gaifan, consisting of meat, fish, or vegetables over a plate or bowl of rice. It looks and tastes just like étouffée.

Cooking helped Tianye relax and reflect on many good memories during the quarantine. It also enabled him to communicate with his family back in Beijing, China. “Since we cannot share a dish now,” said Tianye, “they started sending me a photo of their lunch every day. And now I have already received more than 30 photos! Sometimes, I would send back photos of
what I cooked (occasionally) or ordered out (a lot).”

Tianye agrees with the famous maxim, “We are what we eat.” He believes that cooking and eating are not just something we have to do every day. He said, “I believe what I cook and eat is an accumulation of experiences: the people I’ve met, what I’ve learned, and where I’ve gone.”

Of course, Tianye relishes taste, but he also values the story behind each dish. For instance, he still remembers the day when he decided to go to college in Wuhan, a city in south China. His mother made him a list of cooking recipes and told him he needed to learn them all before he left because “it is your identity as a northern man.”

Tianye also has fond memories of a chilly, rainy evening he spent in Ethiopia’s Semien Mountains, where he and his friends enjoyed fresh roasted coffee and Semien Mountains-style chicken goulash . . . all while surrounded by dozens of baboons. Good thing that baboons have a vegetarian diet!

Talented builders took up residence in Mardee Marden’s yard.

Mardee Marden: Unexpected New Neighbors

One morning early in the quarantine, our Gurnee Studio Coordinator Mardee Marden and her daughter Ella looked out a bay window to notice two perfect circles carved into a tree in their yard. Initially, Mardee thought the holes were manmade. She and Ella soon discovered three tiny birds using the holes for nests. The holes were so perfect that Mardee still thought they were manmade . . . then she looked up woodpeckers, which she had never seen.

Mardee said, “To my embarrassment, I imagined woodpeckers would resemble Woody . . . you know who I’m talking about. To my surprise, I discovered the truth: my new neighbors are woodpeckers and they are great builders indeed.”

Mardee and Ella watched the woodpeckers throughout the quarantine and they suspect the woodpeckers were watching them. And the noise? It’s a muffled fast knocking. “We’ve come to love the sounds,” said Mardee, “as long as they stick to the trees and not my house.”

Lots of interesting views in Loren Johnson’s Lincoln Square neighborhood.

Loren Johnson: Neighborhood Exploration

Loren Johnson, senior architect and sustainability coordinator in our Chicago studio, has made a habit of walking his Lincoln Square neighborhood with his wife Krysta and their dog Olaf. According to Loren, Lincoln Square offers an ideal urban trek: it has a mix of commercial and residential including both multi-family buildings and single-family homes. Additionally, the neighborhood has a good blend of incomes and ages with single people, families, and retirees. There are also many fellow dog owners in the neighborhood. All of this adds up to great people watching.

“It’s been very nice to have breaks in the day to get some fresh air,” said Loren. “It helps me to schedule better and keep track of my tasks.”

Olaf mainly enjoys tagging along for the smells. Usually, he likes to greet the neighbor dogs, but everyone has been trying to keep the dogs apart too lately.

Eventually, Loren and Krysta started bringing a garbage bag and a pincher to help keep their neighborhood clean. Loren said, “It’s interesting to see what kinds of things end up in the gutters. We’ve been seeing a lot of fast food containers and PPE lately.”

Tricia Davis took matters into her own hands when she witnessed an attack.

Tricia Davis: To the Rescue

When she was cleaning leaves over one quarantine weekend, Legat’s Chicago Studio Coordinator Tricia Davis and her roommate watched helplessly as a hawk killed a robin that was sheltering her eggs. The roommates put the eggs in a box with a heating pad, then drove an hour to drop them off at a wildlife rehabilitation center.

The vet said the eggs looked good and were almost ready to hatch. They did hatch and the birds were hand-fed before being released.

Contact us or comment below to share your thoughts on this post.

Share

In the News

CommunityEmployee Insights

Train station design: regaining the power of rail

tinley park train station legat architects feature
CommunityNews

Hyatt Place and Hyatt House Hotels in East Moline Bring Upscale Lodging to The Bend on the Mighty Mississippi

Hyatt Place Hyatt House East Moline Rendering
News

In Memory: Alan F. Bombick, AIA (1955 – 2016)

Alan F Bombick feature

Looking For More? Check Out The Full Insights.

View All Chevrone right

Get Our Newsletter

Sign up for Legat’s newsletter to uncover design tips, news, and all things architecture.

Footer

Legat Logo Mark
  • About
    • Our Story
    • Services
    • Special Projects
    • Team
  • Careers
  • Insights
  • Projects
    • Learning
    • Wellness
    • Community

Chicago, IL

312 258 9595

Columbus, OH

614 228 7758

Gurnee, IL

847 662 3535

Iowa City, IA

319 450 0510

Oak Brook, IL

630 990 3535

Quad Cities, IA/IL

309 517 5536

Social link iconSocial link iconSocial link iconSocial link iconSocial link iconSocial link icon
  • Branding Assets
  • File Storage
  • Sitemap
  • Privacy Policy

©

2025

Legat Architects. All rights reserved.

Website designed by ArtVersion.