acsa news digest october 2011

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ACSANewsDigest October 2011 A Publication of the Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture DREXEL UNIVERSITY After 37 years on the Drexel faculty and 25 years of leadership Paul M. Hirshorn, AIA has retired at the end of the academic year 2010-2011. Hirshorn was Head of the Department of Architecture from 1986 to 2007, Head of the Department of Ar- chitecture + Interiors from 2007 to 2010 and served as Architecture Program Direc- tor this past year. Under his leadership the Arfaa Lecture Series was established, the Architecture Program’s off-campus studies programs were launched and the unique 2+4 architecture degree program was cre- ated. Paul Hirshorn has worked tirelessly for the Department, the Program and for Drexel University and we would like to thank and acknowledge him for his many contributions. Assistant Professor Dr. Ulrike Altenmüller- Lewis, AIA has assumed the position of Program Director for Architecture in July 2011. Dr. Altenmüller-Lewis had served as Associate Director of the Architecture Pro- gram since she began teaching at Drexel in September 2008. This past spring Profes- sor Altenmüller-Lewis won the prestigious Allen Rothwarf Award for Teaching Excel- lence, Drexel’ University’s highest teaching award. Erik Sundquist has joined the Department of Architecture + Interiors as an Assistant Teaching Professor in the Architecture Pro- gram. Prior to his appointment at Drexel University, Sundquist taught at the Col- lege of Architecture and the Arts at Florida International University in Miami Florida. As a practicing architectural designer he has collaborated with architects, artists, industrial designers and interior design- ers on high profile projects that span four continents. Eric Sundquist received his BA in Psychology and Economics from The University of Massachusetts, a MA in Po- litical Psychology from SUNY Stony Brook and his MArch from Florida International University. In his teaching and research, he has explored the role of sustainability in professional practice and effects of digi- tal based design on traditional notions of building tectonics and scale. Nicole Koltick has been promoted to As- sistant Professor in the Department of Ar- chitecture + Interiors. She coordinates the technology course work and digital initia- tives in the Interiors Design undergradu- ate and Interior Architecture and Design graduate programs. Nicole Koltick received an M. Arch. from UCLA and a BFA, in Art with University Honors, from Carnegie Mel- lon University. She is a principal of the trans-dicsiplinary design firm lutz/koltick. Koltick’s current research interests include future speculation, robotics, computation, artificial intelligence and interactive envi- ronments. She is interested in exploring the boundaries between technology, sci- ence, the “natural,” the built environment and its inhabitants. Nicole Koltick works with complex and fantastical narratives as well as multi-agent systems and advanced computational strategies to envision new landscapes, environments and territories for inhabitation. CORNELL UNIVERSITY Cornell University’s Milstein Hall – the first new building in over 100 years for the renowned College of Architecture, Art and Planning (AAP) – opened its studios for students in late August with comple- tion coming in October 2011. Led by OMA partner Shohei Shigematsu, who directs the New York office, and Pritzker Prize- winner Rem Koolhaas, the design for the 47,000-square-foot building physically unites the AAP’s long-separated facilities to form a platform for interdisciplinary col- laboration. “Milstein Hall operates on many levels,” says AAP dean Kent Kleinman. “It rede- fines the entry for the northern edge of the campus; it provides a permeable boundary between academic space and the public; it offers extraordinary spatial relationships between internal programmatic elements; and it offers a landscape of studios that fosters a level of interaction between our undergraduate and graduate architecture students that we have never enjoyed be- fore.” Milstein Hall’s large horizontal plate con- nects the second levels of the AAP’s exist- ing Sibley Hall and Rand Hall to provide 25,000 square feet of studio space with panoramic views of the surrounding envi- ronment. Enclosed by floor-to-ceiling glass and a green roof with 41 skylights, this “upper plate” cantilevers almost 50 feet over University Avenue to establish a rela- tionship with the Foundry, a third existing AAP facility. The wide-open expanse of the plate — structurally supported by a hybrid truss system — stimulates interaction and allows flexible use over time. Beneath the hovering studio plate, the ground level accommodates major program elements including a 253-seat auditorium, and a dome that encloses a 5,000 square foot circular critique space. The dome serves multiple functions: it supports the ACSANews Digest is published once monthly and is distributed digitally to all full- time faculty in ACSA member schools via the ACSA Update membership email. These Regional School items were originally published on the ACSA website, which offers extensive coverage of member schools activities updated daily. Visit www.acsa-arch.org/ACSANews/read for more news. © Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture 2011 NORTHEAST

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ACSANewsDigestOctober 2011

A Publication of the Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture

DREXEL UNIVERSITY

After 37 years on the Drexel faculty and 25 years of leadership Paul M. Hirshorn, AIA has retired at the end of the academic year 2010-2011. Hirshorn was Head of the Department of Architecture from 1986 to 2007, Head of the Department of Ar-chitecture + Interiors from 2007 to 2010 and served as Architecture Program Direc-tor this past year. Under his leadership the Arfaa Lecture Series was established, the Architecture Program’s off-campus studies programs were launched and the unique 2+4 architecture degree program was cre-ated. Paul Hirshorn has worked tirelessly for the Department, the Program and for Drexel University and we would like to thank and acknowledge him for his many contributions.

Assistant Professor Dr. Ulrike Altenmüller-Lewis, AIA has assumed the position of Program Director for Architecture in July 2011. Dr. Altenmüller-Lewis had served as Associate Director of the Architecture Pro-gram since she began teaching at Drexel in September 2008. This past spring Profes-sor Altenmüller-Lewis won the prestigious Allen Rothwarf Award for Teaching Excel-lence, Drexel’ University’s highest teaching award.

Erik Sundquist has joined the Department of Architecture + Interiors as an Assistant Teaching Professor in the Architecture Pro-gram. Prior to his appointment at Drexel University, Sundquist taught at the Col-

lege of Architecture and the Arts at Florida International University in Miami Florida. As a practicing architectural designer he has collaborated with architects, artists, industrial designers and interior design-ers on high profile projects that span four continents. Eric Sundquist received his BA in Psychology and Economics from The University of Massachusetts, a MA in Po-litical Psychology from SUNY Stony Brook and his MArch from Florida International University. In his teaching and research, he has explored the role of sustainability in professional practice and effects of digi-tal based design on traditional notions of building tectonics and scale.

Nicole Koltick has been promoted to As-sistant Professor in the Department of Ar-chitecture + Interiors. She coordinates the technology course work and digital initia-tives in the Interiors Design undergradu-ate and Interior Architecture and Design graduate programs. Nicole Koltick received an M. Arch. from UCLA and a BFA, in Art with University Honors, from Carnegie Mel-lon University. She is a principal of the trans-dicsiplinary design firm lutz/koltick. Koltick’s current research interests include future speculation, robotics, computation, artificial intelligence and interactive envi-ronments. She is interested in exploring the boundaries between technology, sci-ence, the “natural,” the built environment and its inhabitants. Nicole Koltick works with complex and fantastical narratives as well as multi-agent systems and advanced computational strategies to envision new landscapes, environments and territories for inhabitation.

CORNELL UNIVERSITY

Cornell University’s Milstein Hall – the first new building in over 100 years for the renowned College of Architecture, Art and Planning (AAP) – opened its studios for students in late August with comple-tion coming in October 2011. Led by OMA partner Shohei Shigematsu, who directs the New York office, and Pritzker Prize-winner Rem Koolhaas, the design for the 47,000-square-foot building physically unites the AAP’s long-separated facilities to form a platform for interdisciplinary col-laboration.

“Milstein Hall operates on many levels,” says AAP dean Kent Kleinman. “It rede-fines the entry for the northern edge of the campus; it provides a permeable boundary between academic space and the public; it offers extraordinary spatial relationships between internal programmatic elements; and it offers a landscape of studios that fosters a level of interaction between our undergraduate and graduate architecture students that we have never enjoyed be-fore.”

Milstein Hall’s large horizontal plate con-nects the second levels of the AAP’s exist-ing Sibley Hall and Rand Hall to provide 25,000 square feet of studio space with panoramic views of the surrounding envi-ronment. Enclosed by floor-to-ceiling glass and a green roof with 41 skylights, this “upper plate” cantilevers almost 50 feet over University Avenue to establish a rela-tionship with the Foundry, a third existing AAP facility. The wide-open expanse of the plate — structurally supported by a hybrid truss system — stimulates interaction and allows flexible use over time.

Beneath the hovering studio plate, the ground level accommodates major program elements including a 253-seat auditorium, and a dome that encloses a 5,000 square foot circular critique space. The dome serves multiple functions: it supports the

ACSANews Digest is published once monthly and is distributed digitally to all full-time faculty in ACSA member schools via the ACSA Update membership email. These Regional School items were originally published on the ACSA website, which offers extensive coverage of member schools activities updated daily.

Visit www.acsa-arch.org/ACSANews/read for more news.

© Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture 2011

NORTHEAST

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raked auditorium seating, it becomes the stairs leading up to the studio plate above, and it is the artificial ground for an array of exterior seating pods fostering public activities.

Associate Professor Mark Cruvellier was ap-pointed to a three-year term as the depart-ment chair of architecture effective July 1, 2011. As noted in AAP dean Kent Klein-man’s announcement, “[Cruvellier] has a long administrative track record, but even more importantly, he has the skills and dis-position to support a strong team.” Cruvel-lier takes over as chair from Dagmar Rich-ter who begins as a department chair at the Pratt Institute this January.

Associate Professor Lily Chi was appointed director of graduate studies (Field of Archi-tecture), and Associate Professor Andrea Simitch was named director of the B.Arch. program. A search for the Edgar A. Tafel Professor of Architecture / Director of Pro-fessional M.Arch. Program is underway.

AfterTaste: Expanded Practices in Interior Design, coedited by AAP dean Kent Klein-man, will be released in October 2011. The book includes texts, interviews, and portfo-lios based on the annual AfterTaste sym-posia hosted by Parsons The New School for Design. The materials document new theories and emerging critical practices that argue that the field of interior design is inadequately served by its historical re-liance on taste-making and taste-makers, and attempt to promote new voices and perspectives in both the theory and prac-tice of the discipline.

CATHOLIC UNIVERSITY OF AMERICA

The School of Architecture and Planning at The Catholic University of America insti-tuted a new position for an Associate Dean for Research to coordinate and support re-search/creative work efforts at the school. Professor Barry D. Yatt, FAIA, CSI, was ap-pointed the first ADR.Professor Barry Yatt, FAIA, CSI, co-wrote with Joseph McCade, Ed.D, a chapter ti-

tled “Defining Creativity and Design” for an upcoming book by CTTE, the Council on Technology Teacher Education. This spring, he also will be presenting a three-part na-tional webinar for CSI on the National CAD Standard (NCS), based on the work of a CSI Task Team. He continues to work on the manuscript of his book on predesign analysis Definition: Gaining Insight,. Pro-fessor Yatt is also working with a team of experts in artificial intelligence, systems architecture, and space sciences on a grant from DARPA, the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency. They are devel-oping an “adaptive” (that learns from its experiences) but “psychologically stable” computer program that develops optimized designs for the complex systems applicable to space missions and that are responsive to evolving needs, resources, and condi-tions. Prof. Yatt’s contribution to the team is in the area of predesign analysis, stake-holder facilitation, and graphic design.

The school recently established a new Center for Building Stewardship as the research arm of the Master of Science in Sustainable Design program.

Professor Julius Levine, FAICP, is nearing completion of a book titled Reweaving a Neighborhood Fabric: Perpetuating Diver-sity, Buttressing Shepherd Park through the next generation of Ohev Shalom con-gregants.

Associate Professor Eric Jenkins, AIA, continues to research the links between analytical freehand sketching and design education by examining recent studies in cognitive psychology and in human physi-ology. He is completing work on a book titled Design by Drawing to be published by Routledge with a grant from the Graham Foundation.

Associate Professor Chris Grech, RIBA, di-rector of the MSSD program is carrying out research for the Athena Sustainable Ma-terials Institute on a database of building materials in the Washington, DC area.

Associate Professor Miriam Gusevich pre-sented two papers this past summer. Urban Pentimento: Redeeming the Metropolitan Landscape, was presented at the EURA conference in Copenhagen and Architec-

ture, Ecology and Economy was presented at the Economy Conference at the School of Architecture in Cardiff, Wales.

Assistant Professor Brad Guy, Assoc AIA, LEED AP, received a grant for $10,009 from the Construction Materials Recycling Association to research and develop a national standard for certification of con-struction and demolition debris processing facility recycling rates, tentatively titled “Certification of Recycling Rates” (CORR).

The School of Architecture and Planning at The Catholic University of America is celebrating its 100th anniversary this year. Highlighting this milestone is a three-day symposium in October on “Transcending Architecture – Aesthetics and Ethics of the Numinous.” Lectures on sacred archi-tecture will be led by a field of renowned scholars and practitioners from disciplines ranging from architecture and religion to philosophy and social work. The sympo-sium is organized by Associate Professor Dr. Julio Bermudez, director of the Sacred Space and Cultural Studies graduate con-centration. For more information check: http://www.sacred-space.net/symposium/

Architect Juhani Pallasmaa is the Profes-sor in Residence at CUArch this Fall 2011. He is directing a month long graduate stu-dio investigating the relationship between architecture and spirituality. He is also thoroughly involved in the life of the school through guest talks, reviews, and sponta-neous engagement with students. Juhani Pallasmaa’s residence is made possible in part by the Clarence Walton Fund for Catholic Architecture. Past Walton Critics include architects Antoine Predock (2009) and Craig Hartman (2010). Visit CUAArch site at http://publicaffairs.cua.edu/releas-es/2011/ArchVisitor.cfm for more informa-tion.

Assistant Professor Hollee Hitchcock Becker and Associate Professor Julie Ju-Youn Kim joined The Catholic University of America in August. Professor Becker comes to CUA from Kent State University and has degrees from Rensselaer Polytechnic Insti-tute and Kent State University. She will be teaching Structures and doing research on environmentally-adaptive facades and pre-fabricated disaster resistant replacement

SOUTHEAST

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housing. Professor Kim comes from The University of Mercy at Detroit where she also directed the March program. She has degrees from Wellesley College and MIT and is the founder of c2architecturestu-dio, an award-winning design practice in-cluded in Architectural Record’s Emerging Architect series (06/10). This is also one of 12 architectural firms included by the Korean Architects Association as “Young Korean Architects in the Global Context.” Professor Kim will be teaching Design Stu-dios, building technology and directing the 2012 Summer Institute for Architecture.

Professor Randy Ott, Dean of the School of Architecture, was recognized with an award of the AIA Washington DC chapter in the ‘Unbuilt’ category. The “Salt Chapel” on the edge of Utah’s Great Salt Lake was chosen among more than 100 submissions presented. The jury found the project an adventurous exploration or form, context, and poetry.

Associate Professor Dr. Adnan Morshed, was invited by the Woodrow Wilson Center in Washington, DC, to present the paper, “The Central Threat: Dhaka as a Frontier in the Climate-Change Narrative of Bangla-desh.” Dr. Morshed’s article, “Ascending with Nine Chains to the Moon: Buckmin-ster Fuller’s ideation of the Genius,” was published in the GSD journal New Geogra-phies. His review of the National Building Museum exhibition, Designing Tomorrow: America’s World’s Fairs of the 1930s, is forthcoming in the Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians.

Associate Professor Eric Jenkins presented the paper “Belcamp: A Little Bit of Europe in Maryland” at the Conference on Com-pany Towns of the Bata Concern held in Prague, March 2011.

Professor of Practice Dr. Raj Barr-Kumar, FAIA RIBA, was the keynote speaker at the Memorial Celebration honoring Architect Raimund Abraham held at the Austrian Embassy in Washington DC last September. His award-winning design of the restaurant ‘Bibiana’ in Washington DC was featured in the Fall issue of Architecture DC. He was also the keynote speaker at the City School

of Architecture and the Sri Lanka Institute of Architects, and a featured speaker at the Pacific Area Quantity Surveyors World Congress. The Financial Times of Sri Lanka published a full page interview with Dr Barr entitled “Go Green to Make Green.”

VIRGINIA TECH

For UIA 2011 TOKYO 24th World Con-gress of Architecture, G.T. Ward Professor of Architecture Donna Dunay, FAIA, and Helene Renard, Assistant Professor of In-terior Design at Virginia Tech, gave opening and closing talks for the exhibit, “For the Future: Pioneering Women in Architecture from Japan and Beyond,” mounted at the Tokyo Forum. “For the Future:” showcases work in an historical framework through projects and achievements between Japan and the US, and beyond. The exhibition designed as a collaborative effort of the International Archive of Women in Archi-tecture Center (IAWA) at Virginia Tech with the International Union of Women Archi-tects (UIFA) Japan to celebrate 25 years of the IAWA presents unique, early and largely unknown histories of women’s contribu-tions to architecture.

NORTH CAROLINA STATE UNIVERSITY

Dean Marvin J. Malecha, FAIA, of the Col-lege of Design at North Carolina State Uni-versity was awarded the 2011 F. Carter Williams Gold Medal during the annual AIA North Carolina conference held at the Ra-leigh Convention Center September 8-10. The F. Carter Williams Gold Medal is the highest honor presented by the chapter to a member of AIA North Carolina in recogni-tion of a distinguished career or extraordi-nary accomplishments as an architect.

Malecha was honored for his immense con-tributions to the architecture profession including seventeen years as an architect and educator in the state of North Carolina with a career spanning over five decades between two coasts. “He’s accomplished more in his career to date than other distin-guished professionals have accomplished in this state in a life time,” says alumnus John Atkins III, FAIA. In 2009, Malecha served as president of the American Insti-

tute of Architects, providing distinguished service and leadership throughout a tumul-tuous time in the nation’s economy.

Alumnus Phil Freelon, FAIA, says, “He’s a leader in the academic and professional world. One could argue that Dean Male-cha’s most significant and lasting contri-bution has been his effort to bring these two factions together. He has written ex-tensively on this topic and he continues to work tirelessly to bridge the gap between architecture education and practice.”

UNIVERSITY OF TENNESSEE-KNOXVILLE

The University of Tennessee College of Ar-chitecture and Design is hosting its first college-wide Open House, Friday, Novem-ber 11, in tandem with university-wide Open House, Saturday, November 12 http://admissions.utk.edu/undergraduate. Home to diverse and internationally recog-nized practitioners, scholars, and teachers, the college offers a wide array of programs: first-professional undergraduate degrees in architecture and interior design, first-professional graduate degrees in architec-ture and landscape architecture, and post-professional programs in architecture and landscape architecture http://www.arch.utk.edu/Academic_Programs/academicpro-

Dean Marvin J. Malecha

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grams.shtml. The all-day event begins on the university’s Knoxville campus and in-cludes presentations by faculty and stu-dents, tours of our award winning facility and multi-disciplinary design-build proj-ects such as The New Norris House www.thenewnorrishouse.com and the Living Light Solar Decathlon House livinglightutk.com, the historic Norris Dam, and the uni-versity gardens. The day will conclude with a talk by local historian and author Jack Neely, and a reception at the university’s Downtown Gallery of art. The event is free of charge but spaces are limited. Please contact Ms. Vanessa Arthur ([email protected]). For more information consult: http://www.arch.utk.edu.

POLYTECHNIC UNIVERSITY OF PUERTO RICO

Professor Beatriz del Cueto became the first Puerto Rican woman and the second person on the island to receive the Rome Prize Award for 2011 in the category of Ar-chitectural Preservation and Conservation. The prize includes a scholarship for a pe-riod of six (6) months to two (2) years at the academy in Rome.

Professor Andres Mignucci, FAIA has been named Visiting Scholar and Maxfield Lec-turer 2011-2012 at the School of Archi-tecture at Miami University in Oxford, Ohio. Mignucci recently published his book Jesus Eduardo Amaral Architect, a mono-graph on one of Puerto Rico’s leading mod-ern architects and founder of the School of Architecture at the University of Puerto Rico.

Professor Smyrna Mauras Modesti has joined the faculty this Fall and is the Coor-dinator of the Interior Design Program.

Professors Yara Maite Colon, Sotirios Kotoulas, Claudia Rosa Lopez, Maria Isa-bel Oliver, and Nelly Toledo have joined the faculty this Fall. Prof. Colon holds a Ph.D. in History and Theory of Architecture from the Escuela Tecnica Superior d’ Arquitec-tura de Barcelona; Prof. Kotoulas holds a Masters in Architecture and History and Theory of Architecture from Mc Gill Uni-versity in Canada; Prof. Claudia Rosa Lo-pez holds a Master of Fine Arts and Design from Savannah College of Art and Design;

Prof. Oliver holds a Masters in Architecture from Columbia University and has taught at the City College of New York, Parsons School of Design, the Cooper Union and the University of Puerto Rico. Prof. Toledo will be conducting the course on Industrial Design.

Professor Yara Maite Colon was invited to participate on the VII International Con-gress of Modern History of Architecture in Spain. Colon’s lecture ‘Los principios de Cuadernos de Arquitectura (1944-1950): convicciones entre lineas durante la pos-guerra’ will be part of the conference re-garding the propaganda and manifestos of journals between 1900-1975.

Professor Javier Santiago lectured at the University of Puerto Rico, Recinto de Caro-lina, on the topics of Interior Design and Social Responsibility, and on a research fo-cused on the quality of life of young Puerto Rican homosexuals. He was awarded a Bronze Award Nude/Body Category fro the 2011 Single Image Contest, Color Photog-raphy Magazine. His photographic work was included in Professor Miguel Rodri-guez Casellas article Puertorricanism or liv-ing in the surface, published in the Harvard Design Magazine.

Professor Yazmin Crespo was a speaker at the Federation of Caribbean Architecture Association Conference in Ponce.

Professor Francisco de la Cruz was awarded Third Place for the photographic work Art and City at the 2010-2011 Puerto Rico Design Exchange Competition.

Dean Carlos Betancourt has invited profes-sors Yazmin Crespo, Heather Crichfield, Andres Mignucci, Maria Isabel Oliver (co-ordinator), and Maricelis Ramos, to partici-pate in the new editorial board of the next issue of the Politecnica School of Architec-ture journal Polimorfo.

Former editor Oscar Oliver Didier will be the new editor of the Colegio de Arquitec-tos y Arquitectos Paisajistas de Puerto Rico journal Entorno, and former editor Marcelo Lopez Dinardi is conducting graduate stud-ies at Columbia University.

FLORIDA ATLANTIC UNIVERSITY

Florida Atlantic University School of Archi-tecture (FAUSoA) is pleased to announce that the National Architectural Accrediting Board has granted a full 6-year accredita-tion term to the FAUSoA Bachelor of Archi-tecture Program.

FAUSoA is also pleased to announce that Keith Van de Riet (PhD Candidate) will be joining the faculty in the Fall semes-ter of 2012. Keith Van de Riet comes to FAU from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI) and The Center for Architecture, Sci-ence and Ecology (CASE). Prior to joining RPI and CASE, he worked in construction and architectural practice in Kansas and New York on projects that integrated green roof and photovoltaic technologies, with emphasis on the interface between build-ing envelope and environmental context. Keith has particular interest in the use of integrated bioremediation strategies to address the environmental challenges of large-scale urban development. He is work-ing in the Tropical Coastline Remediation research area with faculty at CASE and in collaboration with international biologists, ecologists, geotechnical and structural en-gineers, and experts in ecosystem model-ing. Keith received a Bachelor’s degree in architecture from The University of Kansas in 2004 and has a Master’s in Science of Architectural Science from the Built Ecolo-gies program at Rensselaer.

Anthony Abbate, AIA, NCARB has been promoted to Professor at the School of Ar-chitecture and Associate Provost for the Broward Campuses at Florida Atlantic Uni-versity. Mr Abbate, Rosemary Kennedy, Se-nior Lecturer at Queensland University of Technology (Australia) and Kasama Polakit, Ph.D. Assistant Professor at FAU School of Urban and Regional Planning have co-ed-ited the Proceedings from the biennial in-ternational conference, Subtropical Cities 2011, held in Fort Lauderdale last Spring.

Associate Professor Francis Lyn has been appointed Director of the Broward Com-munity Design Collaborative (BCDC). The mission of the BCDC is to build interdis-ciplinary collaboration to develop smart ur-ban design oriented solutions at multiple scales, with the objective to address the

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global challenges of climate change, help build healthy communities in south Florida that are walkable, livable, and equitable. While the focus of our efforts is on the local context, the geographic center of a metro-politan region with a population of approxi-mately 6 million, our academic mission is to look at sustainable design solutions within an urban and suburban sub-tropical setting. Mr. Lyn has also been appointed as Thesis Phase Coordinator for the School of Architecture.

Associate Professor Philippe d’Anjou has recently published a series of articles in three prominent journals. These include: “An Alternative Model for Ethical Decision-Making in Design: a Sartrean Approach” in Design Studies; “An Ethics of Authenticity in the Client-Designer Relationship” in The Design Journal; and “An Ethics of Freedom for Architectural Design Practice” in Jour-nal of Architectural Education. These arti-cles are part of professor d’Anjou’s ongoing research in design philosophy and ethics that aims at articulating new theoretical foundations of design and architecture.

Assistant Professor Henning Haupt has re-ceived a grant from Broward County to re-alize an installation of his research. This Color-Space Construction will be installed in January of 2012.

LAWRENCE TECHNOLOGICAL UNIVERSITY

Adjunct Instructor Peter Lichomski had a number of watercolor paintings accepted into juried exhibitions recently, including the 2011 Michigan Fine Art Competition (sponsored by the Birmingham Bloomfield Art Center), the Birmingham Community House “Our Town” art show, the North-ville Art House “Outside In,” exhibit, and 1st Annual Donna A. Vogelheim Memorial “Healing Power of Art” exhibition.

Adjunct Instructors Christopher Schanck and Aaron Blendowski were featured in the show, “Cranbrook Design: Into the Net-work,” at Studio Couture in Detroit, Sep-

tember 24 -October 24, 2011. Cranbrook Design was conceived as a laboratory for design exploration and experiment for cur-rent students and recent alumni of Cran-brook’s Design and Architecture programs to contextualize their work as a product of the ‘the network society.’

Assistant Professor Steven Coy’s work as the “Hygienic Dress League” was featured in a photo exhibition at the Hamtramck, Michigan Public Pool gallery in October. Coy and his wife Dorota created the League – a faux company that exists as a real cor-poration – as a commentary on corporate advertising and branding.

Associate Professor Dale Allen Gyure pre-sented a paper entitled “The crowning fea-ture of our system”: Nineteenth-Century High Schools and American Middle Class Aspirations and Anxieties,” at the History of Education Society Annual Conference in Chicago. He also presented a public lec-ture, “Nature, Light, and Beauty: Minoru Yamasaki’s Design for the North Shore Con-gregation Israel” in Yamasaki’s sanctuary at North Shore in Glencoe, Illinois.

UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY

Professor Richard S. Levine has recently retired from teaching after 46 years at the School of Architecture at the University of Kentucky. From early in his architectural career, Prof. Levine has been a pioneer and advocate for sustainability-oriented archi-tecture. He has over 200 publications on

solar energy and sustainable cities and has done sustainable city research and projects in Italy, Austria, China, the Middle East as well as in Kentucky.

He is now devoting his energies to his ar-chitectural and urban design practice at the Center for Sustainable Cities Design Studio (CSC Design Studio). Dick Levine’s practice in design has encompassed such areas as structural systems, hospitals, de-sign process, solar oriented architecture and sustainable cities. In the mid ‘70’s his widely published Raven Run Solar Home was the first to incorporate active and pas-sive solar, super insulation, earth tubes, composting toilets, attached greenhouse, and many other integrated features in a single project. The patented active air col-lectors developed in that project are part of one of the most efficient and least expen-sive solar collection and storage systems ever devised.The Hooker Building in Niagara Falls, NY (1978) for which Levine was energy and design consultant, was projected to consume 88% less energy than that of a conventional office building and received the Owens-Corning Energy Conservation Award. Thirteen years later, Norman Foster reproduced Hooker’s double glass wall with its computer operated aluminum louvers in an office building in Duisburg, Germany, sparking a transformation in Europe of en-ergy efficient commercial buildings whose design strategies are now being emulated in the US.

In the mid 1980’s, Prof. Levine, along with his colleague Ernest J. Yanarella, started the Center for Sustainable Cities (CSC) at the University of Kentucky, to advance the theory and practice of sustainability. In 1994 Levine became the principal author of the European Charter of Cities and Towns Towards Sustainability (the Aalborg Char-ter), the main vehicle in Europe for carrying out the Local Agenda 21 provisions of the Rio Earth Charter (1992). He also gave the keynote address at the Charter ratification conference.

Partnering with Dr. Heidi Dumreicher, di-rector of Oikodrom: the Vienna Institute for Urban Sustainability, the CSC focused on the city-region as the appropriate scale at which homeostatic relationships between

EAST CENTRAL

Professor Richard S. Levine

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social, environmental and economic issues could be realistically pursued to become the exemplar for the proliferation of sus-tainability throughout the globe. This was a pivotal determination that would lead to the formulation of the first Operational Defini-tion of Sustainability. In the early 1990’s, the CSC and Oikodrom partnered to work on a series of three commissioned designs for a Sustainable City-as-a-Hill to be built over the Westbahnhof rail-yard in Vienna, Austria. Using Levine’s patented Coupled-Pan Space-Frame (CPSF) structural system as the city’s underlying structural frame-work a rich, diverse and sustainability driven urban fabric was developed. Late in his life Lou Kahn had visited an early test of the CPSF and commented, “You should build a museum around it.” The City-as-a-Hill urban form, the Sustainable Urban Im-plantation, the Partnerland Principle, the Sustainable Area Budget, the Operational Definition of Sustainability, the Multiple, Participatory, Alternative Scenario-Building Process and other sustainable urban design principles were elaborated and integrated in the Westbahnhof project and continue to be studied and expanded upon today.

From 2002-2005, Prof. Levine worked on the European Commission sponsored SUC-CESS project which developed sustain-able future scenarios for rural villages in six Chinese provinces. This was followed by two successive EC projects focused on the renewal of the Islamic bath house (Hammam) tradition in six Mediterranean countries with the intention of developing and enhancing empowered, sustainable, civil society processes. In 2005, the CSC Design Studio (CSCDS) was formed as an extension of the CSC and Prof. Levine’s private architectural practice. In 2007, the CSCDS, headed by Prof. Levine, organized a system-dynamics modeling seminar in Fez, Morocco. This was part of the ongo-ing development of the “Sustainable City Game™”, the Sustainability Engine™, and the SCIM (Sustainable City Information Modeling) process.

As a recognition of his leadership and life-time of work, in 2010 the American Solar Energy Society awarded Dick Levine its “Passive Solar Pioneer” award. Levine is currently engaged in the design and con-struction of a number of low cost, zero net

energy houses using the passive house standard. His research and publications continue including his just published book with Ernest J. Yanarella titled, “The City as Fulcrum of Global Sustainability,” (Anthem Press, 2011). His web site is: www.center-forsustainablecities.com.

UNIVERSITY OF OKLAHOMA

The University of Oklahoma dedicated Gould Hall for the College of Architecture in a public ceremony on Wednesday, Sept. 14. It is the first time that students from all five disciplines – architecture, construc-tion science, interior design, landscape ar-chitecture, and regional and city planning – are housed under one roof. The result, says College of Architecture Dean Charles Graham, will be greater opportunities for interdisciplinary study and a more rounded learning experience. The newly renovated building features a two-story, vaulted gal-lery – the Buskuhl Gallery – that allows for the flexibility of lighting and space neces-sary to adequately accommodate the stu-dents’ work in a professional manner, as well as a beautiful space in which to host receptions, symposia and traveling exhib-

its. Among the innovative features of the new building are a “Super Studio,” featur-ing two 40-inch plasma televisions and an interactive technology table, which allows six students to share their work with the professor and other students, and a full and mini “Learn Lab.” Learn Labs differ from traditional classrooms in that they have no typical “front”; rather, space is ar-ranged in such a way as to encourage inter-action among the students and professor. Three projectors allow students to share their work on one or all of the screens, and a ceiling-view document camera can be used to zoom in on an object and display it on one or more of the projector screens.Oklahoma educator and urban designer Blair Humphreys was named Executive Di-rector of the Institute for Quality Communi-ties at the OU College of Architecture. The Institute for Quality Communities, founded in 2008, builds on OU’s success as an out-standing research university. Humphreys will guide the Institute in its work to build more vibrant, sustainable and equitable communities throughout Oklahoma and provide more research and educational opportunities for OU students. In spring 2011, Humphreys was the faculty adviser for a group of students from OU’s College of Architecture and Michael F. Price Col-lege of Business competing in a national urban design competition for The Urban Land Institute. The team placed in the top four, competing against 152 others from across the United States and Canada.

Ron Frantz, an architect who specializes in small-town design and preservation has joined the Institute for Quality Communi-ties as the director of Small Town Studios. Frantz, who has done extensive work with both national and state Main Street pro-grams, also has been named a Wick Carey Professor and will teach in the college’s Di-vision of Architecture. Frantz will provide design and planning experience by pairing faculty and students to projects in small towns across the state.

KANSAS STATE UNIVERSITY

Architecture Professor David Seamon at-tended the 30th annual International Hu-man Research Science Conference, held in Oxford, England, July 27-30, 2011. He or-ganized a symposium, “Lived Relationali-

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ties among Place, Space, and Environmen-tal Embodiment.” The three symposium presenters were health sociologist Dr. An-drew Moore, a research associate with the Arthritis Research UK Primary Care Centre at Keele University in Staffordshire, Eng-land; Dr. Sam Griffiths, a Lecturer in urban morphology and theory at University Col-lege London’s Bartlett School of Architec-ture; and Seamon, whose presentation was entitled, “‘Seeing’ Merleau-Ponty’s Per-ception: Possibilities in the Urban Photo-graphs of New York City Photographer Saul Leiter. Seamon also presented “Home-world, Alienworld, and Being at Home in Alan Ball’s HBO Television Series, Six Feet Under,” a blind-reviewed paper presented at the 7th annual Religion, Literature, and the Arts conference held at the University of Iowa, Iowa City, August 27. The confer-ence theme was “Uncanny Homecomings: Narrative, Structures, Existential Ques-tions, Theological Visions.”

Professor Donald Watts joined more than one hundred former Peace Corps Volunteers who had served in Afghanistan as part of the 50th Anniversary of the founding of the Peace Corps in Washington D.C. He repre-sented our college at a special reception for former Peace Corps Afghanistan volunteers hosted by His Excellency, Ambassador Eklil Hakimi at the Afghan Embassy in Washing-ton. Watts served as the architectural co-ordinator of the Kansas State University / Kabul University Partnership Program oc-curring between 2007 and 2010.

Assistant Professors Nathan Howe and Sam Zeller with the help of fourth-year students Ethan Rhoades, Hana Havlova, Matthew Whetstone and Scott Davis en-tered and won the international design competition The 2011 Friends of Seger Park Playground Sprayground in Philadel-phia, PA. This competition was to look at the site of their existing water feature and envision a design that would be contem-porary, interactive and provide an icon for their park. The team has now been com-missioned to produce a promotional model and construction documents while Seger Park continues to raise funds for the proj-ect’s implementation.

Greg Sheldon, James Pfeiffer, and Rick Schladweiler from the Kansas City-based

firm BNIM are co-teaching a fourth-year design studio this fall. The trio is quite enthusiastic about diving into teaching design. Sheldon, associate principal at the firm, and 2006 Architect of the Year for the AIA Kansas City chapter, taught building construction techniques to beginning stu-dents at the KC campus of the University of Missouri, but has never taught studio. The trio intends to fold verifiable design techniques into the studio’s semester-long project.

UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS AT AUSTIN

Lois Weinthal, associate professor and graduate advisor for the Master of Interior Design Program, is pleased to announce the release of her book, Toward a New In-terior: An Anthology of Interior Design The-ory, published by Princeton Architectural Press. In this anthology, Weinthal frames the interior in a range of scales, from the clothing we wear to the city we inhabit. Be-tween these scales is an array of layers that can be pulled apart and further investigat-ed, often revealing an identity by which we surround ourselves. From clothing to the closet to the concept of domesticity, inte-rior design can be seen as the stage set by which we act out our lives as we move fluidly between these layers.

Weinthal presented a book talk in the School of Constructed Environments at Parsons The New School for Design on Thursday, October 20.

Wilfried Wang, O’Neil Ford Centennial Pro-fessor in Architecture, along with three col-leagues, will present keynote lectures at the “Spatial Cognition for Architectural Design (SCAD)” Symposium, to be held Novem-ber 16 to 19 at the German House in New York City. The symposium will address the theoretical and methodological achieve-ments of the cognitive and computational disciplines in the domain of architectural design. Wang will speak on “On the notions of Cognitive Entities and Cognitive Identi-ties in Architecture.”

The October 21, 2011, edition of The Daily Texan featured the article, “Dean of Archi-tecture Emphasizes Green Construction,” highlighting Dean Fritz Steiner’s participa-tion in the Texas Book Festival, which will take place October 22 and 23 at the State Capitol in Austin.

Assistant Professor Matt Fajkus’ Bat House Visitor Center project was selected for in-clusion in “More Than Architecture” exhib-it, up through October 30 in the Fine Arts Building on the UT campus. Fajkus won 2nd and 3rd places in AIA Napkin Sketch Competition. The exhibit is up through Oc-tober 31 at the Austin AIA office.

The University of Texas at Austin School of Architecture will honor the life and work of Associate Dean Kent Butler at a memorial symposium on October 1 at the UTSOA. Dr. Butler, a long-time faculty member, died during a hiking trip in Yosemite National Park in May.

The Center for Sustainable Development (CSD) is a proud co-sponsor of the 2011 UT Campus Sustainability Symposium September 23, 2011, led by the Presi-dent’s Sustainability Steering Committee, with support from UT’s Office of Sustain-ability, the Center for Sustainable Develop-ment, the Campus Environmental Center, the Environmental Science Institute, and the UT Energy Institute.

Dean Fritz Steiner will moderate the panel discussion, “How Green is My City?,” at the, www.texastribune.org/festival/home,Texas Tribune Festival, which will take place on September 24 and 25 in Austin.

On Wednesday, November 3, Houston To-morrow Distinguished Speaker Series lun-cheon, Dean Fritz Steiner will discuss his latest book, Design for a Vulnerable Planet, and his ideas for a sustainable future based on new regionalism-a theory of design which holds that structure and landscape should be inspired by the surrounding eco-system. Steiner frequently works with local, state, and federal agencies on diverse envi-ronmental plans and designs. He is a mem-ber of the Steering Committee of America 2050 and is current president of the Hill Country Conservancy and board member of Envision Central Texas.

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Pollen Architecture & Design’s Balcones House will be featured on the 2011 Ameri-can Institute of Architects http://www.aiaaustin.org/firm_project/balcones-house Austin Homes Tour, October 1 and 2. Lec-turers Elizabeth Alford and Dason Whitsett [B.Arch. ‘95, M.S.S.D. ‘05] are princi-pals of Pollen Architecture (with Michael Young).

Associate Dean Kevin Alter was a featured speaker at the American Institute of Ar-chitects Arkansas 2011 State Convention in Hot Springs, on September 17, where he presented selected work from his firm, http://alterstudio.net/ alterstudio archi-tects, llp.

Assistant Professor Fernando Lara recently published two articles. “Incomplete Uto-pias: Embedded Inequalities in Brazilian Modern Architecture,” appeared in the June 2011 edition of the Architectural Re-search Quarterly, published by Cambridge University Press. The article, “New (Sub)Urbanism and Old Inequalities in Brazilian Gated Communities,” was published in the August 2011 edition of the Journal of Ur-ban Design, published by Taylor & Francis Group.

Senior Lecturer Joyce Rosner’s work in the exhibition, “SLICE: Connections and Deviations,” will be displayed at the Kreft Center Gallery, Concordia University, Ann Arbor, Michigan, from October 25 to De-cember 4.. A central theme in Rosner’s work is the idea of an iterative collection. Through the interplay of hand and material, narrative tension is developed between the subject and its recorded evidence.

Dr. Steven Moore, Bartlett Cocke Regents Professor of Architecture and Planning; Dr. David Adelman, Harry M. Reasoner Re-gents Chair in Law; and Dr. Barbara Brown Wilson, director of the UT Austin Center for Sustainable Development, have been awarded a National Science Foundation Workshop Grant to host “Sequencing and Targeting Climate Change Policy for Archi-tecture: An Interdisciplinary and Interna-tional Approach.”

On September 27, Dr. Nancy Kwallek, Gene Edward Mikesa Endowed Chair in Interior Design and Director of the Interior

Design Program, presented a lecture on color palettes from the 1950s, in conjunc-tion with Mika Tajima’s exhibition, “The Architect’s Garden,” at the UT Austin Vi-sual Arts Center. Dr. Kwallek used Herman Miller and Knoll as examples to discuss the impact of color on our senses.

Wilfried Wang, O’Neil Ford Centennial Pro-fessor in Architecture, led the Quito Travel Studio with 13 students to Ecuador. Be-sides seeing the impressive work of José Maria Saez Vaquero and Adrian Moreno, both visiting professors at the School of Architecture this semester, the group met José Miguel Mantilla and the office of El Borde: David Barragan and Pascual Gan-gotena. The students visited a number of outstanding pieces of contemporary ar-chitecture, as well as museums with Pre-Columbian art. While in Ecuador, Wang presented a lecture on “Changing Para-digms: The Challenge of Sustainability to Architecture” at the Universidad Católica de Santiago Guayaquil and a lecture on “Judging Architecture” at the Universidad de Guayaquil.

Adjunct Associate Professor Barbara Hoidn was an invited participant in the Jane Ja-cobs Revisited: A Bellagio Conference” at the Rockefeller Foundation at Villa Serbel-loni in Bellagio, Italy, which took place from September 29 to October 3, 2011.

TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY

Dr. Anat Geva, Associate Professor, Depart-ment of Architecture, Texas A&M Univer-sity is pleased to announce the publication of her book Frank Lloyd Wright Sacred Ar-chitecture: Faith, Form, and Building Tech-nology, Routledge, September, 2011.

Frank Lloyd Wright designed more than thirty houses of worship, of which only ten were built. This book serves as the first comprehensive study of all of Wright’s sa-cred architecture and is the first book to introduce a theoretical framework of the conceptual model that illustrates the rela-tionship between faith, form, and building technology in sacred architecture. The book offers scholarly discussion on the applica-tion of this conceptual model to Wright’s religious projects with analytical drawings and photographs. This unique contribu-

tion will be useful to all those interested in Wright’sarchitecture and theory as well as in the study of sacred architecture.

Students in Texas A&M’s University Honors Program honored the mentoring efforts of Dr. Stephen Caffey, assistant professor of architecture, by casting enough votes for him to earn the Wells Fargo Honors Faculty Mentor Award.

“Award recipients,” wrote Kyle Mox on the honors program blog, “distinguish them-selves by extending the mentoring relation-ship beyond the confines of the classroom, encouraging a spirit of inquiry in their stu-dents, being thoughtful teachers, and ex-hibiting the strongest desire to train a new generation of thinkers and creators.”

Caffey and fellow recipient David Bergbre-iter, professor of chemistry were presented the awards by the honors student council during a May 12 ceremony at the College Station Hilton Convention Center.

Caffey, who joined the Texas A&M faculty in 2008, earned a Ph.D. in Art History in 2008, a Master of Art History degree in 2001 and Bachelor of American Studies degree in 1992, all at the University of Texas at Austin.

His research interests include empire and identity, visual and spatial literacies, neu-roscience of aesthetic perception and the aesthetics of sustainability.

TULANE UNIVERSITY

Professor Eugene Cizek will receive the prestigious James Marston Fitch Award from the National Council of Preservation Educators at a dinner in his honor on Octo-ber 21st at the National Trust for Historic Preservation annual national conference in Buffalo, New York. Gene has practiced historic preservation since the mid-1970’s beginning with his pioneering advocacy work and restoration projects in Faubourg Marigny located adjacent to the Vieux Car-ree. In 1997 Gene founded the Masters in Preservation Studies graduate program within the Tulane School of Architecture that has since served as a principal training opportunity in architectural preservation in the state of Louisiana. Gene’s keen eye for

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worthwhile architectural preservation proj-ects, his wide range of accomplishments as a teacher, and his unmatched enthusiasm and skills as an advocate and preservation planner have made him a mainstay of the preservation scene in New Orleans and the nation. Tulane University congratulates him heartily on this award of distinction.

Tulane University is pleased to announce the establishment of USGBC Students - Tu-lane Group, initiated by the members of the new MSRED program. USGBC Students is a national initiative to recruit, connect and equip the next generation of green building leaders by empowering them to transform their campuses, communities and careers. Over 50 charter class members have been recruited, ranging in disciplines from real estate development, architecture, biology, and business. The activities for the fall includes lectures with local professionals focused on sustainable practices in the fields of business, ecological studies, and historic renovation and various community service initiatives. The group also intends to provide tools for members to become LEED accredited, as well as help connect them to the national USGBC community.

Favrot Professor of Architecture Errol Bar-ron’s visionary architectural work is fea-tured in the Symposium and Exhibition, Speculative Propositions: Heightened Acu-ity, hosted by the University of Louisiana at Lafayette’s School of Architecture and Design.

Assistant Professor of Architecture Kentaro Tsubaki’s article Tumbling Units: Tectonics of Indeterminate Extension is in the new book, Matter: Material Processes in Archi-tectural Production, edited by Gail Peter Borden and Michael Meredith, published by Rutledge Press. The article explores the nature of extension and aims to raise a fun-damental question about the way current architectural practice engages the matter and the act of making.

UNIVERSITY OF HOUSTON

This fall, the Gerald D. Hines College of Architecture opened the doors of the Ma-terials Research Collaborative, which is an outlet of Material Connexion, a database that has physical collection libraries in only

eight other locations throughout the world.The MRC was founded with educational value in mind, allowing free access to all University students. It provides a tangible, out-of-classroom experience for architec-ture students who are used to seeing just pictures of materials.

The library includes over 100 materials that allow students to find materials by visual preferences or by criteria. They are able to feel the texture and how light or how heavy an object is.

Materials are labeled in a way that makes it easy for them to find in the database, in-cluding even a QR code that you can scan with a specialized phone app.

Director and Associate Professor Donna Kacmar worked with the dean to bring the collection to the University.

Together, they worked out a collaboration with area professionals that includes Page Sotherland Page, Kendall/Heaton Associ-ates, Gensler and Ziegler Cooper. (excerpt from the UH Daily Cougar)

Associate Professor Michelangelo Sabati-no, PhD, of the Gerald D. Hines College of Architecture received a number of awards for his recent book Pride in Modesty: Mod-ernist Architecture and the Vernacular Tra-dition in Italy (2010): Best Book of 2010 from the American Association of Italian Studies, Aldo and Jeanne Scaglione Prize from the Modern Language Association and Best Book of 2010 from the South-east Chapter of the Society of Architectural Historians (SESAH). His Modern Architec-ture and the Mediterranean: Vernacular Dialogues and Contested Identities (with Jean-François Lejeune, 2010) was short-listed and received a Commendation for the 2011 CICA (UIA) Bruno Zevi Book Award. During the summer of 2011, Sabatino was a Visiting Scholar at the Canadian Centre for Architecture completing his forthcom-ing book on Arthur Erickson.

The Southeast Chapter of the Society of Architectural Historians has selected GD Hines College of Architecture Associate Professor Michelangelo Sabatino’s book, Pride in Modesty, as this year’s SESAH book award winner.

Assistant Professor Gregory Marinic’s New York-based practice, Arquipelago, has been awarded an honorable mention for his submission “Seoul Market System” to the 2011 Seoul Public Design Competition. The competition is sponsored by the Seoul Metropolitan Government.

UH College of Architecture Students Final-ists in the INTERNATIONAL ARCHITEC-TURE COMPETITION: SC2011 SPAIN-CHINA MADRID + HANGZHOU Madrid: Hyper Building – Vertical City. The UH students Emily Yong, Andre Simapranata, Juan Pablo Fuentes, Cristhian Bisso, and Jessica Yong were the only team from the United States to be recognized.

UNIVERSITY OF ARKANSAS

Justin Hershberger has joined the faculty as a visiting assistant professor, co-teach-ing in the Fall 2nd year Design Studio and assisting the Design-Build Studio led by Mark Wise.

Justin grew up in rural Indiana where he spent his spare time working in his father’s cabinetry shop. He earned his M.Arch from the University of Virginia School of Archi-tecture in 2011 and received the American Institute of Architects’ Henry Adams Medal as well as Faculty of Architecture Awards for both Design Excellence and Public Ser-vice. In 2010, he received the Sarah McAr-thur Nix Fellowship to study three concrete churches in France. While in graduate school, Hershberger was consistently in-volved in teaching assistantships at both the graduate and undergraduate level fo-cused on craft, making, and building. His thesis work focused on how construction influences and can provide an impetus for design.

Hershberger also holds a B.S. in Architec-ture from the University of Virginia School of Architecture (2005). Before returning to school in 2009, he worked in a fine con-crete fabrication shop in Charlottesville, Virginia producing countertops, bathtubs, vanities, etc. As the shop manager, he over-saw projects from the initial design phase to installation. Through the work, Hersh-berger developed his interest in fabrica-tion, craft, and the details of architecture that influence everyday life.

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Santiago R. Pérez, Assistant Professor and 21st Century Chair in Integrated Practice has published “Towards an Ecology of Making,” a chapter in a new book edited by Gail Peter Borden and Michael Meredith titled: Matter: Material Process in Architec-tural Production.

Pérez has established a new FABLAB at the Fay Jones School of Architecture, fo-cusing on a merger of Craft + Advanced Digital Fabrication, questioning contem-porary digital practices and reframing 20th century material - component systems by direct critical engagement through making, in what he terms FABCRAFT.

The winners of the Hnedak Bobo compe-tition have been announced, with entries submitted by our international programs students who have completed a semes-ter in Rome or Mexico. The Rome Study Center is directed by Professor David Vit-alie, and the summer program in Mexico is led by Adjunct Assistant Professor Rus-sell Rudzinski. The competitive prize is sponsored by the Memphis based Hnedak Bobo Group. Jury members Justin Hersh-berger, Steve Luoni and Santiago Pérez joined Mark Weaver from Hnedak Bobo in discussions to determine the final winners. The prize was awarded to 5th year student Erica Blansit, for her Rome Program sub-mission- a “Ludoteka” or children’s play and learning center in Trastevere, and a three-student team from the summer 2011 Mexico program; Kenneth Hiley, Akihiro Moriya and Tanner Sutton.

A visionary handbook for designing low im-pact development, created by the Univer-sity of Arkansas Community Design Center, has garnered a second national award. The book Low Impact Development: a design manual for urban areas won a 2011 Award of Excellence in Communications from the American Society of Landscape Architects. This award category recognizes publica-tions, journals and books on landscape ar-chitecture with honor awards and one top award for excellence. The manual will be featured at the 2011 ASLA Annual Meet-ing and Expo in October in San Diego, and in the October issue of Landscape Archi-tecture Magazine. The Community Design Center is an outreach program of the Fay Jones School of Architecture.

The jury called the manual “beautifully composed and very accessibly written” and “clear, brilliant, attractive, useful, and per-tinent. All young people should read this – boy, does it communicate.” It is already a required text in some university engineer-ing courses nationwide.The Community Design Center and the university’s Ecologi-cal Engineering Group developed the book under a grant from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and the Arkansas Natu-ral Resources Commission.

Mark Wilcken, a producer at the Arkansas Educational Television Network in Little Rock, has created the 55-minute docu-mentary, Clean Lines, Open Spaces: A View of Mid-Century Modern Architecture. The film, shot with high-definition technology, will be screened in four cities around the state this month, including one on Oct. 9 at the University of Arkansas Global Campus in downtown Fayetteville. It will premiere on AETN at 9 p.m. Nov. 14. Production of the film was funded through grants from the Arkansas Humanities Council and the Arkansas chapter of the American Institute of Architects. Wilcken interviewed archi-tects, architecture professors, homeowners and a representative of the Historic Pres-ervation Alliance of Arkansas. All offered helpful tips and advice for finding people and properties. Architecture school faculty members interviewed were Greg Herman, associate professor; Marlon Blackwell, dis-tinguished professor and head of the archi-tecture department, and Ethel Goodstein-Murphree, professor and associate dean, who served as architectural historical con-sultant on the film. Alumni interviewed in-clude Ernie Jacks (B.A. Architecture ’50), Bob Laser (B.A. Architecture ’50), Charley Penix (B.Arch. ’80) and Reese Rowland (B.Arch. ’90). Hicks Stone, son of Edward Durell Stone, also contributed.

Marlon Blackwell is a member of one of five multidisciplinary creative teams selected to participate in Portal to the Point: A Design Ideas Exploration. The teams will focus on public art and design at Point State Park, the most visible landmark in Pittsburgh. About 40 firms from across the country were invited to submit proposals. The final five were selected based on an evaluation of the merits of their proposals and how they’d approach this project, as well as

their professional track record, Blackwell said. Blackwell’s firm is the leader of an impressive team that also includes Ken-dall Buster, a nationally renowned sculp-tor and a professor in the department of sculpture and extended media at Virginia Commonwealth University; Guy Nordenson and Associates, a structural engineering firm in New York; dlandstudio of Brooklyn, N.Y., led by principal landscape architect and architect Susannah Drake; and Ren-fro Design Group, an architectural lighting design firm founded by Richard Renfro in New York.

Blackwell is a Distinguished Professor and head of the architecture department in the Fay Jones School of Architecture at the University of Arkansas. His firm, Marlon Blackwell Architect, is based in Fayette-ville. Blackwell has worked previously with Nordenson, who was the structural engi-neer for his Ruth Lilly Visitors Pavilion, located in 100 Acres: The Virginia B. Fair-banks Art and Nature Park, which opened in June 2010 at the Indianapolis Museum of Art. A piece of site-specific artwork by Buster, the emerald green fiberglass and steel Stratum Pier, is also part of the mu-seum’s art and nature park. Buster and Nordenson were also both guest lecturers on the University of Arkansas campus, as part of the school’s annual lecture series last year. Renfro graduated from the Uni-versity of Arkansas in 1979 with a Bach-elor of Architecture. An exhibition of the designs will be held October 19-23 at the Heinz Architectural Center at the Carnegie Museum of Art in Pittsburgh. A public sym-posium with all the participants is planned for early 2012. A book that documents the process and the resulting designs will be available online, establishing an extended platform for the dissemination of informa-tion about the project.

MONTANA STATE UNIVERSITY

Associate Professor Chris Livingston and Assistant Professor Zuzanna Karczewska attended an international conference in Delft, Netherlands organized by European

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Association of Envisioning Architecture. Chris Livingston’s paper was entitled “The ‘Surgeon-Anatomist’ - Architecture, Medi-cine and possible trajectories for Visualiza-tion within Building Information Modeling” and Zuzanna Karczewska’s “Tangibility and Duration of Drawing”.

Associate Professor Maire O’Neill has an upcoming exhibit titled “Taking Stock – A morphology: field documentation of agri-cultural buildings” at the Ravalli County Museum in Hamilton, Montana. This ex-hibit includes building documentation and interpretive drawings reflecting the evolv-ing building practices of livestock produc-ers and farmers settling the intermountain west. It includes a typological and morpho-logical analysis and will take place October through December 2011.

A proposal written by Milenka Jirasko was one of three international winners of the Berkeley Prize Travel Fellowship Compe-tition allowing her to research the former Auschwitz concentration camp in rural Po-land this summer. She won a $3,200 trav-el stipend to allow her to research sacred spaces that are open to the public under the guidance of Associate Professor Maire O’Neill. Fellow students Carson Booth, Ra-chel Haugen, Britni Jezirorski and Chris Taleff were among 33 semifinalists select-ed overall. The prize is given by the Univer-sity of California, Berkeley and the Berke-ley Prize Endowment to enable winners to travel to gain a deeper understanding of the social art of architecture.

A team of Montana State University stu-dents has won a competition to design an 85-foot ice-climbing tower as part of an attempt to lure the 2013 world cup of ice climbing championship to the Gallatin County Fairgrounds in Bozeman. The team led by Michael Spencer of Willow Creek, a recent graduate of the MSU School of Architecture, with Tymer Tilton of Mis-soula a current architecture student, and MSU engineering student P.J. Kolnik, won the MSU-based competition to design the Bozeman Ice Tower under the guidance of Associate Professor Mike Everts. Everts says “the winning design is composed of angled climbing surfaces that attach to stacked, side-cycled shipping containers. The containers, in addition to being eco-

nomical and sustainable, are designed to be temporary lodging for visiting athletes”. The winning design, which can be seen on the Web, bozemanicetower.wordpress.com, includes a tower that can be used for ice or traditional climbing surrounded by a spec-tator area that will allow the structure to be used as an outdoor concert venue.

Associate Professor Mike Everts received an Honorable mention for the 2011 NCARB Prize. The submission titled “The Next Generation of Mountain Architects” was recognized by the jury for teaching students leadership skills, communica-tions skills, and how to participate in the community decision-marking process. With guidance from non-faculty architect practi-tioners and professors, students researched and designed a culturally and environmen-tally sensitive community center in Phor-tse, Nepal near Mt. Everest. Students then traveled to Nepal to work with local offi-cials, contractors, and villagers to dig the foundation and construct critical building component prototypes.

UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA

M. Brian Tichenor, AIA has just complet-ed the restoration of a four-acre Thomas Church garden in Pebble Beach, and is in the final stages of planning for the first large residence built to Passivhaus stan-dards in Monterey County.

Adjunct Associate Professor, Gerdo Aqui-no, is President of SWA, and Principal at the Los Angeles studio. He recently co-authored a book, published by Birkhauser/Actar, entitled Landscape Infrastructure: Case Studies by SWA. For the fall/winter of 2011 he lectured at GSD Harvard, Cal Poly Pomona, Cal Poly San Luis Obispo and the University of Virginia on “Transportational Futures” and Landscape Infrastructure. He has recently been awarded the 2011 Westside Prize Merit Award, Open Space Category for Milton Street Park, Marina Del Rey, CA. He is currently working on the recently awarded Shanghai Disney Project (Residential, Dining and Entertainment Area), a pedestrian streetscape in El Paso, Texas, and a linear urban park along Bal-lona Creek in Marina Del Rey. Gerdo will be speaking on a panel on October 28th at the ULI Conference entitled: From Eye Sore to “A Must See:” Creating Urban Parks from Thin Air and Adding Real Estate Value.

Visiting Assistant Professor Ying-Yu Hung is Managing Principal of SWA Los Ange-les, and co-founder of the Infrastructure Research Initiative (I.R.I.S.), recently co-authoring the book “Landscape Infrastruc-ture: Case Studies by SWA”, published by Birkhauser/Actar. She was a finalist for the 2011 ULI Awards for Excellence: Asia Pacific Competition for Gubei Pedestrian Promenade in Shanghai, China. Hung is an active lecturer and recently presented a panel on the topic of landscape infrastruc-

University of Southern California

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ture at this year’s National American Plan-ning Association conference held in Bos-ton and CELA in Los Angeles. In the fall/winter of 2011 she lectured at GSD Har-vard, Cal Poly Pomona, Cal Poly San Luis Obispo and the University of Virginia on “Transportational Futures” and Landscape Infrastructure. In August, SWA Los Angeles won 2nd Place in the 2016 Rio Olympic Competition in Rio de Janerio, Brazil. Her current projects include the Fuyang River-front Concept Master Plan in China.

Adjunct Assistant Professor Eric Haas, AIA received a Preservation Design Award from the California Preservation Foundation for the restoration of R.M. Schindler’s Bubesh-ko Apartments. He also presented the proj-ect on the panel “Renovating an Icon” at Dwell on Design 2011 in Los Angeles.

Professor Marc Schiler tested and evalu-ated the reflective and specular implica-tions of using a foamed aluminum material on the exterior of the LUMA Foundation in Arles, France, designed by Frank Gehry. Gehry continues to push the envelope in using new materials. Professor Schiler also documented the interesting instances of solar convergence over the span of a day at the Vdara Hotel in Las Vegas, designed by Rafael Vinoly. Preliminary results were presented at the Facades Tectonics confer-ence at USC.

Visiting Assistant Professor Kristine Mun has been invited to participate in the LA Downtown Artwalk event from October 13-18, 2011. She will be showcasing her Studio402 projects, entitled “Architecture and the Logic Machine: Behavior and Ma-terial Application”

Assistant Professor Karen M. Kensek is or-ganizing the sixth annual BIM conference to be held in Los Angeles on July 13, 2012.

Faculty members Doris Sung and Rob Ley were awarded the 2011 AIA National Up-john Grant to support ongoing research that their respective design offices have engaged dealing with responsive materi-als within architecture. Both Rob and Do-ris have separately received support from previous Upjohn Grants, this year’s award marks the first time that they will be work-ing together on a new project.

Lecturer Carlo Aiello co-edited the new book ‘Evolo Skyscrapers’ which is an in-vestigation on the future of vertical density. The publication was presented last Sep-tember at the 2011 Interior Design Show West (IDSWest) in Vancouver. It received instant praise by the public and critics.

Assistant Professor Ken Breisch has been asked to join the “Los Angeles Architecture, 1940-1990” Exhibition Advisory Commit-tee for the Getty Research Institute, as well as the Los Angeles Arboretum Preservation Advisory Group, and the Survey LA Review Committee.

Adjunct Professor Veronica G. Galen, As-soc. AIA, IES, LEED AP BD+C, designed the lighing for the Silver Award winning Dream Home 2011 Custom Contemporary Home of the Year and Best Whole House Remodel for residential projects with Kollin Altomare Architects, and was part of the team awarded an Illuminating Engineering Society of North America Award of Merit for the lighting design of Chase Bank Colorado Boulevard.

Adjunct Professor Regula Campbell, AIA authored a presentation in June at the International Federation of Landscape Architecture World Congress: “Scales of Nature”, Zurich, Switzerland on the topic: Biodiversity in the City: Enrichment for Ur-ban Life and Work – “Making It Personal, Making It Real”.

Adjunct Professor Doug Campbell, ASLA will be recognized by the Government of Hangzhou, China this October for his con-tribution to the region’s “Quality of Life” through his design of a recently completed sustainable new town re-visioning a former industrial site in the City’s northern district.

An exhibition featuring design work ad-dressing the proposed USC/Hybrid High Charter School by School of Architecture Associate Professor Chuck Lagreco’s 2011 spring topic studio students will be on display at a reception in the new Rossier School of Education Computing Center - part of a continuing collaboration on educational facilities by the two schools focusing on the neighborhoods around the campus.

Studio work on the Owens Lake dust miti-gation project influenced the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power to hire three local landscape architecture firms to be part of the current phase of design and construction for over 2.7 square miles of the lake. He has also joined the team in an advanced research capacity.

Architecture Lecturer, Christine Lampert’s firm, Lampert Dias Architects, Inc. has just finished the construction administration phase for the 8000 square foot San Clem-ente Senior’s Community Center that they designed in downtown San Clemente. The Center officially opened on Monday Octo-ber 3, 2011.

Cory Ticktin, AIA who is a Design Princi-pal with AECOM in Los Angeles currently oversees the Studio’s International work in Asia. Mr. Ticktin is currently working on a number of projects in Asia including a 130,000 M² Mixed-Use commercial de-velopment in Bangkok, Thailand currently under construction, a 45,000 M² Corporate Headquarters for Unilever also in Bangkok, an 80 meter tall office tower in Bangalore, India, two 130 meter tall residential tow-ers also in Bangalore and a 100 meter tall residential tower in Pune, India.

Associate Professor Trudi Sandmeier is the new Director of USC Graduate Historic Preservation Programs. She recently cu-rated an L.A. Food Noir film event at the historic Orpheum Theatre and will be both a panelist and moderator for the upcoming Historic Preservation Symposium at Cornell University.

Ed Woll reports that construction is sub-stantially complete for Young Burlington Apartments (affordable supportive hous-ing for young people) in Los Angeles’ Ko-reatown neighborhood and 60% complete for Jovenes Houses (transitional housing for disadvantaged youth) in East Los An-geles. Projects on the boards include de-velopments in Eagle Rock and in Pomona providing affordable supportive housing for families, seniors and homeless veterans. The projects in Eagle Rock and Pomona will have substantial urban-farming com-ponents.

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Victor Regnier, FAIA, Vice Dean + Profes-sor of Architecture will present the keynote address for the 14th Annual Sarnat Sym-posium on Geriatric Care in Los Angeles, CA. In November, he will keynote the Caser Foundation International Conference on Ar-chitectural Design and Long Term Care in Madrid, Spain.

Gary Paige’s architecture project, “Type Variant Houses” and artwork, “Ruled Surfaces” is the subject of an exhibition entitled “Other Works” at the School of Architecture at UC Berkeley, along with architects Wes Jones and IDEA Office part-ners Eric Kahn and Russell Thomsen.

Michael Hricak, FAIA, Adjunct Associate Professor, served as a panelist and present-ed a talk on urban design and public health to a gathering of elected leaders, city man-agers and agency officials and staff from 88 municipalities and at the Los Angeles 2011 BIKE SUMMIT, sponsored by LA County Department of Public Health, and hosted by the City of Long Beach.

Professor James Steele is organizing a Symposium called the “Critics Forum” about the History of USC School of Archi-tecture, which will also appear as a book in a years time, and he is eagerly anticipat-ing the publication of a monograph on Sid-ney Eisenshtat that he edited for the USC School of Architecture Guild Press, in May.

Vinayak Bharne has been named a contrib-uting editor of Kyoto Journal in Japan. He will serve as the south Asian commentator providing perspectives on architecture, ur-banism & cultural anthropology. He is also contributing a chapter in the forthcoming book “Planning Los Angeles” (APA Plan-ners Press 2012).

Lecturer Mina Chow, AIA, NCARB, dZI Me-dia, Inc. have completed their “rough cut” for a new web series on innovative architec-ture. The series was created with the City of Los Angeles Mayor’s office with Prof. Jim Steele and Getty Research Institute Wim de Witt as humanities advisors. You may view the “rough cut” at: http://vimeo.com/29752344

Assistant Professor Victor Jones and the Watts House Project were awarded a 2011

Graham Grant to complete work for the Watts House Project’s Platform fence, pocket park, and façade improvement. He will be a visiting scholar at the American Academy in Rome in December to pursue research on the Italian Structural Engineer, Sergio Musmeci. He delivered a project presentation “Cultivating Cultures” at the 2011 ACSA Fall Conference / Houston en-titled “Local Identities Global Challenges”

Douglas Noble, FAIA, Ph.D., is organizing the 8th FACADE TECTONICS conference, to be held in Los Angeles June 28-July 1, 2012. The Call for papers is at: http://www-bcf.usc.edu/~dnoble/facadetectonics8.htm

Adjunct Associate Professor Michael Hri-cak, FAIA, and his Venice based design firm recently received city approval for an innovative hotel and conference center to be built in Redondo Beach, California which promises to set new standards for design and sustainability in this beachside community.

Professor Graeme M. Morland recently delivered lecture demonstration entitled, “SKETCHING WITHOUT FEAR” on the oc-casion of USC’s “GET YOUR HANDS DIRTY with the ARTS” annual event. For many people, picking up a pencil to sketch what they see is intimidating and disappointing as the resultant image bears little resem-blance to the subject before them. Invari-ably, this moment of frustration is translat-ed as failure and they are persuaded that they cannot draw. This “crash course” was designed to alay these fears by demonstra-tion and guidance, walking novice students through the process of constructing a draw-ing, establishing “datums”, understanding the rudiments of perspective, the limits of “vision”, graphic heirarchy, and the basics of skiagraphy.

The work of lecturer Rebecca Lowry will be on display at Los Angeles Gallery g825, opening October 15, and at Cain Schulte Gallery in San Francisco, opening Novem-ber 3. The LA show will present a new body of work, focussing on representations of music, while the SF show will present a broad sampling of work from the last three years.

Visiting Professor Jennifer Siegal was

awarded a Visions and Voices grant to pro-duce the symposium Motopia: A New Age for Modular Construction to be held at USC on November, 2, 2011. Find out more at web-app.usc.edu/ws/eo2/calendar/113/event/893725.

UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA

The Biosphere 2 Landscape Evolution Ob-servatory (LEO) will consist of three mas-sive landscapes constructed inside an envi-ronmentally controlled greenhouse facility. A scale-model built by Assistant Professor Susannah Dickinson and two third-year architecture students, David Kim and James Carrico, will be displayed for visi-tors at Biosphere 2. For more info visit: leo.b2science.org/node/36.

OF ARCH #118: International Magazine of Architecture and Design features the Tuc-son Zoo and Natatorium in Reid Park, by Burns Wald-Hopkins Shambach Architects with design consultation on fabric struc-tures by Professor R. Larry Medlin.

Adjunct Lecturers Teresa Rosano and Luis Ibarra (Ibarra Rosano Design Architects, Inc.) have three projects featured in Con-temporary Villas, Strahan, McMillan, and McMillan, eds. (Atglen, PA: Schiffer Pub Ltd, 2011).

WOODBURY UNIVERSITY

The Center for Community Research and Design’s “Rethinking Accessibility,” sup-ported by the National Endowment for the Arts, is part of a national exhibition at the Community Design Collaborative in Philadelphia called “Leverage”; the exhi-bition showcases community engagement practices around the United States. The CCRD’s Darfur school project is curently in the planning stages, with student Art Nesterenko’s project chosen by the Darfur Rehabilitation Project. Plans are underway to raise funds for the project to be built in Chad, Africa.

BArch. Chair Jeanine Centuori’s work with partner UrbanRock Design (Russell Rock, collaboration) “Conditional Reflections” has been featured in “Modern in Denver Magazine.” It is an integrated public art project with architects Semple Brown in

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Denver. The project transforms three glass facades of the public pool structure into meditations on the three states of water. They are accompanied by a courtyard de-sign. Also, Jeanine’s practice recently com-pleted a Public Art Master Plan for the city of Tucson that articulates a vision for a five-mile stretch of Grant Road. The plan has been adopted by the city.

Visiting Assistant Professor, Chandler Ahrens, has projects published in the re-cently released book Performalism, Form and Performance in Digital Architecture ed-ited by Eran Neuman and Yasha Grobman. Eran Neuman is a partner of Chandler’s in the practice, Open Source Architecture, along with Aaron Sprecher. Open Source Architecture co-designed the exhibition Performalism, Form and Performance in Digital Architecture at the Tel Aviv Museum of Art in 2008 with Yasha Grobman.

Jose Parral, Assistant Professor and Rene Peralta, Director of the Master’s in Land-scape + Urbanism will be lecturing on Oc-tobre 31st, as part of the Education Ses-sions in the 2011 American Landscape Architecture Annual Meeting to be held in San Diego, CA. The title of the session is: The San Diego-Tijuana Border: A Cause and Effect Relationship.

Assistant Professor Maxi Spina’s housing Building in Argentina Jujuy Redux (co-designed with P-a-t-t-e-r-n-s) appeared in the Book “Pulsation in Architecture”, by Eric Goldemberg, as well as in the sym-posium and book launch held at Columbia University. The book highlights the role of digital design as catalyst for a new spatial sensibility related to rhythmic perception while it proposes a novel critical reception of computational architecture based on the ability of digital design to move beyond mere instrumentality, engaging with core aspects of the discipline.

Professor Paulette Singley and Assistant Professor Linda Taalman join a stellar speaker line-up for the MAK Center Fall Fundraiser 2011 on October 16 at the Lovell Beach House in Newport Beach.

Los Angeles Times architecture critic Chris-topher Hawthorne singled out Julius Shul-man distinguished Professor in Practice

Barbara Bestor’s design for Intelligentsia Coffee in Silver Lake as one of the best commercial and retail interiors in Los An-geles.

WATERMARKS: Acqua Alta, Resiliency, and Precise Meanders Exhibition by Pro-fessor of Practice Jennifer Bonner was fea-tured by the LA Weekly and ArchDaily. LA Weekly writer Tibby Rothman called the in-stallation at the WUHO gallery “an ephem-eral meditation on life in the time of global warming.”

UNIVERSITY OF OREGON

The University of Oregon Department of Ar-chitecture is pleased to welcome Assistant Professors Daisy-O’lice Williams and Philip Speranza, new faculty in design communi-cations.

The 2011 Pietro Belluschi Distinguished Visiting Professor in Architectural Design is John Paul Jones, FAIA, principal of Jones and Jones, Seattle. John Paul Jones earned his bachelor of architecture from the UO in 1967. His firm received the ASLA Firm Award in 2003. Johnpaul is a Fellow in the AIA and his honors also include the AIA Seattle Medal of Honor, the Executive Ex-cellence Award from the American Indian Science and Engineering Society, and the 1998 Elis F. Lawrence Medal from the UO School of Architecture & Allied Arts.

Professor Howard Davis was the recipient of the Thomas F. Herman Award, the high-est teaching honor for senior faculty mem-bers at the University of Oregon.

Professor Kevin Nute’s chapter on ‘Japa-nese Art as a Means to Organic Architec-ture’ will appear in a forthcoming book published by the French School of Far Eastern Studies in Paris, Reception et diffusion en Occident de l’espace archi-tectural et de l’art des jardins du Japon, Paris, 2012. His paper ‘Frank Lloyd Wright and the Woodblock Print’ will appear in the Bulletin de l’Association Franco-Japonaise, Paris, in March 2012.

Professor Gerald Gast’s design thesis stu-dents at the University of Oregon’s Portland Program are working on a two-year project with the City of Portland’s Office of Healthy

Working Rivers. 2011 projects focused on the Willamette River North Reach, the city’s industrial waterfront. This year’s work addresses the Willamette Central Reach, Portland’s Downtown Riverfront. An exhibit of the first year of work was opened by May-or Sam Adams at City Hall in June, with a second event planned for June ‘12.

UNIVERSITY OF CALGARY

Professor Jim Love was co-applicant for a successful $5 million award granted by the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada, to establish a “Smart Net Zero Energy Buildings Re-search Network.” The Ralph Klein Environ-mental Education Centre in Calgary won a 2011 Sustainable Architecture and Build-ing Magazine award. Adjunct Professor Chris Roberts was project architect, while Jim Love was the LEED coordinator and en-ergy and commissioning consultant.

Dr. Brian R. Sinclair, FRAIC, had his new book entitled “Campus Design + Plan-ning: Culture, Context and the Pursuit of Sustainability” published by the Canada Green Building Council (CaGBC). He re-cently completed a lecture tour in the Middle East, including the Inaugural Ad-dress in the “Sustainability Lecture Series” sponsored by the Responsible Urbanism Research Laboratory (RURL) at Zayed Uni-versity (Abu Dhabi). In 2010 Dr. Sinclair received the President’s Medal of Distin-guished Achievement by the International Institute for Advanced Studies in Systems Research and Cybernetics in Germany.

David Monteyne published his book, “Fall-out Shelter: Designing for Defense in the Cold War,” with the University of Minne-sota Press.

Graham Livesey has published the follow-ing contributions to books in the last year: “Assemblage,” “Fold + Architecture,” “Rhizome + Architecture,” and “Space + Architecture,” in A. Parr, ed., The Deleuze Dictionary (Edinburgh University Press); “Event Theory and Creative Agency,” in

CANADA

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Faber, Krips, and Pettus, eds., Event and Decision: Ontology and Politics in Badiou, Deleuze and Whitehead (Cambridge Schol-ars Publishing); and, “Ecologies, Assem-blages and the Patchwork City,” in A. Parr, and M. Zaretsky, eds. New Directions in Sustainable Design (Routledge).

The Architecture Program recently hosted the ACADIA 2011 Annual Conference (As-sociation for Computer Aided Design in Architecture). This international event was organized by faculty members Jason John-son, Josh Taron, Vera Parlac, and Branko Kolarevic.

In 2011, the program has hosted the fol-lowing distinguished scholars in our short course series: the William Lyon Somerville design charrette in January was taught by architect Adam Caruso of London; the Tay-lor Visiting Lecturer in February was Drura Parrish of the University of Kentucky; and the Gillmor Theory Seminar in October was taught by Dr. Jane Rendell of the Bartlett School of Architecture, London.

UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA

Blair Satterfield has co-authored an essay with his HouMinn partner, Marc Swack-hamer titled “Built to Change: A Case for Disintegration and Obsolescence.” This es-say appears in the newly published book “Matter: Material Processes in Architec-tural Production,” edited by Gail Peter Bor-den and Michael Meredith and published by Rutledge Press.

Professor Satterfield’s practice, HouMinn, in collaboration with the architects VJAA and artist Diane Willow, was shortlisted to submit a scheme for the redesign of the Mississippi River Plaza on the University of Minnesota campus. An exhibition of the teams’ entries will be on display at the Weisman Art Museum’s grand re-opening on October 2, 2011. Teams will present their work to a jury on October 26, when a winner will be decided.

Matthew Soules’ practice MSA is featured in Twenty + Change this year in Toronto, Ontario. Twenty + Change is a biennial ex-hibition and publication series dedicated to promoting emerging Canadian designers working in architecture, landscape archi-

tecture and urban design who are pushing the boundaries of their discipline.

CATHOLIC UNIVERSITY OF AMERICA

The School of Architecture and Planning of The Catholic University of America proudly presents Professor Adèle Naudé Santos, Dean of the MIT School of Architecture and Planning in the Inaugural Lecture honoring George T. Marcou, FAICP Professor Emeri-tus, on Wednesday 10/26/11, 5:30pm at the Koubek Auditorium of the Crough Cen-ter for Architectural Studies, 620 Michigan Ave. NE, Washington, DC 20064.

Professor George Themistoclis Marcou taught at The Catholic University of Amer-ica from 1962 to 2002. Born in Cairo, Egypt, he attended the Massachusetts In-stitute of Technology earning a bachelor’s degree in Architecture in 1953, and a master’s degree in city planning in 1955. During those years, he met a fellow student and the woman who would become his be-loved wife during 56 years, Margaret, who also graduated from MIT. Both raised five children, three golden retrievers, and later enjoyed their eleven grandchildren. Profes-sor Marcou was widely known for his pro-fessionalism, wonderful sense of humor, and practical approach to problem solving. Traveling around the world with Margaret, whether it was for business or for pleasure,

was a great passion where his fluency in Arabic, Greek and French came in handy. His career as an urban planner began in 1962, when he founded Marcou, O’Leary and Associates, a planning and urban development consulting firm. There he directed projects for numerous counties and cities both in the United States and abroad. The firm received urban design awards from the U.S. Department of Hous-ing and Urban Development, including an award for its preservation plan and program for the Vieux Carré Historic District in New Orleans.

Projects in the Washington area included Fiscal Impact Analyses for Montgomery County, a program for revitalization of downtown Frederick, Maryland, campus plans for George Washington University and the National Institutes of Health, plan-ning studies for Fairfax County and a study of Washington’s skyline for the National Capital Planning Commission. The firm was acquired by Westinghouse in 1973. In 1977, Professor Marcou became the first manager of the Community Development Bureau of the Metropolitan Washington Board of Trade, developing policy and ac-tion programs for the business community dealing with public issues.

Later in 1979, he was appointed Deputy Executive Director of the American Plan-ning Association (APA) where he was re-sponsible for its policy and lobbying pro-gram. He also served on the APA’s Political and Legislative Committee. In 1993, Gov-ernor Schaffer of Maryland awarded Pro-fessor Marcou the Governor’s Award for Professional Excellence and the following year appointed him to the State of Mary-land Economic Growth, Resource Protec-tion and Planning Commission on which he served for five years. He was often asked to be a guest lecturer at conferences and universities in the U.S. and abroad. These invitations took him to Denmark, Greece, Italy, and the Netherlands. He was a long-standing member of Lambda Alpha Inter-national, an honorary land economics soci-ety and the American Institute of Certified Planners.

Professor Emeritus George Marcou passed away on April 28, 2011 in Bethesda, Mary-land.

MEMORIALS

Professor Emeritus George Marcou