Web-ACSANewsMay09 - Association of Collegiate Schools of
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Web-ACSANewsMay09 - Association of Collegiate Schools of
may 2009 volume 38 number 9 acsaNews publication of the association of collegiate schools of architecture ACSA Annual Meeting in Portland, Oregon Read the highlights on page 4 in this issue: 2 President’s Message 4 97th ACSA Annual Meeting Recap 5 ACSA 100th Anniversary Celebration 6 ACSA 100th Anniversary Web Curator Call for Nominations President’s Report: The Year in Review 8 NAAB Accreditation Review ACSA International Relations 10 ACSA Memorials 11 Journal of Architectural Education Call for Submissions 12 98th ACSA Annual Meeting—New Orleans 16 2009 ACSA Administrators Conference 17 ACSA Fall Conferences Call for Proposals 20 2009-10 ACSA Awards Program 21 Student Design Competitions 25 REGIONAL NEWS 40 OPPORTUNITIES ACSA Calendar 23 NAAB Procedures for Accreditation, 2009 Ed. Student artwork at the 97th Annual Meeting closing reception at Portland State University photo by Eric W. Ellis from the president Reflections on Leadership by marleen kay davis acsaNews Pascale Vonier, Editor Editorial Offices 1735 New York Avenue, NW Washington, DC 20006, USA Tel: 202/785 2324; fax: 202/628 0448 Website: www.acsa-arch.org ACSA Board of Directors, 2008–2009 Marleen Kay Davis, FAIA, President Thomas Fisher, Vice President Kim Tanzer, AIA, Past President Mitra Kanaani, AIA, D.Arch, Secretary Graham Livesey, Treasurer Patricia Kucker, East Central Director Brian Kelly, AIA, Northeast Director Andrew D. Chin, Southeast Director Ursula Emery McClure, AIA, LEED AP, Southwest Director Stephen Meder, West Director Keelan Kaiser, AIA, West Central Director George Baird, FRAIC, AIA, Canadian Director Deana Moore, Student Director Michael J. Monti, PhD, Executive Director ACSA Mission Statement To advance architectural education through support of member schools, their faculty, and students. This support involves: • Serving by encouraging dialogue among the diverse areas of discipline; • Facilitating teaching, research, scholarly and creative works, through intra/interdisciplinary activity; • Articulating the critical issues forming the context of architectural education • Fostering public awareness of architectural education and issues of importance This advancement shall be implemented through five primary means: advocacy, annual program activities, liaison with collateral organizations, dissemination of information and response to the needs of member schools in order to enhance the quality of life in a global society. The ACSA News is published monthly during the academic year, September through May. Back issues are available for $9.95 per copy. Current issues are distributed without charge to ACSA members. News items and advertisements should be submitted via fax, email, or mail. The submission deadline is six weeks prior to publication. Submission of images is requested. The fee for classified advertising is $16/line (42-48 characters/line.) Display ads may be purchased; full-page advertisements are available for $1,090 and smaller ads are also available. Please contact ACSA more information. Send inquires and submission via email to: news@acsa-arch.org; by mail to Editor at: ACSA News,1735 New York Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 20006; or via fax to 202/628 0448. For membership or publications information call ACSA at: 202/785 2324. ISSN 0149-2446 Leadership is demonstrated in many different ways, and different types of leadership are appropriate in different contexts at different times. I thought I would conclude my year as ACSA president with some observations on leadership, as well as a sincere thank you to all who contributed to the accomplishments of ACSA over the past year. While it has been an honor to serve in a leadership role with ACSA, the organization derives its real strength through its members and their participation. Thanks to a first rate ACSA staff, opportunities for participation are plentiful and meaningful participation is maximized. “Participation is the first stage of leadership,” were the words that welcomed my sons to high school, where the faculty had a “leadership curriculum.” The school defined leadership in four stages, roughly corresponding to the four years of high school, unified by service activities; participation, contribution, responsibility; and finally, directing the efforts of others. Dispelling the stereotype of active-leader/passive-follower is one of the best ways to understand the many forms of effective leadership. Teaching is, I believe, one of the most profound forms of leadership, with lasting effects in developing thinking ability, skills, knowledge, values, and confidence in the next generation. The “positional authority” of a teacher is a sacred trust, but not the true source of inspired leadership. Different teaching styles seem to rely on different motivational techniques: praise, criticism, encouragement, communication styles, high standards, objective analysis, humor, consistency, etc. Interestingly, students respond differently to their different teachers, while the “best” students seem to respect all their teachers and to take advantage of each one’s unique strengths. The exposure to so many teaching/leadership styles, particularly in the interpersonal environment of the studio, is a healthy experience for our students, preparing them for the range of interpersonal encounters with clients and others. Leadership by example is a powerful force. As a student, watching faculty dedication was one of the most inspirational influences for me: no matter how late I left the studio, Mathius Ungers was in his office, with a team of post-professional students, working on his latest competition. Later, as one of the early female faculty members in the male-dominated domain of architecture, I was very aware that female students seemed to watch me very closely. I had to set, and meet, high standards of professionalism. We are all role models for our students, and they need many types of role models. When I became a new parent and as I watched my children grow, I was also struck by the overlap in qualities related to leadership, teaching, parenting, and coaching. In each of these roles, overreliance on “positional authority” is the most ineffective form of leadership. “Because I said so” might achieve immediate results, but will never truly motivate—nor inspire—others. ACSANEWS may 2009 The ability to visualize what doesn’t exist comes easily to designers, but not to everyone. In fact, it is easier to identify obstacles to any new idea. For a designer, an obstacle is a new opportunity. Designers enjoy imagining new ways to achieve different goals and overcome obstacles. We are comfortable with developing concrete ideas within the ambiguity of the unknown. Describing ideas, overcoming obstacles, and helping to create a collective vision is where designers, simply in participation, can make invaluable leadership contributions to our different communities. ACSA is a service organization, creating value for our schools and faculty members. Theories of “servant leadership” seem especially appropriate for a service organization: working for the collective group. As an elected leader for ACSA, I worked in this way, partly as a “steward” of a great organization, with a clear mission developed by my predecessors. Because designers can so easily imagine new ideas and goals, I felt that one important role as president was to focus our energy and to keep our core mission clear: service to the schools, through communication, publications, information, opportunities, awards, conferences, networking, and organizational structure. As described in the Annual Business Meeting Summary (found on page 7), the ACSA Board of Directors identified key priorities for the year: diversity, planning for ACSA’s 100th anniversary in 2012, the National Academy of Environmental Design, and vigilant participation in the NAAB reassessment of the Conditions for Accreditation. “Design” served as a unifying theme over the last year in our two major conferences and in the various “president’s letters” that I have written. We must value our expertise as design thinkers and design edu- cators, while articulating that design can be a form of applied research as well as a basis of leadership. The elected leaders for ACSA change each year, with a complete turnover every three years. However, an indispensable form of leadership for ACSA comes from the full-time professional staff at our national office, assembled by our executive director, Michael Monti. While all of us are busy in our day jobs as design educators, the ACSA staff wakes up every day, thinking about the best way to provide service to all of the ACSA schools. It has been a pleasure to work with this group, and I deeply appreciate the professional contributions of each one and their sense of team work in moving ACSA forward: • • • • • • Project Manager Eric Ellis, who oversees the complexity of awards, competitions, and other projects; Conferences Manager Mary Lou Baily, who oversees the myriad details involved in our successful conferences; Membership/Marketing Manager Kathryn Swiatek, who manages the database and sponsorships; Communications Manager Pascale Vonier, who oversees everything from the weekly email blasts to many of our various print publications; Administrative Assistant Kevin Mitchell who brings graphic design skills in laying out the ACSA News among other responsibilities; and our newest staff addition, Administrative Assistant Danielle Washington, with her great people skills, honed by a major in psychology. Mike Monti recently celebrated his five-year anniversary with ACSA, and it is an understatement to say that he deserves great credit for genuine leadership in making a more effective ACSA organization over that time. I have joined his fan club. Everyone who works with him appreciates the intelligent guidance he shows in transforming the operational and substantive aspects of ACSA. In closing, I want to extend a genuine thankyou to everyone who contributes to the success of ACSA, through demonstrating leadership in participation, contribution, and service; the ACSA staff, the current ACSA Board members, my predecessors (and mentors) as ACSA Board members, the JAE Editorial Board, the hardworking conference co-chairs, the regional conference co-chairs, the many accreditation task force members, the faculty councilors at each school, the administrators leading the schools, and all the faculty participants in our conferences, awards programs, competitions, publications, committees, and other activities. Thanks to you, the schools and faculty of ACSA have greatly benefited. If our graduating students need to develop a viable and creative “Plan B,” the same can be said for our schools, which are facing increasingly grim futures in this great recession. This is a deeper challenge, and we will need to preserve design education in the face of significant educational cut-backs. (“Budget correction” was the latest euphemism I heard.) Architects will need to protect our core strengths in studio-based learning and design thinking, while imagining creative solutions for providing student opportunities, streamlining curriculum, leveraging expertise, insuring faculty development, outsourcing course components, forming creative partnerships, generating income and cutting costs. As a professional organization, ACSA can help its member schools and faculty by a sharing of ideas and best practices. acsaNATIONAL Development of a collective vision empowers groups, organizations, and teams. Great leaders do not impose a top-down vision, but have the ability to articulate—and develop—a collective, shared vision. Interestingly, the word “vision” is derived from the visual: our domain as designers. ACSANEWS May 2009 97th annual meeting 2008-09 Architectural Education Awards Ceremony at University of Oregon The shared values of design by pascale vonier At the end of March, educators, practitioners, and students gathered in beautiful downtown Portland to share their views on the value of design across social, aesthetic, environmental, economic, and pedagogical borders. This year, over 400 participants attended the 97th Annual Meeting, which was hosted by the University of Oregon, and co-hosted by Portland State University. Co-chairs Mark Gillem, University of Oregon, and Phoebe Crisman, University of Virginia, organized a program of events including 120 paper presentations, 10 special focus sessions, and 4 critical converstaions, which sparked a wide-range of provocative discussions. tablished panel discussions to share school’s successful best practices and initiated an informal LGBT Breakfast. The Women’s Leadership Council held a third successful meeting and participants worked together to form action items to complete over the next months. A workshop is planned for the Administrators Conference in St. Louis that would cover various issues of interest to women in academia, such as how to find a publisher. Also, at the 98th ACSA Annual Meeting in New Orleans, the group hopes to have a workshop to offer advice on negotiation and looking for new hires. Portland was an ideal backdrop for these conversations as it is an inherently interdisciplinary city, bringing a balance between design, local heritage, and area redevelopment. Architects work with transportation engineers and planners to make affordable and appealing communities and attendees got to explore some of the newly revitalized areas during the various walking tours. In an effort to continue building ACSA’s knowledge base, the second annual poster sessions took place Friday afternoon, during which attendees mingled with poster presenters to exchange ideas and build upon new ones. That evening, University of Oregon hosted the 2009 Architectural Education Awards Ceremony and reception at their new White Stag building. The ceremony is also an opportunity for fellow collateral organizations—JAE, AIA, NCARB, and ARCC—to present their education awards. During the Saturday luncheon, outgoing ACSA Canadian Director George Baird introduced this year’s Topaz Medal recipient Adèle Naudé Santos with a personal story, which depicted Santos as a spirited, determined, and passionate individual. acsaNATIONAL Opening night kicked off with lectures by Michael Pyatok, an Oaklandbased architect widely known for his expertise in the development and design of low-income and affordable housing, and David Miller, co-founder of notable Seattle firm Miller|Hull and chair of the University of Washington Department of Architecture. Both architects’ design values draw upon the heritage of the community within which they build and on the importance of creating, what Miller called, “long-life, loose-fitting architecture of deconstruction” that can be adapted for future reuse. After the lectures, during a discussion moderated by co-chair Mark Gillem, Miller and Pyatok talked about the importance of place and community in their work. While they both work in very different communities; Miller works in downtown zones and tries to open his work to the street and greenspaces, whereas Pyatok, who designs social housing, faces the challenge of protecting his residents from outside elements, they both believe that the residents and neighbors should be a part of the design process from the start and that architects and builders should not put alien buildings in existing communities. Pyatok said, “We do not want to stigmatize with odd, out-of-place architecture.” ACSA continued to make diversity within the profession a priority at this year’s annual meeting, ACSA Northeast Regional Director Brian Kelly es- Closing keynote and 2009 Tau Sigma Delta Gold Medalist Patricia Patkau reiterated the themes brought up by Miller and Pyatok, emphasizing the value of buildings that have reprogrammable lives. Patkau’s work also relates strongly to its surroundings, she spoke of the value of designing buildings that years from now will be so highly regarded that they would never be torn down. This new economic downturn is giving architects pause on how they can work closer to their communities for sustained growth. Thank you to our co-chairs, Mark Gillem and Phoebe Crisman, and the host schools for all their hard work. ACSA is already looking forward to next year’s Annual Meeting in New Orleans! For more information on this year and next year’s conferences please visit acsa-arch.org. For a complete recap of ACSA’s annual business meeting, you can find President Marleen Davis’ article on page 6. by brian kelly ACSA embarked on an ambitious plan to recognize an upcoming milestone in architectural education, its 100th anniversary, which will take place in 2012. The centenary is being envisaged as a constellation of events that will mark this occasion ranging from scholarly events and publications to broad public outreach initiative on the topic of architectural education. ACSANEWS may 2009 ACSA TO CELEBRATE CENTENNIAL IN 2012 The ACSA Board of Directors established a steering committee comprised of nationally recognized leaders, scholars, and practitioners in the field of architecture. Four major projects are currently being planned that will form the basis for the celebration: a scholarly book, a web based exhibition, a special edition of the Journal of Architectural Education (JAE), and special events at the 100th national meeting in Boston, MA. The scholarly book will examine major themes that shaped architectural education in North America. The project team will be lead by an internationally renowned scholar who will be assisted by an editorial board of commensurate rank. Book chapters will be solicited from scholars with a demonstrated expertise in architectural history and architectural education. From left to right per row: Women’s leadership council reception; Keynote lecturers David Miller and Michael Pyatok; Topaz Medallion Recipient Adèle Naudé Santos; Keynote lecturer Patricia Patkau; reception at University of Oregon; Poster Session; AIA President Marvin Malecha, ACSA President Marleen Davis, ACSA President-Elect Tom Fisher; closing reception at Portland State University To see more photos from the conference visit acsa-arch.org/conferences JAE is planning for a special edition to focus on themes relevant to the 100th anniversary. Additionally, events are being planned for the 2012 national meeting in Boston. For more information see: www.acsa-arch.org/100 acsaNATIONAL The web-based exhibition is planned as a centerpiece for the 2012 of the ACSA, and will demonstrate that the achievements of architectural education in North America are significant and provide value, interest, and opportunities for all citizens. The website will appeal to two principal audiences. Students, parents, guidance counselors, and teachers in K-12 settings will experience the dynamics of architectural education and learn about the variety of career paths available. Second, citizens, community, and civic leaders will find the website a valuable resource about community design centers, service learning, and public scholarship venues throughout North America that bring design excellence and the resources of the academy to the public. The website will gather content from schools of architecture throughout North America to portray design excellence in the context of equity and social justice, diversity, quality of life, sustainability, and civic leadership. ACSANEWS May 2009 president’s report: the year in review summary of the Annual Business Meeting, held in Portland by marleen kay davis Given the distinguished 97-year history of ACSA, it would be presumptuous to claim that this has been ACSA’s best year. Nevertheless, I am pleased to report that ACSA is in excellent shape: organizationally, financially, and in terms of the services that it provides to its member schools and faculty. At the Annual Business Meeting in Portland, the ACSA Board reported on the priorities, operations, and accomplishments of the ACSA. This report, summarizes some of the key accomplishments of the last year. ACSA 100th Web Exhibition CURATOR 1. A once-in-a-century opportunity for ACSA will occur in 2012, when we celebrate ACSA’s 100th anniversary. The ACSA Board of Directors and a steering committee, led by ACSA Northeast Director Brian Kelly, has brainstormed ideas to mark this centennial. These efforts include; a scholarly book as a critical review of architectural education over the last century; an innovative web-based exhibit targeted to a broad contemporary audience; and thematic issues of the Journal for Architectural Education. Our 2012 Annual Meeting will be in Boston, home of the first school of architecture at MIT, founded in 1965. 2. The National Academy of Environmental Design (NAED), created in 2007, continues in its start-up phase, with the ACSA leadership of Kim Tanzer, Michael Monti, Tom Fisher, and many others. Modeled on the existing National Academies chartered by Congress, the NAED aspires to be the central repository of expertise related to environmental research and design, with a goal of developing transformative design practices and policies in the face of a global environmental crisis. The National Academy of Environmental Design has incorporated, with 22 member organizations, representing over 500,000 members. 3. Inspired by the AIA Gateway Commitment to Diversity in April 2008, ACSA has focused on diversity this year. ACSA Northeast Director Brian Kelly has proactively established panel discussions at both of our major conferences, initiated an informal LGBT Breakfast during the Annual Meeting, and has started a collection of best practices and other resources for schools. 4. Hundreds of ACSA faculty have been involved in accreditation, either in preparation for a visit, on a team, or as part of the two year process to reassess the Conditions for Accreditation. Under the direction of ACSA West Central Director Keelan Kaiser as chair of the Architecture Education Committee, ACSA has provided reports, recommendations, commentary, and responses at each stage of this two-year process. On March 1, the NAAB issued its final draft for the Conditions, which will be approved in July 2009. We were pleased that there were no major “surprises” and that many of the ACSA recommendations have been respected. Nevertheless, a number of detailed concerns have been identified, in the hopes of improving the final set of revised Conditions. Thanks to ACSA staff efforts, our web site has complete documentation of the communication during this two-year process: At this point, I confess to NAAB Fatigue! 5. The ACSA regional conferences continue to be popular, typically with intriguing themes that attract national interest in the peer-reviewed selection process. We had three regional conferences last fall, and special thanks are due to the host schools. 6. Over the last year, Michael Pride and Ted Landsmark deserve great credit in initiating “Inside / Out”, a series of informal discussions among architectural educators and our colleagues in interior design. First held in conjunction with Kentucky Derby weekend at the University of Cincinnati in 2008, additional day-long meetings have been held at call for nominations acsaNATIONAL The Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture proposes to create a cutting-edge website to promote the value that an education in architecture can bring to students, citizens, and the communities in which they live and work. The project is planned as a centerpiece for the 2012 centennial anniversary of the ACSA, the membership organization for schools of architecture in the United States and Canada. ACSA is seeking nominations (candidates may be either self-nominated or nominated by a colleague) for the position of curator who will serve as the primary contact with individuals, schools, and other organizations that are portrayed in the web site. The curator should have significant knowledge of architectural education as well as a working knowledge of digital media. ACSA sees this as an opportunity to sponsor creative work of a talented faculty member who will work in collaboration with the ACSA 100th Anniversary Steering Committee, the ACSA Board of Directors, and a professional web designer in two phases under two separate contracts. This is a part-time position. For a complete description of this position and the web exhibition project visit: www.acsa-arch.org/100 ACSANEWS may 2009 7. 8. Created last year, the ACSA College of Distinguished Professors is defining its mission as a group of past winners of ACSA Distinguished Professor awards. ACSA holds two major conferences each year, both of which exceeded our projections for attendance. Thanks to our conference co-chairs, Crystal Weaver of SCAD, and Alan Plattus of Yale, the ACSA Administrator’s Conference in Savannah was excellent, with the theme: “Design… in the Economy, in the University and in the Curriculum.” With just over 400 attendees, our Annual Conference in Portland had a great sense of energy, derived from the keynotes, the walking tours of Portland, the Topaz Award presentation by Adele Naude Santos, and the many conference sessions. Everyone enjoyed the two receptions at Portland State University School of Architecture and at the downtown center of the University of Oregon. Our conference co-chairs, Mark Gillem of the University of Oregon, and Phoebe Crisman of the University of Virginia. developed a theme related to “the Value of Design,” which generated a record number of submissions. 9. The ACSA Treasurer Graham Livesey reported a healthy financial profile for the ACSA: thanks to continued vigilance while expanding effectiveness, the organization has operated in the black, although our reserve fund investments are fluctuating in this unstable economy. 10. Publication efforts are a key service of ACSA, facilitating communication as well as providing a major venue for faculty scholarship and peer recognition. The Journal of Architectural Education (JAE) has an active Editorial Board under the leadership of Executive Editor George Dodds. Routledge has sponsored a series of edited books based on ACSA past conferences: the latest book, entitled Writing Urbanism: A Design Reader, edited by Douglas Kelbaugh and Kit Krankel McCullough. The 8th Edition of the ACSA Guide to Architecture Schools has been printed, along with full text accessibility on our website. The ACSA staff has completed an important, but time-consuming, priority identified by faculty: past ACSA Conference Proceedings are now indexed and will be available on our website. 11. Communication efforts continue to improve, particularly with expansions of our handsome web site. We plan a website exhibit of awards and award projects. I hope you’ve noticed, and read, the weekly email mini-blasts, in which we try to focus on 2-3 key issues. 12. Awards and competitions are an important form of peer recognition valued by faculty. Hundreds of submissions to the various awards programs are judged by dozens of faculty involved different award juries. During the Awards Ceremony, numerous faculty or programs received award recognition. For the first time, the Award Ceremony included images related to teaching and creative activity of the recipients. 13. As a direct outcome of some of the discussions related to accreditation, an ad hoc committee from the other collaterals developed a concept plan for an “Education Analysis.” The study would address “What Does an Architect Need to Learn and When?” looking at three settings: formal education, internship, and life-long learning related to continuing education. If funded as a grant, this has the potential to be a landmark study. 14. Over the last year, the ACSA staff has completed five grants, related to the ACSA Centennial, Universal Design, and the Education Analysis. Last fall, the ACSA received a grant from the NEA. 15. A new initiative is an expansion of resources for faculty that will be posted on the web site. with an on-going “call for content,” we plan to build up the ACSA website as a place where faculty can share resources related to course development and career planning. 16. ACSA has joined with AIA in “A Call for Action” related to the Obama stimulus plan. We want our web sites to feature faculty and student work that would relate to some of the opportunities in federal financing for short-term construction, as well as long-term research funding. Although we currently have a submission deadline of April 15, we will continue to build this resource in the foreseeable future. 17. Rather than reading memorials regarding deceased faculty at our Annual Meeting, ACSA will start a new tradition of collecting, and archiving, these important tributes to architectural educators. 18. Looking forward to next year, President-Elect Tom Fisher reported on the plans and priorities for the upcoming year, with an emphasis on the economy, the environment, and equity. He outlined the themes for the Administrators Conference in St. Louis in addressing global economic challenges and opportunities, along with the “Re-Building” theme for the Annual Meeting to be held in New Orleans. Providing service to ACSA schools and faculty is a multi-dimensioned task, with impressive efforts as described. None of this would be possible without the enthusiasm and professional dedication of the ACSA staff, under the direction of Executive Director, Michael Monti. I want to express my deepest gratitude for their efforts, as well as a genuine thank you to all those who participate and contribute to ACSA. Thank you! acsaNATIONAL the ACSA Administrators Conference in Savannah and at the IDEC conference in March 2009. An average of 50 participants at each of the three meetings discussed curriculum, disciplinary challenges, and opportunities for collaboration. Nationally, many universities are moving interior design from an art or human ecology environment into a design-oriented academic unit. Bringing the two disciplines together while respecting the autonomy of each is an important goal. ACSANEWS May 2009 accreditation review NAAB RELEASES PROPOSED CONDITIONS by michael j. monti The National Architectural Accrediting Board published the details of its restructured Conditions for Accreditation, providing the final draft of a document that seeks to differentiate institutional support from student performance standards, all the while increasing the the reporting requirements for schools. Guide to Arch schools Free searchable online database of all professional architecture programs in the United States and Canada Find tuition and admissions information, related degrees and specializations The 2009 print edition is now available The 2009 proposed Conditions were released for a 90-day public comment period on March 1. “Overall, we are pleased with the final draft, particularly that there are no major 11th hour surprises,” said ACSA President Marleen Kay Davis. “We feel that many of our ACSA recommendations have been honored, with the increased emphasis on sustainability, with the less-prescriptive wording of most of the Student Performance Criteria, with the emphasis on faculty development, with the clustering of SPC’s into areas related to core values, rather than curriculum, and with a broad emphasis on leadership and ethics as part of professional coursework in integrated practice.” More Information A complete summary of the process to develop ACSA’s positions on accreditation is available on a special page of the website. Visitors will find resources such as: • • • • ACSA’s responses to NAAB A PowerPoint presentation summarizing issues with the proposed Conditions A version of the proposed Conditions highlighted to demonstrate significant changes since 2004 A summary of reporting requirements, including those which may be difficult for schools to implement. The final draft of the Conditions is the last step of a more than two year process of development. More than 100 faculty and administrators contributed to ACSA’s efforts to identify issues for discussion with the new Conditions, while NAAB engaged a similarly large group for its own efforts. The resulting final draft presents the conditions in two parts: “Institutional Support and Commitment to Continuous Improvement” and “Educational Outcomes and Curriculum.” The second part comprises the Student Performance Criteria, which have been reduced to 31, from 34, and which have been grouped into three realms, Critical Thinking and Representation, Integrated Building Practices, Technical Skills and Knowledge, and Leadership and Practice.” Of major concern for the ACSA Board of Directors with the new draft is the increased reprorting requirements included in the draft. These include significantly increased requirements around faculty credentials, public information (such as Architect Registration Exam pass rates), and budgets. acsaNATIONAL The ACSA board released a summary of the reporting requirments that highlights those issues which the board is concerned will be difficult for programs to implement. “The proposed Conditions clarify the content required in the Annual Program Report. However, we are concerned that some of the information required for the APR is overly prescriptive and only marginally related to the quality of the school or the students’ education,” President Davis said. archschools.org Published by the Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture . ACSA has emailed schools about the proposed Conditions and held a forum for discussing the Conditions at the 97th ACSA Annual Meeting and Annual Business Meeting. Based on member feedback and its own deliberations, the board plans to provide a formal response to the draft by May 1. TRANS-NATIONAL COMPETENCIES IN EDUCATION CONTINUE TO DEVELOP by michael j. monti The Santiago meeting continued previous discussions of developing and measuring competencies designed for graduates of professional architecture degree programs, with four of the meeting’s sponsoring schools giving presentations on their curricula. Two other sessions focused on developing and measuring competencies specific to sustainability and digital technologies. In session one, representatives from Universidad de Chile (whose 19th century main administratiion building was the venue for the meeting), Universidad de Concepcion, Universidad Central de Chile, and Universidad del Bío Bío. Representatives from more than 20 schools in South American, Central America, Mexico, and Europe gathered in Santigago, Chile, to continue a series of discussions of common competencies sought as outcomes from architectural education. The meeting, titled “Educating Architects in a Fast Changing World,” is the third organized by the European Network of Heads of Schools of Architecture (ENHSA), spearheaded by Constantin Spiridonidis (Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece) in conjunction with a group of Latin American architecture programs. ACSA is also a participant of this thematic network, which received a grant of more than 300,000 to support six meetings in locations in Through the presentations and discussion following, it became clear that schools were cognizant of the challenge of evolving curricula to match changes in professional practice. Participants marked changes in the overall context of educational delivery, such as a movement to outcomes-based frameworks based more on projects and problem-solving and less on traditional disciplinary areas. At the same time, the continued challenge of producing graduates with strong technical skills, particularly those tied to traditional architectural practice, presents schools an imperative to develop curricula that educate students with a broad understanding of the multidisciplinary context in which architecture as a discipline and profession exists and still with a mastery of a range of professional skills. Additional sessions focused on specific competencies in sustainability and in response to the development of digital tools. These discussions involved presentations from more than 12 educators from Europe and South and Central America, providing a range of looks at projects and collaborations. Of particular interest is “e-archi.doct,” a project sponsored by the European Union that connects 15 schools of architecture in Europe to create a virtual campus through which students can pursue post-professional (post-master’s) studies in architecture. As Spiridonidis commented in the presentation, this initiative responds to the interest in developing a stronger research consciousness in architectural education through broad and deep opportunities for study, largely through virtual means, across Europe. The closing session involved a discussion of the next steps for this group, as well as the overall purposes of these meetings. As a European Union¬–funded project, it was intended as a way to increase transparency and mobility in education—goals that match those of the Bologna Accord, which continues to transform higher education in Europe by attempting to standardize the structure of educational degrees. Yet, as was discussed, there is an underlying interest in the funding organization to export the European educational model around the world—an opportunity for engagement that would ultimately be left to non-European schools to decide. LATIN AMERICAN SCHOOLS DEVELOP ACCORD Since the beginning of this project in early 2008, participants have discussed whether or not a multinational association of architecture schools in Latin America was needed. With more than 200 schools in South America alone and more than 75,000 students, the opportunity to benefit from increased cooperation and sharing of information seemed strong. During the meeting in Santiago, Pilar Barba, director of the school of architecture at the Universidad de Chile, produced a letter of intent to create an American Network of Heads of Schools of Architecture (ANHSA), similar to that in Europe and well as to ACSA in the United States and Canada and ASINEA in Mexico. The purposes of ANHSA, as indicated in the letter, include establishing a network open to all schools of architecture to “analyze, debate, revise, and construct.” acsaNATIONAL Latin America and Europe. Previous meetings were held in Crete, in September 2008, and Lima, in February 2008. ACSANEWS may 2009 from the executive director ACSANEWS May 2009 10 memorials THOUGHTS OF MAX by tony schuman It was my great pleasure and privilege to have known Max Bond since the heady days at Columbia in the late 60s when he came to the school to help guide our initial efforts at community engagement in Harlem. Over that period he was a friend and mentor and valued colleague through a variety of circumstances and efforts. Through it all he was remarkably consistent in his values, his demeanor, and his architecture. acsaNATIONAL Following that first design studio in East Harlem in the fall of 1968, where Max was advisor to a group of us working with the Real Great Society, my early conversations with Max revolved around his work in Ghana. During the presidency of Kwame Nkrumah, Max spent several years in Ghana teaching at the University of Science and Technology in Kumasi and building, most notably the library in Bolgatanga in the northeast corner of the country. As I prepared to make my own journey to West Africa, aided by a Kinne travel grant from Columbia, Max provided documentary materials, encouragement, and a list of contacts in Kumasi. The latter, mostly faculty from Washington University in St. Louis and the Tropical Architecture program from the AA, received me warmly based on my association with Max. I was interested at the time in the intersection between indigenous and contemporary architecture, and Max’s library provided one convincing strategy – a fundamentally modernist notion inflected toward and informed by local culture in the form of an broad flat concrete roof hovering over a collection of smaller pavilions housing the library functions in an organization reminiscent of a tribal family compound. In the years since, I had occasion to visit other works by Max, among them the Martin Luther King, Jr. Center for Non-Violent Social Change in Atlanta, the Birmingham Civil Rights Institute, and the Schomburg Library in Harlem. Max’s architecture was, like his demeanor, utterly without bombast. He derived his designs from careful consideration of site, history, and culture, including the culture of the construction workforce. In Atlanta, his choice of materials (masonry) and structural forms (the vault) reflected the use of these materials and methods in traditional African building but also the demographics of the local labor pool, where African Americans were skilled in masonry but absent from some other trades because of racial discrimination. In Birmingham, his building, though substantial in size, defers in significant ways to the Sixteenth Street Baptist Church, site of the horrific bomb attack by the Ku Klux Klan in 1963 that took the lives of four young girls. The Civil Rights Institute, located across the street from the church, is set back from the building line so that the main façade of the church is visible to people coming down the sidewalk. Inside the Institute, the route of the visit is organized so that as the visitor nears the end of the trajectory, he/she confronts a window whose gaze focuses on the church façade. The Schomburg Library employs African hardwoods and elements like a relief map of Africa in the lobby floor to convey a sense of origins, but the architecture itself is straightforwardly modern. When I asked Max about the evolution of his design vocabulary, notably the absence of an attempt to represent “black culture” through formal devices, his response was candid: ‘This is the idiom I am comfortable with.” Max was a busy man. As an educator, practitioner, and leading figure in the African American cultural community he was in great demand as a speaker, as an advisor, as a consultant. In my experience Max was someone who said ‘yes” more often than not to these requests for his assistance. One secret of his ability to do so was that he worked collaboratively. During the City College years, he relied heavily on his partner, Don Ryder, to manage their architectural practice, and on Prof. Feigenberg, his Associate Dean, to help out at the College. So when we demonstrated in front of the South African embassy, Max was there. When Karen Phillips, Beverly Willis and I organized a two-day, two-city workshop on “Working Neighborhoods”, Max was there. He answered the call when asked to head a “critical conversation” at an annual meeting of ACSA (Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture) in which faculty had an opportunity to participate in a plenary session through a refereed response to a short “provocation” issued by the invited speaker. Max’s topic was “Working Cities: Density, Risk, Spontaneity.” In person Max was always thoughtful, always congenial, and always trying to promote a unified, collective response to issues. However softly he spoke, he was fervently committed to fundamental principles of equal rights and social justice, and he was a champion of these values in every aspect of his life work. He was a participant in a study tour of Cuba for architects and planners organized by Jill Hamberg and me in 1980 to meet with our Cuban colleagues. Max maintained contact over the years with several of these distinguished architects and educators, among them Roberto Segre, Fernando Salinas, Mario Coyula and Ruben Bancrofft, the Dean of ISPJAE, the School of Architecture at the University of Havana. When Max became Dean of the School of Environmental Design at City College in 1985, he was in a position to extend these contacts in the form of an exchange program which for seven years took City College students to Cuba, led by Prof. Alan Feigenberg, to engage design projects with their student counterparts. Regrettably, U.S. Immigration policy prevented the Cuban students from being able to return the visit in New York. My last sustained interaction with Max was at a 3-day charrette held at the New Jersey Institute of Technology (NJIT) two years ago, organized by the RPA, and sponsored by the City of Newark, to develop a “Draft Vision Plan” to lead the way into a renewed planning effort in the city. At Mayor Cory Booker’s invitation, Max was a key participant in this effort. In typical fashion he cut through the welter of sectoral concerns (transportation, housing, public safety, economic development, etc.) to suggest that we focus on social equity as a core value of the undertaking, a recommendation very much taken to heart by those present. As the preeminent African American architect in the nation, Max was a role model for people of color in the design professions. He wore this mantle gracefully, leading through quiet example and soft persuasion. In the process he became a role model for us all of ethical, committed, thoughtful citizenship. We mourn with his family, friends and colleagues this terrible loss. ACSANEWS may 2009 journal of architectural education Herbert Bayer Lonely Metropolitan, 1932. Courtesy Marlborough Gallery, London O P E N C A L L for Submissions Journal of Architectural Education This is a reminder that the JAE is continuously accepting the submission of previously unpublished text based articles and design work for blind peer-review. Manuscripts will be considered in two categories: 1. 2. 11 Scholarship of Design - manuscripts that are primarily text based (7000 words max. including endnotes) with illustrations serving to support the text. Design as Scholarship - 8 (eight) page manuscripts that are primarily visual ZLWKWH[WZRUGVPD[LQFOXGLQJHQGQRWHVDQGOLVWRI½JXUHVVHUYLQJWRVXSport the images. This work may be the product of an academic studio, or created directly by the submitting author(s). Submission requirements and the review process are outlined on the JAE website at http://jaeonline.org/ under the category, Design as Scholarship. Refer all inquiries to: George Dodds, PhD JAE Executive Editor gdodds@utk.edu Phoebe Crisman Learning Barge, JAE 61:1, 2008 JAE Best Design as Scholarship Article Emerging Asia: Visions, Tensions and Transformations Theme Editors: Marco Cenzatti, Harvard University (cenzatti@gsd.harvard.edu) Lisa Findley,California College of the Arts (handmark@mindspring.com) Abidin Kusno, University of British Columbia (akusno@interchange.ubc.ca) The recent outpouring of various and extraordinary design practices in Asia has driven home the point that the architecture of Asia today is inconceivable without an account of its historical and theoretical positions. The recent spectacular performances of architecture for the Summer Olympic Games in Beijing 2008 represent just one among several attempts of countries in Asia to register their presence on the world stage today. As architecture increasingly lays claim on Asia’s imagination and creativity, it has also played an indispensible role in defining the Asian experiences and discourses of modernity, nationalism and globalization. These undertakings, however also raise critical concerns about the actual and potential impacts of architecture and urban design on social, political and environmental change. The goal of this special issue is to explore theories, histories, pedagogies and practices that have emerged from the rapidly changing realities of architectural representation in Asia today. Thematically, the special issue has its trio focus: 2). Examine the role of transnational design ideologies and practices which involved Western collaborators (architects and architectural schools and professional associations) in the production and representation of architecture in Asia. 3). Examining architecture as the material site for the formation of political identities and public memories within the historical context of Asian situation. acsaNATIONAL 1). Exploring the production, reception and strategies of architecture and urban design as they are crystallized in the particular context of rapid and traumatic urbanization. b ACSANEWS May 2009 building 9 8 th aCSA Annual Meeting Call For Papers Submissions Due: September 30, 2009 The following call for submissions is the result of the first stage of a two-stage, refereed process. Full topic descriptions are available at: www.acsa-arch.org/conferences New Orleans | March 4-7, 2010 12 Host School Franca Trubiano, Georgia Institute of Technology Tulane University Co-chairs Bruce Goodwin, Tulane University Judith Kinnard, Tulane University Theme Overview What is the role of the building in architectural discourse today? As schools engage in cross-disciplinary dialogues that are essential to the expanded field of architectural practice, does the art and craft of building design remain central to our curricula? Sophisticated technologies now allow us to preview the appearance and predict the performance of proposed buildings. Our traditional conception of design is challenged as decision-making can be automated and building parts can be cut, routed or printed to exact tolerances. Yet the ecological, economic and cultural contingencies that surround each project are increasingly complex. Recent events have exposed the fragility of buildings as objects in the face of natural and man-made forces and the critical role of infrastructure has been made increasingly apparent. The 2010 ACSA Annual Meeting will engage multiple themes associated with the changing art of building both as artifact and as process in architecture and related disciplines. The theme encourages debate on how we might balance traditional definitions of aesthetics, urbanism, preservation and construction with innovative practices that shatter the boundaries of architectural thinking. acsaNATIONAL Bridging the Gap Between Qualities and Quantities in Design Practice These debates will be informed by the city of New Orleans. More than 3 years after Hurricane Katrina the process and results of the re-building efforts at work in this most vibrant and unique of American cities will be an important point of reference and topic for discussion. Despite conditions of need and crisis, many false and unproductive characterizations continue to shape the teaching of design in schools of architecture. Most evident is the divide that separates qualitative and quantitative descriptions, and measurements of space and matter. This session encourages the presentation and discussion of architectural projects, student or otherwise, theoretical or built, conceived and executed using analytical processes predicated on the evaluation of specified data-scapes. The adoption of verifiable processes, whether in service to structural design, environmental sustainability, energy measurements or systems management, can contribute to the definition of a building’s performance and as such begin to bridge the present divide. Papers are sought which make evident the use of analytical processes in the reconceptualization of architectural design. Constructs and Concepts: Building in the Design Studio Scott Murray, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign In recent decades, architectural practice has traditionally been marked by a pervasive and perhaps necessary, though one might say unnatural, separation of the process of design from the act of building. This divergence is codified in the terminology of practice: the transition from the design development phase to construction documents technically marks a clean break at the end of a project’s design and the beginning of its construction. The rise of construction management, as a profession outside of architecture, has further entrenched the architect’s disassociation with building. These distinctions are perhaps just as evident in architecture schools, where design studios do not typically address the issues and challenges arising from construction, ideas more often tackled in technology courses which may or may not be related to studio work. This session invites papers and projects that explore diverse strategies for integrating the physical act of making into a broader definition of design. Alexandder Ortenberg and Axel Schmitzberger, California State Polytechnic University, Pomona The term “detail” itself has undergone many changes in meaning and identity and is in need of special attention. Architecture schools do not teach how to develop building details—even though the majority of offices will charge entry level employees with precisely this type of architectural production. We seem to agree that once young architects have acquired problem solving skills they will be able to master the specifics of detail on their own. This question, however, has not been adequately discussed as a theoretical subject. The proposed session attempts to reinvigorate the discourse of the detail as part of architectural education, as a practical issue and as an ethical and philosophical quest. Disaster as Design Moment in New Orleans and Beyond Jacob A. Wagner, University of Missouri-Kansas City This session seeks papers that address the concept of a “design moment” in the wake of disasters, including Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans. The idea of a “design moment” suggests an uncommon opportunity to create significant interventions in the basic urban form of a particular city. In contrast to the incremental growth of a city, design moments are characterized by dramatic alterations of urban form in a short period of time that may accelerate existing trends or radically transform building practice. Design moments provide a critical juncture in the life of a particular city that reveal both continuity and conflict with the urban past. Beyond the impacts to the physical city, a design moment can alter the social structure, act as a catalyst for new approaches to design education, or foster new schools of thought that influence the design professions for several decades. Energy and Environmental Simulation in the Design Studio Ute Poerschke, Lisa D. Iulo, and Loukas N. Kalisperis, Pennsylvania State University The most important decisions related to energy are made in the early design stage, for example the building’s siting and orientation, its main materiality and construction. Since this stage is rarely accompanied by consultants for reasons of cost and time, architects increasingly perform energy and environmental simulation in order to receive alternative input for the idea generation process. The session seeks papers that discuss the role of energy and environmental simulation in the architecture and urban design curricula. The main intent of this session is to collect, exchange, and compare teaching experiences of implementing energy and environmental simulation in architectural undergraduate and graduate courses in order to further enhance integrated strategies and inspire curriculum refinements. Flood Architecture Eduard Epp, University of Manitoba Flood Architecture addresses cultural settlement ideals and practices in geographic regions temporally affected by extreme hydrological/climatic cycles, primarily in river basins. It is constituted and determined by geophysical, technological, and socio-cultural systems working inter-dependently in time, space, and formal constitution. Flood Architecture recognizes and addresses the [potential] leadership role of the design disciplines [architects, industrial designers, landscape architects, urban designers] as ‘agents of positive change’ together with other allied disciplines including politicians, civic administrators, engineers, community activists, and so on. The opportunity arises for leading academics, practitioners and students to address Flood Architecture in relation to these sub-themes through both poetic and purposeful design proposals and works and to provide evidence through a very significant academic setting. Authors may submit only one paper per session topic. The same paper may not be submitted to multiple topics. An author can present no more than two papers at the Annual Meeting as primary author or co-author. All authors submitting papers must be faculty, or staff at ACSA member schools, faculty or staff at ACSA affiliate schools or become supporting ACSA members at the time of paper submission. 13 Papers submissions (1) must report on recently completed work, (2) cannot have been previously published or presented in public except to a regional audience, and (3) must be written in English. Submissions should be no longer than 4,000 words, excluding the abstract and endnotes. S u bm i s s i on P r o c e s s Flow and Contemporary Architecture Practice Nana Last, Rice University One of the prevailing constructs of contemporary architecture practice is that of flow. Appearing in and around various discussions from smooth space, to systems theory, material logics, emergence and temporality, the construct of flow is nearly as ubiquitous as it is broad. This makes the intersections between flow and architecture at once obvious and ill-defined, potentially potent and transformative yet too frequently associated solely with specific types of formal manipulations. The construct of flow, however, is positioned to serve as more than a design tool for architecture: it is situated in a position to open up issues of deep concern to architecture’s own definition, functioning and practical limits. This panel seeks papers that examine models, constructs and phenomena of flow in modern and contemporary architecture, landscape and urban practices. Papers on all aspects of this topic that examine how flow contributes to or reimagines the discipline and practice of architecture. Honorable Mention: Losing to the Competition Michael A. McClure, University of Louisiana at Lafayette This session aims to interrogate the value of competition entries that did not make the cut, and the role of competitions in design practice and education. Specific ‘losing’ entries are important examples of the working practices of particular emerging and established designers. The schemes of academic design competitions that did not win or place nonetheless hold great value for the students, the school, and the larger academy.The session welcomes debate regarding their role within larger contexts; social, practical, historical, pedagogical; it welcomes pedagogical approaches, historical and contemporary practices, multi-disciplinary comparisons that engage competitions as an active agent in the work The deadline for submitting a paper to a session for the Annual Meeting is September 30, 2009. Authors will submit papers through the ACSA online interface. When submitting your paper, you will be guided with the Web interface, through the following steps. 1. Log in with your ACSA username and password. 2. Enter the title of your paper. 3. Select the Session Topic for your submission. 4. Add additional authors for your paper, if any. 5. Upload your paper in MS Word or RTF format. Format the paper according to these guidelines. * Omit all author names from the paper and any other identifying information to maintain an anonymous review process. * Do not include an abstract in the file. * Use endnotes or a reference list in the paper. Footnotes should NOT be included. * No more than five images may be used in the paper. Images (low resolution) and captions should be embedded in the paper. 7. Click Submit to finalize your submission. Note: Your paper is not submitted unless you click the Submit button and receive an automatic email confirmation. acsaNATIONAL Detail Question(ed) All papers will undergo a blind peer review process. Session Topic Chairs will take into consideration each paper’s relevance to the topic and the evaluation furnished by three peer reviewers. ACSANEWS may 2009 S u bm i s s i on R e q u i r e m e n t s ACSANEWS May 2009 14 Call For Papers Integrating Sustainability Into Architectural Education: Are We There Yet? Making Sense of the Architectural Production of ‘Others’ John B. Hertz, University of Texas at San Antonio Sabir Khan, Georgia Tech Sustainability is now a key issue in the ethical and technical concerns of practicing professionals. This session will measure the progress of the integration of these same concerns into the broader architectural curriculum. This session will ask participants to take part in a discussion about the pedagogical changes that are integrating sustainability into the broader curriculum, including technical areas as well as studio, history/theory, and others. While case studies are important as a snapshot of where we are, papers should also reflect on how individual course experiences relate holistically to other academic offerings and to the curriculum as a whole. It is also open to more encompassing viewpoints regarding the greening of architectural education, including the role of external forces, such as accreditation criteria or calls by the AIA for greater responsibility in the preparation of future professionals. For a number of well-intentioned, if under-reflected, reasons - globalization of practice, cross-cultural awareness, NAAB criteria, curricular breadth - there is general agreement that courses on the architecture of people, periods, and places outside the Greco-Roman diffusion stream ought to be included in the curricula of US architecture schools. This session proposes to give these courses - and the theoretical and pedagogical questions that their presence in architectural curricula raises - the comprehensive appraisal they rarely get. This session invites papers that unpack courses on architectural production in the ‘non-West’ in order to engage and map underlying epistemological and methodological questions. The larger goal of this session is to sponsor a clear-headed conversation about the relationship of such courses to architectural curricula and to architectural practice today. John Enright, University of Southern California Material Making: The Process of Precedent Re-Generating Form: New and Old Methods of Conceiving, Finding, Generating, Composing, and Iterating Forms in Architecture Intersecting Infrastructures: Public Works and the Public Realm Katherine W. Rinne, California College of the Arts Infrastructure is the foundation of every community and it is the quality and extent of that infrastructure that determines in large part the economic and social health of towns and cities. Clean water, good schools, affordable housing, and reliable public transportation are all essential components of city building and for the creation of a stimulating and open public realm. This session will focus on architectural, landscape, and urban research, practice, and teaching that promotes deeper understandings of the connections between the construction of civic infrastructures and the construction of a public realm in cities and towns, and the creation of social equity. Papers that address how infrastructures can be used as generator of design thinking (rather than as afterthoughts left to engineers) are especially welcome as are those that address the rebuilding and restoration of existing or failed infrastructures as opportunities to create a more just environment. Is Architecture Critical? acsaNATIONAL Marc J. Neveu, California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo Within the context of natural, designed, economic, environmental, and other disasters, the justification of architecture has been understandably put into question. What guides the making of architecture? Is it an immediate response to a crisis; the desire for long-term social well-being; the effect of building on natural resources; or is it simply an economic opportunity? What role does theory, if any, still play? This session asks the question: Can architecture still be critical? This session seeks papers that argue for, or against, demonstrate, reveal, or castigate architecture as a critical project. Papers may relate to projects that are historical, contemporary, future oriented, academic or professional. Gail Peter Borden, University of Southern California Making is a fundamental process of architecture. Material is essential to the activity of design as well as the resultant of the process. The role of making and the dialogue of a design with material is the focus of this session. The session will illuminate the potential of new materials, provide a re-interpretation of common “everyday” materials, and embrace the process of making as a generative mechanism of form. Papers should look at the particular the role of materials in architecture and their influence on precedents [both contemporary and historical] of design process, fabrication methodology, construction procedures and legibility and influence on built work. As in any case study method, papers should look for the deeper didactic lessons of the precedent. The lessons may be practical and technical in nature, or may address qualitative and aesthetic realms. Papers for this session should be founded in materials with the desire to identify lessons from their innate qualities and the process of their use through design precedents. Public-Interest Architecture Elizabeth Martin, Southern Polytechnic State University Architects and all design professionals are undergoing a major transformation that is both proactive (searching for roles with greater relevance) and reactive (responsing to the humanitarian and environmental crisis facing the world). The collaborative projects or research studies explored in this session takes the point-of-view that an architecture of public-interest might emerge in partnership with practice, ie, public health, environmental advocacy groups, or design/build clients. This session will demonstrate the modest, yet we believe productive ways to prepare architecture students to serve as stewards for our communities. Re-Building Mobility: Mobile Architecture and the Effects on Design, Culture, Society and the Environment This topic addresses mobility and prefabrication in architecture and seeks proposals that examine new models and research that further the discussion of how mobility and prefabrication are affecting design and education. It has been fifty years since a group of Airstreams caravaned through Africa. Since that time, the notion of mobility in architecture has had a rich history, from Fuller’s early work involving mobility and pre-fabrication to today’s preoccupation with digital technologies. The recent Hurricane Katrina disaster produced the “FEMA trailer,” as provisional housing that remained for months as urban reminders of the tragedy. This topic asks for contributions that address the breadth of mobility and prefabrication in architecture from high-end prefab techniques and strategies, to possibilities involving efficient alternatives for disaster relief, to new paradigms in design technology and education. William T Willoughby, Louisiana Tech University As we rebuild architecture today, each era of designers must generate forms that best reflect their times’ available technology. Today, generative scripting for 3-D modeling application and tools allow designers to parametrically adjust, transform dynamically, and evolve forms that improve performance based on environmental or programmatic demands. The transparency of tracing paper allowed past generations of designers to overlay, deliberate over change, and explore subtle iterations of design. Computational equivalents now allow architects to explore, analyze, and generate variations in building form dynamically. In an attempt to critically assess new and old methods of form finding and responses to building performance issues, this session seeks current scholarship on form generation as well as historical examples of iterative design methods. Shrinking Cities Syndrome: Agendas for ReBuilding Andreas Luescher, Bowling Green State University Sujata Shetty, University of Toledo Cites all over the world are facing the prospect of declining populations, collectively becoming part of a global shrinking city phenomenon. While much of the discussion of shrinking cities has focused on Europe, the challenge is acute in the U.S., where, following suburbanization, many cities now present a classic ‘doughnut’ form – a sparse core surrounded by rings of smaller cities. Cities in the U.S. industrial mid-west are facing the additional consequences of the decline of the manufacturing industry and the housing foreclosure crisis. The session takes advantage of the conference themes to reflect on the challenge of preserving and reusing urban fabric with architectural and cultural interest within shrinking cities. Marc J. Neveu and Don Choi, California Polytechnic State University Almost every school of architecture offers a suite of courses in architectural history and theory. But what purposes do these classes serve? After all, the National Architectural Accreditation Board (NAAB) requires not that such history courses be taught but simply that students learn about Western, non-Western, and national/regional traditions. At a time when architectural technology, pedagogical approaches, and historical methodology are changing rapidly, how might history and theory coursework be reconceived? This session aims to examine strategies by which architectural history and theory courses can address contemporary developments in architectural history, practice and pedagogy. This session invites papers that question the content, role, and goals of courses in architectural history and theory. Teaching Architecture - Perfecting Pedagogy Robert J. Dermody, Roger Williams University Every day, professors of architecture strive to teach, inspire and engage their students in various subjects from history and studio, to technology and theory. They explain, share, convey, and impart knowledge using a wide variety of formats and methods. They do this as both accrediting bodies and the profession require increased knowledge and skills from graduates of architecture programs. This session seeks papers that share best practices of teaching all courses in architecture degree programs in today’s more technically demanding environment. As schools attempt to satisfy increasing NAAB requirements, and accommodate students’ desire for more technology teaching methods must evolve. Presentations in this session will offer an opportunity for faculty members of all levels to engage in a dialogue about the craft of teaching architecture. Royal Sonesta 300 Bourbon St New Orleans, LA 70130 (800) 766-3782 www.sonesta.com The Common Benefit Of Common Good Design-Build Anselmo G. Canfora, University of Virginia In more recent times, architecture schools across the US have contributed substantially to humanitarian efforts to mend or improve the built environment for populations in dire need. Building on the activism and the hands-on teaching of the late Samuel Mockbee, many design-build programs have focused a lot of energy, effort, and resources on helping residents of underserved communities regain a sense of dignity by helping design and build housing, schools, and community facilities. A number of notable organizations like Architects Without Frontiers, Architecture for Humanity, Design Corps, and Habit for Humanity have formed collaborative partnerships with schools of architecture on the frontline of this massive and complex effort to assist those in need. This session seeks papers and presentations examining design-build programs and projects that effectively integrate humanitarian directives and comprehensive pedagogical frameworks. While raising the level of understanding, consciousness and ethics of the architectural academic community. Open Session ACSA encourages submissions that do not fit into one of the above topics. Accepted authors will be required to complete a copyright transfer form and agree to present the paper at the Annual Meeting before it is published in the proceedings. Each session will have a moderator, normally the topic chair. Session moderators will notify authors in advance of session guidelines as well as the general expectations for the session. Moderators reserve the right to withhold a paper from the program if the author has refused to comply with those guidelines. Failure to comply with the conference deadlines or with a moderator’s request for materials in advance may result in an author being dropped from the program, even though his or her name may appear in the program book. 15 In the event of insufficient participation regarding a particular session topic, the conference co-chairs reserve the right to revise the conference schedule accordingly. Session topics must receive a minimum of 6 reviewable submissions in order for the session to continue in the review process. If a session receives fewer than 6 submissions, the session will be canceled, the papers referred to the Open Session topic and grouped with other open papers on similar subjects for standard review. Chairs of canceled sessions will be invited to chair an Open Session and continue overseeing the peer review process and make decisions on papers. Accepted papers will be published in a digital proceddings avialable for free download from the ACSA website and a printed version on the proceeddings will be availbale for purchse after the meeting. Authors whose papers have been accepted for presentation and publication in the proceedings are required to register for the Annual Meeting. T i m e l i n e April—Call for Papers announced July 15—Paper submission site opens September 30—Paper submission deadline October—Accept/reject notifications sent to authors with reviewer comments. Accepted authors revise/pprepare papers for publication November 20—Final revised papers and copyright forms due December 16—Paper presenter registration deadline Contact Mary Lou Baily, ACSA Conferences Manager, with questions about paper submissions (mlbaily@ acsa-arch.org, 202.785.2324 x2) acsaNATIONAL Surveying Architectural History and Theory All submissions will be reviewed carefully by at least three reviewers. Official acceptance is made by the session topic chairs. Selection is based on innovation, clarity, contribution to the discipline of architecture, and relevance to the session topic. All authors will be notified of the status of their paper and will receive comments from their reviewers. ACSANEWS may 2009 Pa p e r P r e s e n tat i on ACSANEWS May 2009 November 4-7, 2009 St. Louis, Missouri 16 2009 ACSA/NCAA Administrators Conference ECONOMIES: ART+ARCHITECTURE Establishing new directions for creative leadership, education and practice The first joint conference for the Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture (ACSA) and the National Council of Art Administrators (NCAA) Host School Co-chairs hotel Theme Host School: Sam Fox School of Design & Visual Arts Washington University in St. Louis Washington University in St. Louis Peter MacKeith + Carmon Colangelo Chase park Plaza Hotel 212 N. kingshighway Blvd. St. Louis, Missouri 63108 Rate $165 The first joint Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture and National Council of Art Administrators (ACSA/NCAA) administrators’ conference, Economies: Art + Architecture, is being planned for expansive and inclusive interpretation – promoting rich dialogue between both groups of leaders about current issues in the fields of art, architecture, and design education. acsaNATIONAL This timely theme will serve as a catalyst in the discussion of broad areas such as efficiency, ecology, sustainability, technology, entrepeneurship, ethics, public art, urbanism, the new economy, and the market. 2010 Conference locations: ACSA Northeast Region (Brian Kelly, ACSA Northeast Regional Director) ACSA West Region (Stephen Meder, ACSA West Regional Director) ACSA West Central Region (Keelan Kaiser, ACSA West Central Regional Director & Gregory Palermo, ACSA West Central Regional Director-Elect) ACSA Fall Conferences are smaller than the national conferences and tend to be thematic in focus. They are most often held at the school itself, or some combination of the school and local venues, for cost control as well as to give our constituents the opportunity to really get to know the school, students, and faculty at the host location. Fall conferences also tend to be a bit more flexible and/or inventive than the national version. Collaboration between schools is encouraged where appropriate. Fall Conferences are an opportunity for the host school to bring educators from across the association to their campus, demonstrate education excellence to upper administration, and provide an exceptional venue for student learning. They are often times a significant visibility opportunity for programs. ACSANEWS may 2009 CALL FOR PROPOSALS for 2010 ACSA FALL CONFERENCES 17 Please visit the ACSA website (https://www.acsa-arch.org/conferences/regionalmeetings.aspx) to find a digital copy of the ‘Guide to Planning ACSA Fall Conferences’. If you might be interested in hosting a 2010 ACSA Fall Conference, please read through the booklet and feel free to contact your Regional Director directly with any questions, or contact Eric Ellis at the ACSA national office. Typically, Fall Conferences pay for themselves by conference fees and contribution from the host school and ACSA. Proposals to host a 2010 Fall Conference should be submitted by June 30, 2009. They may be submitted via mail or email and should be submitted to your Regional Director and copied to Eric Ellis at the national office (eellis@acsa-arch.org). Proposals should include, at a minimum: • Conference chair or co-chairs • Proposed dates (late September or October, typically a Thursday - Sunday. These dates will be coordinated through the national office to exclude overlapping fall conferences. The conference also includes the regional meeting which should be coordinated with the RD.) • Possible theme/topics • Possible locations/venues • Letter of institutional support. Submissions will be reviewed by committee including the Regional Director, past fall conference co-chairs, and Eric Ellis as staff support. Recent history of Fall Conference host schools: ACSA Northeast Region 2008 – University of Massachusetts Amherst (Without a Hitch: New Directions in Prefabricated Architecture) 2006 – Université Laval (Imag(in)ing worlds to come) ACSA West Region 2008 – University of Southern California (Material Matters: making architecture) 2006 – Woodbury University (Surfacing Urbanisms: Recent Approches to Metropolitan Design) ACSA West Central Region 2008 – University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign ([ARCHITECTURE] in the age of [DIGITAL] reproduction) 2006 – University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee (Reconciliation | Remediation: Post-Industrial Transformation) ACSA Northeast Region Director – Brian Kelly, bkelly@umd.edu ACSA West Region Director – Stephen Meder, smeder@hawaii.edu ACSA West Central Regional Director – Keelan Kaiser & Gregory Palermo, kkaiser@saic.edu & gpalermo@iastate.edu acsaNATIONAL If you would like to discuss this further feel free to contact your Regional Director or Eric Ellis (eellis@acsa-arch.org). ACSANEWS May 2009 18 ASaaW]\B]^WQa( /`QVWbSQbc`S7a<]b/`b /`b/`QVWbSQbc`S71]ZZOP]`ObWdS >`W[WbWdS/`QVWbSQbc`S(@SdSOZW\UbVS<Obc`S]TbVSBVW\U 7ZZc[W\ObW]\O\R3\ZWUVbS\SR@SÀSQbW]\(>SROU]UgO\R>`OQbWQS0cWZbC^]\bVSAg\bVSaWa]T/`bO\R/`QVWbSQbc`S 2WaQW^ZW\O`g1][^cZaW]\O\R6gabS`WQOZ7\abWbcbW]\a 4]`[cZObW\UO2SaWU\>VWZ]a]^Vg(BVS:Saa]\a]T/`QVWbSQbc`OZ6Wab]`gO\RBVS]`g AVWTbW\U5`]c\R(B]eO`RaO\/`QVWbSQbc`S]T;]dS[S\b/RO^bObW]\O\R@Sa^]\aWdS\Saa BVS1W\SabVSbWQ/`b]TC`PO\7\dS`aW]\ ;]`SbVO\;SSbabVS3gS(/`QVWbSQbc`SOaOA^SQWOZ3TTSQba;OQVW\S :O\RaQO^SOa1O\dOa =^S\ A^SOYS`a( 2S\\Wa=^^S\VSW[AQcZ^b]` BS`S\QS@WZSg2W`SQb]`;WO[W/`b;caSc[ =`S\AOTRWS>ZOge`WUVb 8]aS^V5`W[O2W`SQb]`Ab]`ST`]\bT]`/`bO\R/`QVWbSQbc`S 9W[PS`Zg6WZZ>`]TSaa]`]T:O\RaQO^S/`QVWbSQbc`S;WO[WC\WdS`aWbg AcP[WaaW]\@S_cW`S[S\ba( acsaNATIONAL /Pab`OQbaO\R^`]XSQbaRcS(;]\ROg;Og" ' <]bW¿QObW]\a(;]\ROg8c\S& ' 4W\OZ^O^S`aO\R^`]XSQbaRcS(;]\ROg/cU% ' 4]`RSbOWZSRacP[WaaW]\`S_cW`S[S\baO\RaSaaW]\b]^WQRSaQ`W^bW]\adWaWb( Vbb^(eeeOQaOO`QV]`UQ]\TS`S\QSa'A34OZZ1]\TOa^f ACSANEWS may 2009 19 Host School: University of New Mexico & University of Texas Arlington Co-chairs: Tim Castillo, Phillip Gallegos, Kristina H. Yu, University of New Mexico | Brad Bell, Wanda Dye, Kathryn Holliday, University of Texas at Arlington Conference Theme Understanding the value of “place” and cultural specificity bring a unique design, technical, and economic responses that challenges traditional canons of practice and pedagogy. Within the context of practice and pedagogy of design, the conference title Shifting Design Identity will seek to address international and regional southwest responses to key questions: The contemporary world is undergoing a major shift in cultural process, global culture is a ubiquitous condition that is a product of media and emerging networks defined by new technologies. As designers we are asked to respond and shape the future utilizing new tools to create designs that will respond to fluid transformation of built environment. • Design Identity: Design roles are in a tumultuous world of collaboration, competition, and collegiality with many disciplines. A principal question to explore is the definition of “design” and “role” where professions have lost much of their force for change to global pressures in the Southwest. • Economic: The global economy is shifting its priorities to address depleting resources and environmental conditions. Designers today are faced with emerging challenges to develop new models for practice and pedagogy that address the needs of our global environment. • Cultural: The Southwest, in particular, and the North American-Latin-Indigenous community, in general, characterize a region of parallel worldviews, cultures, history, contemporary agendas, and contradictions. Can the inconstancy of land, cultural territories, and technologies form meaningful relationships thru design? • Technologies: Given that design is not stable by nature, cans the range of realities: virtual to the real, and the tools that help create it, reconcile shifting sense of space and place? As we begin to understand the future of design as a convergence of disciplines, culture and technology, a new paradigm for creating space can emerge. As schools of design begin to recalibrate, the profession continues to explore the interdisciplinary collaboration as a means of execution. Shifting design identity intends to explore this new paradigm influenced by culture, context, sustainability and technology while exploring these transformations occurring in pedagogy and practice in the global environment. Schedule Thursday October 15, 2009 Keynote Speaker: UNM Sponsored Opening Reception Friday, October 16, 2009 Culture and Inhabiting the Everyday Landscape 8:30 – 10:00 Session 1: Kristina Yu, UNM 10:30 – 12:00 Session 2: Wanda Dye, UTA Lunch Emerging Technologies 1:30 – 3:00 Session 3: Tim Castillo, UNM 3:30 – 5:00 Session 4: Bradley Bell, UTA Keynote Speaker: UTA Sponsored Saturday, October 17, 2009 Community Engagement 8:30- 10:00 Session 5: Kathryn Holliday, UTA 10:30- 12:00 Session 6: Phillip Gallegos, UNM Lunch Afternoon Tours: Los Alamos & Acoma Emerging Technologies The evolution and application of digital technology has reconfigured the design profession. As new technologies continue to emerge, integration and exploration have redefined the way think about the architectural design process. Designers are now presented with a broad spectrum of cross-disciplinary opportunities to enhance and expand current design methodologies. As these new innovative strategies continue to emerge, avenues for social and cultural application are providing a dynamic new direction for how we practice and teach design. Community Engagement Architecture in the modern era is engaged in critical thinking about complex societal systems. A tremendous pressure for change challenges historical myths about the design professions. From the utopianism of the modernist movement to the hands-on engagement of the deign-build ethos, architects have developed multiple strategies for creating an architecture that serves a broad sense of external community. Architecture and design education has come under increasing pressure to consider multiple layers of disciplines, technologies, and cultural systems across regions, countries and peoples. Submission Deadlines Abstracts Due: May, 4, 2009 | Accepted/Decline Response: June 1, 2009 Final Papers Due: September 15, 2009 Poster Session ACSA Southwest also welcomes submissions for poster presentations. Posters should address the broad themes of the conference as described above; topics related to cross-border and international issues and projects are particularly welcome. Authors should submit a 250-word abstract and a PDF or JPG of the poster design for review. Posters should be formatted to be 48”x36” vertical orientation and the poster should include a title, presenter’s name and affiliation. Posters should be unmounted; boards and tacks will be provided at the conference. Presenters should be prepared to stand with their posters to discuss and answer questions with conference participants. The poster session will be held Friday evening before the keynote address. acsaNATIONAL Call for Abstract Papers/Abstract Projects Culture and Inhabiting the Everyday Landscape Our daily experiences – working, shopping, driving, living in our homes -- are made up of encounters with ubiquitous, non-specific design. “One size fits all” structures and spaces are the status quo in our progressively complex, globalized world. We find ourselves drawn into an unavoidable relationship with the built environment. Paul Groth writes: “Landscape denotes the interaction of people and place, a social group and its spaces, particularly to the space the group belongs and from which its members derive some part of their identity and meaning.” (p.1, Understanding Ordinary Landscapes) The identities of inhabitants are impacted by these spaces and slowly, everyday activities in everyday landscapes can accumulate gradually into cultural space. ACSANEWS May 2009 ACSA 2009-2010 ACSA Awards Program Call for Nominations & Submissions NEW ONLINE SUBMISSIONS 20 Kiel Moe, Northeastern University, Project: TUBEHOUSE acsaNATIONAL Each year the Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture honors architectural educators for exemplary work in areas such as building design, community collaborations, scholarship, and service. The award-winning professors inspire and challenge students, contribute to the profession’s knowledge base, and extend their work beyond the borders of academia into practice and the public sector. New online submissions will begin in Summer 2009. Please visit the ACSA website for more information. www.acsa-arch.org/awards NEW ONLIN E SU BMIS SION S CONCRETE ACSANEWS may 2009 student design competitions 21 thinking for a sustainable world international student design competition Opportunity This fourth annual Concrete Thinking For A Sustainable World competition offers two separate entry categories, each without site restrictions, for maximum flexibility. Category I TransiT Hub Design an environmentally responsible Public Transportation Center focusing on architectural innovations to preserve tomorrow’s resources. Category II building ElEmEnT Design a single element of a building that provides a sustainable solution to real-world environmental challenges. Execution Show your solutions on up to two 20” x 30” digital submission boards and a design essay uploaded through the ACSA website in Portable Document Format (PDF) or Image (JPEG) Files - www.acsa-arch.org/competitions. Payoff Winning students, their faculty sponsors, and schools will receive prizes totaling nearly $50,000. registration begins registration deadline submission deadline results dec 05 2008 Feb 09 2009 Jun 03 2009 Jun 2009 learn more Program updates, including information on jury members, as they are confirmed, may be found on the ACSA website at www.acsa-arch.org/competitions. sponsors Sponsored by the Portland Cement Association (PCA) & the National Ready Mixed Concrete Association (NRMCA) and administered by Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture (ACSA). For complete information go to www.acsa-arch.org/competitions. acsaNATIONAL Call for Entries ACSANEWS May 2009 Preservation as Provocation Re-thinking Kahn’s Salk Institute, 2008-09 International Student Design Competition W E S NE LIN ION S ON IS BM SU 22 student design competitions INTRODUCTION Jonas Salk commissioned the renowned Philadelphia architect Louis I Kahn to design his new Institute for Biological Studies in 1959. Together they collaborated and designed a facility uniquely suited to scientific research. This competition invites architecture students to imagine the next chapter in the life of one of America’s architectural treasures, which was designated a Historic Landmark in 1991. This challenge asks designers how the preservation of these extraordinary buildings can provoke a profound rethinking of our current conventions about composition, construction, and building performance. The aim is to envision a new type of facility that would be unimaginable without the existing structures. THE CHALLENGE The Salk Institute has been a highly successful research facility, but the changing landscape of science requires an evolution of the campus; along with respect of the architectural and historic integrity of the site. According to the Salk Institute’s Master Plan, “Our successful recruitment efforts are dependent on having state-of-the-art research facilities and equipment, as well as ancillary support systems that allows our scientists to focus on their work.” Embrace the design scheme and intent of the original master plan. SCHEDULE December 05, 2008 Registration Begins, online February 09, 2009 June 17, 2009 June 2009 Summer 2009 Registrations Deadline Submission Deadline Prize winners chosen by the design jury Competition Summary Publication (registration is free) AwARDS Winning students and their faculty sponsors will receive cash prizes totaling $10,000. The design jury will meet in June 2009 to select winning projects and honorable mentions. Winners and their faculty sponsors will be notified of the competition results directly. A list of winning projects will be posted on the ACSA web site at www.acsa arch.org/competitions. FOR MORE INFORMATION acsaNATIONAL Program updates, including information on jury members as they are confirmed, can be found on the ACSA web site at www.acsa arch.org/competitions.s. Download the competition program booklet at www.acsa-arch.org/competitions. W NE INE ONS I ONL ISS M SUB ACSANEWS may 2009 student design competitions 23 2008-2009 acsa/aisc Life Cycle of a School STEEL design student competition INTRODUCTION The Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture (ACSA) is pleased to announce the ninth annual steel design student competition for the 2008-2009 academic year. Administered by ACSA and sponsored by American Institute of Steel Construction (AISC), the program is intended to challenge students, working individually or in teams, to explore a variety of design issues related to the use of steel in design and construction. THE CHALLENGE The ACSA/AISC 2008-2009 Steel Design Student Competition will offer architecture students the opportunity to compete in two separate categories: Category I – LIFE CYCLE OF A SCHOOL will challenge architecture students to design a school for the 21st century that critically examines life cycle and proposes an innovative solution in steel. The problem of urban growth and decay is larger than an individual building. Therefore, architects should consider a total life cycle assessment approach to designing buildings so that they may be adaptable, flexible, and accommodate change. This project will allow students to explore many varied functional and aesthetic uses for steel as a building material. Steel is an ideal material for schools because it offers a high strength to weight ratio and can be designed systematically as a kit of parts, or prefabricated, to allow for quicker construction times and less labor, thus reducing the cost of construction. Schools constructed in steel are more flexible and adaptable to allow for diversity of uses over the life of the facility. Category II – OPEN with limited restrictions. This open submission design option will permit the greatest amount of flexibility. SCHEDULE December 5, 2008 February 9, 2009 May 6, 2009 May 2009 Summer 2009 Registration Opens online (registration is free) Registration Deadline Submission Deadline Prize winners chosen by the design jury Competition Summary Publication SPONSOR American Insitute of Steel Construction (AISC), headquartered in Chicago, is a non-profit technical institute and trade association established in 1921 to serve the structural steel design community and construction industry in the United States. AISC’s mission is to make structural steel the material of choice by being the leader in structural-steel-related technical and marketbuilding activities, including: specification and code development, research, education, technical assistance, quality certification, standardization, and market development. AISC has a long tradition of more than 80 years of service to the steel construction industry providing timely and reliable information. For complete information go to www.acsa-arch.org/competitions. acsaNATIONAL Awards Winning students and their faculty sponsors will receive cash prizes totaling $14,000. The design jury will meet in May 2009 to select winning projects and honorable mentions. Winners and their faculty sponsors will be notified of the competition results directly. A list of winning projects will be posted on the ACSA web site at acsa-arch.org and the AISC web site at aisc.org. ACSANEWS May 2009 student design competitions 24 2008-2009 INTERNATIONAL STUDENT DESIGN COMPETITION NEW ONLINE SUBMISSIONS How can we plan, design, and construct the world between our buildings INTRODUCTION The 2008-2009 GREEN COMMUNITY Competition is oriented to challenge students to rethink their communities. From major cities to college campuses, designers, planners, policy makers, and citizens are rethinking their own towns and cities’ relationship to the environment, from where the energy originates, to where the waste ends up. The GREEN COMMUNITY Competition will expand on themes from the National Building Museum’s sustainable exhibits Green Community (2008-2009), Big and Green (2003), and The Green House (2006–2007). The GREEN COMMUNITY Competition will focus entirely on the issues of sustainable development—how can individuals plan, design, and construct the world between the buildings. The GREEN COMMUNITY Competition will encourage students to consider environmental sustainability dependant upon collective, community-scale efforts. The competition will also examine ways of reducing the impact of our built environments on the Earth. The competition will explore sustainable planning strategies such as brownfield/grayfield redevelopment, transit-oriented communities, natural resource management, and land conservation. THE CHALLENGE The GREEN COMMUNITY Competition offers students the opportunity to think critically about their communities, looking ahead to a sustainable future. Locate a site in your local community or region, identify the barriers and strengths to living sustainably, and develop a proposal to create a flourishing and sustainable community using the tools of the environmental design disciplines: architecture, landscape architecture, and urban planning. December 5, 2008 Registration opens online (registration is free) February 9, 2009Registration Deadline May 20, 2009Submission Deadline June 2009 Prize winners chosen by the design jury Summer 2009 Competition Summary Publication Awards Winning students, their faculty sponsors, and schools will receive cash prizes totaling $7,000. The design jury will meet June 2009 to select winning projects and honorable mentions. Winners and their faculty sponsors will be notified of the competition results directly. A list of winning projects will be posted on the ACSA website (www.acsa-arch.org/ competitions). Competition finalists will present their concepts at the National Building Museum with travel costs covered by the competition sponsors. Prize winning submissions will be exhibited at the National Building Museum, highlighted in Architectural Record, displayed at the 2010 ACSA Annual Meeting and at the 2010 AIA National Convention, and will be published in the competition summary publication. acsaNATIONAL COMPETITION SPONSORS Since 1857, the American Institute of Architects (AIA) has represented the professional interests of America’s architects. As AIA members, over 74,000 licensed architects, emerging professionals, and allied partners express their commitment to excellence in design and livability in our nation’s buildings and communities. Ehrenkrantz Eckstut & Kuhn Architects (EE&K Architects) is an internationally-renowned firm that has distinguished itself by creating great places. McGraw-Hill Construction connects people, projects and products across the design and construction industry. From project and product information to industry news, trends and forecasts, we provide industry players the tools and resources that help them save time, money, and energy. COMPETITION ORGANIZERS The Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture (ACSA) is a nonprofit organization founded in 1912 to enhance the quality of architectural education. ACSA is committed to the principles of universal and sustainable design. The National Building Museum is America’s leading cultural institution dedicated to exploring and celebrating architecture, design, engineering, construction, and planning. Essential to the profession for more than 110 years, Architectural Record provides a compelling editorial mix of design ideas and trends, building science, business and professional strategies, exploration of key issues, news products and computer-aided practice. For complete information go to www.acsa-arch.org/competitions. southwest The Department of Architecture at Texas A&M University is pleased to announce and welcome new Assistant Professors Stephen Caffey, Gabriela Campagnol, Gabriel Esquival, Klein Glowacki, Eugene Wagner and Xuemei Zhu, Juan Carlos Baltazar Cervantes. Dr. Anat Geva, associate professor of architecture at Texas A&M university, and a faculty fellow with the College of Architecture’s Center for Heritage Conservation is participating in a statewide initiative aimed at developing an online database of historic Texas church buildings that can be used by anyone interested in reviving or repurposing the state’s endangered sacred places. Know as the Western Religious Heritage Collaborative Initiative, the effort was launched last January by the Texas Historical Commission in collaboration with Partners in Sacred Places (PSP), a nonprofit and nonsectarian organization dedicated to promoting the stewardship of historic religious properties. An article by Stephen Sharpe, detailing The Western Religious Heritage Collaborative Initiative, appeared in the March/ April 2007 issue of Texas architect. Dr. Stephen Caffey received his PhD in Art History from University of Texas at Austin in May 2008. His immediate research projects include a planned collaboration with the Visualization department on digitally re-creating the visual and spatial experience of a no-longer-extant rotunda annex to the music hall at Vauxhall Pleasure gardens outside London in the mid18th century; an art-historical case-study of the visual and spatial programs created by landscape architect Lancelot Brown in his 1770 plan for Claremont, Robert Clive’s country house in Surrey; and a transdisciplinary examination of the aesthetics of sustainability in the 21st century. Dr. Gabriela Campagnol received her PhD in Architecture and Urban Planning from University of S.Paulo in August 2008. Her research interests are industrial heritage, conservation and adaptive reuse of industrial buildings; history of company towns, American and South American modern and colonial architecture; Her current research investigates the origins, development, and spatial organization of several sugar mills located in Brazil, Cuba and United States. Professor Gabriel Esquival received his Master’s Degree in Architecture from The Ohio State University. Gabriel Esquivel is a practicing architect. He is currently working on different collaborative projects by himself and with Kivi Sotamaa with whom he created an office called ESQUIVEL SOTAMAA DESIGN, concentrating on developing a diversity of High Design projects, concentrating on the importance of affect. Dr. Klein Glowacki received his PhD in Classical and Near Eastern Archaeology from Bryn Mawr College in 1991. He is the author of numerous articles on ancient Greek art and archaeology, and is the co-editor of Stega: The Archaeology of Houses and Households in Ancient Crete (forthcoming 2009). He currently working on a publication of an ancient domestic architectural complex (c. 1100 BCE) from the archaeological site of Vronda-Kavousi in eastern Crete and a monograph on the ancient sanctuaries on the slopes of the Acropolis in Athens, Greece. With a background in anthropology and archaeology architect Professor Dr. Eugen Logan Wagner, integrates the architectural history of the region of Middle America and the Southwest with the revival of architectural crafts, methods and vernacular techniques from the past to create regional sustainable modern architecture and historic architectural preservation strategies for historic buildings. Dr. Wagner is currently working on a book on the origins and evolution of open urban space in Middle America, to be published by UT Press. Articles by Dr. Wagner have been published in National Geographic Magazine; Artes de Mexico; Fine Homebuilding and others. Professor Xuemei Zhu is expecting her PhD in October, 2008 from Texas A&M University. She is currently a Faculty Fellow of the Center for Health Systems and Design, an interdisciplinary center housed jointly in the colleges of Architecture and Medicine at Texas A&M University. Her study has been highlighted in several public media, including the TIME magazine. Besides teaching environment-behavior relationships and evidence-based design, Professor Zhu is working on two multi-disciplinary team projects funded by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, with a total budget of about $430,000. These projects examine the potential of environmental improvements and policy interventions in promoting children’s active school transportation (e.g. walking) and reducing health disparities. 25 University of Houston Assistant Professor Michelangelo Sabatino, PhD, of the Gerald D. Hines College of Architecture was appointed History and Theory Coordinator. He published an article entitled “Space of Criticism: Exhibitions and the Vernacular in Italian Modernism,” in the Journal of Architectural Education 62:2 (February, 2009). Sabatino delivered a paper entitled “The ‘Primitive’ in Italian Futurist Art and Architecture: The Case of Capri” at the College Art Association (CAA), Annual Conference in Los Angeles. He served as Moderator for a symposium entitled “The Centennial of Italian Futurism,” at the Italian Institute of Culture, Los Angeles. He also received a “Best Paper” award for his essay “From Blueprint to Digital Model: The Information Age, Archives and the Future of Architectural History” at the 2008 EAAE/ARCC International Conference in Copenhagen, Denmark. Sabatino presented a paper entitled “Douglas Cardinal: Rethinking the ‘Primitive’ in Contemporary American Indian Architecture” at the annual conference of the Society of Architectural Historians held in Pasadena, California. ACSA Listserv Join ACSA’s Listserv, a forum for quick communication among ACSA faculty members. To subscribe to the list, send an email to “sympa@lists.utah.edu” with the following message in the *body* of the email: /subscribe ACSA-list Your Name/ acsaregional Texas A&M University ACSANEWS may 2009 regional news ACSANEWS may 2009 regional news west central North Dakota State University 26 The NDSU Department of Architecture and Landscape Architecture is pleased to announce The Albert Levering Prize. Recognizing the ongoing importance to freehand drawing as a tool for design, the Levering Prize is being offered to encourage creative expression in various media (pencil, charcoal, pen-and-ink, etc.). Third- and fourth-year students in the department’s two programs are eligible. The prize will be awarded for the first time during the 2009-2010 academic year. The prize commemorates Albert Levering (1865-1929), a 19th- and early 20th-century architect-designer-delineator whose career included architecture, journalism and illustration. acsaregional Dr. Paul Gleye, the Chairperson of the Department of Architecture and Landscape Architecture for the last decade, has stepped down, and Dr. Ganapathy Mahalingam has stepped in as Interim Chairperson for the department, until a permanent Chairperson is appointed for the department. The maiden voyage of the department’s first annual Term Abroad Program in Barcelona, Spain, is underway during Spring Semester 2009, under the leadership of Assistant Professor Stephen Wischer. The program, which is based upon precedents set by the University of Calgary and Carleton University, offers students the opportunity to pursue intensive studio exploration and supplemental seminars in the culturally rich mosaic of Barcelona for a three-month period. Students are exploring the design of a train station, hotel, and a “client based” residence through the symbolic structure of the Citizen “X,” which pushes students to empathically interpret the historical, factual and experiential influences of the place through design exploration born from and created for the life as it is lived here. Several exhibitions will demonstrate these designs to the public including one in Barcelona before the program concludes. The other exhibition scheduled for September 2009 will bring the experience of Barcelona to the department and the interested public. As part of a third-year design studio analysis, Assistant Professor David Crutchfield and As- sociate Professor Ron Ramsay led two classes of students on an extensive tour of the Historic Fargo Theatre as well as their second new stateof-the-art theater space: “Off Broadway” (currently under construction). The tour included a review of both acoustic and blackbox theater design principles, walk-throughs of the backstage and support areas, as well as a discussion on the history and operation of theaters with the facility’s Executive Director and staff. NDSU Architecture students are designing a booth for the second annual regional “GreenEXPO.” The display is expected to include several ecologically-sensitive design studio projects and other related exhibits. This year, Assistant Professor David Crutchfield was elected to serve as Chair of the Valley Earth Week committee, the organizers of the event. Assistant Professor Mike Christenson recently received an award for Best Paper from the 2008 ANZAScA conference (Australian and New Zealand Architectural Science Association), for his paper titled “Testing the relevance of parameterization to architectural epistemology,” which he presented in November 2008 at the University of Newcastle in New South Wales, Australia. The paper discussed aspects of building information modeling (BIM) software impacting the study of existing works of architecture. University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Assistant Professor Scott Murray is a recipient of a 2008 grant from the Graham Foundation to support his research on innovative curtain wall design in contemporary architecture, the subject of a forthcoming book. Associate Professor Jeffery Poss recently received two design awards. Meditation Hut II “Le Cadeau” a small structure designed and constructed by Poss, received a First Place in the At Home Architect and Design Awards 2008 held in October in St. Louis and was published in the November/December issue of the At Home magazine. His design for the Peoria County WWI & II Veterans Memorial received a 2008 AIA Honorable Mention Design Award from the AIA Central Illinois Chapter. He has also been in collaboration with the campus’ College of Education and Architect Professor Emeritus A. Richard Williams to develop an addition to William’s iconic 1965 Education Building. Associate Professor Abbas Aminmansour presented a paper titled “Current Practices in Design and Construction of Tall Buildings” at the 2008 East Asia Structural Engineering and Construction conference in Taipei, Taiwan. In addition, Professor Aminmansour has been asked by the Tall Buildings committee of the American Society of Civil Engineering to lead the development of a manuscript on integrated design and construction of tall buildings. Professor Aminmansour was voted as a full member of the Chicago Committee on High Rise Buildings. He also is serving as an invited member of the International Technical Committee of the 7th Asia Pacific Structural Engineering & Construction Conference (APSEC 2009), August 4–6, 2009, Awana Porto Malai, Langkawi, Malaysia. The School of Architecture of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and UN + Architecture, Shanghai, China have announced the opening of a new exhibit Roads Less Traveled by James P. Warfield, ACSA Distinguished Professor in Architecture, Emeritus. The exhibition opened with a book signing on January 4, 2009 at Kenga Kuma’s Z58 in Shanghai and continues through February 2. Roads Less Traveled is a book and exhibition of visual and verbal memoirs based upon forty-five years of travel and research in vernacular architecture by American architect James Warfield. Its text is culled from Warfield’s travel journals, spontaneous accounts written on site as he experienced the places and people of cultures around the world. Portrait galleries celebrate the dignity of the individual, the distinctiveness of cultures, and the commonality of mankind. Roads Less Traveled, presented in both English and Chinese text and over 400 photographs, is a retrospective from a scholar and a traveler who has been privileged to explore in his lifetime the color, texture and richness of our shared world patrimony. The fall 2008 issue of NOMA Magazine, the publication of the National Organization of Minority Architects indicated that among all of the accredited programs of the American Collegiate Schools of Architecture (ACSA), the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign is ranked fourth from the top on the list of “Universities with 10 or more Licensed African-American Graduates” with 53 individual graduates. The National Organization of Minority Architects on the Illinois campus is a vibrant, committed student organization that hosts a significant annual symposium on issues facing the architecture discipline. Inspired by this year’s centennial of the Burnham Plan, which created such iconic features as the city’s lakefront, the Chicago Architectural Club announced the winner of an ideas competition, slyly called “Burnham 2.0”. Three UIUC alumnus, Elba Gil, David Lillie, and Andres Montana, along with Michael Cady, had the winning design from more than 70 qualified entries and received a $10,000 prize. Gilfillan Callahan Nelson Architects collaborated with the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign School of Architecture in fall 2008 to sponsor a graduate-level design studio project for the deaf-blind and autistic students in an interactive school, Keeneyville Elementary School District 20. Professor Botond Bognar’s book titled, Beyond the Bubble: The New Japanese Architecture, has just been published by Phaidon Press in London. Assistant Professors Roger Hubeli and Julie Larsen of APTUM Architecture (project, “FLIPPING THE STRIP”) were awarded third place in the Flip a Strip competition (www.flipastrip. org) organized by the Scottsdale Museum of Contemporary Art and is on exhibit until January 18, 2009. The competition looked at the architectural potential of existing strip malls and “…to envision a new future for this lowly (yet overabundant) building stock.” stitute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA), Orlando, Florida, in January 2009. University of Kansas University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee The School of Architecture and Planning will add the departments of Interior Design, Design, and Digital Media as part of the restructuring of the Fine Arts program and will be titled the School of Architecture, Design and Planning starting in July 2009. Assistant Professor Mo Zell was awarded one of the UWM Stipends for Undergraduate Research Fellows for research work to be conducted this spring with Tas Oszkay, an undergraduate architecture student. The research analyzes exemplars of K-12 educational facilities. Data collection will be focused on 15 case studies representing a number of different educational models worldwide. The School of Architecture is organizing the 40th Annual conference of the Environmental Design Research Association (EDRA 40) meeting in Kansas City May 27-31, 2009. Chairs are Professors Keith Diaz-Moore, Marie Alice L¹Heureux, Mahbub Rashid and Kent Spreckelmeyer. The Kansas City AIA is also a sponsor of the event. Professor Gaylord Richardson is retiring after successfully teaching in the School of Architecture since 1975. He completed his last semester teaching fifth year design and his popular course on Advanced Architectural Presentation Techniques. Professor Marie Alice L’Heureux has been promoted to the rank of Associate Professor with tenure starting in the Fall 2009 semester. Professor Bill Carswell is teaching a $15,000 practice-sponsored ŒCongregate Housing: Residence Hall Design¹ studio. A team of Professor Richard Farnan¹s students, Ivan Chan and Blake Perkins received a competition mention in the eVolo skyscraper competition. Dr. Bezaleel Benjamin, Professor of Architecture, read a paper titled “Regulating Artificial Gravity Forces in Space Exploration” at the 47th Aerospace Sciences Meeting of the American In- Assistant professors Kapila Silva and Jae Chang traveled with a group of students to Korea, Malaysia, and other areas of the Far East and collaborated with students at the the Universiti Teknologi in Malaysia to assess the impact on the local population of the United Nations¹ designation of Melaka as a World Heritage site. 27 Professor Linda Krause and Professor Patrice Petro, Director, Center for International Education have organized the CIE 2009 Conference- Sustaining Cities: Urban Lost and Found. Conference participants include Ackbar Abbas, Sherry Ahrentzen, Robert Bruegmann, Tim Ehlinger, UWM Dean Bob Greenstreet, Alfonso Iracheta, Andrew Kincaid, Paula Massood, Linda McCarthy, Robert Neuwirth, Stephanie Smith, Adjunct Professor Christine Scott Thomson, Charles Waldheim, Georgia Butina Watson, John Urry, and Assistant Professor Mo Zell. More information about the conference can be found at the following link:http://www4.uwm. edu/CIE/research/conferences/Sustaining_Cities John Wiley & Sons published Professor Don Hanlon’s new book, Compositions in Architecture, in March. It is designed to be used in several ways: as a text for courses in theory and design methods, and as a studio companion. It contains many analyses of buildings that can help students understand how theory relates to compositional principles and techniques. It also demonstrates the utility of precedent analysis in architectural design. (WEST CENTRAL continued on page 28) acsaregional The Historic American Buildings Survey (HABS) of the National Park Service, The Athenaeum of Philadelphia and The American Institute of Architects (AIA) announced the 2009 Charles E. Peterson Prize, which annually recognizes the best set of measured drawings prepared to HABS standards and donated to HABS by students. Visiting Assistant Professor Charles Pipal’s student team, as part of his Arch 518 Recording Historic Buildings course, received an honorable mention for their project Altgeld Hall (historically known as ‘Library Hall’). The student team consisted of: Caroline Andrews, Allan Bernhart, Kimberly Gareiss, Katherine Lipes, James Mangrum, Timothy Penich, Joshua Ream, Mark Stoner, and Crystal Whiters. ACSANEWS may 2009 regional news ACSANEWS may 2009 acsaregional 28 regional news (WEST CENTRAL continued from page 27) Washington University in St. Louis Peter MacKeith, associate dean and associate professor of architecture in the Sam Fox School of Design and Visual Arts, served as the St. Louis coordinator for the exhibition Eero Saarinen: Shaping the Future at the Mildred Lane Kemper Art Museum (January 30 - April 27, 2009). The exhibition is curated by Donald Albrecht in conjunction with an international consortium of Finnish and American scholars. The show was organized by the Finnish Cultural Institute in New York; the Museum of Finnish Architecture, Helsinki; and the National Building Museum, Washington, D.C., with the support of the Yale University School of Architecture. This is the first retrospective to explore the complete career of the acclaimed Finnish American architect, who created the monumental St. Louis Gateway Arch as well as sweepingly abstract terminals for New York’s John F. Kennedy International and Washington’s Dulles International airports. The retrospective examines the aesthetic, cultural, and political significance of his work within the larger context of postwar modern architecture, with materials drawn largely from the archives of Saarinen’s office, including drawings and full-scale building mock-ups of more than 50 projects. In addition, the Kemper Art Museum sponsored 1000 Arches, a community project that invited the public to create short films inspired by the St Louis Gateway Arch. Selected entries were screened at the museum on April 18, 2009. From Jan. 30 to March 9, 2009. the Sam Fox School at Washington University in St. Louis hosted an exhibition titled On the Riverfront: St. Louis and The Gateway Arch. The show was curated by Peter MacKeith, associate dean of the Sam Fox School and associate professor of architecture and Eric Mumford, PhD, associate professor of architecture, history, and art history. On the Riverfront profiled the people, events and conditions that culminated in the 1947-48 competition from which Eero Saarinen’s design was chosen, as well as the monument’s subsequent construction and its place in American architecture. In conjunction with the exhibition, the Sam Fox School hosted a symposium on Jan. 31, 2009. Participants from Washington University in St Louis included: Cynthia Weese, former dean of Architecture; Robert McCarter, the Ruth & Norman Moore Professor Eero Saarinen, with J. Henderson Barr (renderer), Dan Kiley (landscape architect), Alexander Hayden Girard, and Lilly Swann Saarinen. Detail from Jefferson National Expansion Memorial, First Stage Competition entry, 1947. Jefferson National Expansion Memorial Archives, National Park Service. From the exhibition “On the Riverfront: St. Louis and the Gateway Arch. of Architecture; Stephen Leet, associate professor of architecture; Eric Mumford, associate professor of architecture; Patricia Heyda, visiting assistant professor of architecture; Robert Duffy, Senior Adjunct Lecturer; Mary Brunstrom, doctoral student, Washington University in St. Louis; and William Gass, one of the most critically acclaimed authors of fiction and critical prose and the David May Distinguished University Professor Emeritus in the Humanities, Washington University in St. Louis. Also participating were: EevaLiisa Pelkonen, Yale University, co-editor of the exhibition catalog for Eero Saarinen: Shaping the Future; architect Robert Burley, who led the Arch design team for Eero Saarinen and Associates; and Charles Birnbaum, founder of The Cultural Landscape Foundation and former coordinator of the National Park Service Historic Landscape Initiative. Other speakers and respondents included Juhani Pallasmaa, architect, professor, Helsinki, Finland; Robert Moore, National Park Service, St. Louis; Hélène Lipstadt, DOCOMOMO US, Boston; Gyo Obata, architect and founding partner of HOK, St. Louis; Jane Amidon, associate professor of landscape architecture, Ohio State University; Sarah Goldhagen, historian and critic, The New Republic; Harold Roth, architect, New Haven, CT; landscape architect Susan Saarinen (Saarinen’s daughter) and former Finnish ambassador Matti Häkkänen (Saarinen’s second cousin). Patricia Heyda, LEED AP, visiting assistant professor of architecture, co-organized the Downtown/Riverfront Student Design Charrette in St. Louis Nov. 6-9, 2008. The event brought together professionals with 48 students in art, architecture, landscape design, urban design and transportation engineering from five universities: Washington University, Drury University, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, University of Southern Illinois -Edwardsville and Missouri University of Science and Technology. Working in inter-disciplinary teams, the students brainstormed ideas for revitalizing St. Louis’ central riverfront and Arch grounds. The charrette was co-funded by the St. Louis Chapter of the American Institute of Architects Scholarship Fund and by the Transportation Engineering Association of Metropolitan St. Louis. All proposals were exhibited at the Landmarks Association of St. Louis and in Steinberg Gallery at Washington University, in conjunction with the major retrospective of Eero Saarinen’s work at the Mildred Lane Kemper Art Museum. east Central Sophia Psarra, associate professor of architecture, has published the book Architecture and Narrative: The Formation of Space and Cultural Meaning, published by Routledge. The book explores the ways in which arrangement of spaces, social relationships, and cultural content are fundamental to how buildings are shaped, used, and perceived. Narrative enters architecture through the ways in which space is structured to achieve specific effects on our perception. Architects employ conceptual-formal patterns independently from a viewer’s experience but also organize space from the viewpoint of an observer. The act of perceiving is linked with the sequential unfolding of information as our bodies pass through space. Examining the three notions of conceptual, perceptual, and social space, Architecture and Narrative explores the ways in which these three dimensions interact in the design and life of buildings. Looking at how meaning is constructed in buildings and how it is communicated to the viewer, this intriguing study will be of interest to anyone concerned with architecture and culture: from architects to museum specialists and exhibition designers. M.Arch. students Ryan Horsman and Jason Dembski won second place in the Student Product Design category of the second annual International Design Awards Competition for their “Chopstick/Steamer Stool.” Horsman and Dembski developed the Chopstick/Steamer Stool as part of a summer abroad program at B.A.S.E. Beijing with support from founders Robert Mangurian and Mary-Ann Ray. The goal of this particular project—taking cues from Chinese culture and its ability to make excess/ waste useful—was to (re)use everyday Chinese items in new ways. The Chopstick/Steamer Stool takes traditional bamboo steamers, thousands of disposable chopsticks, and simple cushioning material and combines them into a piece furniture. The stool uses six bamboo steamers stacked vertically and bound. Peaking out of the top steamer are thousands of disposable chopsticks—accumulated in less than a year by a ‘one child policy’ family—packed together and standing on end. Serving as a middleman between the steamers and the chopsticks is a basic cushion. Although foam is ideal, the cushion could be made of anything from an old rickshaw seat to a pile of rags. The cushion allows the chopsticks to move independently under pressure and prevents them from falling through the steamer racks. When combined in this way, these fundamental Chinese items form a deceptively comfortable stool which can reasonably be made without spending a single yuan. Four stools were made this summer. At the time of entry two prototypes were on display in FEI Space in Beijing’s 798 Arts District and two others were sold through FEI Space. A project by Michigan Architecture students Francis Wilmore, Jennifer Cramer, and Courtney Brinegar has been selected as a special mention for the 2009 Skyscraper Competition organized by eVolo Architecture, which called for “innovative designs that take into consideration the historical and social context, the existing urban fabric, the human scale, and the environment.” The group’s project is called “niu shu” and was originally created for the team’s graduate studio with Max Fisher visiting professors David Erdman and Clover Lee for fall 2008. The class focused on creating new approaches towards high-rise living in Hong Kong, which is generally driven by the economics of development. The team describes niu shu: “In the reality of a global consumerist society, William McDonough states that we need to ‘honor commerce as the engine of change.’ This project aspires to an aliveness that is not only literal in an environmental sense but also culturally and formally. The niu (new) shu (shoe) is a play on the pronunciation of the denoted Mandarin words for twisting and tree that carry a connoted English context. Hong Kong is comprised of a repetition of ubiquitous, shoebox-like forms that are only differentiated through their marketing. As the towers grow from the ground they translate the lost space of nature into an enhanced environment of consumerism. By using sustainability as a visible marketing tool to differentiate our design the complex becomes a living organism that prospers from a blurring of what is residential enrichment and commercial capital.” According to Wilmore, “we worked within this economic scheme to create a unique living experience for residents that would be subsidized through a hydroponic farm within the towers. The food would then be processed and sold in the market at the base of the towers.” 29 Niu shu will be featured in several architecture and design journals including eVolo MAGAZINE. In addition, it will be included in an exhibition planned for the summer of 2009 in New York City. The exhibition will present the best projects of the 2006-2009 Skyscraper Competition. Professor of Practice in Architecture Mary-Ann Ray received a grant from the Graham Foundation for the forthcoming publication of the project Caochangdi : Beijing Inside Out - Farmers, Floaters, Taxi Drivers, Artists, and the International Art Mob Challenge and Re-make the City, authored by Robert Mangurian and Mary-Ann Ray, co-principals of Studio Works in Los Angeles. The content for this work has involved nearly sixty students from Taubman College to date through their involvement with seminars in Ann Arbor and with the Beijing studio that has taken place at BASEbeijing for the past three years with Mangurian, Ray, and Robert Adams, associate professor at Taubman College. Caochangdi, one of nearly 500 urban villages in the city of Beijing, tells the story about itself and its mostly illegal residents, including farmers, “floaters” (members of the Floating Population who are rural to urban migrants), taxi drivers, and world-class artists. The village also has embedded within it both the problems and possibilities of a new urban space that is redefining the city of Beijing at this pivotal point in human history when cities make up half of the world’s population. The authors, who live and work in Caochangdi for part of each year, dissect the multiple phenomena that form this dynamic urban condition. Caochangdi : Beijing Inside Out will be published by Timezone8 publishers, Beijing, and distributed by DAP (Distributed Art Publishers), and will include never before published texts by Pi Li and Ai Weiwei. The book is expected to be published in the spring/summer of 2009. acsaregional University of Michigan ACSANEWS may 2009 regional news ACSANEWS may 2009 regional news west Arizona State University 30 Assistant Professor Thomas Morton received the ACSA/AIAS New Faculty Teaching Award at the 2009 Conference. Professor Max Underwood was named a President’s Professor in the Fall of 2009. Director Darren Petrucci was named one of the Emerging Voices of 2009 by the Architectural League New York and his and Assistant Professor Renata Hejduk’s VH-R10g House on Martha’s Vineyard was picked as one of Architectural Record’s 2008 Record Houses and received an AIA Arizona Merit Award. Professor Dan Hoffman with Studio Ma won an AIA Arizona Merit Award for their 130 North Central housing in downtown Phoenix. In 2008, two teams co-taught by Associate Professor Ken McCown won student awards from the American Society of Landscape Architects, and in the “Integrating Habitats” competition in Portland, OR one student team earned a first prize and another won and honorable mention. University of Calgary The Architecture Program is pleased to announce the appointment of two new faculty members in the areas of materials/methods, and digital fabrication: Jason Johnson and Josh Taron. Jason was educated at Ball State University and the Architectural Association, and was recently an adjunct professor at Ball State. Josh was educated at Berkeley and ScArc and joins us from practice in Los Angeles. acsaregional David Monteyne will be a Visiting Scholar at the Canadian Centre for Architecture in Montreal during the Winter 2009 term. The book Manufacturing Material Effects: Rethinking Design and Making in Architecture, co-edited by Branko Kolarevic, Haworth Chair in Integrated Design, and Kevin Klinger, was recently published by Routledge. The book examines the synergetic relationships between design and making in architecture and the increasing attention devoted to intricate, often complex effects in material and surface articulation. Dr. Kolarevic has given several public lectures in 2008; his lecture titled “Integrated Design: From Digital to Material” at the University of Salford School of the Built Environment in Manchester was the inaugural lecture for that School’s newly launched MS program in Digital Architectural Design. Marc Boutin was named Associate Dean (Architecture) on July 1, 2008. This is a new position that coincides with the administrative reorganization of the Faculty of Environmental Design into two graduate programs: Architecture and Environmental Design. He delivered an invited lecture on “Negotiated Space” during Copenhagen’s Metropolis workshops in July 2008, and led a design workshop exploring the same theme for the Nordhaven area of the city. The second, revised edition of Wine By Design, by Loraine Fowlow and Sean Stanwick, will be released by John Wiley & Sons in 2009. The book highlights the best of international contemporary winery design, and includes commentary on current trends in the wine industry such as wine tourism, celebrity wineries, and the winery hotel/spa, as well as the development of green/sustainability initiatives. Graham Livesey is working on a doctorate at TUDelft in the Netherlands and is examining the legacy of the Garden City movement. He gave a paper at the recent AHRA Conference at the University of Sheffield entitled “Assemblage, Agency, and Ecologies of the Contemporary City.” Catherine Hamel has the essay “Crossing into the Border: an Intersection of Vertical and Horizontal Migration,” coming out in March 2009 in the book in Place Studies in Art, Media, Science and Technology: Historical Investigations on the Sites and the Migration of Knowledge, edited by A. Broeckmann and G. Nadarajan. Visitors to the Architecture Program during 2008-09 include the distinguished Zagreb-based architect Hrvoje Njiric, as the 2009 William Lyon Somerville Visiting Lecturer; he directed a studio charrette on homelessness and gave a public lecture. The 2008 Gillmor Visiting Lecturer was Karen Till from Virginia Tech. Marc Fornes was the inaugural 2009 Dale Taylor Lecturer, he directed a one week digital fabrication workshop; Fornes is the founder of THEVERYMANY, a design studio and collaborative research forum. Guest reviewers for final design projects have included John Shnier (Toronto), Randy Cohen (Montreal), Adrian Blackwell (Toronto), and Michael Everts (Montana State). University of California, Berkeley Therese Tierney is a doctoral scholar at UC Berkeley has recently published Abstract Space: Beneath the Media Surface (Princeton Architectural Press). The book argues that the integration of digital methodologies into architectural pedagogy and practice have opened up an ontological crisis. Abstract Space demonstrates in both text and graphics that the architectural expression (of which the image is an important and powerful part) is not limited to one definition; it exists as a complexity and is variable. Therese is currently a Malcolm Reynolds Fellow at UC Berkeley and was a researcher at Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s Media Lab during 2005. Avigail Sachs, PhD candidate at CED has published recently two articles: “The Postwar Legacy of Architectural Research” in JAE 62/3 pp. 53-64)and “Marketing through Research: William Caudill and Caudill Rowlett Scott (CRS)” in: JOE 14/1 pp. 737-752 The new Berkeley Summer Program [IN]ARCHITECTURE comprised of an eightweek curriculum will be launched from June 22- August 14. For information please see http://arch.ced.berkeley.edu/programs/summer. At the Spring 2009 ACSA conference in Portland, Keith Plymale lecturer at UC Berkeley presented conceptual digital modeling work performed by his first year undergraduate studio. The projects are the result of a research grant and collaboration with Autodesk software company and has led to some evolutionary discussions about first year pedagogy and the design of the software being used to produce digital models in concert with physical models. University of Nevada Las Vegas A design team of twelve students led by Glenn NP Nowak, Assistant Professor, exhibited their architectural installation at the Fringe Festival University of Oregon Professor Kevin Nute has received funding support from the University’s Office of Equity and Diversity to organize a series of special lectures on the Japanese American Internment in the Pacific Northwest, to be hosted by the School of Architecture and Allied Arts between April and June. The lectures relate to a diversity-centered design studio Professor Nute is teaching in the spring, “Outside Inside—The Pacific Northwest’s Japanese American Internment Remembered,” which is being funded by a Joel Yamauchi Memorial Fund award. The studio involves the design of a new Oregon Nikkei Legacy Center in Portland’s former Japantown as well as new visitor interpretive facilities at the Minidoka National Historic Site in southern Idaho, where the majority of Oregon’s Japanese American population was incarcerated between 1942 and 1945. The lectures will examine the legal and human implications of the Internment and its relevance today. Speakers include Tetsuden Kashima, Professor of American Ethnic Studies at the University of Washington, Seattle; Peggy Nagae, lead attorney on the successful Minoru Yasui Supreme Court appeal; Wendy Janssen, National Park Service Superintendent, Minidoka National Historic Site; and former University of Oregon students who were held at Minidoka. An accompanying photo exhibit has been created by the Oregon Nikkei Legacy Center with the help of the School of Architecture, and will become a permanent traveling educational exhibit after the University of Oregon lecture series. Professor Nute has also been invited to teach as a Visiting Fellow at the University of Queensland, Australia in the fall, when he will be giving a series of lectures and seminars at other Australian schools on his work on the role of time in architectural space. Associate Professor Ihab Elzeyadi was selected by the School board of Visitors external review committee to receive the 2009 Mulvanny G2 Faculty Research Award for his research project entitled, GATE: Green Affordable Teaching/Learning Environments. The committee commented that Elzeyadi’s proposal articulated a national statement of need for research to correlate built environment retrofit of existing classrooms with student health and well being. The project is particularly timely and has the potential to provide a metric for a knowledge-based economy. Professor Jim Pettinari and Associate Professor Hajo Neis with the help of graduate research students finished a research project on ‘centers and corridors’ in the Portland Metropolitan Area with a study on “Vision of Future Downtown Tigard.” The study, which can be seen at the Portland Urban Architecture Research Laboratory website (puarl.uoregon.edu), was done in close cooperation with Tigard planners Ron Bunch and Sean Ferelly and received acclaim by the city and the Metropolitan Government METRO. In a next project, Neis and Pettinari will focus on a seven-mile corridor in the City of Tigard. UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA Prof. Thomas Spiegelhalter is organizing with GLUMAC and moderating a Sustainability Innovation Event featuring one of the world leading architects on Sustainability and Advanced Building Systems Integration “Christoph Ingenhoven Architects” at the USC Energy Institute on Oct. 2. 2008. Co-Sponsors include CLUMAC, Gensler Architects, GABA German-American-Business Association, and others. Christoph Ingenhoven designed numerous award-winning Low-Energy-High-Rise-Buildings and recently the zerofossil-energy main train station infrastructure in Stuttgart, Germany, which will also be featured in his innovation lecture at the Architectural Records Innovation 2008 Conference in New York City. Prof. Spiegelhalter is also collaborating with Landscape architect Peter Drecker in Germany on a master plan with sustainability indicators for a low-carbon, Zero-Fossil-Energy-Settlement proposal (Nullenergiesiedlung) for the redevelopment of the Brownfield area of Thyssen-Krupp in Oberhausen, Germany, 2008-2009. The USC School of Architecture, Anthony A. Marnell II. Italian Studies program, based at the Centro DI Cultura Scientifica “Alessandra Volta”, Villa Olmo in Como has been asked to participate in an appointed Task force, “Think Tank” to study the future Economic and Planning strategies for the City of Como. Appointed by the Mayor of Como and the Centro Volta Scientific Council, a group of 11 business professionals from the City are working alongside the following Academic Panel: Prof Umberto Bertele, Planning Strategies, Politecno di Milano; Prof Guido Martinotti, Urban Sociology, University Degli Studi di Milano Bicocca; Prof Gioachino Garofoli, Economics and Politics, University degli Studi dell’ Insubria; Prof Graeme M. Morland, Architecture / Urban Design, Director, USC, School of Architecture; Italian Studies program, Prof Giuseppe Filiputti, Architect, Milan, USC Program Co-ordinator. In January 2008, the Second intermediate report was presented to the City, following a working session with the Mayor and the Panel. 31 Students from the USC Chase L. Leavitt Graduate Building Science program published 14 papers at conferences including the Oxford Conference – 50 years on – Resetting the Agenda for Architectural Education; Solar2008, the American Solar Energy Society in San Diego; the Society of Building Science Educators Retreat; the ACSA Conference in Houston, and the 2008 Composites Australia/Composites CRC Conference. Over the summer Eui-Sung Yi and Roland Wahlroos-Ritter collaborated for Chang Yo Architects on an competition entry for the South Korean Embassy in Tokyo. Their design incorporated an innovative environmental engineering solution surpassing LEED standards that we developed with Buro Happold Los Angeles. Their proposal has made the final shortlist of three. Ryall Porter Architects N.Y. and WROAD started a collaboration on a high end residence project in Santa Monica. The ambition of the project is to achieve a zero-energy solution in collaboration with Buro Happold. Michael Hricak, FAIA and Mina Chow, AIA are currently providing observations and commentary on some of America’s most revered (WEST continued on page 32) acsaregional in Australia this past month. Glenn and his students also delivered formal presentations of their work to the School of Architecture at the University of Adelaide. The design team members along with Dr. Janet White, Assistant Professor, are representing the work in Las Vegas venues throughout the semester. Information on this design project can be found at www. rebelsinfringe.com. ACSANEWS may 2009 regional news ACSANEWS may 2009 32 regional news (WEST continued from page 31) buildings on the AIA affiliated website www. shapeofamerica.org. Buildings examined include Kahn’s Exeter Library, the Cadet Chapel at the USAF Academy, Taliesin West and the Hearst Castle. Michael Hricak is currently serving on the Editorial Advisory Board for Architectural Record. This past summer Michael Hricak participated in “Dwell on Design/Los Angeles” speaking on sustainability practices in residential architecture. Mark Gangi was elected President of the AIA Pasadena Foothill Chapter 2009. He aslso won a 2008 AIACC Savings by Design Award in Sustainability Water + Life Museums 2008 Gail Peter Borden received the prestigious Borchard Fellowship which will provide him with the Chateau de Bretesch and $30,000 to study the material implications of Ledoux and the tectonic implications of architecture parlant. John Enright, Assistant Professor at USC and principal of Griffin Enright Architects, received a California Council AIA Honor Award for the “Keep Off the Grass! Installation.” The firms Point Dume Residence was featured in an article in the New York Times entitled, Of the Sea and Air and Sky, in November. Three residential projects are featured in the recent publication, 1000x Architecture of the Americas, edited by Michelle Galindo, Verlagshaus Braun, 2008. John Enright lectured at the LA Forum as part of its “Loose Talk: Out Their Doing series,” moderated by Eric Owen Moss. Other recent lectures include “Recent Work” at Outlet 16 at the Mandrake, and “In the Academic Realm: 3 projects that explore new strategies in Educational Architecture,” at the Los Angeles AIA’s Design Dialogues event. Chris Warren and Mario Cipresso of Studio SHIFT have been selected by RFP as one of seven firms to compete in the second stage of a competition for a Center for Disease Control Complex (approx. 430,000SF) in Taiwan. The proposal is due in March. Doug and Regula Campbell were invited to present a case study of their masterplan, architectural and landscape architectural design of Audubon Center at Deb’s Park for the Designing the Parks Conference Part II held in Sausalito, CA in early December 2008. The project was selected not only for its LEED’s Platinum rating, its inclusive planning and design process, and that it offers a welcoming, educational wilderness experience to its underserved neighborhood as well as the region; but also because it uses the interpretive media of architectural and landscape architectural design to deepen visitors’ experience of and connection to Nature. southeast Catholic University of America Assistant Professor Adnan Morshed, PhD, presented an invited talk “Architecture Without (Male) Architects: Women’s Empowerment in Grameen Bank Housing in Bangladesh ,” at the htc.workshop, School of Architecture , Florida International University, in November 2008. He has received a $10,000 grant from the Royal Netherlands Embassy in Washington to organize the Dutch lecture series at CUA, “The Dutch Element at NY400: Celebrating 400 Years of Dutch-American Friendship.” The series included four speakers from the Netherlands : Nathalie de Vries of MVRDV, Edzo Bindels of West 8, Lars Spuybroek of Nox, and Jurgen Bey of Studio Makkink and Bey. acsaregional Florida International University Professor John Stuart recently completed The New Deal in South Florida: Design, Policy, and Community Building, 1933-1940. Gainesville: University Press of Florida, 2008. (co-edited with John F. Stack, Jr., and with contributions by Mary N. Woods, Cornell University; Marianne Lamonaca, The Wolfsonian-FIU; and Ted Baker, formerly of FIU). The book appeared in coordination with the exhibition A Bittersweet Decade: The New Deal in America, 1933-1943, which Stuart co-curated with Marianne Lamonaca and Jon Mogul of The Wolfsonian-FIU. Associate Professor Marilys Nepomechie, FAIA, and Landscape Architecture Chair Marta Canaves, ASLA, IIDA have been awarded 2008 design honors from the American Institute of Architects Florida/ Caribbean Region and from the Miami Chapter of the AIA for sustainable, affordable housing and infrastructure in Smoketown, Kentucky; the project was researched in collaboration with the University of Kentucky College of Design. The AIA Florida/ Caribbean design awards were juried in Buenos Aires. The distinguished international jury panel was chaired by Jorge Glusberg, director of the Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes, Argentina. Jury for the AIA Miami Awards was held in Boston, Massachusetts. Nader Tehrani, of Office d’A and MIT, chaired a panel of prominent architects and critics. Nepomechie was named winner of the 2008 William G. McMinn Honor Award for Outstanding Contributions to Architecture Education, conferred by the Florida/Caribbean Association of the American Institute of Architects. She and Marta Canaves were invited speakers at the 2008 AIA Florida/ Caribbean Annual Convention. Nepomechie and Canaves are also the recipients of a Cejas Research Endowment Grant in support of their interdisciplinary scholarship on mid-century hotels and tourism in Miami, Florida and La Habana, Cuba. Nepomechie is essayist and editor, and Canaves the designer, of Bienal Miami + Beach 2001 - 2005: A retrospective (Ediciones TRAMA, 2007). Published by Professor Jaime Canaves, FAIA and University of Miami Adjunct Professor Carlos Casuscelli, the bi-lingual volume has been designated as an international book award finalist by the 9th Bienal de Arquitectura/ Santo Domingo in the Dominican Republic. Nepomechie was an invited speaker at the 2008 National Grassroots Conference in Washington Nepomechie has been named to the Editorial Advisory Board of Architectural Record. Professor Jaime Canaves, FAIA, IIDA is the recipient of the AIA Miami 2008 Architect of the Year Award. Canaves was invited as guest speaker and member of the International jury panel for the XXI Bienal de Arquitectura de Colombia in Cartagena and the 2008 Bieanl de Arquitectura de la Republica Dominicana in Santo Domingo. He participated as a panelist for the Response and Responsability Round Table during the Build Boston Conference. The Session was sponsored by the International Committee of the Boston Society of Architects. Professor Jeffrey Kipnis (The Ohio State University) is the 2008-2009 Paul L. Cejas Eminent Scholar in Architecture. Kipnis gave four lectures outlining problems confronted in contemporary architectural practices, and held a series of seminars with graduate students and faculty during his fellowship. Bernard Tschumi was the 20072008 Cejas Eminent Scholar. Assistant Professor David Rifkind organized the first two htc.Workshops, a series of semi-annual symposia which provide a forum for new research in architectural history, theory and criticism. The htc.Workshop invites emerging scholars to discuss their work with peers and senior scholars representing a number of disciplines in order to work through difficult material in a collegial setting. Consistent with the international focus of FIU and the Department of Architecture, the htc.Workshop places special emphasis on contemporary research examining architecture in Latin America and the Caribbean, Africa, Asia and Eastern Europe. The fall htc.Workshop featured papers by Esra Akcan (University of Illinois at Chicago), Adnan Morshed (Catholic University), and Sarah Teasley (Northwestern University), and was moderated by Katherine Wheeler (University of Miami). The spring htc.Workshop presented work by Colette Apelian (Berkeley City College), Vladimir Kulic (Florida Atlantic University), and Itohan Osayimwese (University of Washington), was moderated by Marianne Lamonaca (The Wolfsonian-Florida International University), and featured a keynote lecture by Fasil Giorghis (Addis Ababa University). The undergraduate architecture program at FIU has – for the first time – received over 1,000 applications for the 60 seats of the entering 2009 freshman class. Assistant Professor Jason Chandler organized the exhibition Engaging the Urban, featuring 23 recent infill projects by ten young Miami firms. The exhibition opened with a roundtable discussion moderated by department chair Adam Drisin and Assistant Professor David Rifkind. Assistant Professor and digital design coordinator Eric Goldemberg coordinated a two-day conference, Digital Pulse in Architecture, which focused on the discussion and showcase of digital design’s potential to unveil rhythmic sensations, the fundamental pulsation qualities of architecture. The symposium was a unique event for the state of Florida, as it showcased the work of some of the most relevant designers of digital production. The keynote was delivered by architecture critic and theorist Jeffery Kipins, and the guest speakers were Hernan Diaz Alonso, principal of Xefirotarch, Ali Rahim, design director at Contemporary Architecture Practice, Ferda Kolatan, principal of su11, Perry Hall, painter and musician, David Ruy, co-director of Ruy Klien, Marcelo Spina, leader of PATTERNS, and Eric Goldemberg, principal of MONAD Architects. The conference represented an opportunity to reveal and disseminate provocative concepts and innovative fabrication techniques of contemporary architecture design, a revelation of cutting-edge technologies that are changing the way in which space is conceived and built. Savannah College of Art & Design Brian Wishne has accepted the position of dean for the School of Building Arts. He has served as chair of the department of architecture at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee and has worked as project designer at a number of design firms including Engberg Anderson Design Partnership and Space Design International Inc. Wishne also has served as a staff designer with Michael Graves and Associates in Princeton, N.J., and as a faculty member for the University of Cincinnati’s School of Architecture and Interior Design. He is the recipient of an Honor Award for Design Excellence from the Architects’ Society of Ohio of the American Institute of Architects and an Award for Excellence in Architectural Design from the Cincinnati chapter of the American Institute of Architects. Professor Emad Afifi was the keynote speaker at the annual conference of the Illumination Engineering Society of North America (IES). The topic of the keynote address was “Inspiration-- Shedding Some Light on the Value of Design, Creativity and Innovation”. 33 Professor Scott Dietz received an AIA Design Honor award for the Julia & Malcolm Butler residence, Savannah, Georgia. The project was published in the AIA Georgia Journal. He also received an award from the Historic Savannah Foundation for the Deborah & Roy Williams residence in Savannah, Georgia. Professor Matthew Dudzik had a paper accepted to the Art and Design for Social Justice Symposium hosted by Florida State University. This paper presents findings from his research ‘Examining the Psychology of Space in a Culture of Fear,’ and is co-authored with Professor Hannah Mendoza, a professor if Interior Design at the Savannah College of Art and Design. Dr. Mohamed Elnahas joined the Savannah College of Art and Design in September 2008. He is teaching environmental control and design studio. His teaching philosophy revolves around bridging the gap between technical courses and design studio by integrating other classes in studio projects. Professor Alexis Gregory served as the moderator of a panel discussion at the 2009 AIA South Carolina Spring Meeting in Charleston, SC. The panel topic is “Overcoming Obstacles to Women’s Achievement in Architecture in South Carolina.” Prof. Hug Ngo gave a lecture in the College of Architecture at Texas Tech University. He also received the runner up award to the 2008 Educator of the Year Award from Bentley Systems Inc. Professor Andrew Payne has officially completed his PhD in Design from the College of Design (SOUTHEAST continued on page 34) acsaregional DC, and at the AIA National Convention in Boston, Massachusetts. She serves as National Vice Chair of the AIA Small Projects Advisory Group, and on the Institute’s 2009 Small Firms Task Force. ACSANEWS may 2009 regional news ACSANEWS may 2009 34 regional news (SOUTHEAST continued from page 33) at NC State University. His research “Understanding Change in Place” focused on way-finding by visually impaired pedestrians. He also had a paper presented in the 2008 West Fall ACSA Conference in Los Angeles, CA, and two magazine articles published in Jacksonville Magazine on Universal Design and Aging in Place. Chair Scott Singeisen presented a paper, coauthored with Dr. David Dirlam, titled, “Collaboratively Crafting a Unique Architecture Education through MODEL Assessment” at the SID2008 conference, The 7th International Workshop on Social Intelligence Design - Designing Socially Aware Interactions. Professor Scott Sworts’ spring 2008 Design Studio VI course received an Honorable Mention award in the Leading Edge Design Competition. The Award was a Citation of Merit for Integration of Onsite Energy Generation. Prof. Ming Tang was interviewed by Charlie Rose for his award winning project Folded Bamboo House in New York City. His design was the only architectural project selected by the jury in the finalist of the Earth Award 2009. He also won the third place of Live the Box competition sponsored by AIA Newark & Suburban and the Young Architects Forum, which was featured in the article named “The Shipping Container as Building Block” by Antoinette Martin in the New York Times. He also won an Honorable Mention in the Re: Construct: Sustainable Materials and Building Practices competition, the second place in the Streetscape in A New World international competition in Shanghai, China, and the third place in Homeland Rehabilitation: Design Competition of Rehabilitating Wenchuan Earthquake-stricken Area, China. acsaregional Prof. Ming Tang had his book, Urban Paleontology: Evolution of Urban Forms, published in October 2008, co-authored with Professor Dihua Yang. Professor Tim Woods’ “Moon River House” will be published in a Rizzoli publication, titled Southern Cosmopolitan by author Susan Sully in March 2009. His sustainable modular home design called the “Living Machine” was published in the 2009 Jan/Feb issue of Natural Life Magazine. University of North Carolina at Charlotte 5th Year student Je’Nen Chastain was elected from the floor of the AIAS Annual Meeting to the office of AIAS President. She is the second student in 2 years to be elected to a National AIAS position. Deana Moore was elected as AIAS Vice President in 2008. Visiting Assistant Professor, Mohammad Gharipour finished his PhD dissertation in December 2008. His dissertation, “Pavilion Structure in Persianate Gardens: Reflections in the Textual and Visual Media” was supervised by Prof. Douglas C. Allen at Georgia Institute of Technology. Gharipour’s recent paper, “Achaemenids’ Contribution to the History of Garden Design” which is published in the Journal of Middle Eastern and North African Intellectual and Cultural Studies, explores the origins of the fourfold gardens (chaharbagh) in Near Eastern literary documents. Assistant Professor Chris Beorkrem of the Digital Design Center and Associate Professor Jose Gamez of the Design and Society Research Center received a grant from the Arts and Science Council of Charlotte entitled: Industrial Recycling as Pavilion Installation. The Grant will subsidize the construction of a pavilion at a local non-profit made of remnants from local industrial manufacturing facilities and constructed using digital manufacturing tools. Assistant Professors Chris Beorkrem and Jeff Balmer gave an invited presentation with Dr. Anne Harley (Department of Music) at the National Opera Association’s Annual Meeting in Arlington, VA. They presented work from three operas, which have been produced over the last three years integrating real-time technology within Operatic performances. book in German and English languages is titled The Significance of the Idea in the Architecture of Valerio Olgiati and is published by Niggli Verlag (www.niggli.ch) in Zürich/Sulgen, Switzerland. Michael Ermann, Associate Professor of Architecture, is part of a faculty team that received an award from the Institute for Society, Culture, and Environment (ISCE) to support development activites for “Phoebe’s Field”, a travelling exhibition designed to make abstract physics of fields concrete and relevant to middle school students. The team also received an Educational Enhancement Collaboration Grant. Juhani Pallasmaa, Professor Emeritus of the Helsinki University of Technology, presented the Robert Turner-Lecture supported by Robert Turner and Rengin Holt introducing his newest book The Thinking Hand. He also served as a design critic and lecturer. Marie Zawistowski, graduate from the Ecole d’Architecture at Paris-Malaquais, and Keith Zawistowski, graduate from Virginia Polytechnic Institute & State University, joined the faculty as visiting instructors. Paola Zellner Bassett, graduate from the Universidad Nacional de Buenos Aires and from the Southern California Institute of Architecture, joined the faculty as a lecturer. my profile Are you now teaching at a different school? Do you have a new email address? Let us know! Virginia tech University Be sure to update your ACSA Personal Profile online. Kathryn Clarke Albright, Associate Professor of Architecture, was spearheading the organization of the symposium “Ferrari Symposium III: Territories of Opportunities” featuring leactures by Bruce Mau Design and Lee Polisano. Go to www.acsa-arch.org, login to your account, and make updates under “My Profile”. Dr. Markus Breitschmid, Assistant Professor of Architecture, has published a new book on the Swiss architect Valerio Olgiati. The dual-language Don’t know your login? Get your password sent to you automatically at www.acsa-arch.org/ sendpassword.aspx northeast ACSANEWS may 2009 regional news threat , that Kroeker and Singh had done with students at the College of Design, University of Minnesota. Howard University Howard University School of Architecture and Design has appointed Jack Travis, FAIA, NOMAC as the 2008-09 James E. Silcott Endowed Chair. As Silcott Chair, Travis will work collaboratively with students and faculty in the Department of Architecture exploring Black culture in architecture and environmental design. CITY COLLEGE OF NEW YORK Assistant Professor Fran Leadon, AIA, is co-authoring the upcoming fifth edition of the AIA Guide to New York City with Norval White, FAIA. The new edition is the first since 2000 and will be published in 2010 by Oxford University Press. White and Leadon are revisiting and re-evaluating each building from the last edition, taking all new photographs, and writing new descriptions of significant recent construction. Leadon has taught the freshman design studio at City College since 2000, and this year also taught an elective course, Documenting New York City. His students gained unique perspectives of the city by visiting, photographing, and writing about both historic and more recent buildings, and some of their discoveries will be included in the new edition of the Guide. Dalhousie University On November 14 2008, Professor Richard Kroeker, Dalhousie University was awarded the 2008 Erich Schelling Medal in Architecture Medal at a ceremony in Karlsruhe Germany. The inter- national medal is awarded every two years for leading edge design work. Pictou Landing Health Centre , designed by Prof. Richard Kroeker and Prof. Brian Lilley of Dalhousie University with Architect Peter Henry, also of Dalhousie, was selected as a finalist in the 2008 World Architecture Awards Health category at the 2008 World Festival of Architecture in Barcelona, Spain. April 4 and 5, 2008 Dalhousie University Architecture Professor Richard Kroeker co-chaired a symposium on Dakota Sacred Lands at the College of Design, University of Minnesota together with Virajita Singh of University of Minnesota Center for Sustainable Building Research. The symposium brought together key players related to the issue of sites that are sacred to the Dakota and other Native American cultures. It was part of a conference hosted by the University of Minnesota College of Design entitled: Sacred Sites / Sacred Sights : architecture, ethics, and spiritual geographies. The Dakota Sacred Sites symposium received funding from the Graham Foundation. It was a result of design studio work on Oheyawahi, a significant Dakota sacred site under Jack Travis is a distinguished architect, practitioner and teacher having published his seminal book African American Architects in Current Practice in 1991. He has taught and lectured at a number of Architecture Schools and program including the University of Cincinnati, Pratt Institute, and the Fashion Institute of Technology. Travis founded the AfricCulture/Design-Culture Studio in 1994, which seeks to collect, document and disseminate information on Black Culture as it relates to environmental design. He has had major appointments with AIA, NOMA, Harlem’s Community Board and HGTV’s Trend Smart Team. Travis has appeared in all of the prominent design publications as well as the New York Times, New York Newsday and the Daily News. He is most highly recognized as one of the leading designers involved in African and African American cultural factors in design and is the “Cultural Design Consultant” for Frederic Schwartz Architects and HOK Architects. The Silcott Chair was created in 2002 by James E. Silcott, a distinguished alumni of the School of Architecture and Design and member of Howard University Board of Trustee, to provide student support and to highlight and enhance the School of Architecture and Design. Professors Harry Robinson, Barbara Laurie and Silcott Chair Jack Travis are each members of an architecture team short listed as finalist for the Smithsonian’s New National Museum of African American History and Culture (NMAAHC). 6 architecture teams were selected as finalists to (NORTHEAST continued on page 36) acsaregional Leadon and White in New York, January 2009. 35 ACSANEWS may 2009 36 regional news (NORTHEAST continued from page 35) engage in an architecture design competition to determine the final architect for the NMAAHC. Professor Robinson’s team includes Foster & Partners and Blackburn Architects. Alford Blackburn with her husband, the late Walter Blackburn, both Howard graduates, started Blackburn and Schneider Architecture in Indianapolis many years ago. Professors Laurie’s team includes her firm of Devrouax & Purnell and Pei Cobb Freed & Partners. Marshall Purnell, partner of of Devrouax & Purnell is the immediate past president of the American Institute of Architects. Silcott Chair Travis is with Moody Nolan Ltd. And Antoine Predock Architects. Curtis Moody of Moody Nolan is the principal of one of the largest African American owned and staffed architecture firms in the country. The NMAAHC will be located on a five acre site between the Washington Monument and the National Museum of American History on the national Mall and is the last building to grace the Mall. It is proposed to be completed by 2015. Professor Celik is a native of Istanbul, received her B. Arch. at Istanbul Technical University, her M. Arch. at Rice, and earned a Ph. D. from the University of Berkeley. She teaches undergraduate and graduate level courses in the history of architecture including survey courses, honors seminars and directed studies. She lectures extensively here and abroad in Turkish, English, and French. Norwich University Zeynep Celik, Distinguished Professor at the NJIT College of Architecture and Design, has recently published Empire, Architecture, and the City – French-Ottoman Encounters, 1830-1914 (University of Washington Press, 2009). In it, Professor Celik examines the political agendas of the French and Ottoman empires and their influence on modern infrastructure and city building as evidenced in outlying cities of Algeria and Tunisia. In her nuanced look at cross cultural exchanges, Celik shows how remarkably similar buildings and urban forms manifest a great variety of meanings depending upon their authors. She summarizes her work with ideas on how each empire’s different mind-set engaged cultural differences, race, and civilizing missions very differently. Associate Professor Lisa Schrenk’s book Building a Century of Progress: The Architecture of the 1933-34 Century of Progress International Exposition (University of Minnesota Press) was recently named to Choice Reviews List of Outstanding Academic Titles. The monograph examines the development and promotion of modern architectural ideologies, aesthetics, building practices, and materials during the late 1920s and early 1930s in the context of Chicago’s Second World’s Fair. In connection with her research on the exposition, Dr. Schrenk is a consultant for the upcoming exhibit “Designing the World of Tomorrow: America’s World Fairs in the 1930,” scheduled to open at the National Building Museum in October 2010, and recently co-authored the paper “Traveling the Rails to a Century of Progress: American Railroads and the Second Chicago World’s Fair” at the 2009 Southwest/ Texas Popular Culture Association/American Cultural Association meeting in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Zeynep Celik is author of several books in her field of study including The Remaking of Istanbul: Portrait of an Ottoman City in the Nineteenth Century, Displaying the Orient, and Urban Forms and Colonial Confrontations: Algiers under French Rule. She is currently editing, with two colleagues, a collection of essays entitled Walls of Algiers: Narrative of the City though Text and Image, to be published by Getty Publications Dr. Schrenk is on sabbatical for the 2008-09 school year completing research for a new book that explores the educational environment of Frank Lloyd Wright’s Oak Park studio and how the architect used the physical structure of the architectural office as an experimental design laboratory. Part of her current research was funded by a “We the People” grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities. New Jersey Institute of Technology acsaregional and the University of Washington Press in May of 2009. Professor Celik is also curating two scholarly exhibitions “Empire, Architecture, and the City” to be mounted in the gallery of the Banque Ottomane in Istanbul in March 2010 and “Walls of Algiers” which opened at the Getty Research Institute in Los Angeles in March 2009 and will be shown again at the Contemporary Center of Architecture in New York in late 2009. Syracuse University “Home Turf,” an exhibition of green design research produced by Syracuse faculty was held in the school’s gallery February 23 – April 3rd. Variously directed towards the larger project of calibrating building weight in the planetary balance, Associate Professors Ted Brown and Anne Munly (Munly Brown Studio), Assistant Professor Michael Carroll (atelier BUILD), Assistant Professor Kevin Lair (MOD-ECO Design) with UPSTATE: Fellow Joe Sisko (CELL), Assistant Professor Albert Marichal (Albert Marichal Studio), Assistant Professor Michael Pelken (energydesignlab), and Associate Professor Tim Stenson (Stenson Building + Furniture Design) presented a broad range of work on “green” topics, from houses to housing, and from products to infrastructure. Assistant Professor Jean-François Bédard published “Political Renewal and Architectural Revival during the French Regency: Oppenord’s Palais-Royal” in the March 2009 issue of the Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians. The article focused on the political message crafted by Philippe d’Orléans in his use of seventeenthcentury royal forms as implemented by his architect Gilles-Marie Oppenord in the refurbishment of the duke’s Parisian palace. Associate Professor Mark Linder lectured on February 5 at the Cooper Union. Other speaking events this year include a public lecture at Ohio State, a presentation in the workshop “Exploring the Role of History in Contemporary Architectural Practice” at MIT, a lecture at TU Delft in a seminar series to launch a new research program titled “Architecture as Craft,” and a keynote address at the conference “Expertise: Media Specificity and Interdisciplinarity” at Tel Aviv University. Associate Professor Brian Lonsway’s book, Making Leisure Work: Architecture and the Experience Economy has been published by Routledge Press. The book explores the contemporary architecture of theme-based design from a variety of angles to prompt a new understanding of architecture’s role in the increasingly diversified consumer environment. Tracing the convergence of scientific design research, consumer psychology, and Hollywood story-telling techniques, the chapters of the book examine how the design of theme parks, casinos, and shopping malls has in- fluenced our unexpectedly themed spaces, from the city to the MRI machine. Crystal and Arabesque: Claude Bragdon, Ornament, and Modern Architecture by Associate Professor and Undergraduate Program Chair Jonathan Massey has just been released by University of Pittsburgh Press. Massey offers the first biography of Claude Bragdon - an early and unique, but often overlooked, advocate of architectural modernism – and draws on a rich trove of previously unpublished work to show how American modernists committed to social reform used ornament in new ways to engage the media and audiences of mass society. of the contemporary universe, requiring architects with astuteness and agility to respond to its challenges. Study within the graduate program is research driven, in three interconnected clusters – Infrastructure, Site, Territory and Environment, Emerging Architecture of Advanced Technologies, and Design Democracies. The keynote drawing of Professor John Pron’s September 08 Old City gallery show titled PHILApocalypse, a 12’long and 6’ high interpretive rendered collage of the city of Philadelphia inundated with rising tides and uncontrolled flooding, was displayed in the at the Philadelphia City Planning Commission, One Parkway, 13th floor, 1515 Arch Street. in Philadelphia. An exhibit of the six finalist designs as well as the semi-finalist proposals was displayed at the Center for Architecture/ AIA Philadelphia during the month of February 2009. The six finalists will build their shelters at the Schuylkill Center in the spring, with an opening reception on Saturday May 9, 2009. Professor Ng collaborated with an artist, Nami Yamamoto, on the design entitled “Firefly.” ACSANEWS may 2009 regional news 37 University at Buffalo The Monographic Serial SHARESTAN devoted its Autumn 2008 issue to the work of Mehrdad Hadighi. In addition to the chronicle of his work, the issue includes 5 scholarly critical essays. Temple University The four-year Bachelor of Science in Architecture is a pre-professional degree, qualifying graduates to apply for admission to the two-year professionally accredited Master of Architecture program, required for professional registration. The four-year Bachelor of Science in Architectural Preservation focuses on the application of architectural and historical knowledge to the existing built environment. Developed with Temple’s Fox School of Business, the four-year Bachelor of Science in Facility Management educates students on project planning and programming, real estate, financial accounting, contract law, operations management, and research methods for facility managers. The Master of Architecture at Temple University is a two-year, professionally accredited architecture program for holders of a recognized fouryear pre-professional undergraduate architecture degree or equivalent. The program assembles the ingredients – students, faculty, issues, ideas and tools – to engage with the urgent urban, environmental, spatial, cultural, political and technological issues of our times. It asks students to consider reflexively how architects impact on the world and ways in which we can do this better. It recognizes the complexity and interconnectivity Associate Professor Sally Harrison served as a juror of (IN)PLAY SPACE: 2009 Green Spaces Competition of the James River Green Building Council in Richmond, Virginia. Assistant Professor Srdjan Jovanovic Weiss’s design work has been selected by Phaidon press to be published in upcoming 10x10x3 monograph as well as in the upcoming Harvard Design Magazine. Weiss also contributed essays to Beyond Post-Contemporary by SUN Publishers and to Monument to Transformation, published by JRP-Ringier. Weiss published the book: Camp David Spectacle of Retreat [ISBN: 978-0-557-04639-3], documenting research with students at Tyler School of Art, Architecture Department. Weiss gave lectures at the Architecture Day in Stockholm at the invitation of Swedish Association of Architects, at the Neo-Liberal Frontline: Urban Struggles in Post-Socialist Societies in Zagreb, Croatia and at Zones of Conflict Conference at University College London. Assistant Professor Sneha Patel and Adjunct faculty Jack Fanning were awarded as one of eight selected entries for [spot], a design competition to build a series of outdoor interventions that explored the dynamics of the urban parking spot in October 2008. The competition was sponsored by Design Philadelphia and Qb3. Assistant Professor Rashida Ng was selected as a winner of the Gimme Shelter Competition at the Schuylkill Center for Environmental Education to build a sustainable woodland shelter on the organization’s 350-acre nature preserve Edward Steinfeld and Danise Levine of the IDEA Center were invited participants in a weeklong charette conducted by Duany Plater Zyberk for the Atlanta Regional Commission on the Planning of Lifelong Communities from Feb. 10-17. Both assisted the charette team to develop six schemes for neighborhoods in the Atlanta region that would support aging in place. Edward Steinfeld gave a lecture at the Rehabilitation and Disability Studies Department at Southern University on Universal Design for Aging in Place on Feb. 20. University of Maryland Professor Matthew Bell, AIA served as faculty adviser for an interdisciplinary team of graduate students who earned one of the six Honorable Mentions awarded in the ULI Hines 2009 Urban Design Competition. The team placed in the top ten of over ninety submissions. The team included five graduate students—three from the Planning program and one each from the Architecture and Real Estate Development programs. Team members include: Senait Kassa, Nicole Wynands, Nicolas Dei Castelli (Planning); Lin Mao (Architecture); and Priya Kanchan (Real Estate Development) with Marc McCauley of RCLCO Real Estate Advisors serving as professional adviser. Dean Garth Rockcastle, FAIA conceived of the national traveling exhibit entitled SUBSEQUENT ACTION: Creative Work on Neglected Ground. (NORTHEAST continued on page 38) acsaregional Temple University’s Department of Architecture of the Tyler School of Art is pleased to announce four new degree offerings beginning in the fall semester of 2010, the B.S. in Architecture, the B.S. in Architectural Preservation, the B.S. Facility Management and a two-year professionally accredited M. Arch degree. ACSANEWS may 2009 regional news Master’s thesis project by Castellammare di Stabia native, Leonardo Varone, M. Arch., ‘06, one of the speakers featured in the video. Maryland’s effort includes Professor Lindley Vann’s Vesuvian region summer archeology courses, giving Maryland architecture students the opportunity for hands-on experience in archaeological exploration and documentation and Professor Matthew Bell is developing a series of urban and landscape proposals for the site. 38 Frances Halsband, FAIA will serve as the Spring 2009 Kea Distinguished Professor in the Architecture program. Kea Professors serve as critics and lecturers in the Architecture Program. They bring unique perspectives from practice and/or academia that enhance the academic experiences of students and faculty colleagues. Subsequent Action: Creative Work on Neglected Ground exhibit at the Kibel Gallery at the University of Maryland. Image Credit: Jeff Gipson. acsaregional (NORTHEAST continued from page 37) Dean Rockcastle has also served as the show’s initial curator and organizer while the show has been on display in the Kibel Gallery at the University of Maryland from February to March. The exhibition of 32 adaptive reuse projects from across the country will now travel to other cities across the country over the next two years. Rockcastle conceived of the show to evolve as it travels before it returns to Maryland in its transformed form. Each site has a host curator who can edit up to 20% of the show, replacing original works with local or alternative examples. The creative work featured in the exhibition shares an enthusiasm and commitment to discover and reawaken the neglected, marginalized, and even derelict structures, landscapes, and urban places, through insightful, constructive and creative engagement of adaptive reuse. The work here focuses on completed work rather than theoretical or propositional visions. The designers included have used diverse but complementary strategies for interpreting, editing, reframing, and often contrasting much of what was neglected or invisible in existing or found circumstances. The primary reason then for organizing and circulating this exhibit is to share and develop the diverse ways and many talents that have emerged recently to work alternatively with the remnant fabric of our ever changing, existing, material culture. Until recently it was rare to see important new construction projects creatively and respectfully engage neglected or deteriorating structures and places. And, while such work is now more common, still lacking is recognition of why or how this work achieves its unique value. Unlike working on unfettered sites, designers who engage the complex, idiosyncratic circumstances they are provided (whether by choice or by requirement) work creatively in ways that recognize or make the most of these unusual and often eccentric conditions. This exhibition seeks to provide insight into these ways of working by developing and using a taxonomy of terms that seek to describe or reveal relationships between diverse design processes and the resultant work. It thereby seeks to develop a more cogent understanding or at least a language or index of critical terms and insights for seeing and associating the variety of creative strategies and techniques being used. This emerging index is not intended to be definitive or restrictive, but rather associative, instigative and revelatory with an eye towards its potential usefulness and ability to build upon. The University of Maryland’s project in Stabiae, Italy, was recently featured on the CBS Evening News. The project is focused upon building a world-class archeological park at the site, just three kilometers from Pompeii, and began as a Professor Halsband’s practice, Kliment Halsband won the 1997 AIA Firm Award and the 1998 Medal of Honor from NYCAIA. In addition, the firm has won four national honor awards and has been awarded three projects through the GSA Design Excellence program: Federal Courthouses in Gulfport, MS and Brooklyn, NY and a Visitor Center for the Franklin Roosevelt Presidential Library in Hyde Park. Professor Halsband served as Dean of the School of Architecture at Pratt Institute in New York. She has also served as Visiting Distinguished Professor at the Universities of Maryland, Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, California at Berkeley and Ball State. She has taught at Cincinnati, Columbia, and in joint studios with Robert Kliment at Harvard, North Carolina State, Pennsylvania, Rice and Virginia. Professor of the Practice Gary Bowden, FAIA retired at the end of the Fall semester 2008, after nearly 10 years of service to the School. Professor Bowden was an esteemed colleague, and led the Master of Architecture thesis sequence for many years. Professor Bowden joined the faculty as the Professor of Practice in 2001 after retiring from RTKL Associates Inc. capping nearly three decades of practice during which time he served as Senior Vice President, Director of the Commercial Design Studio in the Baltimore office, and a member of its Board of Directors. He has served in leadership roles on numerous award-winning international, retail, mixed-use and urban design projects. His Wentworth University Professor Thomas M. Lesko, AIA, presented the paper “Architectural Perception and Communication” to the 2007 Design Communication Association convention at Ball State University. His article, “Design: redesign” appeared in The Journal of Light Construction in May 2007. He will be presenting his work on “Design Concept Creation and Communication: The Concept Pyramid” at the 2009 Design Communication Association convention at Southern Polytechnic University. Prof. Lesko was recently re-elected to the Board of Directors of the Design Communication Association. He was also re-appointed as the editor for Opportunities, the Association¹s electronic newsletter. Klopfer Martin Design Group, the firm of Mark Klopfer, ASLA, Associate Professor of Architecture, in collaboration with Chan Krieger Sieniewicz, won an invited, two round international competition to redesign the Bund in Shanghai. Working with the Shanghai Municipal Engineering Design & Research Institute (SMEDI), the team has just completed Call for images for upcoming acsa news design development. The project is one of the major works being undertaken by the Shanghai Municipal Government in preparation of its hosting the 2010 World Expo. The project includes reducing the existing 10 lanes of traffic along the Huang Pu River to four and diverting through traffic to an underground tunnel now under construction. The roadway reduction allows an increase of public landscape, creation of four urban plazas, and improved access to the Bund¹s historic pedestrian promenade. The firm is also developing the landscape of Herzog & de Meuron¹s 56 Leonard Street in Manhattan, a residential tower of 400 feet with numerous roof terraces and a sculpture by artist Anish Kapoor. Prof. Klopfer was recently appointed to the editorial board of Architecture Boston, a publication of the Boston Society of Architects. 39 ACSA News needs images for upcoming issues. Images should be black and white, 300 dpi, and in jpeg or tiff format. All images must include a caption and photographer credit. Please submit your images to: Pascale Vonier at pvonier@acsa-arch.org acsaregional contributions in this regard were recognized by his advancement to The College of Fellows of The American Institute of Architects in 1994. Although his projects in the Caribbean, South Africa and The United Arab Emirates sought to celebrate the essence of place and identity, he has also been recognized for similar regional design efforts closer to home. The Reginald F. Lewis Museum of Maryland African American History and Culture in Baltimore, the Master Plan of Downtown Silver Spring Maryland and The Avenue at White Marsh are examples of his culminating projects at RTKL. ACSANEWS may 2009 regional news ACSANEWS may 2009 opportunities events of note Conferences / Lectures 40 5/27/09 SYMPOSIUM ON CHRISTOPHER ALEXANDER Environmental Design Research Association (EDRA), Kansas City, Missouri, USA This full-day symposium presents on-going research, teaching, and design drawing on Alexander’s work. For further information and list of participants, contact co-organizer David Seamon at triad@ksu.edu or visit: www.edra.org. acsaregional 6/10/09 THE ARCHITECTURE OF WRITING: WRIGHT, WOMEN AND NARRATIVE The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, 6:30 pm Moderator: Sarah Williams Goldhagen, The New Republic; Participants: Carol Gilligan, New York University; Gwendolyn Wright, Columbia University; Beverly Willis, FAIA Honoring Taliesin Fellow Lois Gottlieb, this special evening program features the premier of “A Girl Is A Fellow Here: 100 Women Architects in the Studio of Frank Lloyd Wright”, a new 15minute documentary film produced by the Beverly Willis Architecture Foundation, followed by a panel discussion that seeks to expand definitions of architectural genius in which collaboration, in general, and women, in particular, assume greater stature in the remarkable history of Frank Lloyd Wright and in the rich history of American architecture. Co-organized by the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum and the Beverly Willis Architecture Foundation. Tickets required. www.guggenheim.org/PublicPrograms or contact the Box Office at 212 423-3587 6/30/09 CALL FOR ABSTRACTS THE BLITZ AND ITS LEGACY University of Westminster, London; September 3-4, 2010. September 2010 marks the seventieth anniversary of the Blitz on London, and the beginning of mass aerial bombardment which devastated many areas of both the capital and other large cities in Britain. The Blitz and its legacy conference aims to be a total history of a total war phenomenon, focusing upon the expe- ACSA CALENDAR rience of aerial attack through film, images, written texts and oral testimony. It will also explore the reconstruction of the devastated areas, and aim to provide an historical audit of successes and failures in reconstruction by 1970.For more information regarding submission themes, procedures, and address, please contact either Dr. Mark Clapson at the University of Westminster: m.clapson@westminster.ac.uk or Professor Peter Larkham at Birmingham City University: Peter. Larkham@bcu.ac.uk Competitions / Grants 6/22/09 WATERFRONT CENTER ANNUAL AWARDS The Waterfront Center Annual Awards Program is a juried competition to recognize: top-quality urban waterfront projects; comprehensive waterfront plans; outstanding citizen efforts; and, student waterfront work. Winners receive international recognition through a major media release announcing and describing the selected entries and a special display on our web site featuring each winner including a web link to the winner’s website. Award winners are invited to attend a special awards ceremony, reception and dinner during the Center’s annual conference. http://www.waterfrontcenter.org/ 6/30/09 FONDATION LE CORBUSIER Grant for young researcher, year 2009 For the coming academic year 2009-2010, the Fondation Le Corbusier will attribute one grant to young researchers wishing to devote their studies to Le Corbusier’s work. The research proposals should concern primarily the aspects of his work that have not been the subject of sufficient in depth research, or, in the case of areas already studied, propose an original approach (multi-disciplinary, comparative, transverse, etc.). All of the aspects of Le Corbusier’s work are acceptable as research subjects and biographical research contributing to an understanding of the man and his work may also be proposed. For more information and proposal guidelines: info@fondationlecorbusier.fr MAY 6 Submision Deadline AISC Student Competition 20 Submision Deadline GREEN COMMUNITY Competition JUNE 3 Submision Deadline PCA Student Competition 17 Submision Deadline Preservation Student Competition July 15 Submision Deadline ACSA News September Issue 8/15/09 INDUSTRIAL FABRICS ASSOCIATION INTERNATIONAL (IFAI) 2010 ARCHITECT STUDENT SCHOLARSHIP This scholarship award provides tuition expenses at an accredited college, university or technical school. To qualify for the award, applicants must be studying to pursue a career in lightweight fabric structures. Recipients will be announced at the IFAI Expo 2009 in San Diego, CA. blhungiville@indfabfnd.com. Program Accreditation Processes in Architecture and Urban Planning: Library Responsibilities ACSANEWS may 2009 association of architecture school librarians steven w. brown, university of alabama While architectural program accreditation is managed by the National Architectural Accrediting Board (NAAB), urban planning programs are accredited through the Planning Accreditation Board (PAB). Academic programs in both disciplines must initially apply for accreditation and submit periodic reaccreditation applications to ensure continued quality in the students’ education. The NAAB accreditation recognizes architecture programs that meet specific benchmarks in the mission and education provided. Accredited schools must meet minimum standards on a periodic basis by submitting an Architecture Program Report (APR) and passing a site visit from an NAAB team (NAAB, 2004). The role of architecture librarians on accreditation site visits has been discussed historically and is once again under review. J.C. Henning (1975) noted the NAAB’s desire for evaluation of library quality and relevance in their support of architecture programs (p. 540). Henning, along with other architecture librarians, recommended that a librarian “should be included on the accrediting team or at least should be utilized by the NAAB as a consultant” (p.540). More than 30 years later, the NAAB does not include the Association of Architecture School Librarians (AASL) among its official members, but it does consult these librarians when revising the Conditions of Accreditation and to help improve site visit effectiveness (Association of Architecture School Librarians [AASL], 2008; Aurand, 2007). Martin Aurand describes AASL’s Task Force on Training NAAB Visiting Teams for Library Evaluation, whose purpose was to create an instructional tool to improve the effectiveness of NAAB site visit teams in evaluating libraries (para. 3). This group evolved into the Task Force on NAAB Accreditation Review to participate in the 2008-2009 revision process for the Conditions of Accreditation (AASL, 2008). For urban planning programs, the PAB provides a similar path to recognition through accreditation standards (Planning Accreditation Board [PAB], 2006). Urban planning accreditation is a much younger process than that of architecture programs. The PAB began in 1984 and, similar to the NAAB, routinely revises its Accreditation Document. Urban planning programs are required to periodically submit a Self-Study Report and pass a site visit review to gain accreditation. Several authors (Dagenhart & Sawicki, 1992; Drummond, et al., 2008; NAAB, 2004; PAB, 2006) note or imply a connection between architecture and urban planning education when discussing accreditation of programs. Dagenhart and Sawicki (architecture and urban planning professors respectively) mention the historical connection between architecture and urban planning, but argue that the two fields should be separated from each other due to a “radical divergence” (p. 1) in many facets of the two professions. Specifically, they mention differences in concept, history, the professions and academics, thereby proclaiming the link “mythical” (p. 1). This opinion did not seem to be shared by members of the NAAB (2004) and PAB (2006) when they wrote their accreditation procedures. When discussing institutional relations in the accreditation process for urban planning programs, the PAB requires a school to describe the program’s relationships with its department, school, college and other related elements of the school. Since many schools administratively place their architecture and urban planning programs in the same college, the link is implied in the PAB’s accreditation standards (p.12). The NAAB requires schools to demonstrate their accomplishment of thirteen condi- tions. NAAB (2004) notes under “Architectural Education and the Students” subsection 3.1.2 of conditions that a program must demonstrate how students are exposed to “the work of the allied design disciplines” (p. 2-3). Subsection 3.1.4, “Architectural Education and the Profession,” implies a link as well by requiring accredited programs to teach students the “roles and responsibilities of the associated disciplines” (p. 3). As in the PAB standards, the link between architecture and urban planning is not explicitly written, but the implication of a linkage is present. In the process of updating the Conditions of Accreditation, Drummond, et al. (2008), also known as the Emerging Accreditation Model Task Group, explicitly identify urban planning as a related discipline by investigating PAB’s accreditation standards (para. 3-4) for changes and opportunities for collaboration. 41 As of the printing of this article, there were 134 NAAB-accredited (or candidate) architecture programs in the United States and Canada (ACSA, 2008a). Seventy-three PAB-accredited (or candidate) urban planning programs were available to students in the United States and Canada (Association of Collegiate Schools of Planning [ACSP], 2007; PAB, 2008). Fifty-one of those schools offered programs in both disciplines. Thirty-six of those schools (71%) offered these programs through the same academic college (see table 1). This suggests a strong bond between the two disciplines and that the accreditation processes should complement each other as well. Since libraries are evaluated in both accreditation processes, there may be an opportunity for shared evaluation or report duplication by librarians serving both programs. Dagenhart and Sawicki note that many of the older and larger urban planning programs have historically been housed in architecture departments (p.3). Dagenhart and Sawicki’s appendix lists the 53 architecture and urban planning programs that were housed in the same college in 1990 (p. 14-15). Their list has surprisingly little overlap with the schools listed in table 1, as only (AASL continued on page 42) acsaregional Architecture and urban planning programs undergo periodic accreditation processes to maintain program quality. These disciplines share some common characteristics and are often housed in the same college. This study analyzes the administrative locations of accredited architecture and urban planning programs. This paper will also reveal the frequency of program co-location in colleges of architecture or similar units and help determine accreditation process similarities between the disciplines. A second analysis of accreditation processes as they impact libraries can be found in the full report at the AASL website. ACSANEWS may 2009 42 association of architecture school librarians (cont.) seven schools (Auburn, Cal Poly-San Luis Obispo, Cal Poly-Pomona, Ball State, Southern California, Arizona, Oklahoma and Utah) offer both programs through the same college in 2008. This suggests a vast evolution in the education of both disciplines as programs are closed, are born and are moved to different academic units. An opportunity for further research exists in a historical analysis of the accreditation conditions for both programs. The full report on the AASL website only investigated the accreditation processes as they exist today. How did the conditions and criteria evolve over time and how did one discipline’s accreditation process affect the other, if at all? This research could also reveal insight into Dagenhart and Sawicki’s question of how much the two disciplines really are connected. Is it a mythical connection as Dagenhart and Sawicki suggest, or are they bound closer to the accreditation philosophies of the NAAB and PAB? The historical analysis might also reveal the reasons for the dramatic difference between Dagenhart and Sawicki’s 1990 list of programs housed in the same college versus the 2008 list in Table 1. REFERENCES Association of Architecture School Librarians. (2008). AASL committees. http://www.architecturelibrarians.org Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture. (2008a). ACSA 3.0: Membership. Association of Collegiate Schools of Planning. (2007). Guide to undergraduate and graduate education in urban and regional planning (13th ed.). http://www.acsp.org opportunities Aurand, M. (2007, April 24). Task force on training NAAB visiting teams for library evaluation. Message posted to AASL-L electronic mailing list. Dagenhart, R., & Sawicki, D. (1992). Architecture and planning: The divergence of two fields. Table 1 Accredited Schools That House Their Architecture and Urban Planning Programs in the Same College. Arizona State University University at Buffalo, State University of New York Auburn University University of California, Berkeley Ball State University University of Cincinnati California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo University of Colorado Denver California State Polytechnic University, Pomona University of Florida Clemson University University of Kansas Columbia University University of Maryland at College Park Cornell University University of Michigan Florida Atlantic University University of Nebraska-Lincoln Georgia Institute of Technology University of New Mexico Harvard University University of Oklahoma Iowa State University University of Pennsylvania Kansas State University University of Texas at Austin Massachusetts Institute of Technology University of Utaha Morgan State University University of Virginia Ohio State University University of Washington Pratt Institute University of Wisconsin – Milwaukee Texas A & M University Virginia Polytechnic Institute & State University Urban Planning Program is not accredited; Accreditation anticipated in 2009. From Association of Collegiate Schools of Planning. (2007). Guide to undergraduate and graduate education in urban and regional planning (13th ed.). Retrieved October 26, 2008, from http://www.acsp.org/Guide/ ACSP_13th_Edition_Guide.pdf Journal of Planning Education and Research, 12(1), 1-16. Drummond, W., Theodoropoulos, C., Bojsza, K. A., Davis, M., DeVeyra, E., Matthews, S., et al. (2008). Report of emerging accreditation model task group. http://www.naab.org fessional degree programs in architecture (2004 ed.). http://www.naab.org Planning Accreditation Board. (2006). The accreditation document: Criteria and procedures of the planning accreditation program. http:// www.planningaccreditationboard.org Henning, J. C. (1975). Accreditation standards and architectural libraries – a status report. Special Libraries, 66(11), 538-540. Planning Accreditation Board. (2008). Planning Accreditation Board: Accredited planning programs. Retrieved November 11, 2008, from http://www.planningaccreditationboard.org National Architectural Accrediting Board. (2004). NAAB conditions for accreditation for pro-