ACSANewsDigest - Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture
Transcription
ACSANewsDigest - Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture
October 2012 Issue 11 acsaNewsDigest A Publication of the Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture NORTHEAST cornell university Assistant Professor Jeremy Foster joined the faculty of the Department of Architecture as a tenure-track appointment, effective July 1, 2012. Foster’s research focus includes the history and theory of landscapes, cities and built environments, and the role of socio-spatial practices and ideologies in shaping urban environments. He is the author of Washed with Sun: Landscape and the Making of White South Africa (2008, University of Pittsburgh Press) along with numerous scholarly articles. He was educated at the University of Cape Town, University of Pennsylvania, and University of London. Mark Cruvellier has been promoted to the rank of full professor in the Department of Architecture. As Chairman of the Department, Cruvellier was also appointed to the Nathaniel and Margaret Owings Professorship of Architecture. Kent Kleinman has been appointed to a second five-year term as the Gale and Ira Drukier Dean of the College of Architecture, Art, and Planning, beginning July 1, 2013. Assistant Professor Jenny Sabin was commissioned by Nike as part of their new FlyKnit Collective to design, fabricate, and build a pavilion structure in New York City. Nike’s FlyKnit Collective is a platform for creative innovators worldwide to generate dialogue around and interact with the fundamental design principals of performance, lightness, formfitting, and sustainability, ultimately converting these abstract benefits into practical, physical structures and spaces that inspire the communities around them in transformative ways. The pavilion is made from threads that change color in the sun or glow at night. The pavilion opened Sept. 15, 2012 and is up through Nov. 4, 2012 at Nike Bowery Stadium, 276 Bowery, New York City. Milstein Hall, internationally recognized for its design since opening in August 2011, has received LEED Gold Certification from the U.S. Green Building Council. The 47,000-square-foot Milstein Hall is an addition to the College of Architecture, Art, and Planning and provides studio space for 200 students, a gallery, critique spaces, and a 250-seat auditorium. new jersey institute of technology The College of Architecture and Design at NJIT is pleased to announce that Dr. Jesse LeCavalier joined us in the fall of 2012 as Assistant Professor of Architecture. Before coming to NJIT, LeCavalier was a Poiesis Fellow at the Institute for Public Knowledge at New York University and a senior researcher at the Singapore-ETH Center’s Future Cities Laboratory. From 2010-11, he was the Walter B. Sanders Fellow at the University of Michigan’s Taubman College of Architecture and Urban Planning. He is ACSANews Digest is published once monthly and is distributed digitally to all full-time faculty in ACSA member schools via the ACSA Update membership email. These Regional School items were originally published on the ACSA website, which offers extensive coverage of member schools activities updated daily. Visit www.acsa-arch.org/ACSANews/read for more news. © Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture 2012 also a member of Co+LeCavalier, a design studio concerned with transforming everyday life at a range of scales, including furniture, buildings, and urban design. He is a coauthor, with John Harwood and Guillaume Mojon, of the publication This Will _ This (Standpunkte, 2009). His article “All Those Numbers: Logistics, Territory, and Walmart” for Design Observer: Places was named one of “Nearly 100 Fantastic Pieces of Journalism” from the Atlantic in 2011. He has also contributed to journals such as MAS Context, MONU and 306090, as well as the collections Infrastructure as Architecture (Jovis Verlag, 2010), Cities of Change: Addis Ababa (Birkhäuser, 2009) and Deviations: Designing Architecture (Birkhäuser, 2008). His research concerns questions of logistics, form, and representation as they relate to architecture. LeCavalier is currently working on a book about Walmart’s spatial operations and their architectural, territorial, and political implications. MID ATLANTIC Auburn university Professors Andrew Freear and Cheryl Morgan will receive two of the highest honors awarded to faculty at Auburn University at the seventh annual Faculty Awards: Celebrating Excellence ceremony on October 30. Cheryl Morgan, Director of the Urban Studio will receive the Award for Excellence in Faculty Outreach, and Andrew Freear, Director of the Rural Studio, will receive one of the Gerald and Emily Leischuck Endowed Presidential Awards for Excellence. The Cahaba River Society, Alabama Innovation Engine and Douglas Barrett, Associate Professor of Graphic Design at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, have secured a $47,820 grant from SAPPI Fine Paper North America’s Ideas that Matter program. The funding will be used to produce a storybook ACSANewsDigest 2 and video to educate people about the region around the Cahaba River and build support for stewardship and increased river access. Entering its third year of operation, Alabama Innovation Engine is a design-based community development initiative that began as a partnership between Auburn University’s Urban Studio and the University of Alabama’s Center for Economic Development. Assistant Professor of Landscape Architecture Jocelyn Zanzot and Artist Dan Neil have collaborated through their Mobile Studio with Macon County Youth to enter the National Civic Data Challenge, a competition that asks people to make information about civic health accessible and meaningful. Their filming entry which documents a cocreative art process to engage the topic and results in landscape architecture proposals for the transformation of the built environment to increase civic health received honorable mention at the annual conference Friday September 14th 2012. Professor and Chair of Architecture, Behzad Nakhjavan has received a three week fellowship from the Visiting Artists and Scholars Program at the American Academy in Rome for the 2012-2013 Academic Year . Associate Professor and Associate Dean for Graduate Studies and External Affairs Karen Rogers has been invited to serve on the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum Research Center’s selection committee for the 20132014 resident research scholarships. The Georgia O’Keeffe Museum Research Center, a component of the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum, Santa Fe, New Mexico, sponsors research in American Modernism (late nineteenth century to present) by awarding stipends to historians in the fields of art, architecture and design, literature, music and photography and to museum professionals who wish to organize an exhibition at the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum. Dr. Paul Cullen was a Visiting Fulbright Scholar with APLA’s Master of Landscape Architecture program during Summer Semester 2012. An Associate Professor in the School of Visual Arts at Auckland University of Technology in New Zealand, Dr. Cullen teaches sculpture and practices as a sculptor. While in Auburn, Dr. Cullen collaborated with Rod Barnett, Chair of the George Marcou Memorial Lecture, Catholic University of America, Washington, DC. (Photo: Joe Woolhead) Master of Landscape Architecture program on an interdisciplinary project – Contingency - that developed proposals for interventions at a range of sites across Alabama. These proposals were exhibited in the College of Architecture, Design, and Construction Gallery in June 2012. The APLA teaching team for Fall 2012 includes the following adjuncts: Dan Bennett (CPLN), Josh Emig (INDC), Dick Hudgens (ARCH-Rural Studio), Alex Krumdieck (ARCH), Judd Langham (LAND), Jacqueline Margetts (LAND), Stacy Norman (INDC), Randal Vaughan (ARCH), and Ben Weisman (ARCH), Kelly Homan (LAND). Phillip Ewing, a May 2012 graduate of the School of Architecture, Planning and Landscape Architecture, was awarded the first Richard Taylor Fellowship at MIT, where Ewing will pursue a graduate degree in architecture beginning this fall. The first ever Southeastern Student Planning Conference, developed by the Georgia state chapter of the American Planning Association (GPA), took place in September in Columbus, Georgia. Intended to encourage student attendance from planning programs throughout the southeast, the experience exposed attendees to other planning students and practitioners in the region. Sixty-six city and planning graduate students from ten universities attended and of the twenty – two presented papers selected by the Student Program Committee, five APLA Master’s of Community Planning students pre- sented four papers to assembled attendees. Student presenters were Spencer Moore, Auburn University’s representative on the Student Program Committee and a second year student working toward a dual degree in Community Planning and Public Administration, Jaime Larzelere (MCP) and Jes Laing (MCP) who jointly presented, Rafael Egues (MCP/MLA), and Juan Diego Donoso (MCP), and Dale Speetjens (MLA). Auburn University’s chapter of the American Association of Architecture Students (AIAS) recently announced that their annual Internship Fair will be March 18-19, 2013 at the Auburn University Student Center. Details regarding the event are available at http://apps.cadc.auburn.edu/ aias/internship/index.htm catholic university The School of Architecture and Planning of the Catholic University of America presents the second George Marcou Memorial Lecture honoring late Professor Emeritus George Marcou. In this opportunity Michael Arad will be discussing his work with our architectural community. Michael Arad’s design “Reflecting Absence” won the National September 11 Memorial and Museum competition in 2004.The New York-based architect and partner with Handel Architects was one of six recipients of the 2006 Young Architects Awards from the American Institute of Architects. The lecture will start at 5:30pm on Wednesday October 17th, 2012 at the Koubek Auditorium in the Crough Center for ACSANewsDigest 3 the DAC. Please contact Director of the Sacred Spaces concentration Professor Julio Bermudez for more information. Architectural Studies, Catholic University of America, 620 Michigan Ave., N.E. Washington D.C. As in the previous four years, the School of Architecture & Planning at The Catholic University of America had a world-renown architect teaching a studio and lecturing at CUArch as part of our Walton Critic Program. Previous Walton Critics included Antoine Predock (2009), Craig Hartman (2010), and Juhani Pallasmaa (2011). This year the Walton Critic and Professor in Residence was architect Alberto Campo Baeza. Campo Baeza is a Spanish architect internationally known for his luminous, simple yet nuanced, and always provocative architecture. His work is the result of a long, continuous, and disciplined investigation into the miracle of light in space. He has received extensive global recognition, including the Buenos Aires Biennial International Critic Prize (2009), the Eduardo Torroja Award (2005), the Venice Biennial (2000), and the Miami Gold Biennial Gold Medal (2000). Campo Baeza was also a selected candidate for The American Academy of Arts and Letters 2010 Architecture Award and a finalist in the 2011 Premio de Arquitectura Española. His built work, drawings, and ideas have been widely published in Spanish, English, Italian, French and Japanese. Campo Baeza has been a faculty member at the ETSAM-UPM in Madrid since 1976. On 09/12/12, Campo Baeza presented the lecture “Ineffable Architecture: Buliding Poetry by Thinking with Your Hands” at the Crough Center for Architectural Studies of The Catholic University of America. Additionally, on 09/19/12 7:00pm, Alberto Campo Baeza gave a lecture on his current work and reflections at the District Architecture Center (DAC) in downtown DC as part of the event “Architecture Week 2012” organized by The 2012 Summer Institute for Architecture (SIA) included several successful new initiatives including an Architectural Design Studio led by Ben Gilmartin (Diller Scofidio + Renfro); a Traveling Studio to NYC with Tod Williams Billie Tsien Architects, and Boston with Stoss LU; and a Design-Build Studio in Hopewell, Ohio. The Summer Institute also hosted a successful speaker series with Steve Vogel (University of Detroit Mercy); June Williamson (City College of New York); Billie Tsien (Tod Williams Billie Tsien Architects); and Ben Gilmartin (Diller Scofidio + Renfro). A publication is currently in development with an anticipated January 2013 release date. Each summer, the Catholic University of America School of Architecture and Planning conducts the Summer Institute for Architecture featuring numerous undergraduate and graduate level courses. Among these are design studios and elective courses, including history of architecture, graphics, furniture design, theory, and computer-aided design/fabrication. Plans for the 2013 SIA include the NADAAA Design Studio (directed by Nader Tehrani) and a traveling studio to Los Angeles, CA. Please contact SIA Director Professor Julie Kim for more information. Associate Professor Julio Bermudez received a grant to complete the second phase of his interdisciplinary neuroscience research of architecturally induced contemplation (done in collaboration with several researchers and departments of the University of Utah). Bermudez will be presenting two papers this Fall. The first work coauthored with Brandon Ro is entitled “Extraordinary Architectural Experiences: Comparative Study of Three Paradigmatic Cases of Sacred Space (The Pantheon, The Chartres Cathedral and the Chapel of Ronchamp) at the 2nd International Congress on Ambiances (Montreal, Canada). The second work “fMRI Study of Architecturally-Induced Contemplative States” will be presented at the Academy of Neuroscience for Architecture (ANFA) 2012 Annual Conference (La Jolla, CA). In addition, professor Bermudez will travel this November to the University of San Juan in Argentina invited by the Facultad de Arquitectura y Urbanismo to give a lecture entitled “Lo Cotidiano y lo Sagrado: Reflexiones desde el Arte y la Arquitectura” and teach the course “Philosophy in/of Architecture.” As part of the AIA National Convention in Washington this past May, Associate Professor Eric J. Jenkins participated in the AIA Los Angeles and Broadcaster’s multimedia guide to Washington, DC architecture. This smartphone application helps guide listeners to architectural sites accompanied by commentary from local architects and educators. Assistant Professor Hollee Hitchcock Becker presented a paper in the Smart and Sustainable Building Environments Conference in Sao Paolo, Brazil last June 2012. She also won a SASBE 2012 “Highly Commended Paper Award” for her work entitled “Sustainable, Affordable Housing using Locally-grown Bamboo”. Assistant Professor Carlos Reimers was invited to be part of the Network Session “The Search for Multi-Story Incremental Housing” organized by the MIT’s Special Interest Group in Urban Studies SIGUS and presented in the Sixth Session of the United Nations World Urban Forum in Naples, Italy in September 2012. Professor Reimers also presented a paper on alternatives for the manufactured housing industry entitled “Beyond the Trailer: Rethinking Affordable Manufactured Housing in the U.S.” in the ACSA Fall 2012 Conference in Philadelphia “Off Site”. The Catholic University of America is pleased to announce four new faculty members: Assistant Professor Patricia Andrasik has been teaching both studios and sustainability courses at the CUArch Master of Sustainable Design Program since 2004, while practicing at an international architectural firm, She teaches LEED(ing) Green; Sustainable Synergies in Building Assessment, and recently developed a course called LEED EB: O&M on the Crough Architectural Center at CUA tracking and metering utility consumption to improve sustainability. Patricia will be launching two new courses in lighting and environmental analytics next year. ACSANewsDigest 4 Assistant Professor Dr. Charles Hostovsky joined the Catholic University of America to teach in the Master of City and Regional Planning program. “Chuck” is a Registered Professional Planner in Canada, and taught for 15 years at the University of Toronto. He has published widely and won two teaching awards, including the 2011 Government of Canada award for teaching sustainability. In professional practice for 25 years and with an extensive portfolio of planning projects, he was one of the Project Managers that won the Canadian Institute of Planners award for planning excellence in Transportation and Infrastructure in 2011. Assistant Professor of Practice John Nahra, is the owner and Principal of Nahra Architects. John has been an architect in the design and construction industry of the greater Washington, DC area for the past 10 years. He received his dual degrees in Architecture and Civil Engineering at the Catholic University of America and is a member of the AIA, NCARB and the USGBC. John will be exploring the added value of architectural design in the real estate development process as well as serving as advisor in the Thesis program. Visiting Assistant Professor David Dewane is an architect with Gensler. In 2010 he founded Librii with seed funding from the World Bank Institute. The project aims to construct a network of digital libraries along Africa’s expanding fiber optic infrastructure. David trained at the Center for Maximum Potential Building Systems in Austin, TX under renowned Pliny Fisk III and has a Master of Architecture from Rice University. He has held leadership positions on three teams in the U.S. DOE’s Solar Decathlon competition. In the summer of 2009, the Catholic University of America Design Collaborative (CUAdc) was approached by the Franciscan Monastery of the Holy Land with the special request to design four Hermitages on the Monastery grounds in Washington DC. A design studio led by CUAdc Director William Jelen AIA began work analyzing the site and the unique challenges and opportunities of the task. On the following Fall, two graduate studios led by professor George Martin and professor Lou Boza examined both the spiritual opportunities and the tectonic opportunities of a Photo Samsugn Model Home Gallery by Seungbum Kim hermitage building. Finally in the Spring of 2010 as part of Catholic University’s Comprehensive Design Studio, Director Jelen led a 12 architecture student studio towards a singular design. This group known as Studio 12, designed what became the concept of the first Hermitage to be built. The design concept centered on the interplay and blending of the sacred and profane worlds as they pertain to an individual’s daily patterns, routines, and needs. The idea that each moment of ordinary daily life can be an opportunity for sacred appreciation and meditation, guided everything from the choice of natural materials and textures to the orientation of the unit itself facing East towards Jerusalem. The hermitage contains a sleeping area, kitchenette, and bathroom in approximately 350sf. The design incorporated sustainable site considerations, electrical, plumbing and mechanical systems including the use of natural ventilation. Through the choice of materials the design was meant to integrate into the existing historic campus. The first Hermitage is ADA compliant as well. The design for the project was awarded the 2010 AIA Unbuilt Award from the DC chapter of the American Institute of Architects. Work of the CUAdc has continued through the completion of construction on the interior design for the Hermitage including designing and fabricating a custom made chair, bed and desk for the Hermitage. For more information contact CUAdc Director William Jelen. As part of the Catholic University of America Fall Lecture series, Nader Tehrani wil present his lecture “DA DA A NADAA” at 6pm on November 5th, 2012 at the Koubek Auditorium in the Crough Center for Architectural Studies, Catholic University of America, 620 Michigan Ave., N.E. Washington D.C. Working on interdisciplinary platforms, Tehrani has focused his research on the transformation of the building industry, innovative material applications, and the development of new means and methods of construction. As the founding principal of office da, Tehrani has received many prestigious awards for his work, including the Cooper-Hewitt National Design Award in Architecture, the American Academy of Arts and Letters Architecture Award, and 13 Progressive Architecture awards. Tehrani is also a professor and the head of the Department of Architecture at the MIT School of Architecture and Planning. clemson university Merit Awards in the AARP/AIAS Aging in Place Kitchen Design Competition were given to Nick Tafel, Edgar Mozo, Joel Pominville, David Herrero for their project “A Kitchen Alive” and to Diana Rosch for her project “Centre.” Both projects were designed under the supervision of studio instructor Senior Lecturer Annemarie Jacques. Clemson University, School of Architecture undergraduate and graduate students won many international and national awards in Spring 2012: Honorable Mention was given to graduate ACSANewsDigest 5 student Jingjie Zhao, with Professor Keith Green PhD as studio instructor, in the 2011 ACSA/AISC Steel Design Competition of a Culinary Arts College. There were 303 entries, and the jurors awarded only seven prizes, a 2 percent acceptance rate. The Winning Project was awarded to Caitlin Ranson and Dianah Katzenberger (both Clemson M. Arch. ’12 graduates,) with Assistant Professor Ulrike Heine as studio instructor, in the ACSA 2011-2012 International Sustainable Laboratories Student Design Competition. The Jury awarded only two top prizes and three honorable mentions. The South Region Winning Project was awarded to Nick Barrett and Sam Pruitt, with Assistant Professor Ulrike Heine as studio instructor, in the 2011-2012 The Sustainable Home, A Habitat for Humanity Student Design Competition, which was sponsored by the National Endowment for the Arts and Vinyl Institute. There were 100 submissions, from which the jurors chose four regional winners and three other honors, a 5 percent acceptance rate. Four faculty members have joined Clemson University, School of Architecture as new permanent faculty this academic year. Akel Ismail Kahera, Ph.D. has joined Clemson University as a tenured professor and as the newly appointed associate dean for research and graduate studies in the College of Architecture, Arts and Humanities. For the past five years, Akel has served as director of the Texas Institute for the Preservation of History and Culture at Prairie View A&M University in Texas. From 2009 to 2011, he served as interim director of at Prairie View’s graduate studies degree program in community development. He also taught at Texas Tech University and the University of Texas at Austin. His areas of specialization include hermeneutics, design, urbanism, community development, non-Western architecture, and architectural history and theory. He is a practicing architect and designer. Akel is the author of more than two dozen scholarly essays, as well as author or co-author of three books: Deconstructing the American Mosque: Space, Gender and Aesthetics, 2002; Design Criteria for Mosques (co-author,) 2009; and Reading the Islamic City, 2011. Akel received a B.Arch. from Pratt Institute, M.Arch from MIT and Ph.D. in Near Eastern Studies from Princeton University. Ufuk Ersoy, Ph.D. has Joined Clemson University, School of Architecture as a new tenure-track assistant professor focusing on Western and non-Western history/theory and design. Ufuk is a practicing architect and was an assistant professor of architecture at the Izmir Institute of Technology in Turkey prior to moving to Clemson. He is also a guest lecturer in the Program of Architecture, University of New South Wales. He completed his Ph. D. in Architecture under the supervision of David Leatherbarrow at the University of Pennsylvania where he also received his received M.Arch. and M.S. degrees. His research focuses on the glass cultures of 19th- and 20th-century architectures and the consequences of technological changes on the discipline of architecture. Recently, he guest-edited a special issue of the journal World Architecture on “Architecture in Turkey: A Glocal Production” and published his essay “To See Daydreams: The Glass Utopia of Paul Scheerbart and Bruno Taut” in Imagining and Making the World: Reconsidering Architecture and Utopia. Dustin Albright, AIA, LEED AP BD+C, has joined Clemson University, School of Architecture as a new full-time lecturer teaching design studio and structures courses. Dustin has unique dual expertise in architecture and engineering, coupled with critical engagement with public projects. He has a B.S. in physics from Washington and Lee University, M.S. in civil engineering/structures and M.Arch. from Virginia Tech University. Dustin has been practicing with Craig Gaulden Davis in Greenville since 2008. He has been actively engaged with the profession and local communities through his leadership in AIA Greenville’s Architecture Month. Nicholas Ault who taught part-time for Clemson University, School of Architecture last year, joins this year as a full-time lecturer teaching design studio and digital communications. His strengths include a comprehensive understanding of current digital practices in architectural design and fabrication, as well as a focus on pedagogy within undergraduate foundation de- sign studios. Nick has a B.S. in technology from Bowling Green State University and an M.Arch. from the University of North Carolina at Charlotte. He practiced in Ohio, held a visiting appointment at UNCC as the director of Digital Fabrications Laboratory and lecturer at the School of Architecture, and taught as an adjunct at Queens University of Charlotte. WEST university of hawaii UH Manoa school of architecture student wins second place in international design competition University of Hawai‘i at Manoa School of Architecture graduate student Sofija Kavcic took second place in the International Council for Caring Communities (ICCC) Student Design Competition. The contest, titled Integrated Communities: A Society for All Ages, challenged students to explore solutions that integrate older persons into the fabric of the community. Winners were announced recently in Naples, Italy and included students from eight countries including China, Guatemala, Ireland, Sudan, South Korea, United Kingdom, United Arab Emirates and the United States – Kavcic is the only winner from the United States. ACSANewsDigest 6 “The student designs succeed on several levels: their thoughtful research and responsiveness to the needs of older persons; the balance of creativity and practicality and ultimately, their youthful optimism which will benefit us all,” Professor Dianne Davis, founding president of the ICCC. “The fast approaching ‘agequake’ makes it vital that this phenomenon of aging be studied and approached by students in a pro-active manner.” Kavcic’s design, Kakaako Building Blocks, envisions a vibrant multi-generational neighborhood fused by functional city blocks that keep families close. Daycare for seniors and young children is combined and contained within a common living area. Facilities for recreation, exercise, education, public services, retail and health care are all accessible via walkable pathways within a city block. Kavcic explains, “The flexibility of the architectural programming is ensured by the use of modularity. The typical unit assembly system resembles the building blocks toy assembly system, hence the name Building Blocks.” As a winner, Kavcic will present her design at United Nations’ headquarters in New York City on October 1, 2012 as part of the UN World Habitat Day. More information about this year’s contest and awards can be found at http://www.international-iccc.org/studentdesign.htm Roger Schluntz, FAIA and Professor, has been appointed as the Region III Representative of the Union Internationale des Architectes(International Union of Architects, or UIA ) to its Scientific Committee; charged with the program development for the next UIA World Congress of Architects. The 2014 Congress will be held in Durban, South Africa, where the committee members also conducted their initial meeting in late June. The UIA represents some 1,300,000 architects in more than 100 countries. The UIA was founded in 1948 to unite the architects of all countries in a federation of their national organizations, which includes the AIA of the United States. UNIVERSITY of new mexico UNIVERSITY of washington Stephen Mora, Lecturer, with students, is recognized in suckerPUNCH with the installation project, “Intervention”. This installation sits at the belly of the George Pearl Hall, designed by AIA Gold Medalist, Antoine Predock. The plaza level of Pearl Hall provides an open canvas for a spatial intervention of this scale, one that explores the manifestation of complex geometry through the techniques of CNC fabrication, tectonics, details and joinery. Assistant Professor Kathrina Simonen and Liv Haselbach of Washington State University College of Engineering, in collaboration with University of Washington researchers Elaine Oneil of the College of the Environment and Joyce Cooper of the College of Engineering, submitted the Life Cycle Assessment and Buildings Research for Washington State (LCA for WA) report to the State Legislature on September 1st, 2012. This research to explore the potential of integrating LCA methods and data ticular project,” says Kavcic. “She helped me crystallize ideas and pull it all together. I couldn’t have done it without her.” Kavcic is enrolled in the D Arch program at UH Manoa’s School of Architecture – the only NAAB accredited Doctor of Architecture in the United States and Canada. She holds a Dipl.-Ing. (M.S. equivalent) diploma in Architecture from the University of Belgrade. After graduation she plans to specialize in designing high-profile urban dwellings. “This award comes as the result of the education and research I have done during my doctorate studies at UH. The trip to New York is a great opportunity for me to present my project and represent the School of Architecture,” says Kavcic. “United Nations Ambassadors and officials, world leaders, private sector and related experts will also be presenting at the high-level session, so I feel honored to be invited. It’s certainly a confirmation that my choice of UH was the right one.” Professor Spencer Leineweber, FAIA, Chair of Professional Programs at the School of Architecture, served as mentor to Kavcic on the project. Prior collaborations also resulted in awards for Kavcic, but none as prestigious as the ICCC contest. “She has provided tremendous support to me throughout my studies and on this par- Intervention with Stephen Mora at University of New Mexico SA+P ACSANewsDigest 7 into the State Building Code was funded by Washington Senate Bill 5485. As part of this research, two stakeholder workshops were held which included presentations on topics such as: LCA fundamentals, LCA policy and LCA in Practice. This presentations were recorded and are posted online along with the final report report at http:// courses.washington.edu/lcaforwa/wordpress/. Assistant Professor Kathryn Rogers Merlino was awarded the 2012 Runstad Real Estate Center Fellowship and traveled to Istanbul, Turkey in March 2012. This fellowship, now in its second year, is a program that selects a diverse group of academics, professionals and students to pursue research questions related to design, building, development and their environmental and economic concerns. The 2012 Fellows consisted of two professors, Merlino and Carrie Sturts Dossick (Construction Management); professionals Jason Twill (Senior Project Manager, Sustainability, Vulcan Inc.) and Liz Dunn (Consulting Director of the Preservation Green Lab, Founder of Dunn and Hobbes, LLC) and students Natalie Gualy (M.Arch, MSRE 2012) and Ian Fishburn (MSRE, 2012). The fellows spent seven days in Istanbul, investigating the urban growth policies of this architecturally rich and dynamic “megacity”, and discussing its current trajectory with real estate professionals, government officials, designers, academics, activists and citizens. The findings provided a startling reminder that despite conjectures about post-consumer, post-carbon ‘creative culture’ cities, homogenized 20th century ambitions still largely determine the way in which the globe’s most architecturally and culturally unique cities are pursing growth in the 21st century. The Fellows will present their experiences on November 8 at 6pm in Architecture Hall at the University of Washington. Professor Steve Badanes traveled to Australia in March for a lecture tour, and spoke at UTS in Sydney, UniSA in Adelaide, and UTas and Hobart AIA in Tasmania. The Neighborhood design/build Studio, which Badanes directs with Jake LaBarre, won 4 out of 7 Honor Awards at the 2012 AIA Pacific Region Student Awards for the Urban Farm Supershed. Badanes chaired the Louisiana AIA Awards jury, and traveled to Lafayette LA in September to present the awards, and to speak at the La AIA Convention and at the Tulane City Center. A recent film focused on the Seattle icon Fremont Troll, a project led by Badanes and his firm Jersey Devil, premiered this fall. The film, Hall of Giants ‘chronicles the creation and endurance of the much beloved Fremont Troll and explores the public art movement in Seattle and beyond. Through interviews and hundreds of rare photographs and archival footage, viewers will take an historical journey through Seattle’s earliest years and on up to the present, where art and artists still struggle to survive in an everchanging city.’ Robert Hutchison was promoted to Affiliate Assistant Professor in the Department of Architecture, College of Built Environments, December 2011. His firm, Hutchison & Maul Architecture is a partner with the Uniontown Community Development Association on the Addition to the historic Artisan Barn project, which was one of 80 projects to be awarded a 2012 National Endowment for the Arts Our Town Grant. Robert Hutchison was one of eight featured Speakers at the 2012 AIA Arkansas State Convention, Little Rock AR, September 2012. Hutchison was an invited Speaker & Reviewer for the Kansas State University College of Architecture, Planning & Design, Manhattan KS, September 2012. Professor Sharon Sutton published a Critical book essay of “Service-Learning in Design and Planning,” Michigan Journal of Community Service Learning, 19, 1, in press for late October, early November. The Department of Architecture at the University of Washington is working with aid organization Ayni Education International, the Janet W. Ketcham Foundation, architect Salim Rafik, and architect Bob Hull, founding partner of the Seattle based firm Miller Hull, to design the new Gohar Khaton Girls’ School in Mazar-i-sharif, Afghanistan. Bob Hull and Assistant professor Elizabeth Golden are leading a graduate architecture studio focused on developing culturally and environmentally responsive design solutions for the project, which is slated for construction in early 2013. woodbury UNIVERSITY Visiting Assistant Professor Curt Gambetta recently co-edited the August 2012 issue of the Indian journal “Seminar” entitled “Streetscapes: A Symposium on the Future of the Street.” The issue examined the present and future of street life and space in Indian cities, considering issues ranging from architecture, transport, and land use to emerging forms of street culture and activism about public space. Issue content is available at: http://www.india-seminar. com/2012/636.htm Jeanine Centuori, Professor and LA Undergraduate Chair, and Adjunct Faculty Sonny Ward received funding from the Home Depot Foundation, Backyard Products and More, and Los Angeles Works for a design/ build project for the Shadow Hills Riding Club, an equestrian therapy facility. The first part of this project was published in the Los Angeles Times in May 2012. Assistant Professor Maxi Spina received a ‘Merit Award’ at the 2012 AIA|LA Design Awards for the Jujuy Redux Apartment Building in Rosario, Argentina (co-designed with PATTERNS). Merit Award recognizes exemplary, innovative and well-resolved design, worthy of professional recognition. In addition, Jujuy Redux appeared in the September issue of The Architect Magazine as well as on the Sept-Nov issue of Plot Magazine. Adjunct Faculty Deborah Richmond received an ‘Honor Award’ at the 2012 AIA|LA Design Awards for the Silverwood Lake State Recreation Area Visitors Center in San Bernardino County, CA. Honor Award is the highest award and celebrates extraordinary, thoroughly resolved architectural design, worthy of the profession’s highest regard. Additionally, Deborah, as co-chair of the AIA|LA Committee on the Environment (COTE), has launched a new, citywide campaign entitled ‘(What is) the Nature of Los Angeles?’ The campaign started on October 24th with the panel discussion ‘On Uneasy Earth’ and featured a land artist, engineer and geologist. Assistant Professor and Chair of the Master of Real Estate Development (MRED), Ted Smith and his firm McCormick Smith ACSANewsDigest 8 The “Outdoor Learning Classroom,” a collaboration between K-State students advised by Professor Michael Gibson and the Kansas Children’s Discovery Center in Topeka, Kansas. & Others received an ‘Honor Award’ at the 2012 AIA|San Diego Design Awards for the Weinman Residence in Del Mar. WEST CENTRAL David Seamon, Professor of Architecture, published the article, “A Jumping, Joyous Urban Jumble”: Jane Jacobs’s Death and Life of Great American Cities as a Phenomenology of Urban Place,” in the peerreviewed, open-source Journal of Space Syntax, vol. 3 (fall), pp. 139-49 (available at: http://joss.bartlett.ucl.ac.uk/journal/ index.php/joss/issue/view/5/showToc ). Seamon attended and presented a blind peer-reviewed paper at the annual meeting of the International Society for the Study of Religion, Nature and Culture, held at Pepperdine University in Malibu, California, August 8 -11. A team of K-State students advised by Assistant Professor Michael Gibson collaborated with the Kansas Children’s Discovery Center in Topeka, KS to design and construct a new outdoor pavilion to enhance the Discovery Center’s outdoor learning initiative. The pavilion (photo above), dubbed the “Outdoor Learning Classroom,” was supported in tandem by the Discovery Center and by Westar Energy, who provided reclaimed utility poles to serve as the primary structure. Students ultimately provided over 800 hours of volunteer work over four weeks designing and constructing the project. The project opened in late August and the process and final installation is exhibited in a blog found at http:// teeculus.wordpress.com/. Associate Professor of Architecture Mick Charney conducted the workshop “Looking for Mr. Wright, and Finding Him on Facebook” at the Institute of Education, University of London, London, UK at the 19th International Conference on Learning, August 14-16. Additionally, Charney presented the paper “Hint Fiction and Vivid Grammar: Quick Ways to Jump-start Writing Objectives” at the 13th National Lilly Conference on College and University Teaching and Learning in Traverse City, Michigan, September 20-23; he also served as a judge for the Laurie Ryan Memorial Award, Professor of Architecture Peter Magyar and his ARCH 806 Master of Architecture students went on a week-long field trip to Budapest, Hungary, for an architectural site visit during September 2012, which is a first step in the planned cooperation between K-State and the Technical University of Budapest. The maiden trip project, which will be designed simultaneously by selected students of both Universities, hopefully will be followed by cooperation between other colleges, resulting in possible student and faculty exchanges, and mutual research projects. kansas state UNIVERSITY Assistant Professor and SD Undergraduate Chair, Catherine Herbst and Adjunct Faculty Todd Rinehart received a ‘Merit Award’ at the 2012 AIA|San Diego Design Awards for their Modest House. Bloom, an installation at M&A by Professor and LA Graduate Chair Ingalill WahlroosRitter, USC Assistant Professor Doris Sung and Structural Engineer and SCI-Arc Lecturer Matthew Melnyk, was exhibited in October in ACADIA 2012 at California College of the Arts. ‘Bloom’ was made possible with grants from the LA County Arts Commission, AIA Upjohn Fellowship, Arnold W. Brunner Award, Graham Foundation Grant, USC ASHSS Award, USC URAP Award, Woodbury Faculty Development Award and in-kind donations from Engineered Materials Solutions. Light fixture designs by Professor Ingalill Wahlroos-Ritter, Julius Shulman Distinguished Professor of Practice Barbara Bestor, Associate Professor Annie Chu, and Adjunct Faculty Francios Perrin were on view at “Light My Way, Stranger”, The MAK Center for Art and Architecture’s first Day of the Dead Auction, on Friday, November 2nd. a $400 prize presented to the author of the best poster at the Lilly Conference. ACSANewsDigest 9 Professor of Architecture Susanne SieplCoates and her ARCH 806 Master of Architecture students went on a week-long field trip to Zurich, Switzerland to visit the 2012–2013 Distinguished Regnier Visiting Professor Beat Kaempfen in September. Visiting many of Kaempfen’s exemplary buildings, students learned about Swiss standards with regard to ecological, sustainable and energy-efficient design. Professor of Architecture Jim Jones and Professor of Architecture Dragoslav Simic took their ARCH 304 and ARCH 806 Master of Architecture students on a week-long field trip to Honduras for an architectural site visit for the design of a Trauma Center for the Island of Roatan. Texas A&M University A new mobile app developed by SMARTreview, a startup company co-founded by Mark Clayton, professor of architecture at Texas A&M, provides designers and regulators quick access to fire safety codes adopted in the U.S. and many international regions that provide safeguards for people in homes, schools and workplaces. The iOS and Android app, SMARTreview Fire Safety, provides calculations and tables from the International Code Council’s Quick Reference Guide to Fire Safety to determine whether a building’s specifications are in compliance with ICC codes. A companion desktop app for the Windows operating system is also available. “The software represents many years of work to develop a powerful and robust algorithm for checking particular requirements in the building code,” said Clayton. “The app should pay for itself in reduced time on its first use on a project by eliminating the tedium of looking up figures and requirements in building code books, but its real value comes in speeding the process of obtaining a permit and ultimately the completion of a building.” Additional apps are in development, Clayton said, that address other calculations in the ICC code, the International Energy Conservation Code, the International Residential Code, American Disabilities Act compliance, and other regulations. University of Houston’s Graduate Design/Build Studio’s steel, shade structure across from Youngblood Intermediate School. “As a start-up company, we expect to hire additional staff as revenue is generated,” he said. The 14th Annual Texas A&M College of Architecture Research Symposium: Natural, Built, Virtual will take place Monday, Oct. 22 at the Langford Architecture Center on the Texas A&M campus. This year’s symposium includes invited or refereed presentations and papers from the 2011-12 academic year. The symposium will feature approximately 50 presentations divided into diverse categories and delivered in several concurrent sessions throughout the day. This year’s presentations are grouped in broad categories including invention, energy, modeling, management, policy, pedagogy, aging, innovation, perception, history, archaeology, excogitation and well-being. The college’s annual symposium was established more than a decade ago to underscore the influence of research on teaching and practice. It also serves as a catalyst for research-informed teaching in the College of Architecture’s five undergraduate and nine graduate degree programs. And, because many of the presentations were originally delivered at scholarly venues abroad, the event also showcases the global influence of research conducted by college faculty. Rituals developed by ancient Greeks to sustain relationships with their gods will be discussed by Kevin Glowacki, assistant professor of architecture at Texas A&M, at 6:30 p.m. Oct. 9 at the San Antonio Museum of Art. Glowacki will focus on a sanctuary and architectural remains of Aphrodite and her son Eros, gods of love, marriage and fertility, on the north slope of the Acropolis in Athens. “The open-air sanctuary is an instructive example of a less formal or ‘popular’ shrine, where the ancient Athenians made dedications of sculpted reliefs, marble statuettes, and terracotta figurines,” said Glowacki. He will present an analysis of the three main types of rituals performed at the sanctuary, intended to create and sustain personal relations between mortals and their gods: prayer, sacrifice and dedication. University of houston Summer time is work time for the University of Houston’s Graduate Design/Build Studio (UH GDBS). Each year, the studio’s students brave Houston’s heat to help enhance the city’s landscape. By designing and constructing useful community amenities, UH GDBS has helped local schools, parks, and nonprofit organizations. This year was no different as the studio produced a solar-powered outdoor classroom/butterfly pavilion for Alief’s community garden. Their hard work received a “green” thumbs up from the community and soon will be presented with the Mayor’s Proud Partner Award by Keep Houston Beautiful. The award honors projects that enhance and beautify the city. UH architecture professor Patrick Peters and GDBS students will accept the award during the 28th annual Mayor’s Proud Partners Awards luncheon at noon; Oct. 28 at the Houston Hilton Post Oak Hotel. ACSANewsDigest 10 This steel, shade structure will be welcomed to the community Nov. 10 during a ribboncutting event. With solar-powered ceiling fans, the pavilion will provide community members with a place to cool off, as well as a perfect space for educational demonstrations on planting, cooking, vegetables and other topics. The garden and classroom site are located across the street from Youngblood Intermediate School (at Beechnut Street and Dairy View Lane) on property owned by Alief Independent School District. Once completed, the school can use the classroom for outdoor activities. Dr. Khosrow Bozorgi will be presenting a paper entitled “Contributions of the Middle East to European Architecture” at the 5th Annual ASMEA (Association for the Study of the Middle East and Africa). Conference on October 11-13, 2012 in Washington, D.C. Dr. Bozorgi is also the Founder of the The Center for Middle Eastern Architecture and Culture at the College of Architecture, which was established in the spring of 2012. The Center seeks to advance knowledge of the Middle Eastern built environment and culture, and will support scholarship that is of historical and contemporary importance, by acting as a coordinating body for participating universities and institutions whose research focus relates to this geographic area. Houston’s SPARK School Park Program funded the project with support from Alief Independent School District, Alief International District and Coca-Cola. Other collaborators include architect Christof Spieler and Tolunay-Wong Engineers Inc. Another UH project received an honorable mention from Keep Houston Beautiful. A solar-powered outdoor demonstration kitchen that was designed by UH architecture and graphic communication students was recognized by this awards program. For additional details on the project and how it was developed, view the original press release. GDBS is part of UH’s Gerald D. Hines College of Architecture. Past community projects include a solar shade tree for McReynolds Middle School and an amphitheater classroom for T.H. Rogers School. To learn more about GDBS, visit http://www.uh.edu/ gdbs/. University of oklahoma Associate Professor David L. Boeck and College of Engineering Professor Musharraf Zaman have been awarded a two-year $250,000 grant from the Oklahoma Department of Transportation to study the use of Recycled Asphalt Shingles (RAS) in road mix design. A significant number of asphalt shingles are damaged each year in Oklahoma due to storms, and this grant will allow testing which should prove their viability in road construction. Assistant Professor Daniel Butko was the Instructor for a Spring Intercession Course in which students designed and built a playhouse for the Playhouse Parade project for CASA (Court Appointed Special Advocates) of Oklahoma County. This is the third year the college has been involved in the project. The playhouses were raffled off in early June 2012 to raise money for CASA, which provides trained court appointed volunteers who advocate for the best interests of abused or neglected children in the juvenile court system. The playhouse was designed to be easy to assemble with light-weight materials, and to be weatherproof. The students used harvested cedar from around the Norman campus and wood donated from local construction sites in this year’s design. Krone Construction and Western Plastics also donated materials. Enrolled and volunteer students included Aaron Crandall, Haven “Bud” Hardage, Nick Norsworthy, Hunter Roth, Alma Sandoval, Trent Still, Jason Tyler, and Ryan Williams. Faculty reviewing the design and assisting included Assistant Professor Tony Cricchio, Professor Joel Dietrich, Dean Charles Graham, Shop Manager Hunter Roth, and Assistant Profes- sor Stephanie Pilat. Professor Butko is also on the planning committee for the 164th Meeting/Conference of the Acoustical Society of America (ASA). Please see the web site for details: http:// acousticalsociety.org/meetings/kansas_city The Oklahoma City Skydance Bridge, completed following a national competition with a design consortium assembled by OU Mabrey Presidential Professor Hans E. Butzer, was recently completed in Oklahoma City and has now been recognized as one of the 50 best public art projects by the 2012 Public Art Network Year in Review by Americans for the Arts. Included in the multidisciplinary team that designed the $6.8M pedestrian bridge are OU faculty members Dr. Chris Ramseyer, P.E. and Stan Carroll, AIA. “Tomorrow’s Yukon” is an initiative that will engage the City of Yukon in a partnership with faculty and students from the University of Oklahoma’s (OU) College of Architecture. Associate Professor Marjorie Callahan, Architecture, and Associate Professor Leehu Loon, Landscape Architecture, are directing a design studio which will provide the initial visionary steps to stimulate ideas for (1) a streetscape on Main Street and Route 66 and, (2) a new city hall complex capable of consolidating all city services. This project will involve the beloved Oklahoma Route 66, which runs through the heart of the Yukon community. The students’ landscaping and architectural conceptual plans and models will demonstrate ideas for: (1) colorful and safe streetscapes; (2) retail and office options; (3) a government central campus; (4) the beautification of the Route 66 to Garth Brooks Drive; (5) a parkway system of bicycle trails; and, (6) other important connections to children’s state of the art playgrounds, housing, schools and festivals. Associate Professor Lee Fithian was awarded a grant by SAIC in the amount of $5,000 to provide the continuing education program series in sustainability entitled “Acquisition, Coordination and Dissemination of AIA+2030 Curriculum.” Professor Fithian and Associate Professor Tamera McCuen (Construction Science), were awarded OU Provosts’ Dream Course funding in the amount of $20,000 for the interdisciplinary collaboration “BIM for Con- ACSANewsDigest 11 structors” which will be used to enhance curriculum for over 70 graduate and undergraduate OU College of Architecture students. The grant provides the opportunity for students, academicians and professionals to train in BIM and interact in a virtual charrette via the upcoming BIMStormtm OKC on November 7, 2012: http://www.bimstorm. com/i/OklahomaStorm.php. Professors Fithian, McCuen, and Butko will be working together in this collaborative effort with the Construction Science students and the Design 7 studio in Architecture to design a mixed-use building in the Core to Shore redevelopment area of Oklahoma City. Adjunct Lecturer Geoff Parker was the Winner of the 2012 Architectural Record “Cocktail Napkin Sketch Contest” in the Professional Division. You may view his entry via this link: http://archrecord.construction. com/features/cocktail_napkin_sketch_contest/2012/. Assistant Professor Dr. Stephanie Pilat has been awarded an AAUW American Summer/ Short-Term Research Publication Grant for 2012-13, which provides support for work on her forthcoming book, Reconstructing Italy: The Ina-Casa Neighborhoods of the Postwar Era (Ashgate, 2014). M. Arch Grad Student Andrew Stevens has won 2nd Place in the National ACSA/NSF jointly sponsored Open Challenge Competition “The Architecture & Engineering of Sustainable Buildings”. http://www.sustainableae.com/ This award gives $2,000 for to the student and $500 to the faculty involved; in this case Professor Lee Fithian. In other student news, Lisa Om and Ana Ruiz were just awarded the Newman Medal for Excellence in Acoustics based on work performed in Spring 2012 architectural acoustics class. http://www.newmanfund. org/newman-student-awards/. Keaton Cizek, as a member of the OU Habitat for Humanity Group (HFH for Cleveland County), is involved in the “Shackathon,” a fundraising and awareness event held in fall semester which engages many student organizations as well as any person walking along the South Oval for a day. Participating student organizations are allotted a plot of grass along the Oval upon which to build a minimal shelter with limited materials. Facts about poverty displayed by the participants raise awareness among passersby, who are then asked to donate whatever they can to the cause (Cleveland County HFH). Friendly competition among the participating student organizations encourages hard work. EAST CENTRAL Illinois Institute of Technology Professor Harry Mallgrave will be awarded an honorary fellowship from the Royal Institute of British Architects’ (RIBA) Council. The twelve fellowships announced on September 27 reward individuals from a diverse spectrum of backgrounds, including the worlds of education, sustainability, engineering, property development, journalism, politics and the wider built environment industry. The 2013 RIBA Honorary Fellowships will be awarded on Wednesday, February 6, 2013. RIBA Honorary Fellowships are awarded annually to people who have made a particular contribution to architecture in its broadest sense. This includes its promotion, administration and outreach, and its role in building more sustainable communities and in the education of future generations. Harry Francis Mallgrave is an architect, scholar, editor, and professor of history and theory at Illinois Institute of Technology. After several years in architectural practice, he took his doctoral studies at the University of Pennsylvania in 1983 under the supervision of Stanford Anderson. His dissertation topic -The Idea of Style: Gottfried Semper in London -presaged his focus on German theory in his early career. This phase of his work culminated in the intellectual biography Gottfried Semper: Architect of the Nineteenth Century, which won the prestigious Alice Davis Hitchcock Award from the American Society of Architectural Historians. He has written numerous books and articles on the history and theory of architecture including: Modern Architectural Theory: A Historical Survey, 1673-1968, and An Introduction to Architectural Theory: 1968 to the Present. In recent years Mallgrave’s interests have broadened, as indicated by his book The Architect’s Brain: Neuroscience, Creativity, and Architecture. He has more recently followed up on this study with Architecture and Embodiment: The Implications of the New Sciences and Humanities for Design, to be published in 2013. It appeals to the emotional process of embodied simulation, rejects overly conceptualized approaches to theory and the objectification of design (viewing buildings as objects), and argues for a return to the focus of design to where it formerly resided -the human experience of inhabiting the world. Adjunct Associate Professor Amanda Williams will be featured in the new Dreams in Jay-Z Minor exhibition at the Blanc Gallery as part of a series of exhibitions for Chicago Artists Month. Williams and fellow Chicago artist Krista Franklin drew on a series of mutually recurring dreams as inspiration for their work. The exhibit explores notions around dream states, hyper-reality, upward mobility, hopes and aspirations of African Diasporic peoples, black opulence, black excellence, and excess. Using a variety of mediums, from paintings, handmade paper, print, altered books and collage, Dreams in Jay-Z Minor is a visual metaphorical play of installation, 2D, and 3D works. Master of Architecture alumna Diane Hoffer-Schurecht has received the AIA Chicago’s 2012 Chicago Award for Architecture. Select area architecture schools are invited to participate in this annual award and each are allowed to nominate five students to compete. Competition entries are school studio projects that are submitted at the end of the spring semester. As the first place winner, Hoffer-Schurecht will receive the Benn-Johnck Student Award of $500. ACSANewsDigest 12 GULF Louisiana State University The School of Architecture is please to announce that Greg Watson has joined the faculty as an Associate Professor this fall. Greg Watson received his BA in Psychology from Columbia University and his MArch from Washington University in Saint Louis. He has practiced in Chicago, Maine, South Carolina, Mississippi, and Minnesota. Watson’s research has been supported by grants from the New York State Psychiatric Institute, the Mississippi State University Office of Research, the College of Architecture and Landscape Architecture at the University of Minnesota, and the Graham Foundation for Advanced Studies in the Fine Arts. His paintings, drawings, and prints have been exhibited at galleries in New York City, Boston, Philadelphia, Minneapolis, Mississippi, and Louisiana. The School of Architecture is please to announce that Alice Guess has joined the faculty as an Assistant Professor this fall. Alice Guess holds a five year M. Arch from Tulane University and an M. Arch from McGill University’s Architectural History and Theory Program. A South Carolina native, she has practiced architecture in Louisiana, North Carolina and South Carolina. For the last decade she has worked with Reggie Gibson in Charleston, South Carolina, becoming principle of Gibson Guess Architects in 2007. Before coming to LSU she taught at the Clemson Center for Architecture in Charleston.Alice Guess. Associate Professor Jim Sullivan received a Baton Rouge AIA Merit Award for a pavilion that he and LSU School of Architecture students Steven Armstrong, Marc Berard, Megan Harris, and Stacy Palczynski designed and built. For more information see http:// www.la-ab.com/#YMCA-Design-Build. Associate Professor of Architecture Ursula Emery McClure and several of her students were recently awarded the 2012 Charles E. Peterson Prize for their entry “Fort Proctor.” The two groups of students involved with winning the Prize are: (spring 2012) Cody Blanchard, Annette Couvillon, Lindsay Boley, Christopher Peoples, Sarah Kolac, Taylor Alphonso, and (fall 2011) Taylor Alphonso, Ben Buehrle, Audrey Cropp, and Claire Hu. David Bertolini, PhD along with co-editors Don Kunze, PhD and Simone Brott, PhD have a collection of essays titled Architecture Post Mortem: The Diastolic Architecture Of Decline, Dystopia, And Death on that was accepted for publication by Ashgate Press. Forthcoming in 2013. Architect Errol Barron, FAIA, was awarded the prestigious American Institute of Architects (AIA) Louisiana Medal of Honor, the highest award given by AIA LA, at its annual Design Conference in Lafayette on September 28. Barron is a principal of Barron/Toups Architects, an award-winning firm entering its fifth decade of business. He is widely recognized as a designer, painter, educator, preservationist, musician, photographer, critic, lecturer, author and civic leader. The Medal of Honor is given by AIA LA to architects who have sustained a lifetime affecting the profession of architecture, and who have significantly advanced the profession and/or provided strong influence on fellow practitioners. Barron/Toups Architects is recognized for its artful blend of modern sensibilities with historic vernacular, as in St. Peter’s by the Sea Episcopal Church in Gulfport, Mississippi; and the use of natural light in the Ogden Museum of Southern Art in New Orleans. His designs are found both throughout the US and abroad. He has also served as the president of AIA New Orleans and board member of AIA Louisiana, and was elected to AIA Fellowship in 1996. Barron is also a semi-professional (accomplished amateur) flutist, having performed and recorded classical works. His sketches, photographs and watercolors have been exhibited nationally and also published. He has taught architecture for more than 35 years and is currently the Favrot Professor of Architecture at Tulane University. He received his bachelor’s degree in architecture from Tulane, and his master’s in architecture from Yale University, and has studied and practiced in London and New York. “Errol is unwavering in his dedication to producing work of the highest design quality, no matter the challenges and obstacles,” noted architect Douglas Ashe, FAIA. Colleague William Brockway, FAIA, noted, “Errol has published insightful and scholarly essays in widely disseminated journals… has been a consistent winner of design awards… and his work has been featured in many design publications.” Architect Allan Eskew, FAIA, noted, “Errol has been a motivating force at the Tulane School of Architecture… regarded by graduating students as one of their most stimulating and motivational instructors.” University of puerto rico Professor Edgardo Arroyo’s Second Year Studio participated with a group proposal for 2012 Park(ing)Day. Professor Andrea Bauzá was part of a design collective that earned an Honorable Mention representing the US at the Venice Biennale Dean Francisco Javier Rodríguez was a moderator at AULA’s symposium in Albuquerque, New Mexico (UNM). Contemporary Architecture in Puerto Rico 1993-2010, a book designed and edited by Dean Francisco Javier Rodríguez and Professor Darwin Marrero-Carrero was selected for the Bienal Iberoamericana de Diseño (BID12) in Madrid, Spain The UPR hosted the premiere of “Unfinished Spaces”, a Sundance documentary about the Arts Schools in Havana, Cuba Associate Dean Mayra Jiménez represented the UPR in Cádiz, where our journal (in)forma 6 was selected for the Bienal Iberoamericana de Arquitectura. Professor Manuel Bermúdez graduate city studio will travel to Panamá, where they will research Old Panama City as part of a 3-year effort to document colonial cities in the Caribbean that includes Cartagena, ACSANewsDigest 13 Havana, New Orleans, Santo Domingo and Old San Juan. Design from the University of Puerto Rico and an M.Arch from Syracuse University. ACSA Distinguished Professor Enrique Vivoni, PhD curated an exhibit showcasing the six summer studios he led in Corsica documenting over 100 houses, churches and tombs. Professor Jorge Rigau FAIA, received the Distinguished Architecture Professor Award from the Polytechnic University of Puerto Rico in May 2012. The UPR School of Architecture is engaging municipal authorities to explore collaborative studios on the city. Following the successful studios dedicated to Fajardo, the graduate studio led by Professors Thomas Marvel and Cristina Cardalda will continue to work with the Municipality of Bayamón. Professors Jorge Lizardi-Pollock, PhD, Manuel Bermúdez and Dean Francisco Javier Rodríguez presented the book Ambivalent Spaces: Memory and Oblivion in Modern Social Architecture, at the Colegio de Arquitectos (CAAPPR). Natalia Rey (MArch 12) won the Best Urban Design Thesis Award from the Colegio de Arquitectos (CAAPPR) and the Jaime Cobas Thesis Award. The work of Professor Andrés Mignucci was highlighted on ENTORNO Magazine. He is currently working on a book documenting the PR Supreme Court Building. Polytechnic University of Puerto Rico Dean Carlos E. Betancourt LLambias AIA, and Interior Designer Smyrna Mauras, CODDI, announced the inauguration of the Interior Architecture Program in the Spring 2013. Dean Betancourt also announced the integration of the Landscape Architecture program to the school of Architecture ARQPOLI. Professor Diana G. Rivera was appointed as the new Associate Dean of the School of Architecture at the Polytechnic University of Puerto Rico (PUPR). Professor Rivera has been teaching for seventeen years and has taught design studios at various levels. Professor Rivera has a B.A. in Environmental Professor Miguel Del Río AIA, has been appointed AIA Regional Director for the areas of Florida and the Caribbean. The appointment took place on July 2012 during the AIA Convention in Palm Beach. Professor Andres Mignucci AIA, will be lecturing at Tulane School of Architecture, the lecture ‘The City is not a blank slate” will take place this coming month. Also, Professor Mignucci announced the publication of his next book Contexts: Parque Munoz Rivera and the Supreme Court. Professor Nadya K. Nenadich mentored second place award winning students Glorimer Anselmi, Nestor Bartolomei, Javier Bidot, Cristhian Cano, Marcos Colón and Janice Quevedo, for the San Juan 3D Competition sponsored by Colegio de Arquitectos y Arquitectos Paisajistas. Nenadich also gave the lecture “La erosión de la gestión común de lo común” for the Arquitectonics International Workshop “Architecture, Education and Society” at the Barcelona School of Architecture (ETSAB) on May, 2012. Professor María Gabriela Flores AIA, gave the lecture “Consideraciones de Diseño para Vivienda en Puerto Rico” as part of the design competition “Nueva Vivienda para Puerto Rico 2012” at the Puerto Rico’s Architects Association (CAAPPR) on May 10, 2012. Professor Omayra Rivera, coordinator of the Collaborative Design Studio, is offering a course at Beta Local in Old San Juan in collaboration with the project ENLACE for Caño Martín Peña. Moreover, Professor Rivera presented the paper “Participatory Analysis of the Living Environment: The Plus Ultra Neighborhood”, together with professors Leandro Madrazo and Angel Martin Cojo from the School of Architecture La Salle in Barcelona at the Association of Collegiate School of Architecture (ACSA) Conference on June, 2012, that took place at the Center of Contemporary Culture of Barcelona. Professors Yazmín Crespo and Omayra Rivera, together with Andrea Bauzá, presented the work produced by their collaborative studio “Taller Creando Sin Encargos’, at the Puerto Rico’s Architects Association (CAAPPR) on August 16, 2012. They were also guest speakers at the University Radio talk show “Arquitectura de Hoy”. Professor Yazmín Crespo gave a history and theory of architecture summer course at the Elisava School of Design in Barcelona on June, 2012. Professor Vladimir García has joined the ArqPoli faculty. Professor Garcia, who has a Masters Degree from SCIArc, was recently awarded, together with Doel Fresse, the First Prize from the Institute of Puerto Rican Culture: Galería Espacio Temporal (GET) Design Competition 2011 for the Revuelo installation. Revuelo was selected as one of the projects to represent Puerto Rico in the Third Design Biennial in Madrid on November 2012. Professor Garcia gave a lecture about this art-installation at the School of Architecture, Polytechnic University of Puerto Rico and at the Puerto Rico’s Architects Association (CAAPPR) on March, 2012. Professor Maria Isabel Oliver conducted a Summer Advanced History Course together with the Centro de Estudios Martianos in Havana, Cuba. The project Havana: topologies of a transitional city, examines through videos and urban acoustics, the topological ‘invariances’ of memory, history and identity within the ‘variant’ uses of contemporary society. Professor Oscar Oliver Didier, together with 16 students, traveled to Berlin, Germany, to conduct the Summer Studio Berlin: Enduring Impermanence. The project evaluates place and the crisis of permanence. The Study Abroad Exhibitions Berlin: Enduring Impermanence and Havana: topologies