Friday, August 26th, 2011
In a co-authored NY Times op-ed that cites cuts to government-funded social programs as an underlying cause of the recent UK riots, Board Member Saskia Sassen and Fellow Richard Sennett caution that “Americans ought to ponder this aspect of Britain’s trauma. After all, London is one of the world’s wealthiest cities, but large sections of it are impoverished. New York is not so different.” In responding to a young woman’s question about whether or not to take time to work between receiving her undergraduate degree in environmental science and returning to school to pursue a graduate degree in architecture, Galia Solomonoff noted that “One of the benefits of working in between careers is understanding the life applications of a given practice.” And while being interviewed about his role in shaping Postmodernism by filmmaker John Thornton, Patron Robert Venturi (pictured at left) advised that: “Modernism is about space. Postmodernism is about communication. You should do what turns you on.”
Tags: communication, education, environmental science, Galia Solomonoff, graduate school, John Thornton, london, modernism, New York Times, Postmodernism, poverty, quotes, Richard Sennett, riots, Robert Venturi, Saskia Sassen, space, UK, wealth, women architects
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Friday, August 19th, 2011
Deborah Berke will serve on one of the resource teams at the 51st Annual Meeting of the Mayors’ Institute on City Design in Charleston in September; Architizer included Matt Berman’s “Studio Retreat” (pictured at left) in its round-up of modern interpretations of the cabin-in-the-woods; a preview of Re-Definitions, the publication featuring work from a design studio led by Theo. David, is available on Blurb.com; Philadelphia’s TASHAN restaurant, designed by Board Member Winka Dubbeldam, is getting ready to open to the public; on the latest episode of Citywide, Ken Fisher interviews singer and activist Peter Yarrow of Peter, Paul, & Mary fame; eOculus recapped a panel on NYC’s waterfront that was moderated by Ernie Hutton; Daniel Libeskind opined about his love of flight (and his “lucky charm” wife, Nina) in the NY Times; Michael Manfredi’s firm was one of six finalists chosen to compete to revamp St. Petersburg, FL’s City Pier; SFGate picked John Portman’s Hyatt Regency Hotel as one of the ten most impressive buildings in San Francisco; Park City, UT’s Kimball Art Center hired Don Stastny to manage a new design competition for its expansion; Board Member Clare Weisz presented the master plan for Manhattan’s Sherman Creek; and the Wall Street Journal spoke to John Wong about his “most personal project”–the renovation of his own home in San Francisco’s Sea Cliff neighborhood.
Tags: Architizer, books, Charleston, City Pier, CityWide, Claire Weisz, daniel libeskind, Deborah Berke, design competition, Don Stastny, eOculus, Ernest Hutton, flight, Florida, Hyatt Regency Hotel, interiors, john portman, John Wong, Kenneth K. Fisher, Kimball Art Center, manhattan, Matt Berman, Mayors Institute on City Design, Michael Manfredi, modernism, New York City, New York Times, Nina Libeskind, Park City, Peter Yarrow, Philadelphia, publication, Re-Definitions, renovation, residential, Saint Petersburg, San Francisco, Sea Cliff, Sherman Creek, Studio Retreat, TASHAN, Theo David, wall street journal, waterfront, Weiss Manfredi, Winka Dubbeldam
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Tuesday, February 15th, 2011
Urban Omnibus will host a benefit party tonight in New York, including an auction featuring work by Linda Pollak (pictured at left); on 2/17, Fellows Bruce Fowle and Jack Nyman will participate in the conference Greening Modernism at Baruch College in Manhattan; Laurie Kerr will speak at the Center for Architecture’s Building Intelligence Project: Think Tank New York on 2/18; and if you missed Gregg Pasquarelli’s recent lecture on SHoP’s current work, the Architectural League has posted a podcast of the talk.
Tags: Architectural League, art, Baruch College, Bruce Fowle, Center for Architecture, conference, green buildings, Gregg Pasquarelli, Jack Nyman, Laurie Kerr, Linda Pollak, modernism, New York City, panel, party, podcast, SHoP Architects, Urban Omnibus
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Monday, January 10th, 2011
Georgia Tech’s College of Architecture, led by Alan Balfour, recently completed the $9.5 million renovation of their new home, the Hinman Research Building, in Atlanta; Thomas Balsley and Shane Coen will both serve on the jury for ASLA’s 2011 Student Awards; Construction of the Brooklyn Navy Yard’s BNYC 92 facility, designed by Matthew Berman, is in full swing, and the building will open in November 2011; Craig Dykers’ Snøhetta has been shortlisted in the competition to design the Victoria & Albert’s Exhibition Road expansion; Newport’s lavish Bellevue Avenue has been enlivened by a series of Heritage Trail-esque markers by Ronald Lee Fleming’s Townscape Institute; Chad Floyd recently penned a paean to energy efficiency at Jetson Green; Anthony Flint joined the debate about a “new kind of Modernism” at ArchitectureBoston; The NY Observer interviewed Daniel Libeskind about his continued involvement in the reconstruction process at the World Trade Center; Jonathan Schrag spoke to Risk.net about the future of carbon trading in the US; and Henry M. White will design a new network of public spaces at a planned neighborhood in Chandigarh, India (pictured at left).
Tags: Alan Balfour, Anthony Flint, ASLA, Atlanta, Bellevue Avenue, BNYC 92, Boston, Brooklyn Navy Yard, carbon trading, Chadwick Floyd, Chandigarh, competition, Craig Dykers, daniel libeskind, Georgia Tech, green buildings, Henry M. White III, heritage trail, India, jonathan schrag, jury, landscape architecture, matthew berman, modernism, New York City, Newport, public space, Ronald Lee Fleming, Shane Coen, Snohetta, Thomas Balsley, Townscape Institute, victoria and albert museum, workshop/apd, world trade center
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Monday, December 6th, 2010
Patrons Robert Venturi and Denise Scott Brown (pictured at left) will be presented with the Ed Bacon Memorial Prize at a Philadelphia’s Center for Architecture dinner on 12/7; Kate Orff will speak at TEDWomen in Washington, DC, on 12/8; and the Jack Nyman-led Steven L. Newman Real Estate Institute will host a conference on Greening Modernism on 12/9.
Tags: Denise Scott Brown, Ed Bacon Memorial Prize, green buildings, Jack Nyman, modernism, NYU, Philadelphia, Robert Venturi, Steven L. Newman Real Estate Institute
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Monday, October 18th, 2010
Tonight (10/18) Lyn Rice will deliver the lecture “Everyday Rebel” at NJIT in Newark, NJ; Board Member Byron Stigge will speak at the Forum for Urban Design’s Eco-Cities event in Manhattan on 10/20; the October installment of Kenneth K. Fisher’s CityWide program on CUNY-TV premieres at 10:00 AM on 10/20; Board President Michael Sorkin will speak about his work on the US pavilion at the Venice Biennale at the Architectural League’s Workshopping New York on 10/20; Ethel Sheffer and Sheena Wright will both participate in panels during the Municipal Art Society’s Summit for New York City on 10/21-22; Rodolfo Machado’s Bowdoin Museum of Art renovation is included in the Maine Modern exhibition at the Storefront for Architecture in Portland, ME, now through 10/31; Mattias Sauerbruch’s winning design for the M9 Museum (pictured at left) will be on view in Venice along with the other competition entries now through 11/21.
Tags: Architectural League, Bowdoin Museum of Art, Byron Stigge, CityWide, CUNY, eco-cities, Ethel Sheffer, exhibition, Forum for Urban Design, Kenneth K. Fisher, lecture, Lyn Rice, M9 Museum, Mattias Sauerbruch, Michael Sorkin, modernism, Municipal Arts Society, New York City, Newark, NJIT, panel, Portland Maine, Rodolfo Machado, Sheena Wright, Venice, Venice Architecture Biennial
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