Thursday, December 15th, 2011
Today (12/15), Ken Greenberg will be in Edmonton (pictured at left) to speak about urban design at the Downtown X-posed symposium; Lance Jay Brown will introduce, and Rick Bell & Board President Michael Sorkin will speak at, the Center for Architecture’s Freedom of Assembly panel on 12/17; Michael Arad will go gastronomical to serve as a juror for Edible Brooklyn’s 3rd Annual Latke Festival on 12/19; and the work of Robert A.M. Stern and Patrons Steven Holl and Denise Scott Brown is on view at the Shenzhen & Hong Kong Bi-City Biennale of Urbanism\Architecture through 2/18/12.
Tags: Architecture, Bi-City Biennale of Urbanism\Architecture, brooklyn, Center for Architecture, China, Denise Scott Brown, Downtown X-posed, Edible Brooklyn, Edmonton, Freedom of Assembly, Hong Kong, Ken Greenberg, Lance Jay Brown, Latke Festival, michael arad, Michael Sorkin, New York City, Rick Bell, robert a.m. stern, Shenzhen, Steven Holl, symposium, Urbanism
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Tuesday, November 29th, 2011
Speaking at the Center for Architecture’s Buildings = Energy symposium last month, Colin Cathcart noted that, while New Yorkers’ per capita carbon footprint was quite large when viewed at the metropolitan level, the central city’s high density provided a model for the future–both here and around the world–asserting that “Our first, last, best hope to turn this planet around is right here in New York City.” Speaking in support of Manhattan Borough President Scott Stringer’s new report on the need for an infrastructure bank, Jack Nyman noted the need for public education and outreach: “We must help every sector of the economy genuinely understand its own stake in infrastructure issues, and we must engage all sectors fully in building support for new financial models over the long term.”
Tags: Buildings = Energy, carbon footprint, Center for Architecture, Colin Cathcart, density, economy, education, infrastructure bank, Jack Nyman, manhattan, New York City, quotes, scott stringer, sustainability, Urbanism
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Saturday, October 15th, 2011
Board Member Saskia Sassen will participate in the Columbia GSAPP’s Injured Cities Conference on 10/14-15; Barbara Wilks will give a talk at the New York Botanical Garden’s Midtown Education Center on 10/24; Board Member Enrique Norten will speak at the Pratt Institute on 10/24 in conjunction with the new exhibit Breaking Borders: New Latin American Architecture; Richard Sennett will join the Institute for Public Knowledge’s discussion of the new publication Living in the Endless City in New York on 10/25; Jack Nyman’s Steven L. Newman Real Estate Institute will host the symposium The Waterfront: A Brooklyn Model for Preservation and Change on 10/26; Deborah Berke will talk about Development, Design and Financing Strategies for Urban Revitalization Using Hospitality and the Arts at the ULI Fall Conference on 10/26; Board Member Toni Griffin will visit Notre Dame University on 10/26 to deliver the lecture Can Planning Save the City: Facing the Challenges of Urban America; Olympia Kazi will host Board Member Thom Mayne at Van Alen Books on 10/28 for a presentation on his new book, Combinatory Urbanism; Board Member Winka Dubbeldam is on the Host Committee for the Storefront for Art & Architecture’s Critical Halloween party on 10/29; and Tom Angotti will participate in the panel Where is New York? Apparitions at Willets Point at the Columbia GSAPP on 10/31.
Tags: Architecture, Barbara Wilks, Baruch College, Breaking Borders, brooklyn, Columbia University, Combinatory Urbanism, conference, Critical Halloween, Development, Enrique Norten, GSAPP, Injured Cities, Institute for Public Knowledge, Jack Nyman, Living in the Endless City, manhattan, Midtown, New York Botanical Garden, New York City, Notre Dame, NYU, Olympia Kazi, panel discussion, party, Pratt Institute Latin America, preservation, Queens, Richard Sennett, Saskia Sassen, Steven L. Newman Real Estate Institute, Storefront for Art & Architecture, Thom Mayne, Tom Angotti, Toni Griffin, urban planning, Urbanism, Van Alen Books, waterfront, Willets Point, Winka Dubbeldam
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Monday, July 25th, 2011
In a Time magazine article about the advent bookless libraries, Patron Steven Holl noted that “Acknowledging the digital and its speed and putting it in relation to the history and physical presence of the books makes it an exciting space. A book represents knowledge, and striking a balance in a library is a good thing.” Asked what makes a city successful, Board Member Saskia Sassen (pictured at left) argued that it is cities’ “incompleteness that gifts them their longevity. A city does not become obsolete.” (Sassen also sat down with Nicolas Nova for a great interview in advance of Lift Lab earlier this month.) And June Williamson spoke about the future of suburbia in one of Record‘s “What’s Next” features, explaining that “We spent 50 to 60 years building it up, so we’re going to have to spend an equivalent period of time restructuring, infilling, and remaking it.”
Tags: Architectural Record, books, Cities, digital, infill, June Williamson, library, obsolete, Saskia Sassen, Steven Holl, suburbia, Urbanism
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Friday, July 15th, 2011
Our friends at the Design Trust for Public Space will host one of their Public Space Potlucks at Barbara Wilks‘ Harlem Piers Park on 7/20 (pictured at left); Craig Dykers will participate in the Forum for Urban Design’s Next Urbanism discussion at Scandanavia House on 7/27; Ernie Hutton will moderate a panel on PlaNYC at the Center for Architecture on 7/29; and an exhibit of AIA Connecticut’s Design Awards winners, including work by Herbert Newman, will be on view in Clinton through 7/31.
Tags: AIA Connecticut, AIA Design Awards, Barbara Wilks, Bjarke Ingels, Center for Architecture, Clinton, Connecticut, Craig Dykers, Design Trust for Public Space, Ernest Hutton, Events, exhibit, Forum for Urban Design, Herbert Newman, panel discussion, PlaNYC, potluck, public space, symposium, Urbanism
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Tuesday, July 5th, 2011
Over at Fast Co.Design, Karen Alschuler wrote an article comparing buildings to sandwiches, asking: “What makes them tasty?”; Design Intelligence featured the full text of Phil Enquist’s PennDesign commencement address; Deborah Gans reports on her work in New Orleans’ Plum Orchard neighborhood in Places: Design Observer; Ken Greenberg (whom Dow Marmur recently called a Canadian national treasure) is leading the planning process for the redevelopment of Boston’s waterfront; Patron Steven Holl‘s Vanke Center in Shenzhen received high praise from Nicolai Ouroussoff, who calls the building “a triumph of sustainable design” in a new piece out this week; Daniel Libeskind released renderings of the design for a new synagogue in Munich; Villahermosa, Mexico, recently celebrated the opening of a new public building by Board Member Enrique Norten set in a new public park by Barbara Wilks; Steven L. Newman Real Estate Institute Director Jack S. Nyman commented on his organization’s collaboration with CUNY’s Building Performance Lab in creating the just-launched Building Performance Toolkit; the National Capital Planning Commission released design renderings for DC’s Ellipse by the five firms competing for the job, including Rob Rogers’ firm Rogers Marvel (whose SandRidge Energy complex in Oklahoma City was also recently approved by the city); the New Yorker wrote about Moshe Safdie’s soon-to-open Crystal Bridges museum in Arkansas; Rowan Moore reviewed Living in the Endless City, a new book featuring essays by Richard Sennett and Board Member Saskia Sassen; and Don Stastny is leading the visioning process for the redevelopment of Saint Louis’ historic Grand Center entertainment district (pictured at left).
Tags: Arkansas, Barbara Wilks, Boston, Building Performance Lab, Building Performance Toolkit, Canada, China, commencement, Crystal Bridges, CUNY, daniel libeskind, Deborah Gans, Design, design competition, Design Observer, Don Stastny, Ellipse, Enrique Norten, Fast Company, food, Germany, Grand Center, Jack S. Nyman, Karen Alschuler, Ken Greenberg, Living in the Endless City, master plan, Mexico, moshe safdie, Munich, museum, National Capital Planning Commission, New Orleans, New York City, Nicolai Ouroussoff, Oklahoma City, parks, PennDesign, Philip Enquist, Places, Plum Orchard, public realm, recovery, Richard Sennett, Rob Rogers, Rogers Marvel, Saint Louis, SandRidge Energy, Saskia Sassen, Shenzhen, Steven Holl, Steven L. Newman Real Estate Institute, sustainability, synagogue, tasty, Urban Design, Urbanism, Vanke Center, Villahermosa, washington dc, waterfront
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Tuesday, May 24th, 2011
Looking ahead and preparing your summer reading list? Ken Greenberg’s new book Walking Home: The Life and Lessons of a City Builder was just released last week, and you can visit the Random House website to purchase a copy; Board Member Thom Mayne has just self-published the book Combinatory Urbanism: The Complex Behavior of Collective Form; meanwhile, the latest issue of Texas Monthly features an excerpt from the introduction to Fred Steiner’s Design for a Vulnerable Planet, which was published last month. If that’s not enough to keep you busy, check out Designers and Books, a website that features the reading lists of many great architects, planners, and urbanists—including Patrons Robert Venturi, Denise Scott Brown, and Steven Holl, Fellow Daniel Libeskind, and Board President Michael Sorkin.
Tags: books, Combinatory Urbanism, daniel libeskind, Denise Scott Brown, Design for a Vulnerable Planet, Designers and Books, Fred Steiner, Ken Greenberg, Michael Sorkin, Random House, Robert Venturi, Steven Holl, Texas Monthly, Thom Mayne, urban planning, Urbanism, Walking Home
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Monday, April 11th, 2011
Today marks the public launch of By the City, For the City, a new ideas competition that will provide the foundation for September’s Urban Design Week festival in New York City. From April 11-30, we’re inviting everyone to share their ideas for how to improve the city’s urban fabric. Then, in May, we’ll launch an international design competition, enlisting top architects, planners, and urbanists from around the world to create proposals that address the issues that the public is most interested in. To share your idea, visit the BtCFtC website. We can’t wait to hear what you have to say!
Tags: BtCFtC, By the City For the City, design competition, New York City, Urban Design Week, Urbanism
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Friday, November 12th, 2010
On Monday, November 29, Parsons the New School for Design will host the Present and Future of Urbanism, an evening of presentations, questions, and discussions on the state of the art and challenges for the future of cities as Parsons prepares to launch new graduate programs in Urbanism. The event will take place from 6:30-8:30 PM in the school’s Orientation Room, on the ground floor of 2 West 13th Street in Manhattan, and will be free and open to the public.
Tags: discussion, New York City, Parsons, The New School, Urbanism
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Saturday, December 1st, 2007
Landscape architectural historian John Beardsley published Mario Schjetnan: Landscape, Architecture, and Urbanism. Mario Schjetnan, an Institute fellow, has had a prolific career since the 1970s in Mexico, which is documented here through a description of his major projects including his Xochimilco Ecological Park (1993) and his recent Union Point Park in Oakland, California (2005). More
Tags: Architecture, California, Landscape, Mario Schjetnan, Mexico, Urbanism
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