July
28, 2006 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The
Mystery and Imagination of the Minds of Children
A midsummer night’s article
You can’t really remember anything in your
life that happened before you were three years old, except things that
other people have told you, says John Eberhard, FAIA, founding president
of the Academy of Neuroscience for Architecture. Perhaps that’s
why early childhood (from three to six years old) seems so cloaked
in mystery. At age three, whether you are flying with Peter Pan, making
drawings of monsters and castles, or explaining your big secret to
your best little friend (whom no one else can see), you are using your
brain to shape your mind’s experiences.
“Deeper
Shades of Green” Airs
at AIA Headquarters
AIA Executive Vice President/CEO Christine McEntee, left, and Executive Producer
Karena Albers, third from left, discussed Design:e2
(The Economies of Being Environmentally Conscious), at the AIA national
component headquarters on July 24. The six-part television series—narrated
by Brad Pitt—explores
sustainable architecture. Following McEntee’s remarks, Albers screened “Deeper
Shades of Green,” the series’ finale featuring environmental architects
William McDonough, FAIA; Kenneth Yeang, Hon. FAIA; and Werner Sobek. The evening
concluded with a panel discussion among AIA Vice President Norman Strong, FAIA,
second from left, as moderator, and from the right, Kara Strong, AIA; American
Society of Landscape Architects EVP Nancy Sommerville, Hon. AIA; and Daniel Williams,
FAIA. The series will air this summer on PBS. Check your local listing for schedules
and visit the Design:e2 Web
site for more information or to view a trailer.
From the president’s office
Sustainability: Where Design and Policy Intersect
AIA President Kate Schwennsen, FAIA, uses the dog days of summer to ponder what’s
on the corner of Architecture Street and Advocacy Avenue, and what we—collectively
and individually—can do about it.
AIA Michigan Honors 11 Buildings
AIA Michigan members sponsor the chapter’s Honor Awards Program to bring
public attention to examples of good design and recognize the people who make
significant contributions to the built environment. This year was no exception
as the component honored several individuals and 11 diverse projects as exemplars
of excellence. Nine of the award-winning projects are located in the Great Lakes
State, one is in Detroit, and one in Ontario.
The
Institute’s
Influence on Legislative Policy
Congressional advocacy puts architects’ issues
on national stage
With great prescience, AIA Secretary Glenn Brown, FAIA, a founding
member of the Washington Chapter of the American Institute ofArchitects,
urged the society to relocate to the nation’s capital from its New York City headquarters.
In D.C., Brown and his contemporaries reasoned, the Institute could influence
federal building efforts and funding. This brief snapshot of 10 areas of congressional
activity over the past few decades offers a glimpse at the sustained vibrancy
of the relationship between the Institute and the legislative branch and helps
frame how the AIA’s values and public policies influence the
lives of all Americans.
Architects with Something to
Say: AIA Adds New Podcasts
Now is a good time to check out the new AIA Podnet Architecture
Knowledge Review, which is premiering three
more broadcasts:
• “Participation, Collaboration, and Inspiration
in the Design Process,”
with Moore Ruble Yudell’s Jeanne
Chen, AIA; Michael S. Martin, AIA; Neal Matsuno, AIA; and Mario Violich
• “Exploring an Integrated, Humanistic Approach to Design,”
with
MRY’s John Ruble, FAIA; Buzz Yudell, FAIA; Krista Becker,
AIA; and James Mary O’Connor, AIA
• “The Architect as Civic and Community Leader,”
with
Ambassador Richard Nelson Swett, FAIA (pictured).
The free podcasts are available through XML, itunes, or MP3. Try them
out on your MP3 player or PC today—and check back for more podcasts
soon.
Project Watch
Behold the Heritage! Behold the Makeover!
Nashville AIA firm restores Saint Cecilia Motherhouse; gives new chapel
international design
Bring on the music! For the Dominican Sisters of St. Cecilia in Nashville,
their newly renovated and expanded Motherhouse is beautiful music to
their ears. And the Sisters of St. Cecilia know a good tune when they
hear it. So much so, it just might make their namesake, St. Cecilia,
the patroness saint of music, harmonize a dance of joy. But it was
Nashville-based Fowlkes and Associates who tuned in to the need of
the St. Cecilia congregation and chimed in with a big assist.
Your Kiplinger Connection (members
only, AIA.org login required)
The economy: Recession? Probably not.
Insurance: Where will disaster strike
next?
Federal budget: Cuts for Small Business
Administration?
AIArchitect offers AIA members exclusive access to three
stories a week to help them manage their practices and plan for
the coming year. Nonmembers
may subscribe to The Kiplinger Letter.
Need to catch up on recent editions of AIArchitect
This Week?
June
30 |
July 7 |
July 14 |
July 21
|
|
News You Can Use |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
You’re
Invited to Beijing
Biennial cultural conference takes place
September 26–October
6
The organizing committee of the second Architectural Biennial Beijing
invites you to take part in the “ABB2006,” to be held
September 26–October 6 in Beijing. Organized jointly by the
Ministry of Construction and the Ministry of Culture, the forum’s
main theme is “City and Architecture: Resources Efficiency
and Environment Friendliness.” The ABB2006 will focus on
the connections between urban planning and architectural design.
For details, visit the ABB Web site.
Order in the Court: Design Innovation
Please save the date for the AIA’s Academy of Architecture for Justice
fall conference, “Breaking New Ground in Justice: Innovations in Design,
Construction, and Operations,” in New Orleans, October 4–7. AAJ invites
you to join the discussion and share your expertise with designers and key decision
makers in the judiciary, detention, corrections, and law enforcement areas—while
you earn up to nine CES/LUs. Topics to be covered include: expanding existing
facilities through innovative ideas, multi-tenant courts facilities, design-build,
designing green juvenile facilities, small jails, and the next “mission
critical” facility. For schedule and details, visit
the AAJ Web site, or contact Katherine Gupman, 202-626-8051.
(Pictured is the San Carlos Juvenile and Adult Detention Center, San Carlos,
Ariz., by DLR Group for the San Carlos Apache Tribe, a 2005-2006
AIA Justice Facilities Review-cited project. Photo © Marc Boisclair.)
Heads
Up: AIA Honor Award for Architecture, Twenty-five Year Award
Nominations Due Sept. 1
Don’t let summer slip by without turning in your entry fees for the 2007
AIA Honor Award submissions, which are due August 4. Submissions
for the Honor Awards for Architecture—as well as for the Twenty-five Year
Award—are due September 1. AIA Honor Awards
for Architecture are open to all architects licensed in the U.S. for new and
restored projects of all building types located anywhere in the world. The Twenty-five
Year Award honors projects designed by U.S.-licensed architects that have stood
the test of time for 25–35 years. For details, visit the awards section
of the AIA’s Web site. (Pictured
is Trumpf Customer and Administration Building, Ditzingen, Germany, by Barkow
Leibinger Architects, a 2006 AIA Honor Award for Architecture recipient. Photo © David
Franck.)
AIA CAREER CENTER
Browse This
Week’s Featured Opportunities by Category |
|
|
• Architect 100
• Computer
Aided Design 6
• Construction
Management 16
• Engineering 2
• Facilities
Management 3
• Graphic
Design 4
• Industrial
Design 1
• Information
Technology (IT) 3
|
|
• Interior
Design 8
• Intern
Architect 36
• Landscape
Architecture 7
• Marketing 1
• Planning 9
• Project
Manager 61
• Security
Design 2
• Specifications 4 |
|
|
Browse
by State/Province |
|
|
• Alabama 3
• Arizona 2
• California 29
• Colorado 1
• D.C. 6
• Florida 12
• Georgia 3
• Hawaii 1
|
|
• Idaho 2
• Illinois 5
• Indiana 1
• Maryland 7
• Missouri 3
• Nevada 2
• New
Hampshire
1
• New
Jersey
1
|
|
• New
Mexico 1
• New
York 5
• North
Carolina 15
• Ohio 4
• Oklahoma 1
• Pennsylvania 4
• South
Carolina 2
• Tennessee 1
|
|
• Texas 2
• Virginia 10
• Washington 5
• Wisconsin 6
• Wyoming 3 |
|
|
Visit the AIA Career Center to view/post openings. You can sort
the complete list by keyword, category, job level, job type, and location. |
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
You receive this e-mail at:
%%merge recip.EmailAddr%%
because your address is on file in the AIA's membership database.
To change your e-mail address, send an e-mail
with your name, AIA member number, old e-mail address and new e-mail
address to AIA Information
Central. Or make
the changes yourself.
Note: If you are receiving this email at multiple
addresses and want only one, go into the email you want eliminated,
and use the link above.
To manage your entire list of AIA e-mail newsletters, use the online form here: www.aia.org/about_memberProfile. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Bone Up on Health-Care
Buildings: Building Basics
for Healthcare Facilities, by Richard L. Kobus, AIA; Ronald
L. Skaggs, FAIA;
Michael Bobrow, FAIA; Julia Thomas, and Thomas M. Payette, FAIA,
part of the series on specialized design projects, provides the
essential information needed to initiate designs for acute care
hospitals, clinics, long-term care facilities, and specialty
centers. The book lists for $69.95; AIA members may purchase
for $62.95. Order online or phone 800-242-3837, option #4.
Be a Leader: In the “Leadership:
Building Security, Sustainability, and Advocacy” eClassroom
Distance learning course, instructors Raymond T. Mellon, Esq.,
Hon. AIA; Barbara A. Nadel, FAIA; Ambassador Richard N. Swett,
FAIA; and Richard L. Tomasetti, PE, Hon. AIA, discuss how effective
leaders cultivate skills, talent, and knowledge to meet today's
challenges and prepare for tomorrow's opportunities. This course,
which offers 1.5 HSW CES credits, is available through August
4 at a 10-percent-off discounted price, $89.05 AIA members/$121.95
nonmembers (regular price: $98.95 AIA members/$134.95 nonmembers).
How Do I Modify AIA Contract
Documents? Have questions about modifying your AIA Contract
Documents? Go to the online Knowledge Base and select Content
of AIA Contract Documents/Using Documents /Modifying Documents for
answers to Frequently Asked Questions that are always available
to you and everyone else in your firm. Or type key words into
the search window to go directly to FAQs on your subject.
Free Summer Job Postings: Are
you looking for extra help in your office this summer? The AIA
Career Center again allows firms to post limited-time summer job
offers for free on its popular job board. Click “Post
Jobs” on the Employers page; log in if you are a regular
user, or register if you are new to the service; then enter all
relevant information. When you get to “Type” option,
be sure to check “Summer Job.” You will not be charged
for the listing. Offer runs through July 31. The AIA is working
with the American Institute of Architecture Students to get the
word out to candidates.
Yes, You Can Earn Credit! A
refresher course on the Self-Report Form.
Double Discount: During
July, Dell offers a double discount for
AIA members. Call 888-323-6062. Account code AIA; access key AIADELL99. Or
access your AIA Premier Dell.com Web site. Enter account code
AIA and access key AIADELL99 (case sensitive). Your AIA discount
automatically will be applied.
Free Continuing Education: After
reading the standards and other information on environmental issues
and products, references, and more in each MASTERSPEC topic, licensed
users can access online tests to earn AIA/CES learning-unit hours.
Integrated Practice: Technological
change is one catalyst accelerating radical improvement through
the entire construction industry, from owner to architect to contractor
to facility manager, through the full length of the project and
building lifecycle. Learn more about how this change will transform
architectural practice into Integrated
Practice at www.aia.org/ip.
Press Tap News Service: Reporters
from The Wall Street Journal to Michigan
Construction News have signed on to get full access to AIA’s
news service. Post your news today.
Cover Personal and Business
Expenses if Disability Strikes: The AIA Trust Personal
and Business Overhead Disability Plans will cover all your expenses
while you recuperate. Find
out more about this program. For more information about all
AIA Trust programs, go to their site.
|
|
|
|
|
|