News Archive

[02.16.07] Newsletter: Urban Hot Spots exhibit Rochester, Announcing Structures for Inclusion 7

  • 09 Feb 2011 9:35 AM
    Message # 518857
    Anonymous member (Administrator)
    “Urban Hot Spots”
    February 16 – May 25
         Opening Reception
         Friday, February 16, 2007, 6 – 9 PMwww.rrcdc.org


    RRCDC Design Gallery
    1115 East Main Street
    Rochester, NY 14609
    585-271-0520


    Gallery Hours:
    Monday – Friday, 9 AM – 5 PM


    What makes a city “hot”? What about its design helps attract and maintain a healthy and vibrant urban population? What types of physical development encourage a city’s success?


    The exhibition Urban Hot Spots explores urban areas that are economically and socially successful. Hot spots often share certain features in common – natural resources that are capitalized upon successfully; historic areas that are preserved and celebrated; successful transportation systems integrated into the overall city plan; and areas that have undergone decline but experience a successful rebirth.


    By highlighting development projects in these areas that contribute to their success, this exhibit illuminates creative solutions to urban design challenges and will hopefully help to inspire a sense of the possible in our local region. Urban Hot Spots exists as part of Reshaping Rochester!, a series of events and lectures highlighting exemplary urban design. For information on our other events, please check out

     

    STRUCTURES FOR INCLUSION 7
    April 13-15, 2007 | Charlotte, NC

    Design Corps is pleased to announce that its seventh offering in the Structures for Inclusion conference series will take place April 13-15, 2007, at the University of North Carolina Charlotte. Addressing the theme "High Impact: Positive Change Through Design/Build," SFI7 will focus on the growing interest in design/build as both an academic and a professional methodology.

    Design/build has offered an excellent venue for creating positive change through architecture as it encompasses both the idea and the execution, providing a tool for designers to take real and immediate action. What is being shown through realized examples is that design/build is relevant to many social, political, and environmental issues. The attention on this impact has led the profession to reassess its role, educators to re-evaluate their teaching models, and the public to reconsider the ways designers can contribute to the issues individuals face daily.

    With a focus on current case studies, SFI7 will provide students, educators, and other design professionals with informative examples of the best academic and practice-based projects. Case studies are selected to demonstrate exemplary and visionary techniques for executing design/build projects, providing a forum for learning, discussion and evolution of design/build. Presentations will include examples ranging from Katrina and tsunami disaster relief to political constructions and digital fabrication.
    SFI7 is being co-organized by the University of North Carolina Charlotte College of Architecture, and Design Corps, and will be held after

    CriticalMASS, an annual symposium hosted by the College of Architecture’s Master of Architecture Student Society (MASS) in the spring. Each year, CriticalMASS gathers professionals, faculty, and graduate students from various universities to participate in a focused discussion and critique of the architectural design and research generated within the southeastern region. This year’s invited critics and the keynote speakers are SHoP Architects.
    Complete details, including Registration and Travel information, can be found on the new Design Corps website at www.designcorps.org/sfi7.

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    Schedule

    Friday, April 13, 2007
    UNC Charlotte – College of Architecture, Storrs Hall
    9201 University City Blvd.

    6:30pm--CriticalMASS Speakers
    Christopher & William Sharples, SHoP Architects (New York, NY)

    Saturday, April 14, 2007
    UNC Charlotte – College of Architecture, Storrs Hall
    9201 University City Blvd.

    8:30-9:30amundefinedRegistration & Coffee

    9:30-10:00amundefinedIntroductory Speaker
    Steve Badanes, Univ. of Washington, College of Arch. & Urban Planning

    10:00am-12:00pm--Panel I: “Community/Activism”
    Panelists
    Heavy Trash (Los Angeles, CA)
    Patrick Rhodes & Ronald Lewis, Project Locus (New Orleans, LA)
    Tsunami Safe(R) House, SENSEable City Laboratory (Cambridge, MA)
    Scott Shall, International Design Clinic (Lafayette, LA)

    Moderator
    Linda Samuels, UNC Charlotte College of Architecture

    12:00-1:30pmundefinedCatered Lunch

    1:30-3:00pmundefinedPanel II: “Education”
    Panelists
    Phoebe Crisman, University of Virginia School of Architecture
    Jori Erdman, Clemson School of Architecture
    Nils Gore & Robert Corser, University of Kansas School of Architecture

    Moderator
    John Nelson, UNC Charlotte College of Architecture

    3:00-3:00pmundefinedBreak

    3:30-5:00pmundefinedPanel III: “Practice”
    Panelists
    Lori Ryker, Ryker/Nave Design (Livingston, MT)
    Vincent Petrarca, Tonic Design & Tonic Construction (Raleigh, NC)
    Luke Clark Tyler, Task Force for the Homeless (Atlanta, GA)

    Moderator
    Carrie Gault, UNC Charlotte College of Architecture

    5:00-6:00pmundefinedWrap-up and questions


    TBAundefinedPublic Reception

    Sunday, April 15, 2007
    Holiday Inn – Charlotte City Center
    230 North College Street

    9:00am-12:00pmundefinedBreakfast discussion and follow-up

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    For more information, visit http://www.designcorps.org/sfi7/ or email mailto:sfi@designcorps.org.

    www.reshapingrochester.com.
 
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