Podcasts about Architectural Review

Architectural Magazine

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Best podcasts about Architectural Review

Latest podcast episodes about Architectural Review

UCEM
BE Sustainable E11: Cementing climate catastrophe - with Martha Dillon

UCEM

Play Episode Listen Later May 28, 2025 33:55 Transcription Available


What is our action plan for phasing out concrete? Mike interviews Martha Dillon, writer and policy researcher, about her research into the use of concrete in construction. Why do we continue to use a material we know is harmful and exploitative? Listen to the podcast via: - Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/ucem/id1524980861- Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/3Czk2mZlZmknjUZfwLmLTa- YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/universitycollegeofestatemanagement The topics discussed in this episode include:The environmental, health, ecological and political impact of concreteWhy are we so reliant on concrete?Why can't we just ban concrete?Are there more viable sustainable alternatives to concrete? Guest Martha DillonMartha Dillon is a writer and policy researcher specialising in housing, land and the climate crisis. She graduated from the University of Cambridge with a Master's in Civil and Environmental Engineering, before starting her own critically-acclaimed print magazine, It's Freezing in LA!, and working in policy and research roles at the Greater London Authority, think tanks and Buro Happold Engineering. She writes regularly for the Architectural Review and Architect's Journal, and currently works at C40 Cities, a global network of 96 major cities.

Charlottesville Community Engagement
Podcast for May 25, 2025: City Council candidate forum, Sanders explains how he wants to spend $5.4 million from surplus, and an important day at the BZA

Charlottesville Community Engagement

Play Episode Listen Later May 25, 2025 34:14


Congratulations! You're about to listen to the latest edition of Charlottesville Community Engagement! All you have to do is hit the play button and you'll be able to hear several stories about what's happening in local and regional government. Many of the stories that go out in this newsletter are produced in a manner that allows people to listen, using the voices of people who are in the stories! This is not a new concept, but this is a necessary paragraph to get me to the point where I say I'm Sean Tubbs, and this is what I seem to do.Programming note: This should have gone out on Friday afternoon but there were complications and I decided to produce this on Sunday. The Week Ahead will likely come out on Monday and back to regular programming on Tuesday.In this edition:* Three candidates for two Democratic nominations for City Council address Greenbrier neighborhood (read the story)* Charlottesville City Manager Sam Sanders provides updates on how FY24 surplus might be spent ahead of June 2 vote (read the story)* Charlottesville Board of Architectural Review denies request to demolish 1301 Wertland Street (learn more)* Charlottesville's Board of Zoning Appeals upholds an administrative modification for a 24-unit development on Barracks Road (C-Ville Weekly version)First shout-out: Rivanna River Otter MonitoringHave you seen a river otter lately? The Rivanna Conservation Alliance wants to know! The group is conducting a study of the presence of Lontra canadensis. The creatures have been spotted throughout the Rivanna River watershed—in rivers, streams, and even backyard ponds!While they're best known for their playful antics, river otters are also important indicators of stream health. They depend on clean water, healthy riparian buffers, and abundant prey sources (including fish, amphibians, and benthic macroinvertebrates) for survival. As such, their presence or absence within our waterways can provide valuable insights into the overall health of our rivers and streams.To learn more, the Rivanna Conservation Alliance has launched the Rivanna River Otter Monitoring Project to gather valuable data on river otter populations while encouraging community members to get outside and explore our local waterways. This project aims not only to inspire public appreciation for river otters, but also foster a deeper community connection to our rivers and streams and the diverse wildlife populations they support.To learn more and consider a donation, please visit the Rivanna Conservation Alliance.Second-shout out: Cville VillageCan you drive a neighbor to a doctor's appointment? Change an overhead lightbulb, plant a flower, walk a dog for someone who is sick, visit someone who is lonely? If so, Cville Village needs you!Cville Village is a local 501c3 nonprofit organization loosely affiliated with a national network of Villages whose goals are to help seniors stay in their own homes as long as possible, and to build connections among them that diminish social isolation. Volunteers do small chores for, and have gatherings of, professors and schoolteachers, nurses and lawyers, aides and housekeepers. Time and chance come to all – a fall, an order not to drive, failing eyesight, a sudden stroke. They assist folks continue living at home, with a little help from their friends.Cville Village volunteers consult software that shows them who has requested a service and where they are located. Volunteers accept only the requests that fit their schedule and their skills.Volunteering for Cville Village can expand your circle of friends and shower you with thanks.To learn more, visit cvillevillage.org or attend one of their monthly Village “meet-ups” and see for yourself. To find out where and when the next meetup is, or to get more information and a volunteer application, email us at info@cvillevillage.org, or call them at (434) 218-3727. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit communityengagement.substack.com/subscribe

Scaffold
117: Dima Srouji

Scaffold

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 13, 2025 62:26


Dima Srouji is a Palestinian architect, artist, and researcher born in 1990 in Nazareth. She holds a Bachelor of Architecture from Kingston University (2012) and a Master of Architecture from the Yale School of Architecture (2016). ​Srouji's interdisciplinary practice explores the ground as a repository of cultural narratives and potential collective healing. She employs various media—including glass, text, archives, maps, plaster casts, and film—to interrogate concepts of cultural heritage and public space, particularly within the Middle East and Palestine. Her collaborative approach involves working closely with archaeologists, anthropologists, sound designers, and glassblowers. ​In 2016, Srouji founded Hollow Forms, a glassblowing initiative in collaboration with the Twam family in Jaba', Palestine, aiming to revitalize traditional glassblowing techniques. Her work has been exhibited internationally, including at the Victoria & Albert Museum in London, the Corning Museum of Glass in New York, the Sharjah Art Biennial, the Islamic Art Biennial in Jeddah, and the Contemporary Arts Center in Cincinnati. Her pieces are part of permanent collections at institutions such as the Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam and the Victoria & Albert Museum. ​Srouji has contributed to academic discourse through her writings in publications like The Architectural Review and The Avery Review. She currently leads the MA City Design studio at the Royal College of Art in London, focusing on archaeological sites in Palestine as contexts for urban analysis. ​In recognition of her contributions to art and architecture, Srouji was awarded the Jameel Fellowship at the Victoria & Albert Museum for 2022-2023. ​Through her multifaceted work, Srouji challenges conventional narratives, offering new perspectives on cultural heritage and identity within contested spaces.​Support the Architecture Foundation – visit https://www.patreon.com/ArchitectureFoundation to find out how. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Charlottesville Community Engagement
Podcast for November 30, 2024: Albemarle Supervisors briefed on five-year financial forecast, UVA Foundation seeks firms to build 600 units at North Fork, and four other stories

Charlottesville Community Engagement

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 30, 2024 44:20


As promised four weeks ago, this is the fifth Saturday of November. Or at least, this podcast edition of Charlottesville Community Engagement is being produced on November 30. Every week I write over two dozen stories but only some of them are converted into audio versions both for this feed and for WTJU-FM. Most of those stories also end up being added to Information Charlottesville, the archival companion to this Substack feed. I'm Sean Tubbs, and I put this together for many reasons but a love of audio production is at the top of the list.Here's what's in the edition for the final Saturday of this month:* Albemarle Supervisors briefed on potential revenue gap in five-year financial work session (learn more)* The UVA Foundation seeks firms to build 600 units of mixed-income housing at North Fork (learn more)* Albemarle Planning Commission recommends denial of a “public garage” in Keene (learn more)* Charlottesville's Board of Architectural Review wants a different design for a proposed hotel for 218 W. Market Street (learn more)* The director of the Rivanna Solid Waste Authority RSWA director briefs officials on some of the challenges facing the disposal industry including a dwindling amount of landfill space (learn more)* Charlottesville using ranked-choice voting to select name for holiday tree (learn more)First shout-out: Shout-outs on Town Crier Productions!When I went back to journalism in 2020, I started a Patreon account as one way to figure out how to pay my bills. For years I had the idea of producing something that sounded like a public radio show, and I decided to offer “shout-outs” to those who were in the $25 a month tier.That's why you read or hear brief spots for WTJU, the Rivanna Conservation Alliance, Plant Virginia Natives, and other entities that opted for that tier. Over the years I've expanded this and those who pay more than $200 a year through Substack also get a shout-out.In 2025, I plan to shake up the system a little as I try to bring in more revenue to help grow Town Crier Productions as a business. I don't have anything to offer just yet, but I'm interested in hearing from businesses and organizations that might want to help support the work and reach a growing audience. So, drop me a line and let's build the community together!Second shout-out: Cvillepedia!Cvillepedia is an online encyclopedia that anyone can edit, and this second shout-out today is to provide a little bit about what I know. I helped create the website back in the late 2000's as a way of keeping track of all of the stories being written for the nonprofit news organization I worked for at the time.Now Cvillepedia is hosted by the Jefferson-Madison Regional Library under the stewardship of the Albemarle Charlottesville Historical Society. There are over 6,500 articles and we need volunteers to help keep it up to date and to capture more of this community's history, present, and future.One of those articles is November 30 and there's a list of some things that happened today:* 1897 – Charlottesville City Council holds a special meeting to discuss supplementing the area's water supply and they agreed to sell $35,000 worth of bonds to finance improvements. [1]* 1899 – The last Thanksgiving of the century was held on the final day of the month. [2]* 1903 – A special meeting of the Charlottesville City Council takes place and City Engineer C.L. DeMott comments that the city is run by the street railway company. Mayor J. Samuel McCue said that might have been true of a different Council. [3]* 1905 – President Theodore Roosevelt traveled through Charlottesville on his way to Pine Knot. [4]* 1925 – Planning continues for the 100th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence with Charlottesville hoping to take the lead. [5]* 2010 – Kick-off meeting for Belmont Bridge replacement at CitySpace. [6][7]There's so much more to had and so many sources to cite. If you're interested in helping out, drop me a line and I'll put you in touch with someone at the ACHS. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit communityengagement.substack.com/subscribe

A is for Architecture
Jessica Kelly: The architect and the architectural press.

A is for Architecture

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 2, 2024 53:02


Episode 125 of A is for Architecture is a conversation with historian Dr Jessica Kelly, Reader in Design and Architectural History at London Metropolitan University. We discuss her 2022 book, No More Giants: J.M. Richards, Modernism and The Architectural Review, published by Manchester University Press. It's an interesting story, one that mirrors the development of the profession, and perhaps even produces it to some extent. As Jess says, 'I think Richards, although he would completely align himself, and he writes about being a modernist and seeing that as the future of architecture, he is also quite invested in the figure of the architect and the expertise of the architectural profession as a cultural elite, as a sort of guiding figure within society. And he wants to promote that the magazine is invested in promoting the profession, because as much as the Architectural Review is, as it's been described, a mouthpiece for modernism, and really does feature modernism a lot, it features a lot of other stuff as well. [there is] very much a plurality of conversations happening in [it]. […] I think for Richard and his circle and network of people, there is an overlap between [ideology and business and] the idea of whether someone's a consumer or a citizen blurs together in quite an interesting way. And for Richards and his contemporaries, their main objective is to get a public audience for what they understand to be the future of architecture.' Jessica can be found on the London Met website, and the book is linked above.   Thanks for listening. +  Music credits: ⁠Bruno Gillick

Available Worldwide
Purvi Gandhi Irwin | Design Technology Consultant

Available Worldwide

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 7, 2024 35:11


Purvi Gandhi Irwin works in a job that didn't exist when she entered her career field as a preservation project architect. She's a design tech consultant working with 3D modeling software and was recently hired by Overseas Building Operations (OBO). In our interview, Purvi shares questionable choices in high school, how her career has evolved, her special connection to the bathroom tiles in Eastern Market, and how she's managed to maintain a successful career as her family moves around the world. We also discuss ideas for a new podcast that she'd be great at! .BIOPurvi has spent the last 9 years supporting architects, interior architects, and engineers with their design technology needs at Shifted Paradigm Design. This includes teaching a 3D modeling software called Revit, creating digital content, developing workflows and standards, troubleshooting issues, and finding creative solutions to both design and modeling problems.With over 25 years of design experience, most spent as a preservation project architect, Purvi specialized in using innovative technologies to facilitate the documentation and rehabilitation of institutional buildings, and 16+ years of Revit experience working with existing buildings (most historic), from conceptual design, through construction administration and project close-out.She recently joined the DOS Bureau of Overseas Buildings Operations and is working in a DETO position as her husband is an FSO. Purvi is a registered architect with degrees in Architecture and Historic Preservation and was a 10-year board member on the Alexandria, Virginia Board of Architectural Review.Additionally, she has presented at a variety of conferences and webcasts around the world and has also been involved in DEIA-related initiatives in both the design fields and in her community. She is a Girl Scout leader, an avid crafter, and loves to travel in her free time.Connect with Purvi:https://shiftedparadigm.wixsite.com/spdesignhttps://www.linkedin.com/in/purviirwinhttps://x.com/BIMchiq.This episode is sponsored by U.S. History for ExpatsCalling all parents! U.S. History for Expats has U.S. history courses forming right now. Did you know that all 50 states require U.S. history in middle school and 40 states require a U.S. history for graduation? Don't let your children miss out.U.S. History for Expats has an elementary, middle, and high school program to fit your needs. This year, in grades 1-4 we are introducing ‘live' biweekly activities in addition to the Studies Weekly program. Our accredited middle school and high school classes have been designed specifically for the children of American diplomats and cover the entire spectrum of U.S. history using the most recent Virginia Standards of Learning.What makes us different? We provide tons of feedback, unlimited support, and we are the first EFM-owned program to be accredited. Using experience from teaching in seven international schools, we fill in the gaps your international school might be missing.Sign up for a course or an information session by visiting www.ushistoryforexpats.com today. And don't forget, all of our classes can be 100% reimbursed using the Supplemental Instructional Allowance.

Stories of -Esses
Episode 18- Lillian Gilbreth: Revolutionizing Industrialism

Stories of -Esses

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 9, 2024 29:57


Welcome to Stories of -Esses, your go-to channel for captivating tales and thought-provoking discussions! In today's video, join hosts Gaby and Dani as we delve into the mesmerizing story of Lilian Gilbreth.And that's it for today's podcast! Thank you all for listening. We're excited to kick off season 2 with this episode. If you have any suggestions or inquiries, you can contact us at info@storiesofesses.com. Follow us on Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, TikTok, and Pinterest!RESOURCES:An article by The Architectural Review about Lillian Moller Gilbrethhttps://www.architectural-review.com/essays/reputations/lillian-moller-gilbreth-1878-1972A paper from Starbucks: Customizing Beverages at Starbucks® Storeshttps://stories.starbucks.com/uploads/2020/08/Starbucks-Beverage-Health-and-Wellness-Fact-Sheet-August-2020.pdf

Charlottesville Community Engagement
Podcast edition for June 8, 2024: UVA Board of Visitors highlights, Fifth District candidate forum, and more

Charlottesville Community Engagement

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 8, 2024 33:18


Some time has passed since there was an audio edition of Charlottesville Community Engagement, a period of time that could be quantified in many ways. Yet, to those who listen at a point way past the one in which these words are written, mere seconds may have passed. This assumes that anyone is listening at all, and we all know what happens then. In this edition:* Charlottesville's Board of Architectural Review takes a first look at UVA's affordable housing project at 10th and Wertland (learn more)* Ridership continues to increase on Virginia's Amtrak routes (learn more)* Four of the five candidates in Fifth District primaries appear at Spring Creek forum (learn more)* A few highlights from the University of Virginia's Board of Visitors as they began their June meeting on Thursday (learn more)* And the UVA Foundation spends $10.5 million for three properties on Arlington Boulevard (learn more) This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit communityengagement.substack.com/subscribe

Charlottesville Community Engagement
May 4, 2024 podcast: Louisa County adopts a budget without funding for PVCC; Albemarle pursues rezoning for defense and research campus outside Rivanna Station

Charlottesville Community Engagement

Play Episode Listen Later May 4, 2024 30:09


Welcome to Charlottesville Community Engagement for May 4, 2024, a program that unfortunately has nothing to do with the fictional Star Wars universe and is less about a long time ago far far away and more about what's going on right now in the area in and around Charlottesville, Virginia. I'm Sean Tubbs, a local journalist who operates a fledgling information outlet called Town Crier Productions. What you're about to hear are some of the stories from just a little while ago. In today's edition:* Greene County Supervisors approve a two-cent decrease in the real estate tax rate and a three percent increase in the lodging tax rate (learn more)* Before adopting a budget, Louisa County Supervisors pull funding for Piedmont Virginia Community College due to the screening of a film on Palestinian independence (learn more)* A rezoning and special use permit that Albemarle County is seeking for its own property will go before the Planning Commission on May 14, less than two months after the application was filed (learn more)* Half of Charlottesville's Board of Architectural Review weigh in on a proposal for a hotel at 218 West Market Street in Downtown (learn more)* The University of Virginia wants to improve child care for its employees and seek a single firm to manage its four facilities plus a fifth that opens later this year (learn more)Early voting in the June 18 Virginia primary has begun (learn more)A word about the podcastThis newsletter got its start as a podcast. My career began at WVTF Public Radio back in 1995 as an intern. Back then, the news department produced a 15-minute local newscast with stories from municipalities across the listening area, combined with national stories read by the local announcer. That's gone now and has been for years. But back then, I learned how a news department put together enough resources to pull off a regular series of bulletins to inform the audience. I would go on to freelance for WVTF Public Radio and I created the Charlottesville Podcasting Network in 2005 to experiment with long-form audio. I stopped producing audio pieces around the time I went to work for Charlottesville Tomorrow in April 2007. I instead was directed to write articles about government issues. I still continued to work like a radio reporter, editing my stories in Audition but not actually producing them. I left Charlottesville Tomorrow in June 2018 when management changed, and I had an opportunity to try something different. I thought I would be able to continue to write at my new job, that didn't really turn out to the case. In January 2019, I experimented for a few weeks trying to see if I could pull together a daily newscast. I really wanted to get back to journalism as an independent reporter, but I needed a product. I didn't want to rely on freelance work, but wanted to create a way to get information out to people. These are all archived on Information Charlottesville, which had a different name when I initially experimenting. Go back and listen to the first one from January 1, 2019. There's no soundbites, and it's not the most interesting. Also notice there's no text, but I just found the script which ends with this quote:“I became a journalist to help bring people information about what they need to make their own decisions. That's a core value, and one that's helped me build trust with people throughout my career. I hope as you listen to this, you'll learn a lot more about the world around you. Thanks for listening. “ The podcast has been on hiatus due to a series of factors, the most important of which is that I'm focused on making sure I can get a version to WTJU 91.1 FM for Saturday morning. I also lost confidence in my recording set-up and am still trying to figure out how to engineer that back into the work flow. I view all of this as an experiment, an experiment funded by those who want to keep it going. I am a one-person information outlet capable of covering a great deal of things. Thanks to Patreon supporters and over 600 paid Substack subscribers, I'm able to constantly move forward in the hopes of creating more journalism. For now, the podcast will still be a separate product from the newsletter. Yet, I'm going to try to get two podcasts out a week. To make that more likely, perhaps I can find a sponsor? To make that more likely, perhaps I can find more volunteers who would like to learn audio production and journalism? Drop me a line if you have interest in either. Thanks for reading this bit that isn't in the podcast today. Also, tell people about it!To keep the experiment going, the audience needs to grow. Help that happen by telling people about it today! This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit communityengagement.substack.com/subscribe

Holy City Sinner Radio
Episode 248 - College Lodge Approved for Demolition; Griffin to be focus of hearing on 39 ethics allegations - (4/29/24)

Holy City Sinner Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 29, 2024 19:40


On today's show: 1. LiveWildFest Ticket link - www.livewildfest.com/tickets 2. MyLo & Holy City Sinner Photo Contest - https://mylonews.us.launchpad6.com/contest1 3. Board of Architectural Review approves demolition of College Lodge - https://www.live5news.com/2024/04/25/board-architectural-review-approves-demolition-college-lodge/ 4. Griffin to be focus of hearing on 39 ethics allegations - https://charlestoncitypaper.com/2024/04/26/griffin-to-be-focus-of-hearing-on-39-ethics-allegations/ 5. Saturday fire damages Mount Pleasant Seafood - https://www.counton2.com/news/local-news/crews-responding-to-fire-at-mount-pleasant-seafood/ 6. The Edge Tattoo Studio - https://theedgetattooji.com/ 7. Jack's Cosmic Dogs - https://www.jackscosmicdogs.com/ 8. Charleston Crab Shack - https://www.crabshacks.com/ This episode's music is by Tyler Boone (tylerboonemusic.com). The episode was produced by LMC Soundsystem.

Morning, Y'all!
Morning, Y'all! April 25, 2024

Morning, Y'all!

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 25, 2024 16:40


Top headlines for April 25, 2024:Median causing controversy in Summerville area sparking multiple concerns1 fired, 1 retired: Documents show changes within SC State campus policeN. Charleston woman says complaints about Section 8 home have gone unanswered Man found guilty of murdering Mount Pleasant woman in 2019Berkeley Co. faces doubled or dropped insurance after low ratings for fire dept.Charleston could lose almost 40 acres of wetlands to I-526 extensionBoard of Architectural Review approves demolition of College LodgeU.S. Customs intercepts stolen cars from leaving Charleston, Savannah Seaports

Architectural History
Architecture and Media - An Introduction

Architectural History

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 9, 2024 26:05


In this episode we introduce the theme of our miniseries, architecture and media. We talk about our own research interests and what the study of media, in all its various forms, has to offer architectural history.  Jessica Kelly's book about modern architecture and the media is called No More Giants: J.M. Richards, The Architectural Review and modernism and is published by Manchester University Press (2022), find out more about Jessica's research here: https://www.londonmet.ac.uk/profiles/staff/jessica-kelly/ Matthew Lloyd Roberts is a PhD student working on the cultural reception of architecture in late seventeenth- and early eighteenth-century Britain, details here: ⁠https://csca.aha.cam.ac.uk/roberts-phd/⁠ Matthew writes about architecture for a variety of publications and produces the podcast About Buildings and Cities. For more information about the SAHGB, their programme of events, publications and grants and to join the society, see their website at https://www.sahgb.org.uk/

Charlottesville Community Engagement
February 8, 2024: Council approves city's purchase above-market purchase of CRHA-owned property

Charlottesville Community Engagement

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 8, 2024 26:09


Ordinarily we could say that February 8th marks the beginning of the second quarter for this particularly-shaped month, but we're in one of those years with an extra day.How are your plans to mark Leap Year shaping up? Would you support an alternate plan to make that extra rotation its own special month, and if so, what would it be called? This assemblage of information is called Charlottesville Community Engagement and I'm called Sean Tubbs, and this is called the last sentence of the intro. On today's show:* City Council holds the second reading on a resolution authorizing the purchase of 405 Levy Avenue from the Charlottesville Redevelopment and Housing Authority and the amount authorized increased since the first reading* The General Assembly catch-up session continues with a list of continued bills * The Board of Architectural Review takes a look at a speculative project on West Main Street on property that has since been listed for sale This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit communityengagement.substack.com/subscribe

Deconstructing Dallas
Critical Thoughts on Architecture with DMN's Mark Lamster

Deconstructing Dallas

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 2, 2023 40:10


As Season 6 draws to a close, and they guys prepare to celebrate a podcasting milestone, Mark Lamster joins the show.Mark Lamster is the architecture critic for The Dallas Morning News and Loeb Fellow of the Harvard Graduate School of Design. His 2018 biography, The Man in the Glass House, about the late architect Philip Johnson, whose memorial to President Kennedy is located in downtown Dallas, was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award for Biography.He is the author of several books and has been a contributing editor to Architectural Review, Design Observer, and ID and writes often for Architect, Architectural Record, and Metropolis, among other design titles. His work has appeared frequently in national publications and magazines, including the New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, and the Wall Street Journal. Lamster is a native of New York City and holds degrees from Johns Hopkins (BA), and Tufts (MA).World Series talk ensues, as Shawn and Ryan don't know what we now know. (no spoilers).@marklamsterwww.marklamster.com/

A is for Architecture
Charlotte Skene Catling: From geoarcheology to architecture.

A is for Architecture

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 18, 2023 67:25


In episode 6/ 3 of A is for Architecture, architect, writer, teacher and researcher, Charlotte Skene Catling talks about her practice Skene Cailtling de la Peña, which she founded in 2003 with Jaime de la Peña. The practice's work has been widely published and to considerable critical acclaim, blending as it does context, occupation/ use, earth, soil, sedimentation and historic records, in a process they term geoarchaeology. The term has academic connotations, and how this is actualized in Skene Catling de la Peña's practice is worth hearing told. It particularly fascinating where it touches on Aino and Alvar Aalto's Toppila silo in Oulu, Finland, which they are turning into a regenerative/ cultural space with the Factum Foundation. You can find Charlotte all over the internet. She wrote a column for the Architectural Review, Domus and The Burlington Magazine, teaches at the London School of Architecture, Instagrams and LinkedIns. There's a lovely article at Drawing Matter on The Dairy House, excerpted from Françoise Astorg Bollack's Material Transfers: Metaphor, Craft, and Place in Contemporary Architecture, published by  Monacelli Press in 2020. Have a look at Flint House, which was the RIBA House of the Year 2015, and is covered most stylishly in this Architectural Review vid. Deep stuff. Subterranean, even... Available on Spotify, iTunes, Google Podcasts and Amazon Music. Thanks for listening. + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + Music credits: Bruno Gillick + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + aisforarchitecture.org Apple: podcasts.apple.com Spotify: open.spotify.com Google: podcasts.google.com Amazon: music.amazon.co.uk

Radio Carrum
Radio Architecture With Ilana Razbash - Episode 13 (Nikita Bhopti)

Radio Carrum

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 1, 2023 59:02


This week on 'Radio Architecture with Ilana Razbash', Ilana's special guest is NIKITA BHOPTI. Nikita Bhopti is a project architect at Sibling Architecture, a writer, and curator. With experience across public, arts and residential projects, Nikita enjoys the intimate details within architecture, finding joy in the one-to-one nature of things that we contribute to the built environment. Through her freelance writing, Nikita actively engages with various art and design publications such as Architecture Media, Yellowtrace, Architectural Review, and Est. Living, and is on the editorial team for Architect Victoria. She is actively involved in curating industry events via her work with the Australian Institute of Architects' EmAGN committee, and her former role as Lead Curator and Secretary of New Architects Melbourne.

The Tea Leaves Podcast
Chat Chuenrudeemol on "Bangkok Bastards" and Finding Beauty in Everyday Architecture

The Tea Leaves Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 22, 2023 33:40


Chatpong "Chat" Chuenrudeemol is the Principal and Founder of CHAT Architects, a Bangkok-based research and design practice, as well as CHAT Lab, a think tank that aims to discover new Thai vernacular typologies. In 2020, Chat received the Silpathorn award from Thailand's Ministry of Culture – the country's most prestigious award for contemporary artists. His architectural works have won Architectural Review's AR House Awards, the Architecture Masterprize in 2021, and a Building of the Year Award in the Asia-Pacific region. He was previously a Partner at Bangkok Architectural Research and an Architect at the Boston-based NADAAA. Chat has taught architecture at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), the National University of Singapore, Taylor University, and Chulalongkorn University. He holds a bachelor's degree in architecture from the University of California, Berkeley, and a master's degree from Harvard University's Graduate School of Design.

New Books in Art
Bleak Houses: Disappointment and Failure in Architecture

New Books in Art

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 1, 2023 18:26


The usual history of architecture is a grand narrative of soaring monuments and heroic makers. But it is also a false narrative in many ways, rarely acknowledging the personal failures and disappointments of architects. In Bleak Houses, Timothy Brittain-Catlin investigates the underside of architecture, the stories of losers and unfulfillment often ignored by an architectural criticism that values novelty, fame, and virility over fallibility and rejection. As architectural criticism promotes increasingly narrow values, dismissing certain styles wholesale and subjecting buildings to a Victorian litmus test of “real” versus “fake,” Brittain-Catlin explains the effect this superficial criticality has had not only on architectural discourse but on the quality of buildings. The fact that most buildings receive no critical scrutiny at all has resulted in vast stretches of ugly modern housing and a pervasive public illiteracy about architecture. Timothy Brittain-Catlin is Senior Lecturer at the new Kent School of Architecture, University of Kent. His writing has appeared in The World of Interiors, Architectural Review, and many other publications. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/art

New Books in Architecture
Bleak Houses: Disappointment and Failure in Architecture

New Books in Architecture

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 29, 2023 18:26


The usual history of architecture is a grand narrative of soaring monuments and heroic makers. But it is also a false narrative in many ways, rarely acknowledging the personal failures and disappointments of architects. In Bleak Houses, Timothy Brittain-Catlin investigates the underside of architecture, the stories of losers and unfulfillment often ignored by an architectural criticism that values novelty, fame, and virility over fallibility and rejection. As architectural criticism promotes increasingly narrow values, dismissing certain styles wholesale and subjecting buildings to a Victorian litmus test of “real” versus “fake,” Brittain-Catlin explains the effect this superficial criticality has had not only on architectural discourse but on the quality of buildings. The fact that most buildings receive no critical scrutiny at all has resulted in vast stretches of ugly modern housing and a pervasive public illiteracy about architecture. Timothy Brittain-Catlin is Senior Lecturer at the new Kent School of Architecture, University of Kent. His writing has appeared in The World of Interiors, Architectural Review, and many other publications. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/architecture

SCREAM* PODCAST
Fernando Marroquin x Héctor Mijangos | SCREAM* | Ep 13

SCREAM* PODCAST

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 12, 2023 35:44


EP13 FERNANDO MARROQUIN Fotógrafo y amante de las imágenes desde que era niño, Fernando creció entre cámaras. A los doce años se trasladó a la Ciudad de México con su familia, donde aprendió de teatro, museos y arquitectura. Marroquin trabajó en Barcelona y Londres, asistiendo a varios fotógrafos de moda reconocidos hasta su regreso al país donde terminó de asentar su carrera independiente. Desde entonces, su trabajo ha aparecido en publicaciones como Architectural Digest, W Magazine, Architectural Review, Harper's Bazaar, Vogue, Elle, Esquire, GQ, y i-D, así como en la industria de la publicidad con campañas para agencias como Publicist, BBDO, TBWA, Walter Thomson y más. Tras 15 años en la Ciudad de México, Marroquin se mudó a San José, Baja California donde disfruta de la tranquilidad, la calma y la creatividad.

Streetsweeper
Episode 19: Who Sweeps the Sweepers?

Streetsweeper

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 4, 2023 74:34


In episode 19, we take petty revenge on The Architectural Review who done stole our logo definitely probably. We ruthlessly critique their labour issue and it turns out it's kinda alright. Our broom is still bigger than theirs. And redder. Intro Music: 'A Ya Ya (Who Dat)' - Ghetto Mezikanz https://soundcloud.com/djdice_chicago/a-ya-ya-who-dat-ghetto

Charlottesville Community Engagement
March 27, 2023: CvilleBioHub gets $100,000 in state grant for CvilleBioLab; Information about two future buildings in Charlottesville

Charlottesville Community Engagement

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 27, 2023 15:57


March 27 is apparently National Joe Day, which means that is the day I introduce myself as Sean Joseph Tubbs, the host of Charlottesville Community Engagement. On any given day, there are a lot of things to celebrate, commemorate, and honor and this introduction could cite any one of them. For today's introduction, I choose National Joe Day to honor my father, Joe Tubbs, though now I suspect he'll expect payment just for mentioning his name. On today's program:* Charlottesville City Council may consider a zoning amendment to allow a mixed-use project on Ivy Road to proceed* The Charlottesville Board of Architectural Review took a look at a new hotel proposed for West Main Street* The CvilleBioHub has been awarded $100,000 for a new wetlab This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit communityengagement.substack.com/subscribe

charlottesville buildings architectural review national joe day charlottesville city council charlottesville community engagement
Charlottesville Community Engagement
February 17, 2023: Nelson County Supervisors briefed on Route 151 study; LaPisto-Kirtley running for re-election but may face an independent candidate in November

Charlottesville Community Engagement

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 17, 2023 21:45


Readers and listeners of Charlottesville Community Engagement have many choices when it comes to what ersatz holiday to appreciate. Perhaps you are of the National Cabbage Day variety? Or perhaps you want to explore the world around you on this National Public Science Day? Do remember also it is Random Act of Kindness Day. Finally, Who Shall I Be Day? Well, I'll be Sean Tubbs with yet another edition of a program that shall now move on to the information. On today's show:* Nelson County Supervisors are briefed on a study of a section of Route 151 south of Afton * The Virginia Department of Transportation has temporarily closed a roadway in northern Albemarle County * Various updates from members of the Charlottesville Planning Commission, including an explanation of the Board of Architectural Review's PC r* Albemarle Supervisor Bea LaPisto-Kirtley is running for election and at least one candidate has filed to challenge whoever becomes the Democratic nominee in the fall  This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit communityengagement.substack.com/subscribe

Archisearch Talks
Ivi Diamantopoulou & Jaffer Kolb. New Affiliates. Green Talks.

Archisearch Talks

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 31, 2022 48:29


Today our guests are Ivi Diamantopoulou and Jaffer Kolb of New Affiliates an architecture practice working between Athens and New York. Ivi Diamantopoulou is a graduate of Princeton University, where she was awarded the Suzanne Kolarik Underwood Prize for excellence in design and the Stanley J. Seeger fellowship; and a Diploma with honors graduate of Architecture and Engineering from the University of Patras, Greece. She is a registered architect in NY and Greece, with over a decade of experience in design and built work. Ivi frequently teaches design, history and theory of architecture, among others at Columbia and Syracuse Universities. Jaffer Kolb is a graduate of Princeton University, with a Master of Urban Planning from the London School of Economics, and a Bachelor of Arts in Film Studies from Wesleyan University. Jaffer worked on the 13th Architecture Biennale of Venice under David Chipperfield and was the US editor for the Architectural Review. Jafer teaches at Yale School of Architecture and Columbia GSAPP. Ivi and Jaffer joined us as speakers at the ESO Conference in June in Athens, Greece organized by Vasilis.

The Engineers Collective
Designing to create space rather than a building is key to regeneration

The Engineers Collective

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 28, 2022 38:56


Concept design of a timber high rise building in Oslo is attracting both awards and attention globally for its sustainable regeneration potential, even without firm plans to put the proposal into construction.   The masterminds behind the Regenerative Highrise scheme are Haptic Architects director Tomas Stokke and Ramboll director Ollie Wildman who join NCE editor Claire Smith to talk through the new approach and how other projects are looking to copy the idea. Both Tomas and Ollie call for greater consideration of the ability of tall buildings – in the right place – as a means to meet urbanisation without creating urban sprawl. They both suggest that cities need to consider vertical masterplanning in the same way they create horizontal masterplans but they also believe new buildings need to more carefully plan for future use.   The Oslo project, which recently won the Tall Building category at NCE's sister title Architectural Review's Future Projects Awards, is a concept to regenerate a socially challenging site in central Oslo. Ollie describes it as a concept to create conversation. As well as addressing the site's existing issues, the future-proofed design aims to create a building that can be adapted to meet future needs rather than being demolished and rebuilt after a few decades. The structure also features a range of materials, including major use of timber. Tomas talks about the need to focus on the ground floor interaction with the surrounding area in order to deliver on regeneration, explaining that we can't look at buildings in isolation and calls for them to be considered in context of the local environment. The Oslo design features three “ground floor levels” – one facing onto a road viaduct, another onto a river frontage and the third connects with public transport links.   Ollie then goes onto explain the structural design that allows for floor heights and layouts to be changed in the future to adapt to changing needs over the building's lifespan. In doing so he calls for more focus on creating space and less on designing buildings. “Without a single end use in mind, it becomes about creating space,” he said.

Detailed: An original podcast by ARCAT
24: Perforated Metal Panels | Six Hundred West Main

Detailed: An original podcast by ARCAT

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 26, 2022 37:47


In this episode, Cherise is joined by Jeff Dreyfus, Principal and Whitney Hudson, Project Architect from Bushman Dreyfus Architects in Charlottesville, Virginia. Jeff and Whitney share their insights into their recent work on Six Hundred West Main, an urban mixed-use project in Charlottesville, VA. The new building has 53 apartments, an art gallery, lobby, courtyard, underground parking and retail space. The building is built next to two renovated historic buildings that house a locally-famous diner and a wine shop with offices and apartments above. Six Hundred consists of various steel textures on the façade, a concrete structure for the parking and ground floor levels, and wood frame construction above. To see project photos and details discussed, visit https://www.arcat.com/podcast (arcat.com/podcast) This project provided unique challenges and opportunities - a Special Use Permit was required for increased density, the historic district and adjacent existing structures prompted a design review process with the local Board of Architectural Review through to project completion, the owners - a married team of developer and artist - pushed for a forward-thinking urban apartment building that contrasted the historic district, and much more. If you enjoy this show, you can find similar content at https://gablmedia.com/ (Gābl Media).

Charlottesville Community Engagement
August 25, 2022: Fifth/Avon group gets first look at 145-acre Sieg development proposal; Charlottesville panel approves demolition for downtown building

Charlottesville Community Engagement

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 25, 2022 21:30


On today’s series of segments:The Thomas Jefferson Planning District Commission schedules two meetings to address the sale of their buildings, and possible changes to a Smart Scale project at Hydraulic and 29 Charlottesville’s Board of Architectural Review approves demolition of a building on West Market StreetThe end of the Jefferson-Madison Regional Library’s Summer Reading Challenge is nearAlbemarle’s Fifth and Avon Community Advisory Committee gets a first look at a 145 acre development whose size could depend on what transportation infrastructure gets built Sign up for free and you will get a lot of information about infrastructure, housing, and more. Pay for a subscription, and you’ll help guarantee the info flows for years to come! This is a public episode. If you’d like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit communityengagement.substack.com/subscribe

Charlottesville Community Engagement
August 24, 2022: City design panel denies metal grates for Mall fountains; Charlottesville releases policy to incentivize below-market housing

Charlottesville Community Engagement

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 24, 2022 17:35


On today’s show:Charlottesville Area Transit to receive grant from Virginia Department of Rail and Public Transportation to operate a pilot on-demand project in Albemarle CountyThe president of Mary Baldwin University will step down next JuneDetails on proposed rules to encourage creation of below-market housing units in Charlottesville Charlottesville’s Board of Architectural Review declines to allow the city’s Park and Recreation Department to install metal grates on the three fountains on the Downtown Mall This is a public episode. If you’d like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit communityengagement.substack.com/subscribe

Charlottesville Community Engagement
July 27, 2022: Rogers briefs City Council on how to spend $14.8M in ARPA funds; Two new members will join the city Planning Commission in September

Charlottesville Community Engagement

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 27, 2022 19:15


You can tell a lot about a person by what they think about the noise that emanates from the bagpipe, a woodwind instrument perhaps best associated with Scotland but with origins that might date back to the Hittite people from three thousand years ago. Even if are not a fan of the combination of melody and drone, July 27 is the day to appreciate this unique musical instrument. Perhaps this is the day you buy one for the enjoyment of your friends, family, and co-workers? I’m Sean Tubbs, and not a cent or shilling is being paid to Charlottesville Community Engagement by Big Bagpipe. Sign up to make sure each email finds its way to your inbox. Payment isn’t necessary but does tend to help keep the electrons flowing to make the work possible. On this version of the show:Charlottesville continues to prepare for a school year in which more students will not be able to catch a yellow school busTwo new members will soon join the Charlottesville Planning CommissionA former member of the Albemarle County Board of Supervisors has diedCharlottesville City Council hears from the interim City Manager on how $14.8 million in American Rescue Plan Act funding could be spent First shout-out is for LEAP’s new Thermalize Virginia program In today’s first Patreon-fueled shout-out: Have you been thinking of converting your fossil-fuel appliances and furnaces into something that will help the community reduce its greenhouse gas emissions? Your local energy nonprofit, LEAP,  has launched a new program to guide you through the steps toward electrifying your home. Thermalize Virginia will help you understand electrification and connect you with vetted contractors to get the work done and help you find any rebates or discounts. Visit thermalizeva.org to learn more and to sign up!  Preparations continue in Charlottesville for more to walk to school Classes begin for Charlottesville City Schools in four weeks and work continues to prepare for a year in which more students will not be eligible to get a ride on a school bus. A driver shortage has led the school system to expand walk zones that are still being finalized. “We are hoping to let families know this week about their current bus eligibility and whether they have a bus request on files,” reads an email update sent to parents interested parties on Monday. “This status update will tell families if their child is in a walk zone or eligible for the bus.”The notice also states that priority will be given to families living further away from schools. The actual bus assignments will be released in August. Last week, the city administration told City Council that staff is recommending using $500,000 from the city’s share of the American Rescue Plan Act to help pay for safety improvements. “We’ve added $500,000,” said interim City Manager Michael C. Rogers. “Higher amounts were suggested. In talking with staff we believe that we have other funds in the budget that can actually exceed the amount that has been suggested in the past by some of the communications from people but this is a high priority area and we are offering that up for your consideration.” More on ARPA later in the newsletter. In their update, city schools say they are in conversations with the city, parents, and community members about sidewalks and intersections that need to be improved. Last week, Deputy City Manager Sam Sanders said the city government will follow the school system’s lead.“What we’re doing is working directly with schools and trying our best to make sure that their priorities are what we prioritize and what we do to help them through this process because we’re seeing this as everyone’s issue,” Sanders said. Sanders said the work to address safety concerns will continue past the first day of school. “And then to go beyond that and basically reboot our Safe Routes to School program,” Sanders said. “That’s what this is really synergized at this time by allowing all this focus on what we’ve been doing and what we’ve been talking about doing.” Sanders said there are also conversations with Albemarle about how to collaborate on pupil transportation for special needs students. The school system is also encouraging people to report problem locations using the MyCville app or by phoning 434-970-3333, option #2. Two other ways people can become involved are: Take a walk along a school route and make your observations known in a Google Doc created by the school systemApply to be a regular or substitute crossing guard or walking school bus leader - paid positionsThe school system will hold a final “walk and talk” this Friday at Mount Zion First African Baptist Church from noon to 2 p.m. There will also be an online Q&A session on August 10 at 5 p.m. (register)Council make two new appointments to Planning CommissionWhen the Charlottesville Planning Commission meets on September 13, two veterans of other advisory bodies will take their place at the makeshift dais in CitySpace. Carl Schwarz served two terms on the Board of Architectural Review from 2014 to the end of last year. He’s an architect in private practice who lives in the 10th and Page neighborhood. Phil d’Oronzio has been the chair of the Housing Advisory Council Committee since August 2014. He’s the CEO of Pilot Mortgage who lives in the Belmont neighborhood. The pair join three Planning Commissioner who were reappointed by Council at their meeting on July 18.“By some accident of history we wound up with five different Planning Commissioners whose terms expire on August 31, 2022,” said Charlottesville Mayor Lloyd Snook. By Virginia law, the seats have to be staggered so that terms don’t expire all at once. To make that work, they had to technically reconstitute the body and reappoint everyone, even those who terms were not yet.Commissioner Hosea Mitchell was appointed to Seat One for a term expiring on August 31, 2023. Mitchell served a partial term in the late 2000’s before rejoining the Commission in June 2018 to fill an unexpired term. He is retired from a career in the medical business. Commissioner Rory Stolzenberg was appointed to Seat Two also for a term expiring on August 31, 2023. Stolzenberg first joined the Commission in October 2018.  He’s a software engineer with Lumin. Seat Three will continue the appointment of Lyle Solla-Yates whose term expires at the end of August 2024. Solla-Yates has been on the Commission since March 2018 and is the current chair. He works for the University of Virginia School of Architecture. Commissioner Liz Russell will continue in Seat 4 with a term that also expires at the end of 2024. Russell has been on the Commission since September 2020. She’s the director of planning, sustainability, and project management at the Thomas Jefferson Foundation. Seat 5 will continue to be occupied by Commissioner Karim Habbab until August 31, 2025. Habbab was appointed in June 2021 and is an architect with BRW Architects. The terms of Schwarz (Seat 6) and d’Oronzio  (Seat 7) and Schwarz will expire on August 31, 2026. The reconstitution of the Planning Commission comes at a time when the city is rewriting the Charlottesville zoning code to increase density. That’s a major objective of both of the Affordable Housing Plan adopted in March 2021 and the Comprehensive Plan updated in November 2021. Former Albemarle Supervisor Cooke dies at 90 A woman who served two terms on the Albemarle County Board of Supervisors has died. Patricia Cooke was elected in 1981 to what used to be called the Charlottesville District and was re-elected in 1985. According to her obituary in the Daily Progress, Cooke graduated from Lane High School in 1950 and opened a laundry business with her husband in 1956. She also had a bridal and formal wear company. A funeral service will be held on Friday.The Charlottesville District became the Rio District at some point during the tenure of Cooke’s successor, David Bowerman. Bowerman served four terms until retiring the Board at the end of 2004. He passed away in March 2020 while he was a sitting member of the Albemarle County Board of Zoning Appeals. In today’s other two shout-outs Code for Charlottesville is seeking volunteers with tech, data, design, and research skills to work on community service projects. Founded in September 2019, Code for Charlottesville has worked on projects with the Legal Aid Justice Center, the Charlottesville Fire Department, and the Charlottesville Office of Human Rights. Visit codeforcville.org to learn about those projects. The final comes from another Patreon supporter who wants you to go out and read a local news story written by a local journalist. Whether it be the Daily Progress, Charlottesville Tomorrow, C-Ville Weekly, NBC29, CBS19, WINA, or some other place I’ve not mentioned - the community depends on a network of people writing about the community. Go learn about this place today!Council briefed on potential usage of ARPA funds Charlottesville has now received all of the $19.6 million in funding it will receive from the federal government as part of the American Rescue Plan Act fund. Interim City Manager Michael C. Rogers gave Council an update at their meeting on July 18.“It’s been a big help for local government in terms of recovery from the impact of the pandemic,” Rogers said. Council has already appropriated $4.81 million of the funding and has an unallocated balance of $14.8 million. Money spent so far went to four different categories recognized by the U.S. Department of the Treasury. Of that $14.8 million, $2.28 million was already designated for various uses during the development of the budget for the fiscal year that began on July 1. For the balance, Rogers suggested the following uses:For economic development:$750,000 to the Charlottesville-Albemarle Convention and Visitors Bureau to make up for revenue loss from decline in meals tax revenue. Albemarle County is also being asked to make the same contribution. $300,000 for improvements to the Downtown Mall coordinated with Friends of Downtown Cville. The Mall turns 50 in 2026 and Rogers said a task force may be formed to help mark that occasion and prepare for the next fifty years$100,000 for updates to wayfinding One million for a strategic investment fund for economic development$500,000 for the Meadow Creek Trail to close a gap for a VDOT-funded projectInternal uses:$829,000 for equipment replacement$200,000 for facilities repair$270,000 to augment the Human Resources including hiring a deputy director and a recruiter$200,000 to fund Council’s development of a new strategic planPublic safety: $1.4 million for additional COVID spending should future surges have a greater community health impact$1.1 million to help Charlottesville Fire Department with its accreditation, including hiring three more battalion chiefs for two years$450,000 to help retain personnel in the Charlottesville Fire Department$50,000 to help retain personnel for the Sheriff’s Office$500,000 for the “Safe Routes to School Fund” Human service support:$700,000 for the Emergency Assistance - Pathways program which would include additional rental assistance$1.63 million for affordable housing and homeless services$500,000 for the Community Health Initiative $1 million for the Agency Investment Fund $580,000 for Community Arts Investment$176,000 for the Office of Human Rights to hire an investigator to look into claims under the Fair Housing Act $40,000 for an emergency generator for a city shelter that would be used in major catastrophes The combined $2.63 million for affordable housing and the agency investment fund would be disbursed through a competitive process separate from the “Vibrant Community” process the city has used since 2019 to allocate funding for nonprofits. The Community Health Initiative would support public health projects.“Think of this funding as being available for a previously floated idea of the Community Care Team or something of that nature in order to do a really needed and wonderful pilot to see what would be the best support for our community,” said Deputy City Manager Ashley Marshall.Council was to have discussed a proposal for a Community Care Team at its meeting on February 7 but the item was pulled. The topic did come up as part of a Council work session on May 2. Councilor Brian Pinkston noted that additional on-going positions were being proposed to be created with the one-time ARPA money.“Hiring people with one-off type of funding is something we’re trying to be careful of,” Pinkston said. Rogers said those positions would be proposed to continue into the future and the city would have to find other funds to cover them. Councilor Michael Payne questioned the use of $750,000 to go to the CACVB. The city’s economic development director said the money would help the destination marketing organization with a current cash flow situation caused by the way it is funded. “There’s a two year lag in the funding cycles so the money wasn’t needed two years ago,” said Chris Engel. “It’s needed now because that cycle is playing through.”Council got a briefing on the CACVB in June and learned that the agency received $680,000 from ARPA that flowed through the Virginia Tourism Council. (read the story)“Given that state support I’m a little skeptical about how much is really needed for the CACVB as well as whatever specific measurable deliverables we will get for that investment,” Payne said.  Council will be asked to take action on the appropriations at its August 1 meeting. There’s also an additional $2.52 million for which Rogers has not made any suggestions for how it should be spent. “We look forward to our dialogue on this,” Rogers said. “This is meant to be a first start to set us on a direction to address some things we really need to address in the coming months and thought that these funds would be a good way to do it.” Thoughts? Leave a comment below. Housekeeping items for episode #412That’s another program in the archives, and in a few days you’ll be able to read these stories on the Information Charlottesville website I created to help me keep track of what I’m reporting. Want to read articles on land use in Charlottesville? Click here!What about infrastructure updates? Click here!How about climate action? Elections in Virginia? The archive grows each week!All of this is supported by readers and listeners under the Town Crier Productions company I formed two years ago and am still learning how to operate. I’m breaking even, but I’d very much like to find a way to grow. There are ways to do that!For one, if you sign up for a paid subscription through Substack, Ting will match your initial payment! And, if you sign up for their services through this link you’ll get a free standard install, your 2nd month free, and a $75 downtown mall gift card! Enter the promo code COMMUNITY for full effect. Music on the podcast version of the show comes from the D.C. sensation Wraki, and you can support their work by paying whatever you want for the album regret everything on BandCamp.My sincere hope today, though, is that someone will go and buy a bagpipe. If you do, please let me know. If you have one already, record yourself and send me the audio! Or any exotic instrument, really. This is a public episode. If you’d like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit communityengagement.substack.com/subscribe

ALL GOOD VIBES
Dong Gong - Vector Architects

ALL GOOD VIBES

Play Episode Listen Later May 6, 2022 42:22


Dong Gong, founder and Design Principal of Vector Architects, Beijing-based firm, one of the most interesting and authoritative figures among Chinese architects, globally applauded with important recognitions, is our guest in this podcast. After his Bachelor's and Master's at the Tsinghua University, he spent about seven years in US, for another Master of Architecture at the University of Illinois and working at the offices of Richard Meier and Steven Holl in New York. Practicing architect and academic educator, he has seen his extremely brilliant career acknowledged by prestigious local and international rewards. Elected as the Foreign Member of French Academy of Architecture in 2019, appointed as the Plym Distinguished Visiting Professor at University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, and Visiting Professor of Polytechnic University of Turin, Italy, he has been teaching design studios at Tsinghua University and Central Academy of Fine Arts since 2014. Guest speaker and critic at prominent academic and professional institutions around the world, he has been invited to various major exhibitions, including the first Chinese architecture exhibition at MoMA New York; the 2018 “FREESPACE” Venice Biennale. The firm has been awarded the “RIBA International Awards for Excellence” for two projects in the same year, 2021, “100+ Best Architecture Firms” selected by Domus (2019), nominated for the Swiss Architectural Award (2018); overall winner of“Archmarathon Awards” in 2016; and “Design Vanguard” selected by Architectural Record (2014) and the projects, collected as a monograph in the renowned architectural journal AV Monographs, have been widely published in Casabella, Arquitectura Viva, The New York Times, A+U, Detail, The Architectural Review, L'Architecture d'Aujourd'hui, Lotus, Domus and many others. Opportunity of the conversation is offered by the current exhibition at the MoMa, N.Y, dedicated to the new generation of independent Chinese architects Dong Gong belongs to, deepening the passionate commitment he has always demonstrated towards resource-consciousness and awareness of social and cultural traditional values, leading his own practice working independently from state-run design institutes. We dwell on his architecture of deceleration and more contemplation, against a too fast urbanisation that a decade ago has dramatically transformed a vernacular, familiar context into a generic, unemotional and alien environment and on the respectful attempt of his interventions seeking to guarantee continuity with the past, offering emotionally involving experiences for the people.Urban and natural landscapes have demonstrated his innate and attentive sensibility decoding and deciphering the energies of multiple, diverse sites: Suochengli Neighborhood Library, a regenerative intervention related to a typical Chinese courtyard-block, in the historical district of Yantai, a port city in northern China, is an evident testimony of revitalization, based on a brilliant dialogue reactivated between past and present. The Captain's House, famous, award-winning work related to a house that sit on the rocks, on a cliff by the sea, on the Peninsula of Beijiao Village, in Fujian Province, represents another extremely significant intervention that, motivated by the need to address conditions of deterioration of the building, has provided a series of unexpected and unrequested important, valuable additions on an aesthetic-emotional level and from a social point of view. Light is another element that plays a fundamental role in his architecture, often revealing an intense aspiration to break limitations and boundaries as exemplary suggests the small Seashore Chapel, in close contact with the infinity of the ocean or intending to help meditation, relaxation and enjoyment as in the Seashore library.

Urban Broadcast Collective
143. Ian Nairn reviewed with Matt Roberts - Contemplating Loss_PX

Urban Broadcast Collective

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 25, 2022 75:10


In PlanningxChange episode 91 we interview Matt Roberts about Ian Nairn, an architectural and planning critic in the UK during the 1950s - 1970s. Matt is an architectural historian and a member of the podcast team that produces About Buildings and Cities. Details are at https://aboutbuildingsandcities.org. The About Buildings and Cities podcast produced a three part series on Ian Nairn. This is highly recommended as a lively and insightful review of the broad career of Ian Nairn, his times and his impact on the public imagination. Nairn came to prominence with a special edition of the Architectural Review called ‘Outrage' published in 1955. In this he coined the term 'Subtopia' for areas around cities that had been failed by urban planning and lost their sense of place. ‘Outrage' was followed soon afterwards by ‘Counter-Attack'. Nairn also contributed to various books on British cities and architecture (although not a trained architect) such as ‘The Buildings of England'. Nairn also contributed to the evolution of guide books most notably with his ‘Nairn's London' (1966) and ‘Nairn's Paris' (1968). Of his writings Jonathon Meades has said: "Mere architectural description could not suffice for that land of joke-oak and real rhododendron; what it demands is an acute sense of place and the gift to render that sense. Nairn possessed both, and in his London book he showed a third gift, that of the realization of the emotional power of townscape. That trinity of gifts made him a great poet of the metropolis." Nairn also enjoyed a lengthy TV career producing programs on various British towns and cities and on places on the continent. Many of these programs are available through YouTube https://www.youtube.com/watch? v=gQfgA_6HLT0&list=PLzBwppKDCE9BLOqw1SqWdH14H_onhYgWn The BBC produced a program ‘The Man who fought the planners: The story of ian Nairn' which is available on Youtube at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lvoXJ1Ye9R4&t=137s Many of the insights of Nairn are as relevant today as then. Matt Roberts provides us with a fascinating insight into the life and times and legacy of Nairn; we are very grateful to our podcast ‘cousin' for sharing this knowledge. Audio production by Jack Bavage. The episode was released on 25 March 2022. PlanningxChange is proud to be a member of the urban Broadcast Collective.

Charlottesville Community Engagement
February 28, 2022: Nonprofit group wraps unfinished Dewberry skeleton; Council upholds BAR review of apartment building

Charlottesville Community Engagement

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 28, 2022 16:39


It’s the final day of February, but 2022 still has a long way to go. In fact, after today there is 83.8 percent left before it’s time to change the yearly calendar once more. Tomorrow may be heralded by a lion, so be on the listen-out for a roar. But for now, it’s time for another Charlottesville Community Engagement, and I’m your host, Sean Tubbs.This newsletter and podcast is free to sign up for, but your paid subscription ensures this one-person operation will continue well into the future! On today’s program: A new group called Friends of Cville Downtown launches by wrapping the Dewberry structure with a muralCity Council upholds a decision made by the Board of Architectural Review One Charlottesville tax relief deadline is approaching, and the city is looking for more people to serve on advisory panelsA University of Virginia epidemiologist weighs in on what’s next with COVID First shout-out goes to a Livable Cville eventIn today’s first subscriber supported shout-out, Livable Cville wants you to know about an online presentation coming up on Wednesday, March 16 at 5:30 p.m. "Can Zoning Create a More Affordable Charlottesville?" That’s the question to be explored by Dr. Jenny Schuetz of the Brookings Institute. She’s the author of Fixer-Upper: How to Repair America’s Broken Housing Systems. The event is free but you’ll have to register at EventBrite. Pandemic update to begin the weekToday the Virginia Department of Health reports the seven-day percent positivity is now at 7.3 percent, another indicator the Omicron surge is continuing to wane. The seven-day average for new cases is now at 1,621 with 764 new cases reported today. However, the death count from the Omicron variant continues to grow with a cumulative total of 18,771. Ten days ago, that number stood at 18,016 but the VDH always stresses that it takes a while for COVID deaths to be officially recorded. The Blue Ridge Health District now has a total of 419 deaths from COVID, and that number was at 386 ten day ago. There are 26 new cases in the BRHD today. What’s next? Dr. Costi Sifri is director of hospital epidemiology at the University of Virginia Health System. He said a majority of people in the Charlottesville area are either fully vaccinated or have had COVID. “I think in the near term we can and are expecting that we will see a continued diminution of cases going forward and I think that’s likely to occur not only over the next couple of weeks but perhaps and hopefully the next couple of months,” Dr. Sifri said. However, Dr. Sifri said COVID can be unpredictable and there are many parts of the world have low vaccination rates, allowing further mutations to occur. He said the current question is how long immunity through vaccination or previous infections will last.“Will there be future differences with the virus?” Dr. Sifri asked. “Does it evolve or change to overcome some of these protective immune responses that we’ve developed? And how robust or how prolonged are those immune responses?”Tomorrow is also the day that a new law goes into effect allowing parents to opt out of school mask mandates. This morning the UVA Health System announced that the drop in case counts will result in additional visitation at the UVA Medical System. To see the details of what has changed, visit the UVA Health System.Tax relief deadline is tomorrow Tomorrow is the last day for elderly and disabled property owners in Charlottesville to apply for tax relief. “If you own and are living in your home in the city of Charlottesville, if you are over 65 years of age, or are permanently disabled, and if you have a yearly household income of $55,000 or less, and a net worth of $125,000 or less excluding the value of the home, you may qualify for tax relief under this program,” said City Councilor Sena Magill. Visit the Commissioner of Revenue’s website for more information and to find the application. Residential property is up 11.69 percent in 2022. In addition, Council has advertised an increase of ten cents on the property tax rate. City Council will be presented with the budget on March 7. Want to be on a Charlottesville board or commission?With spring here perhaps you’re looking for a fresh hobby. Why not consider being on a Charlottesville Board of Commission? There are several vacancies and Council is taking applications through March 12. Charlottesville Economic Development Authority - one openingCitizens Transportation Advisory Committee - two openingsCommunity Policy and Management Team - two openingsHistoric Resources Committee - four openingsHousing Advisory Committee - one vacancy (specifically for a member of a neighborhood association)Measurements and Solutions Group - eight openingsPersonnel Appeals Board - one opening (for a non-city employee) Region Ten Community Services Board - one openingSocial Services Advisory Board - two openingsTree Commission - four openingsVendor Appeals Board - one openingYouth Council You can apply here. Council will next make appointments on March 21. Council upholds BAR approval at 605 Preston Place The Board of Architectural Review approved what’s called a “certificate of appropriateness” to allow for an apartment complex to be built in the side yard of a 19th century structure. Council was asked to hear the appeal from neighbors who argue the city’s architectural design control (ADC) rules were not followed. At the beginning of the appeal, city historic preservation planner Jeff Werner described the project.“The project is a proposed three-story apartment building,” Werner said. “It’s located on a parcel at 605 Preston Place. The property is within the Rugby-Road-University Circle-Venable ADC district. Also on this property is Wyndhurst which is a home constructed in 1857 and it was formerly the manor house for a 102-acre farm.” The appellants sent in a 19-point letter to make their arguments. Point number two argued that the footprint and massing of the new building would not be not in harmony with the district. Werner disagreed.“To be clear, the design guidelines are intended to be flexible and flexible enough to both respect historic properties and to embrace future new design,” Werner said. Werner recommended the Council uphold the BAR’s determination. Larry Getty represented the appellants. “We actually feel the Board of Architectural Review did not really explain their decisions as to why the number of elements that Jeff Werner discussed actually do satisfy the guidelines,” Getty said. “It is totally out of place with the buildings that are on three sides of the site.” Breck Gastinger is the chair of the BAR and before he spoke he told Council a little about what the panel does. “We are made up of nine citizens of Charlottesville,” Gastinger said. “All of us are volunteers and we are appointed by City Council. We work on your behalf for the city. We’re made up of design professionals, business owners, residents of properties within historic districts.”Gastinger said BAR members must follow the guidelines as they make their determinations. He said the city’s architectural story is always changing. “Our guidelines for the BAR do not mandate particular styles of architecture or prevent new buildings from being added within historic districts,” Gastinger said. “As Charlottesville continues to grow and evolve as a city, we want to make sure it’s going to be done in a compatible way.”Gastinger said the BAR helped inform the project through multiple hearings and their approval was a unanimous 8-0 vote. Mayor Lloyd Snook said he sided with the BAR.“I was struck by the fact that some architects for whom I have a great deal respect were looking at it quite critically and praising what was being done and I would have to say that if those architects are saying good things about it, that’s a very strong recommendation for me,” Snook said. The vote to uphold the BAR was unanimous. Patreon-fueled shout-out to LEAPWhen you think of romance, you might not immediately think of energy efficiency - but the folks at LEAP think keeping your family comfortable at home is a great way to show you care during the month of love. Your local energy nonprofit wants to make sure you are getting the most out of your home all year round, and LEAP offers FREE home weatherization to income- and age-qualifying residents. If someone in your household is age 60 or older, or you have an annual household income of less than $74,950, you may qualify for a free energy assessment and home energy improvements such as insulation and air sealing. Sign up today to lower your energy bills, increase comfort, and reduce energy waste at home!Friends of Cville Downtown launches with unveiling of mural on Dewberry building It was a warm morning for this last day of February and several dozen people gathered in Central Place outside the Dewberry Hotel, an unfinished structure for which construction stopped over 13 years ago when the previous owner ran out of money. A group called Friends of Cville Downtown has raised funds to wrap the skeleton of the unfinished hotel with artwork. The official reveal was a chance to also launch the organization. Board member Michael Caplin called a “placemaking partnership” to increase economic development downtown in an inclusive manner. “Friends of Cville Downtown is raising private money to fund the costs of a campaign for Main, an array of projects that can invigorate the downtown environment with lights, art, paintings, seating, events, banners, sanitation, safety add-ons, and a rich array of events with something for everybody,” Caplin said. “We will accomplish this by working together with one another and with city government in the spirit of goodwill and common purpose.”The first project is the Music Box on Main, which is the name for the temporary installation by the artist Eric Waugh which covers all nine stories of the unfinished Dewberry. “Eric’s paintings, Jazzmaker 1 and Jazzmaker 2, were enlarged and printed on a 13-foot-wide vinyl mesh banner wrap,” Caplin said. “Ten giant rolls of wrap were carried to the roof.”Crews rappelled from the top affixed the wrap to the building, and the goal is to cover up the skeleton for at least the next year. Caplin said the work has been done in conjunction with the Dewberry Group, who even donated $10,000 to the project. “I hope you will say to yourself, ‘what wonderful thing shall we do next, and how shall we get it done together?’” Caplin said. Mayor Lloyd Snook said he welcomed the effort. “We lost sight of the fact that so many of the businesses on the Downtown Mall are operating on very thin margins and the last few years have been very tough for them,” Snook said. “To have people who have the ability to step up to make significant contributions to be able to do the kinds of things the Friends of Cville Downtown are talking about doing is really exciting. It’s exciting for the city government to know that there are going to be people out there who are able to help and willing to help.”Ludwig Kuttner is the vice chair of the Friends of Cville Downtown board. He said he wanted to take action to cover up visual blight and to restore what he described as “positive energy” to the mall.“I think people have complained about it now for over 12 yeers, and it’s ugly and there have been complaints and we just decided let’s do something about it,” Kuttner said. Caplin came up with the idea for the wrap, which includes a wrap on 2nd Street SE. He saw the black façade of the old Boxer Learning building as being like the black keys of a piano.“So I envisioned the windows white and then a swirly jazz thing at the top and I had a friend of mine photoshop it for me to see what it would like when it was done and we sent that image to the Dewberrys and said ‘would you give us permission to do this to your building?’ and Jaimie Dewberry called up and said ‘this is genius, go right ahead!’” As for the future of the Dewberry, Caplin said he was not privy to any information but that they had full permission to apply the temporary measure. “It’s now a positive element of our skyline instead of a ‘what’s happening’ element of our skyline,” Caplin said. Stay tuned for more information as it develops. What do you think? Leave a note in the comments. Support the program!Special announcement of a continuing promo with Ting! Are you interested in fast internet? Visit this site and enter your address to see if you can get service through Ting. If you decide to proceed to make the switch, you’ll get:Free installationSecond month of Ting service for freeA $75 gift card to the Downtown MallAdditionally, Ting will match your Substack subscription to support Town Crier Productions, the company that produces this newsletter and other community offerings. So, your $5 a month subscription yields $5 for TCP. Your $50 a year subscription yields $50 for TCP! The same goes for a $200 a year subscription! All goes to cover the costs of getting this newsletter out as often as possible. Learn more here! This is a public episode. If you’d like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit communityengagement.substack.com/subscribe

The Architectural Review Podcast
CCA x AR Bookshelf: Gordon Matta-Clark

The Architectural Review Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 28, 2022 30:39


The Architectural Review is joined in this episode by the Canadian Centre for Architecture. On our bookshelf in this chapter is the CCA's CP138 Gordon Matta-Clark: Readings of the archive by Yann Chateigné, Kitty Scott and Hila Peleg, co-published with Koenig Books in July 2020. This episode dwells on the peripheries of Matta-Clark's work – in his library, his travel snaps, and his discarded film footage – to reveal the value that hides in the margins and on the cutting room floor: our future on this planet could depend on it. Guests include Francesco Garutti (Curator of Contemporary Architecture, CCA), Yann Chateigné (curator and writer), Kitty Scott (Deputy Director and Chief Curator, National Gallery of Canada) and Laura Phipps (Assistant Curator at the Whitney Museum of American Art). In collaboration with the CCA, we have carefully selected from their recent and upcoming publications to place on our bookshelf, to tell their stories, and reach outside their pages, taking them for a walk. CP138 Gordon Matta-Clark: Readings of the archive is the culmination of three exhibitions held at the CCA between June 2019 and September last year that were part of the CCA's continued Out of the Box series. The exhibition series is now being expanded through a new instalment, created in dialogue with the Generali Foundation Collection and on view until 6 March at the Museum der Moderne Salzburg. The book is available to purchase at the CCA's online store now.

Jerusalem Unplugged
Architecture and urban plans in Jerusalem with Nadi Abusaada

Jerusalem Unplugged

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 12, 2022 48:38


Nadi Abusaada, architect, urbanist and historian, discussed the role of British urban planning for Jerusalem in the early 1920s, particularly the work of Charles Ashbee. Architecture and urban planning are more than just an exercise in beautification or urbanization of space in Jerusalem, it is a question of ethno-politics. We then discussed the Arab Fair that took place in Jerusalem in the early 1930s. This work by Nadi has been published by the Jerusalem Quarterly and it is a fascinating research into an event that has received very little attention. We moved to discuss a recent article published in the Architectural Review looking at the battle that is taking place underground as Israeli archaeologists are trying to use historical claims in order to make territorial gains in East Jerusalem. https://www.architectural-review.com/essays/under-jerusalem-israels-subterranean-expansionLastly, we talked about the agency of architects and their role in the future of the city.Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/jerusalemunplugged. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

The Business of Architecture and Design Podcast
Chris Bosse and Vince Frost - Part 5

The Business of Architecture and Design Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 10, 2020 28:19


Part 5 of 5. For the final episode in this special series Chris Bosse and Vince Frost share their thoughts on how they balance creativity with the day to day of running a business, learning business skills, mentoring and disruption. For more information on these practices: Visit LAVA Visit Frost*collective The Business of Architecture and Design is brought to you by Content Brains and presented by Architectural Review magazine (AR) and Australian Design Review (ADR. Produced by Joanne Davies, Head of Content Brains and Publisher of AR and ADR, Madeleine Swain, Editor Content Brains and Tili Bensley-Nettheim Editor, AR and ADR Architecture. Content Brains can assist you with all of your content needs visit us here.  Other links: Australian Design Review See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Business of Architecture and Design Podcast
Chris Bosse and Vince Frost - Part 4

The Business of Architecture and Design Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 9, 2020 21:52


Part 4 of 5. With two more episodes left, today Chris Bosse and Vince Frost will share insights into talent and culture and the importance of taking them into account in any design business. For more information on these practices: Visit LAVA Visit Frost*collective The Business of Architecture and Design is brought to you by Content Brains and presented by Architectural Review magazine (AR) and Australian Design Review (ADR. Produced by Joanne Davies, Head of Content Brains and Publisher of AR and ADR, Madeleine Swain, Editor Content Brains and Tili Bensley-Nettheim Editor, AR and ADR Architecture. Content Brains can assist you with all of your content needs visit us here.  Other links: Australian Design Review See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Business of Architecture and Design Podcast
Chris Bosse and Vince Frost - Part 3

The Business of Architecture and Design Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 8, 2020 32:51


Part 3 of 5. In this episode Chris Bosse and Vince Frost tell us more about setting up their practices in Australia. For more information on these practices: Visit LAVA Visit Frost*collective The Business of Architecture and Design is brought to you by Content Brains and presented by Architectural Review magazine (AR) and Australian Design Review (ADR. Produced by Joanne Davies, Head of Content Brains and Publisher of AR and ADR, Madeleine Swain, Editor Content Brains and Tili Bensley-Nettheim Editor, AR and ADR Architecture. Content Brains can assist you with all of your content needs visit us here.  Other links: Australian Design Review See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Business of Architecture and Design Podcast
Chris Bosse and Vince Frost - Part 2

The Business of Architecture and Design Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 7, 2020 24:58


Part 2 of 5. Welcome back for episode 2 Chris Bosse and Vince Frost continue their conversation, today they will give us insight into Vince's early days with Pentagram, the correlation between language and communication and the evolution of technology. For more information on these practices: Visit LAVA Visit Frost*collective The Business of Architecture and Design is brought to you by Content Brains and presented by Architectural Review magazine (AR) and Australian Design Review (ADR. Produced by Joanne Davies, Head of Content Brains and Publisher of AR and ADR, Madeleine Swain, Editor Content Brains and Tili Bensley-Nettheim, Editor AR and ADR Architecture. Content Brains can assist you with all of your content needs visit us here.  Other links: Australian Design Review See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Business of Architecture and Design Podcast
Chris Bosse and Vince Frost - Part 1

The Business of Architecture and Design Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 6, 2020 35:37


Part 1 of 5. Chris Bosse, Visionary, Director of Architecture at LAVA (Laboratory for Visionary Architecture) and Vince Frost, Founder, CEO and Group Executive Creative Director at Frost*collective catch up to share their journeys through their own disciplines, talk about their backgrounds, how they became interested in design and how COVID has forced a change in approach For more information on these practices: Visit LAVA Visit Frost*collective The Business of Architecture and Design is brought to you by Content Brains and presented by Architectural Review magazine (AR) and Australian Design Review (ADR. Produced by Joanne Davies, Head of Content Brains and Publisher of AR and ADR, Madeleine Swain, Editor Content Brains and Tili Bensley-Nettheim Editor, AR and ADR Architecture. Content Brains can assist you with all of your content needs visit us here.  Other links: Australian Design Review See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Business of Architecture and Design Podcast
Episode 31 - Jonothan Cowle - (Part 3)

The Business of Architecture and Design Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 3, 2020 14:46


In part 3, Jonothan Cowle, Principal Rothelowman completes his conversation with our host Ben Lornie, Senior Assoicate, PTID.  Support our launch partner Zenith Interiors and supporting partner Total Synergy - Try Synergy for free for 30 days   Get in touch with the team at The business of Architecture and Design: Email - adrpodcast@niche.com.au Other links: Rothelowman PTID Produced by: Paul Lidgerwood, managing director, Joanne Davies, Commercial Content Director of Australian Design Review and Architectural Review, and Niche Media.  Australian Design Review See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Business of Architecture and Design Podcast
Episode 30 - Jonothan Cowle - (Part 2)

The Business of Architecture and Design Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 26, 2020 32:31


Jonothan Cowle, Principal Rothelowman joins our host Ben Lornie, Senior Assoicate, PTID. Support our launch partner Zenith Interiors and supporting partner Total Synergy - Try Synergy for free for 30 days   Get in touch with the team at The business of Architecture and Design: Email - adrpodcast@niche.com.au Other links: Rothelowman PTID Produced by: Paul Lidgerwood, managing director, Joanne Davies, Commercial Content Director of Australian Design Review and Architectural Review, and Niche Media.  Australian Design Review See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Business of Architecture and Design Podcast
Episode 29 - Jonothan Cowle - (Part 1)

The Business of Architecture and Design Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 19, 2020 31:39


Jonothan Cowle, Principal Rothelowman joins our host Ben Lornie, Senior Assoicate, PTID. Support our launch partner Zenith Interiors and supporting partner Total Synergy - Try Synergy for free for 30 days   Get in touch with the team at The business of Architecture and Design: Email - adrpodcast@niche.com.au Other links: Rothelowman PTID Produced by: Paul Lidgerwood, managing director, Joanne Davies, Commercial Content Director of Australian Design Review and Architectural Review, and Niche Media.  Australian Design Review See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Business of Architecture and Design Podcast
The procurement of architecture and the role of competitions with Malcolm Reading

The Business of Architecture and Design Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 5, 2020 60:03


Guest: Malcolm Reading, Founder and Owner of Malcolm Reading Consultants, which is a global architectural competitions consultancy, speaks to our hosts Steve Coster, Managing Director, Hassell and Mark Loughnan, Head of Design, Hassell . Together they unearth the mysteries around the procurement of architecture and the role competitions play in this. Support our launch partner Zenith Interiors and supporting partner Total Synergy - Try Synergy for free for 30 days   Get in touch with the team at The business of Architecture and Design: Email - adrpodcast@niche.com.au Other links: Malcolm Reading Consultants Hassell Produced by: Paul Lidgerwood, managing director, Joanne Davies, Commercial Content Director of Australian Design Review and Architectural Review, and Niche Media.  Australian Design Review See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Business of Architecture and Design Podcast
Episode 28 - Chi Melhem - (Part 3)

The Business of Architecture and Design Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 1, 2020 33:08


Chi Melhem director at Tzannes condludes her conversation with our host Isabelle Toland, director of Aileen Sage Architects. IDEA 2020 click here for more details Support our launch partner Zenith Interiors and supporting partner Total Synergy - Try Synergy for free for 30 days   Get in touch with the team at The business of Architecture and Design: Email - adrpodcast@niche.com.au Other links: Tzannes Aileen Sage Architects Produced by: Paul Lidgerwood, managing director, Joanne Davies, Commercial Content Director of Australian Design Review and Architectural Review, and Niche Media.  Australian Design Review See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Business of Architecture and Design Podcast
Episode 27 - Chi Melhem - (Part 2)

The Business of Architecture and Design Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 22, 2020 31:50


Guest: Chi Melhem, director Tzannes continues her discussion with Isabelle Tolland, director of Aileen Sage Architects. Support our launch partner Zenith Interiors and supporting partner Total Synergy - Try Synergy for free for 30 days   Get in touch with the team at The business of Architecture and Design: Email - adrpodcast@niche.com.au Entries for IDEA 2020 are now open, click here for more details Other links: Tzannes Aileen Sage Architects Produced by: Paul Lidgerwood, managing director, Joanne Davies, Commercial Content Director of Australian Design Review and Architectural Review, and Niche Media.  Australian Design Review See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Business of Architecture and Design Podcast
Episode 26 - Chi Melhem - (Part 1)

The Business of Architecture and Design Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 15, 2020 25:15


Guest: Chi Melhem has been a director at Tzannes since 2016 she has a diverse range of experience from feasibility in urban studies, large public commercial and multi-residential projects through to single residential work. Chi is a strong advocate for employment equality and leads the development of proactive employment practices. Chi also currently teaches a housing design studio in the master's course at the university of new South Wales.  Host: Isabelle Toland, director of Aileen Sage Architects, join us for Chi Melhem's Journey through the Business of Architecture. IDEA 2020 click here for more details Support our launch partner Zenith Interiors and supporting partner Total Synergy - Try Synergy for free for 30 days   Get in touch with the team at The business of Architecture and Design: Email - adrpodcast@niche.com.au Other links: Tzannes Aileen Sage Architects Produced by: Paul Lidgerwood, managing director, Joanne Davies, Commercial Content Director of Australian Design Review and Architectural Review, and Niche Media.  Australian Design Review See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Business of Architecture and Design Podcast
Episode 25 - Simon Pole (Part 3)

The Business of Architecture and Design Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 8, 2020 28:43


In episode 25 we complete our conversation with Simon Pole, Global Design Director, Unispace, and our host Ben Lornie, Senior Associate and the Education lead with PTID.   IDEA 2020 click here for more details Support our launch partner Zenith Interiors and supporting partner Total Synergy - Try Synergy for free for 30 days   Get in touch with the team at The business of Architecture and Design: Email - adrpodcast@niche.com.au Other links: Unispace PTID Produced by: Paul Lidgerwood, managing director, Joanne Davies, Commercial Content Director of Australian Design Review and Architectural Review, and Niche Media.  Australian Design Review See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Business of Architecture and Design Podcast
Episode 24 - Simon Pole (Part 2)

The Business of Architecture and Design Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2020 33:03


We continue our conversation from episode 23 with Simon Pole, Global Design Director, Unispace, and our host Ben Lornie, Senior Associate and the Education lead with PTID.   IDEA 2020 click here for more details Support our launch partner Zenith Interiors and supporting partner Total Synergy - Try Synergy for free for 30 days   Get in touch with the team at The business of Architecture and Design: Email - adrpodcast@niche.com.au Other links: Unispace PTID Produced by: Paul Lidgerwood, managing director, Joanne Davies, Commercial Content Director of Australian Design Review and Architectural Review, and Niche Media.  Australian Design Review See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Business of Architecture and Design Podcast
Episode 23 - Simon Pole (Part 1)

The Business of Architecture and Design Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 23, 2020 28:25


Simon Pole  is the Global design director, at Unispace and has over 25 years experience leading complex projects throughout Europe, the middle East, Asia, New Zealand, America and currently Australia. Over the years, Simon has worked alongside well known names including: Patrick Schumacher, David Chipperfield and local Australian design legends like Nick Corollas and David Whitaker. Simon's ideas enhance workplace performance and change the way businesses do business. He is a global leader in agile work styles across multiple industry sectors, delivering groundbreaking concepts and award winning environments for his clients. Host: Ben Lornie joins us for the first time, Ben is a senior associate and the Education lead with PTID.  Ben has realised projects across five continents, collaborating with university and corporate organisations to create future-focused built environments, that support people and enhance the human experience. Ben regularly presents at conferences and participates in panel discussions as part of PTID's commitment to contributing to a research driven design philosophy. Support our launch partner Zenith Interiors and supporting partner Total Synergy - Try Synergy for free for 30 days   Get in touch with the team at The business of Architecture and Design: Email - adrpodcast@niche.com.au Other links: Unispace PTID Produced by: Paul Lidgerwood, managing director, Joanne Davies, Commercial Content Director of Australian Design Review and Architectural Review, and Niche Media.  Australian Design Review See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Business of Architecture and Design Podcast
Episode 22 – Angela Ferguson (Part 3)

The Business of Architecture and Design Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 16, 2020 23:36


Guest: Angela Ferguson, CEO and managing director of Futurespace, concludes her conversation with host Isabelle Toland, director of Aileen Sage Architects, on her business through the Business of Architecture. Support our launch partner Zenith Interiors and supporting partner Total Synergy - Try Synergy for free for 30 days  Get in touch with the team at The business of Architecture and Design: Email - adrpodcast@niche.com.au Other links: Futurespace Aileen Sage Architects Produced by: Paul Lidgerwood, managing director, Joanne Davies, publisher of Australian Design Review, Architectural Review and INSIDE, Madeleine Swain, editor of Architectural Review and Niche Media.  Australian Design Review See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.