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X-WR-CALNAME:AIA Baltimore/Baltimore Architecture Foundation
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210421T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210421T193000
DTSTAMP:20260410T164526
CREATED:20210208T140518Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210405T183122Z
UID:26182-1619028000-1619033400@www.aiabaltimore.org
SUMMARY:AIA Baltimore & BAF Spring Lecture Series: Architecture + Social Justice
DESCRIPTION:Join AIA Baltimore and The Baltimore Architecture Foundation for the 2021 Spring Lecture Series…\n\n\nCover photo: National Slavery Museum at the Lumpkin’s Slave Jail\, image courtesy of SmithGroup \n1.5 AIA LU HSW Available\, ASLA 1.5 LU/HSW \n\n\nArchitecture is a manifestation of culture. On the occasion of AIA Baltimore’s 150th anniversary\, the AIA Baltimore and Baltimore Architecture Foundation 2021 Lecture Series will explore how the built environment simultaneously reflects and influences culture\, in Baltimore and beyond. Each lecture will expose how cultural values shape design. The three lectures are focused around themes with specific local resonance in Baltimore\, a city in which the arts and culture are key to community identity\, history\, and future vitality: Architecture and Identity\, Art and Architecture\, Architecture and Social Justice. Visiting and local speakers will examine and highlight the built environment and its relationship with the arts\, community initiatives\, sustainability goals\, preservation\, equity\, the vernacular\, and more\, as we reflect on how these have been shaped by design practice throughout AIA Baltimore’s 150 year history. \nArchitecture + Social Justice lecturers will speak about designing for social justice in urban and landscape projects.\n \n\nRegister Here\n  \n \nNational Slavery Museum at the Lumpkin’s Slave Jail\, image courtesy of SmithGroup \nDayton Schroeter\, AIA\, SmithGroup\, Design Principal \nDayton Schroeter\, AIA with SmithGroup will address how architecture has the power to uncover buried stories and hidden history. The African American experience is a story of disruption and lost history compounded by the transatlantic slave trade\, colonialism\, imperialism and capitalist globalization. As such African American history has been tragically distorted\, removed and/or hidden from contemporary discussions about race and Black life in America. Architecture can be a redeeming force in reconciling this loss\, reconnecting African Americans with their history and telling a more complete story of American history. \n \nDear Chinatown\, DC\, Image courtesy of The Urban Studio \nMaisie Hughes\, ASLA\, APA\nThe Urban Studio\nCo-Founder + Treasurer\, Urban Planner | Landscape Architect | Certified Arborist \nMasie Hughes will discuss a project that precedes the Urban Studio; co-Founders Maisie Hughes and Kendra Hyson piloted a 10-week environmental education program that taught high school students how to develop design solutions to some of the DC-area’s most pressing stormwater issues. The students were tasked with addressing stormwater and water quality issues in the students’ neighborhoods\, which are located in some of the most polluted watersheds in the city according to DOEE. These brilliant students developed a comprehensive landscape plan that included much-needed community amenities and green infrastructure strategies to capture and clean the stormwater on their perspective sites. The program not only inspired us to launch the Urban Studio\, it inspired us to put values at the center of our work. This presentation will discuss how values centered work can inform and transform how we practice. \n  \nAbout the Presenters \nDayton Schroeter\, AIA\, SmithGroup\, Design Principal \nDayton is a Design Principal who has championed design justice advocacy throughout his career at SmithGroup. As a leader of the firm’s Justice\, Equity\, Diversity and Inclusion Committee\, his charge is to lead design projects that address the systemic injustice that architecture and planning have perpetuated for historically disenfranchised communities of color. Leveraging his tenacious passion for design justice with authenticity and creativity\, he is currently leading antiracism efforts in design projects including an installation called Society’s Cage that sheds national awareness of the intersectional effects of racism on our society’s collective health\, safety and welfare\, as well as Lumpkin’s Slave Jail\, also known as the “Devil’s Half Acre\,” an interpretive museum in Richmond\, Virginia. \nMaisie Hughes\, ASLA\, APA \nThe Urban Studio\, Co-Founder + Treasurer\, Urban Planner | Landscape Architect | Certified Arborist \nMaisie brings decades of leadership and management to her practice. As a 2018-2019 Leadership and Innovation Fellow with the Landscape Architecture Foundation\, she brings honest and unvarnished insights to provide a framework for people-centered design. Maisie won the National Capital Area Chapter of the American Planning Association 2016 Fredrick Gutheim Award for Distinguished Leadership by a Professional Planner and the 2014 Award of Merrit for the “Citizen Advocate Handbook”. Maisie is an ISA Certified Arborist\, with an Executive Certificate in Nonprofit Management from Georgetown University\, a Master of Landscape Architecture degree from Morgan State University\, and a Bachelor of Arts degree in Afro-American studies from Howard University. \nThank You To Our Generous Sponsors!\nMajor Sponsor \n\n\n \n \n \n \n  \nSupporting Sponsor\n\n  \n \n  \n                                               \n \n \n \n \n \nCapitol Sponsor \nShaw \nCorinthian Sponsor \nGWWO Architects \nJames Posey Associates \nMueller Associates \nMurphy Dittenhafer Architects \nMohawk Group \nNorthpoint Builders \nPotomac Valley Brick & Supply \nSite Resources \nSTV Inc. \nIonic Sponsor \nAPA Maryland \nAmerican Cedar & Millwork \nAmes & Gough \nBudova Engineering \nCianbro \nCraig Gaulden Davis Architects \nDoubleEdge Design \nHope Furrer Associates \nMorabito Consultants \nMoseley Architects \nPella Mid-Atlantic \nPlano Coudon \nQuinn Evans \nSouthway Builders \nSuzanne Frasier\, FAIA \nT3XTURE \nZiger|Snead \n\n\n  \n \nThis project was made possible by a grant from Maryland Humanities\, with funding received from the Maryland Historical Trust in the Maryland Department of Planning. Maryland Humanities’ Grants Program is also supported by the National Endowment for the Humanities and private funders. Any views\, findings\, conclusions\, or recommendations expressed in the Spring Lecture Series do not necessarily represent those of Maryland Humanities\, Maryland Historical Trust\, Maryland Department of Planning\, or National Endowment for the Humanities.
URL:https://www.aiabaltimore.org/event/aia-baltimore-baf-spring-lecture-series-architecture-social-justice/
CATEGORIES:Lectures,Special Events,Webinars
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210407T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210407T130000
DTSTAMP:20260410T164526
CREATED:20210310T201647Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210317T143652Z
UID:26552-1617796800-1617800400@www.aiabaltimore.org
SUMMARY:2021 AIA Baltimore & BAF Spring Lecture Series: Signal Station North: On Light and Visibility in Baltimore City
DESCRIPTION:Join AIA Baltimore & The Baltimore Architecture Foundation for a Lunchtime Lecture.\n\n\nPhotograph Courtesy of Merrell Hambleton \nArchitecture is a manifestation of culture. On the occasion of AIA Baltimore’s 150th anniversary\, the AIA Baltimore and Baltimore Architecture Foundation 2021 Lecture Series will explore how the built environment simultaneously reflects and influences culture\, in Baltimore and beyond. Each lecture will expose how cultural values shape design. The three lectures are focused around themes with specific local resonance in Baltimore\, a city in which the arts and culture are key to community identity\, history\, and future vitality: Architecture and Identity\, Art and Architecture\, Architecture and Social Justice. Visiting and local speakers will examine and highlight the built environment and its relationship with the arts\, community initiatives\, sustainability goals\, preservation\, equity\, the vernacular\, and more\, as we reflect on how these have been shaped by design practice throughout AIA Baltimore’s 150 year history. \n \nPhotograph Courtesy of Neightborhood Design Center \nThe infrastructure of public lighting in Baltimore City is often overlooked\, and yet our street lamps\, porch lights\, illuminated windows and park lights animate the nighttime environment. For the past year and half\, Signal Station North\, a project of the Neighborhood Design Center\, has sought to understand the nightscape of the Station North Arts District through analysis\, observation\, activation and conversation. We’ve learned that light can be warm and welcoming\, but also aggressive; that it can invite us in or keep us out; and that at its best it can make us feel safe\, secure\, and at home. Through a history of light in Baltimore and insights from the Signal analysis\, research\, and engagement process\, this talk will explore how light impacts our neighborhoods—and how neighbors can impact light in their places.  Learn More About Signal Station Here \nRegister Here\n  \nAbout The Presenter \n \nMerrell Hambleton leads Signal Station North\, an NEA-funded project to plan for\, invest in\, and improve access to high-quality lighting in the public realm. As Program Manager for the Neighborhood Design Center\, Merrell supports implementation and design-build services\, including a forthcoming Designer-in-Residence program that will activate key green spaces in East Baltimore neighborhoods. Prior to her work with NDC\, Merrell produced pathbreaking public art projects with NY-based nonprofit Creative Time and artist Stephen Powers. She has a dual MA in Social Design and Critical Studies from MICA and BA in History from Columbia University. \n\n\nThank You To Our Generous Sponsors!\nMajor Sponsor  \nAyers Saint Gross \nHord Coplan Macht \nMaryland ASLA  \nWilldan \nSupporting Sponsor \nOak Contracting \nDesign Collective \nGensler \ninPLACE Design \nJMT Architecture \nMerritt Construction \nPrice Modern \nTW Perry \nVision Technologies \nWhiting-Turner  \nWohlsen \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nCapitol Sponsor \nShaw \nCorinthian Sponsor \nGWWO Architects \nJames Posey Associates \nMurphy Dittenhafer Architects \nMohawk Group \nNorthpoint Builders \nPotomac Valley Brick & Supply \nSite Resources \nMueller Associates \nIonic Sponsor \nHope Furrer Associates \nCraig Gaulden Davis Architects \nAPA Maryland  \nAmerican Cedar & Millwork \nAmes & Gough \nBudova Engineering  \nDoubleEdge Design \nMorabito Consultants \nMoseley Architects \nPlano Coudon \nQuinn Evans \nSouthway Builders \nSuzane Frasier\, FAIA \nT3XTURE \nZiger|Snead \n\n\n\nThis project was made possible by a grant from Maryland Humanities\, with funding received from the Maryland Historical Trust in the Maryland Department of Planning. Maryland Humanities’ Grants Program is also supported by the National Endowment for the Humanities and private funders. Any views\, findings\, conclusions\, or recommendations expressed in the Spring Lecture Series do not necessarily represent those of Maryland Humanities\, Maryland Historical Trust\, Maryland Department of Planning\, or National Endowment for the Humanities.
URL:https://www.aiabaltimore.org/event/signal-station-north-on-light-and-visibility-in-baltimore-city/
CATEGORIES:Lectures,Special Events,Webinars
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210331T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210331T193000
DTSTAMP:20260410T164526
CREATED:20210205T204106Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210312T210522Z
UID:26150-1617213600-1617219000@www.aiabaltimore.org
SUMMARY:2021 AIA Baltimore & BAF Spring Lecture Series: Art + Architecture
DESCRIPTION:Join AIA Baltimore and The Baltimore Architecture Foundation for the 2021 Spring Lecture Series…\n\n\nCover photo: United States Olympic & Paralympic Museum (Diller Scofidio + Renfro) \n1.5 AIA LU\,  1.5 LA/CES LU Available \nArchitecture is a manifestation of culture. On the occasion of AIA Baltimore’s 150th anniversary\, the AIA Baltimore and Baltimore Architecture Foundation 2021 Lecture Series will explore how the built environment simultaneously reflects and influences culture\, in Baltimore and beyond. Each lecture will expose how cultural values shape design. The three lectures are focused around themes with specific local resonance in Baltimore\, a city in which the arts and culture are key to community identity\, history\, and future vitality: Architecture and Identity\, Art and Architecture\, Architecture and Social Justice. Visiting and local speakers will examine and highlight the built environment and its relationship with the arts\, community initiatives\, sustainability goals\, preservation\, equity\, the vernacular\, and more\, as we reflect on how these have been shaped by design practice throughout AIA Baltimore’s 150 year history. \nArt + Architecture: This lecture will address the intersection of art and architecture\, and the ways in which art\, as an expression of culture\, is reflected in the built environment. Speakers will discuss globally renowned cultural projects and museums\, and local art and culture in Baltimore. \n\nRegister Here \n\nBenjamin Gilmartin\, AIA of Diller Scofidio + Renfro\, will discuss how the studio’s significant cultural projects were acts of conservation\, adaptation\, and radical rethinking for contemporary use.  With the transformation of the Lincoln Center for Performing Arts campus and the recent MoMA expansion\, DS+R sought to preserve the original DNA of two of New York’s most iconic modernist projects\, while opening up and democratizing these traditional citadels of “high art.” The recently completed US Olympic & Paralympic Museum in Colorado Springs remediates an industrial brownfield area at the edge of the city center\, to both revitalize the downtown core and build one of the most universally accessible museums in the nation. \n \nCara Ober\, Founding Editor and Publisher of BmoreArt will address artist and museum culture and the way they intersect and collide\, assessing how this impacts art communities and establishes hierarchies of value. \nAbout the Presenters \nBenjamin Gilmartin \nBenjamin Gilmartin joined Diller Scofidio + Renfro (DS+R) in 2004 and became a partner in 2015. Ben led the redesign of Alice Tully Hall\, multiple public spaces within the Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts campus\, and the Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive at the University of California\, Berkeley. Most recently\, Ben completed the United States Olympic & Paralympic Museum in Colorado Springs\, hailed as one of the most accessible museums in the country. He is currently leading multiple projects in London\, including a 5 kilometer-long public space network at Greenwich Peninsula. In addition to completing DS+R’s first building in Australia at the University of Sydney\, Ben is also currently co-leading the design of a facility for MIT’s School of Architecture and Planning in Cambridge and a major tech headquarters in the Pacific Northwest. \nCara Ober  \nCara Ober is an artist\, arts writer\, curator\, and the founding editor and publisher at BmoreArt\, Baltimore’s art and culture magazine. She writes regularly about artist\, museum\, and material culture\, with emphasis on context and subtext in the art world. \nIn 2019\, she was awarded a Rabkin Art Writers Grant and was commissioned by the Warhol Foundation to write “Artspeak and Audience” for Common Field’s Field Perspectives Series. In addition to her regular writing and editing for BmoreArt\, Ober has published articles in Vulture: New York Magazine\, Hyperallergic\, Burnaway\, Art Papers\, ARTnews\, and The Baltimore Sun. Cara has taught classes and lectured at MICA\, Johns Hopkins\, American University\, UMBC\, and Goucher College. \nShe holds an MFA in painting from MICA and a degree in fine arts from American University. Over the past decade\, Ober’s critical reviews\, essays\, and interviews have explored the political and economic impact of the arts in Baltimore and the way artists maintain a professional practice and thrive in a city full of rich and diverse cultural traditions as well as serious social issues. \n  \nThank You To Our Generous Sponsors!\nMajor Sponsor\n\n \n \n \n \n  \nSupporting Sponsor\n\n  \n \n  \n                                               \n \n \n \n \n \nCapitol Sponsor \nShaw \nCorinthian Sponsor \nGWWO Architects \nJames Posey Associates \nMueller Associates \nMurphy Dittenhafer Architects \nMohawk Group \nNorthpoint Builders \nPotomac Valley Brick & Supply \nSite Resources \nSTV Inc. \nIonic Sponsor \nAPA Maryland \nAmerican Cedar & Millwork \nAmes & Gough \nBudova Engineering \nCianbro \nCraig Gaulden Davis Architects \nDoubleEdge Design \nHope Furrer Associates \nMorabito Consultants \nMoseley Architects \nPella Mid-Atlantic \nPlano Coudon \nQuinn Evans \nSouthway Builders \nSuzanne Frasier\, FAIA \nT3XTURE \nZiger|Snead \n\n\n\n\n \nThis project was made possible by a grant from Maryland Humanities\, with funding received from the Maryland Historical Trust in the Maryland Department of Planning. Maryland Humanities’ Grants Program is also supported by the National Endowment for the Humanities and private funders. Any views\, findings\, conclusions\, or recommendations expressed in the Spring Lecture Series do not necessarily represent those of Maryland Humanities\, Maryland Historical Trust\, Maryland Department of Planning\, or National Endowment for the Humanities.
URL:https://www.aiabaltimore.org/event/2021-aia-baltimore-baf-spring-lecture-series-art-architecture/
CATEGORIES:Lectures,Special Events,Webinars
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210317T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210317T130000
DTSTAMP:20260410T164526
CREATED:20210302T190703Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210312T210300Z
UID:26387-1615982400-1615986000@www.aiabaltimore.org
SUMMARY:2021 AIA Baltimore & BAF Spring Lecture Series: Money & Hose
DESCRIPTION:Join AIA Baltimore & The Baltimore Architecture Foundation for a Lunchtime Lecture.\n\n\nPhotograph Courtesy of Phaan Howng \nArchitecture is a manifestation of culture. On the occasion of AIA Baltimore’s 150th anniversary\, the AIA Baltimore and Baltimore Architecture Foundation 2021 Lecture Series will explore how the built environment simultaneously reflects and influences culture\, in Baltimore and beyond. Each lecture will expose how cultural values shape design. The three lectures are focused around themes with specific local resonance in Baltimore\, a city in which the arts and culture are key to community identity\, history\, and future vitality: Architecture and Identity\, Art and Architecture\, Architecture and Social Justice. Visiting and local speakers will examine and highlight the built environment and its relationship with the arts\, community initiatives\, sustainability goals\, preservation\, equity\, the vernacular\, and more\, as we reflect on how these have been shaped by design practice throughout AIA Baltimore’s 150 year history. \nPhaan Howng is a Baltimore-based multidisciplinary artist focused on exploring the production of landscape through large-scale landscape painting\, sculptures\, installations\, and performance. Guided by philosophical\, anthropological\, and socio-political thinking\, Howng’s immersive environments are a response to the toxic extractive practices of global capitalism that hinder environmentally and socially just landscapes. Her work attempts to deconstruct man’s presumed power over nature by focusing on the geopolitics of displaced plant-life and questioning the labor and management that result from processing nature as product. Howng will provide an overview of her work and present on her latest exhibition\, A Bag Of Rocks For A Bag Of Rice\, urging us to rethink how gardening and landscaping practices can mobilize the development of more environmentally thoughtful and sustainable futures. \n\nRegister Here\n  \nAbout The Presenter \nPhaan Howng is a Baltimore-based multidisciplinary artist focused on exploring the production of landscape through large-scale landscape painting\, sculptures\, installations\, and performance. Guided by philosophical\, anthropological\, and socio-political thinking\, Howng’s immersive environments are a response to the toxic extractive practices of global capitalism that hinder environmentally and socially just landscapes. Her work attempts to deconstruct man’s presumed power over nature by focusing on the geopolitics of displaced plant-life and questioning the labor and management that result from processing nature as product. Howng received her BFA in Painting from Boston University (2004) and her MFA from the Mt. Royal School of Art at the Maryland Institute of College of Art (2015)\, where she is currently an adjunct professor. Howng’s work has been exhibited across the United States at major venues and cultural-institutions such as the Baltimore Museum of Art (Baltimore\, MD 2017-2018)\, the Smithsonian Arts and Industry Museum (Washington D.C. 2018)\, Spring Break Art Show (New York\, NY 2019) Art Kiosk (Redwood City\, CA 2019)\, Facebook (Washington D.C. 2019)\, and The Asian Arts and Culture Center at Towson University (Towson\, MD 2020). \n\n\nThank You To Our Generous Sponsors!\nMajor Sponsor  \nAyers Saint Gross \nHord Coplan Macht \nMaryland ASLA  \nWilldan \nSupporting Sponsor \nOak Contracting \nDesign Collective \ninPLACE Design \nJMT Architecture \nMerritt Construction \nPrice Modern \nTW Perry \nVision Technologies \nWhiting-Turner  \nGensler \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nCapitol Sponsor \nShaw \nCorinthian Sponsor \nGWWO Architects \nJames Posey Associates \nMurphy Dittenhafer Architects \nMohawk Group \nNorthpoint Builders \nPotomac Valley Brick & Supply \nSite Resources \nMueller Associates \nIonic Sponsor \nHope Furrer Associates \nCraig Gaulden Davis Architects \nAPA Maryland  \nAmerican Cedar & Millwork \nAmes & Gough \nBudova Engineering  \nDoubleEdge Design \nMorabito Consultants \nMoseley Architects \nPlano Coudon \nQuinn Evans \nSouthway Builders \nSuzane Frasier\, FAIA \nT3XTURE \nZiger|Snead \n\n\n\nThis project was made possible by a grant from Maryland Humanities\, with funding received from the Maryland Historical Trust in the Maryland Department of Planning. Maryland Humanities’ Grants Program is also supported by the National Endowment for the Humanities and private funders. Any views\, findings\, conclusions\, or recommendations expressed in the Spring Lecture Series do not necessarily represent those of Maryland Humanities\, Maryland Historical Trust\, Maryland Department of Planning\, or National Endowment for the Humanities.
URL:https://www.aiabaltimore.org/event/2021-aia-baltimore-baf-spring-lecture-series-money-hose/
CATEGORIES:Lectures,Webinars
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210316T083000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210316T093000
DTSTAMP:20260410T164526
CREATED:20210218T152628Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210312T211901Z
UID:26305-1615883400-1615887000@www.aiabaltimore.org
SUMMARY:Demystifying the Financial Stressors Faced by Your Clients (PMC)
DESCRIPTION:Is there something you can do as an architect or a builder to help your client smooth out the process?\n\n\n1.0 AIA LU \nIt’s the day before that big deadline and your phone rings. The project on your screen is about to change yet again – the fifth change you’ve been asked to make this month. Your fees aren’t structured for this\, and neither is your patience. \nWhat really happens behind the scenes on your client’s end? Why do they make what seem like endless and erratic decisions about scope and schedule? Is there something you can do as an architect or a builder to help your client smooth out the process? Do you feel helpless each time a project stalls or dies for economic reasons? And what exactly do all those finance terms mean anyway? \nRegister Here
URL:https://www.aiabaltimore.org/event/demystifying-the-financial-stressors-faced-by-your-clients-pmc/
CATEGORIES:Lectures,Professional Development,Webinars
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210308T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210308T180000
DTSTAMP:20260410T164526
CREATED:20210301T211852Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210301T211852Z
UID:26364-1615222800-1615226400@www.aiabaltimore.org
SUMMARY:Dead Architects Society Meeting
DESCRIPTION:March 8\, 2021 at  5:00 pm | Free Event \nIn addition to discussing the ongoing celebration of 150th Anniversary of AIA Baltimore\, Jillian Storms\, AIA will virtually share how researchers can tap the vast treasure trove of primary materials on the Olmsteds’ work in Baltimore ahead of Olmsted 200 – the Bicentennial of Frederick Law Olmsted’s birth. \nFor zoom access email Jillian Storms\, AIA at jillian.storms@maryland.gov \nAs part of AIA Baltimore’s and BAF’s response to the coronavirus (COVID-19)\, this committee meeting is only accessible via tele-conference. The call in information is only sent out via email. If you are not on the list serve for this committee reach out to BAF staff\, Margaret Stella Mstella@aiabalt.com\, for call in information.
URL:https://www.aiabaltimore.org/event/dead-architects-society-meeting/
CATEGORIES:Committee Meetings,Lectures,Special Events
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210226T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210226T133000
DTSTAMP:20260410T164526
CREATED:20210208T205329Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210208T205422Z
UID:26231-1614344400-1614346200@www.aiabaltimore.org
SUMMARY:Design for Distancing: Reopening Baltimore Together
DESCRIPTION:Learn how local designers are working to make public spaces safer during the pandemic\n\n\nThis program is hosted on Zoom. Upon registering you will receive an email confirmation and a Zoom link. If you do not receive a link\, please contact ndennies@aiabalt.com. If you do not contact us at least 1 hour prior to the start of the program\, we cannot guarantee admittance. \nTickets to all Virtual Histories are donation based. Your support helps us make up for lost tour and program revenue from COVID-19 and create more virtual programs like this. Donations from this program will also be split with Baltimore Heritage and the Baltimore Museum of Industry. \nHear from three local design teams – Envirocollab\, Graham Projects and Living Design Lab – who are working to adapt public spaces for COVID-19 and how Baltimore’s Design for Distancing program can serve as a model for other cities. This program is presented in partnership with Neighborhood Design Center\, AIA Baltimore/Baltimore Architecture Foundation\, the Maryland Chapter of the American Society of Landscape Architects (MD ASLA) and the Baltimore Museum of Industry. \nDesign for Distancing is a program of the City of Baltimore\, Office of the Mayor and the Baltimore Development Corporation\, in partnership with local nonprofit the Neighborhood Design Center. Developed in the summer of 2020 in response to COVID-19 and the challenges faced by local businesses\, the Design for Distancing program called on Baltimore’s world class design and public health communities to develop innovative approaches to safe\, physically distant gathering.
URL:https://www.aiabaltimore.org/event/design-for-distancing-reopening-baltimore-together/
CATEGORIES:Lectures,Virtual Histories,Webinars
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210219T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210219T133000
DTSTAMP:20260410T164526
CREATED:20210201T161009Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210201T161009Z
UID:26003-1613739600-1613741400@www.aiabaltimore.org
SUMMARY:Olmsted Brothers Vision for Wyman Park and the Stony Run Stream Valley
DESCRIPTION:The presentation will focus on the Olmsted vision and what remains today.\n\n\nThis program is hosted on Zoom. Upon registering you will receive an email confirmation and a Zoom link. If you do not receive a link\, please contact ndennies@aiabalt.com. If you do not contact us at least 1 hour prior to the start of the program\, we cannot guarantee admittance. \nVirtual Histories are back in 2021! The Baltimore Architecture Foundation (BAF) and Baltimore Heritage present a series of 30 minute live virtual tours and presentations focusing on Baltimore architecture\, preservation and history. \nTickets are donation based. We encourage you to give what you can to support BAF and Baltimore Heritage. Your support helps us make up for lost tour and program revenue from COVID-19 and create more virtual programs like this. A portion of donations will also go to Friends of Maryland’s Olmsted Parks & Landscapes (FMOPL). \nWyman Park and the Stony Run Stream valley demonstrate the premier design work of the Olmsted Brothers from 1903 to 1947. The influential landscape architecture firm was established in 1898 by brothers John Charles Olmsted and Frederick Law Olmsted Jr.\, sons of the eminent landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted. The Municipal Art Society hired them to produce the City’s first comprehensive park system plan in 1904\, the Development of Public Grounds for Greater Baltimore Report. The Wyman family had donated land for Johns Hopkins University in 1902 for use as a northern campus and that same year\, the University gave the remainder of the land to the City of Baltimore to serve as a public park. \nIn the 1904 Report\, the Olmsted Brothers identified Wyman Park\, with its old beech trees and bold topography\, as one of the finest single passages of scenery to be so near a large city and advocated for it to become a stream valley reserve and extended north and south Bookending the University to the southeast and fitting into the City grid is the intact Wyman Park Dell\, a 16-acre public park noted for its steep enclosing slopes and a large\, sweeping lower lawn\, fully realized and conceived by the Olmsted Brothers. The presentation will focus on their vision and what remains today from Stony Run’s headwaters at the city’s northern border to where the stream joins the Jones Falls River to the south. \nIn addition to the Baltimore Architecture Foundation (BAF) and Baltimore Heritage\, Inc.\, this Virtual History is co-sponsored by the Friends of Maryland’s Olmsted Parks & Landscapes (FMOPL) and the Maryland Society of Landscape Architects. \nPresenters’ Bios: \nSince 1986\, Sandy Sparks\, founding president of the FMOPL\, is strongly committed to the non-profit organization’s involvement in streetscape\, park system and watershed planning\, in addition to its significant archive of Olmsted drawings. Since the 1990s\, Sandy has served as the designer/editor of The Olmstedian monograph series focused on Olmsted designs in the Baltimore region. A strong believer in the value of stakeholder-based parks friends groups\, Sandy launched the Friends of Wyman Park Dell (1983)\, Friends of Mt. Vernon Place (2000) and Friends of Stony Run (2011). With support from the Central Baltimore Partnership\, she led the launch of the Friends of the Jones Falls\, becoming the group’s first President in 2019. A graduate of the University of Illinois (BFA) and Maryland Institute of Art (MFA)\, Sandy remains an active leader in Charles Village\, where she has lived since 1966 and continues to design/edit The Charles Villager. \nJillian Storms\, AIA\, is an architect in the School Facilities Branch of the Maryland State Department of Education. She once served on the Board of Directors and Inventory Committee of FMOPL. She is a former President of the BAF and now serves as co-chair of its research committee\, the Dead Architects’ Society. She received BAF’s Roger Redden Award and Preservation Maryland’s George T. Harrison Volunteer Award in recognition of her extensive architectural research and public programming and has already graced us with a couple of Virtual Histories focused on that research
URL:https://www.aiabaltimore.org/event/olmsted-brothers-vision-for-wyman-park-and-the-stony-run-stream-valley/
CATEGORIES:Lectures,Virtual Histories
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210212T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210212T133000
DTSTAMP:20260410T164526
CREATED:20210201T160911Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210201T160911Z
UID:26001-1613134800-1613136600@www.aiabaltimore.org
SUMMARY:Finding Eutaw Farm: The Herring Run Archaeology Project
DESCRIPTION:Join us to learn about how Eutaw Farm was discovered and its role in Baltimore history\n\n\nThis program is hosted on Zoom. Upon registering you will receive an email confirmation and a Zoom link. If you do not receive a link\, please contact ndennies@aiabalt.com. If you do not contact us at least 1 hour prior to the start of the program\, we cannot guarantee admittance. \nVirtual Histories are back in 2021! The Baltimore Architecture Foundation (BAF) and Baltimore Heritage present a series of 30 minute live virtual tours and presentations focusing on Baltimore architecture\, preservation and history. \nTickets are donation based. We encourage you to give what you can to support BAF and Baltimore Heritage. Your support helps us make up for lost tour and program revenue from COVID-19 and create more virtual programs like this. \nJason Shellenhamer and Lisa Kraus are the co-directors of the Herring Run Archaeology Project\, a free public archaeology program in the City of Baltimore. Jason\, Lisa and their team of volunteers have spent the last 6 years exploring the remains of Eutaw Farm\, an 18th and 19th century estate located in modern Herring Run Park. The house at Eutaw Farm burned down in 1865\, and vanished from memory\, but it was never really gone. Join us to learn about how Eutaw Farm was discovered\, the roles it played in Baltimore’s history\, and the fascinating people who once called Eutaw home.
URL:https://www.aiabaltimore.org/event/finding-eutaw-farm-the-herring-run-archaeology-project/
CATEGORIES:Lectures,Virtual Histories
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210205T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210205T133000
DTSTAMP:20260410T164526
CREATED:20210201T160827Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210201T160827Z
UID:25999-1612530000-1612531800@www.aiabaltimore.org
SUMMARY:The Preserve the Baltimore Uprising Project: A People's Archive
DESCRIPTION:Dr. Denise Meringolo describes the processes\, values\, and ethical considerations underlying the creation of Preserve the Baltimore Uprising\n\n\nThis program is hosted on Zoom. Upon registering you will receive an email confirmation and a Zoom link. If you do not receive a link\, please contact ndennies@aiabalt.com. If you do not contact us at least 1 hour prior to the start of the program\, we cannot guarantee admittance. \nVirtual Histories are back in 2021! The Baltimore Architecture Foundation (BAF) and Baltimore Heritage present a series of 30 minute live virtual tours and presentations focusing on Baltimore architecture\, preservation and history. \nTickets are donation based. We encourage you to give what you can to support BAF and Baltimore Heritage. Your support helps us make up for lost tour and program revenue from COVID-19 and create more virtual programs like this. \nPreserve the Baltimore Uprising began as a digital repository designed to preserve and make accessible original content captured and created by individual community members\, grassroots organizations\, and witnesses to the protests that followed the death of Freddie Gray on April 19\, 2015. It is a people’s archive. For the people. By the people. Owned by all. \nPublic Historians strive to be both responsible and responsive. As scholars\, we are responsible for upholding the highest standards of intellectual inquiry. As public servants\, we are committed to responding to the needs\, interests\, and desires of our audiences and stakeholders. Sometimes it is difficult to balance these two demands. In this talk\, Dr. Denise Meringolo\, Professor and Director of Public History at the University of Maryland\, Baltimore County\, describes the processes\, values\, and ethical considerations underlying the creation of Preserve the Baltimore Uprising\, a crowd-sourced digital collection.
URL:https://www.aiabaltimore.org/event/the-preserve-the-baltimore-uprising-project-a-peoples-archive/
CATEGORIES:Lectures,Virtual Histories
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210126T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210126T180000
DTSTAMP:20260410T164526
CREATED:20210111T161507Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210125T213100Z
UID:25779-1611680400-1611684000@www.aiabaltimore.org
SUMMARY:Rethinking Health and Opportunity through Healthy Housing
DESCRIPTION:Join us in a discussion with community leaders as we dialogue on environmental justice and its effect on the built environment…\n\n\n\nSponsored by the AIA Baltimore Committee on the Environment + Resilience \nThis presentation will address environmental justice issues and how they affect the built environment in Baltimore. Presenter Ruth Ann Norton will discuss neighborhood environmental health\, the proximity of pollution sources to specific communities\, as well the transformational impact healthy housing has on a path to lowering racial and health disparities and opening better life opportunities for all. \nSpeaker: Ruth Ann Norton\, President & CEO of Green & Healthy Homes Initiative \nRuth Ann Norton serves as President & CEO of the Green & Healthy Homes Initiative (GHHI)\, a national nonprofit founded in 1986 dedicated to the elimination of childhood lead poisoning and the creation of healthy\, safe and energy efficient housing for America’s children. A dedicated advocate for healthy housing\, she broadened the mission of the organization\, formerly the Coalition to End Childhood Lead Poisoning\, by designing a groundbreaking national program built on a framework of cross-sector collaboration to efficiently deliver green\, healthy and safe homes in communities throughout the United States. \nModerator: Peter Doo\, FAIA\, Architect and Principal\, Doo Consulting \nPeter Doo\, FAIA\, LEED Fellow\, is the founder and a Principal of Doo Consulting LLC and a recognized leader in sustainability. An early LEED Accredited Professional\, he now works with a variety of rating systems including LEED\, Green Globes\, the Living Building Challenge and National Green Building Standards.
URL:https://www.aiabaltimore.org/event/rethinking-health-and-opportunity-through-healthy-housing/
CATEGORIES:Lectures,Webinars
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210122T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210122T133000
DTSTAMP:20260410T164526
CREATED:20210112T143123Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210112T143123Z
UID:25794-1611320400-1611322200@www.aiabaltimore.org
SUMMARY:Lake Clifton High: The Story of Baltimore's Most Ambitious Modernist School
DESCRIPTION:Lake Clifton was Baltimore’s crown jewel of a massive school building effort. What happened?\n\n\n\nThis program is hosted on Zoom. Upon registering you will receive an email confirmation and a Zoom link. If you do not receive a link\, please contact ndennies@aiabalt.com. If you do not contact us at least 1 hour prior to the start of the program\, we cannot guarantee admittance. \nVirtual Histories are back in 2021! The Baltimore Architecture Foundation (BAF) and Baltimore Heritage present a series of 30 minute live virtual tours and presentations focusing on Baltimore architecture\, preservation and history. \nTickets are donation based. We encourage you to give what you can to support BAF and Baltimore Heritage. Your support helps us make up for lost tour and program revenue from COVID-19 and create more virtual programs like this. \nThis presentation will outline the history of Baltimore’s Lake Clifton High School. Completed in 1971 as the crown jewel of a massive school-building effort\, the sprawling and state-of-the-art campus was expected to stimulate racial integration and ease school overcrowding. However\, white students immediately rejected the school and the campus’ huge capacity was never filled. Lake Clifton developed a poor reputation around the city\, and recently closed for good after years of restructuring and physical dilapidation. The campus is likely to soon be acquired and demolished by Morgan State University; thus\, now is an ideal time to examine and commemorate Lake Clifton’s role in a tumultuous period of Baltimore’s history. \nJulian Frost\, grew up in Baltimore and graduated from Baltimore City College in 2019 and is currently a sophomore at Haverford College. He is majoring in the Growth and Structure of Cities program at Haverford’s sister school\, Bryn Mawr. Over the past year Julian has developed a great interest in the history of Baltimore’s built environment\, and is currently thinking about how to direct this interest into productive\, creative\, and potentially professional avenues. Julian started an Instagram page (@baltimorebuilthistory) as a repository for his casual research and findings.
URL:https://www.aiabaltimore.org/event/lake-clifton-high-the-story-of-baltimores-most-ambitious-modernist-school/
CATEGORIES:Lectures,Virtual Histories
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20201109T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20201109T130000
DTSTAMP:20260410T164526
CREATED:20201001T142918Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201001T142918Z
UID:23968-1604923200-1604926800@www.aiabaltimore.org
SUMMARY:The Restorative Impact of Perceived Open Space
DESCRIPTION:Join us for a webinar from Sky Factory as we explore the restorative impact of perceived open space…\n\n\n\nThis course explores the impact of deep plan buildings on human performance. We analyze the role daylight and perceived open space play in shaping cognitive function\, as well as how our psycho-physiology changes in interior environments. \nThe course introduces a new technology that proposes the restorative value of perceived open space in its two essential orientations: perceived zenith and perceived horizon line. Restoring these fundamental spatial reference frames through a valid multisensory illusion restores a range of wellness benefits normally associated with interiors applying biophilic design principles. \nLearning Objectives \n• Discuss the sky as the therapeutic spatial medium of daylight. \n• Explain why circadian photoreceptors may generate a restorative effect on spatial cognition. \n• Describe the link between our sensorimotor system\, memory\, and spatial reference frames. \n• Summarize the malleable nature of human perception and how multisensory \nillusions can make space. \n• Explain the implications of deep plan buildings on human wellness. \nAbout the Presenter \nGeof Northridge has extensive experience in both commercial real estate and the commercial construction industry. For the past eight years he has been with Sky Factory developing and presenting continuing education courses on topics including the effect of biophilic design elements on human physiology\, how biophilic illusions can be created to provide many of the same physiological benefits as actual biophilic design elements\, and how knowledge of the mechanics of human perception can be paired with carefully crafted illusions of nature to alter how humans experience interior spaces.
URL:https://www.aiabaltimore.org/event/the-restorative-impact-of-perceived-open-space/
CATEGORIES:Continuing Education,Lectures,Webinars
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20201106T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20201106T123000
DTSTAMP:20260410T164526
CREATED:20201019T193619Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201102T162800Z
UID:24220-1604664000-1604665800@www.aiabaltimore.org
SUMMARY:Public Artworks of Lake Clifton High School
DESCRIPTION:Join artist Ryan Patterson for a presentation about Lake Clifton High School and the legacy of Baltimore’s mid-century public art\n\n\n\nThis program is hosted on Zoom. Upon registering you will receive an email confirmation and a Zoom link. If you do not receive a link\, please contact ndennies@aiabalt.com. If you do not contact us at least 1 hour prior to the start of the program\, we cannot guarantee admittance. \nIn 1969\, Lake Clifton Highschool was the largest public school campus on the east coast and a high profile example of Baltimore’s art in schools program. Now the building sits vacant and awaits demolition. Through the lens of public art we will examine the history of the location\, the seven artists commissioned to create contemporary works for the school\, and touch on the current predicament of unmaintained mid-century public artworks in aging school buildings across Baltimore City. \nC. Ryan Patterson is an artist and arts administrator who lives with his family in Better Waverly\, Baltimore. From 2013 to 2019 he was the Public Art Administrator at the Baltimore Office of Promotion & The Arts where he worked closely with advocates and volunteer collaborators to establish an updated inventory of public artworks across Baltimore. He currently serves as a state contractor for public art project management. \nTickets are donation based. We encourage you to give what you can to support BAF and Baltimore Heritage. Your support helps us make up for lost tour and program revenue from COVID-19 and create more virtual programs like this.
URL:https://www.aiabaltimore.org/event/public-artworks-of-lake-clifton-high-school/
CATEGORIES:Lectures,Special Events,Tours
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20200922T083000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20200922T093000
DTSTAMP:20260410T164526
CREATED:20200821T154532Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200825T140930Z
UID:23525-1600763400-1600767000@www.aiabaltimore.org
SUMMARY:Green by Design: Green Building Tax Incentives
DESCRIPTION:AIA Baltimore Practice Management Committee Continues It’s Webinar Series…\n\n\n\n1.0 AIA LU available \nProgram Description \nDiscussion of tax benefits architectural firms create for their clients. We all know about the179-D deduction for energy-efficient design of public buildings – did you know that also applies directly to private owners? The new tax law allows your clients a significant depreciation deduction for new construction or renovations – see how they can write off up to 40% of those costs. Learn about this and other special deductions for renovation projects. \nLearning Objectives \n\nHow your non-public owners benefit from 179-D energy efficient design and construction benefit\nIncreased depreciation deductions now available for new build and renovations\nAsset disposition deductions create additional benefits for renovation projects\n\nPresenter \nGeoffrey R. Kimmel – Senior Business Development Director –Philadelphia \nGeoff has an extensive financial services background including service in the specialty tax\, commercial banking\, and insurance industries. Since 2010\, he has consulted heavily with ETSclients to identify\, qualify\, and capture tax benefits. Prior assignments included managing Treasury Management consulting teams serving clients ranging from Small Business to Fortune 500 companies designing and delivering custom-developed operational\, systems and process improvement solutions. As CFO and Board Member for a regional bank\, he managed all bank operational and financial activities.
URL:https://www.aiabaltimore.org/event/green-by-design-green-building-tax-incentives/
CATEGORIES:Lectures,Webinars
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20200911T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20200911T133000
DTSTAMP:20260410T164526
CREATED:20200908T201417Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200908T201417Z
UID:23645-1599829200-1599831000@www.aiabaltimore.org
SUMMARY:Uncovering the Stories of the Peale
DESCRIPTION:Join us to hear some of the many stories of the historic Peale Museum building.\n\n\n\nThis program is hosted on Zoom and Facebook Live. Upon registering you will receive an email confirmation and a Zoom link. If you do not receive a link\, please contact ndennies@aiabalt.com. If you do not contact us at least 1 hour prior to the start of the program\, we cannot guarantee admittance. \nThe Baltimore Architecture Foundation (BAF) and Baltimore Heritage present a series of 30 minute live virtual tours and presentations focusing on Baltimore architecture\, preservation and history. \nTickets are donation based. We encourage you to give what you can to support BAF and Baltimore Heritage. Your support helps us make up for lost tour and program revenue from COVID-19 and create more virtual programs like this. \nHear some of the many stories of the historic Peale Museum building\, from its origins as the first purpose-built museum in the country\, to the introduction of gaslight technology to the city\, to its role as Baltimore’s first City Hall and public high school for people of color. Get a glimpse of what is coming next as the Peale relaunches as a center for Baltimore stories and studies\, and a laboratory for reinventing the museum for the 21st century in the creative and innovative spirit of the Peale family. \nAbout the Presenter \nNancy Proctor is founding director of the Peale\, a center for Baltimore stories and studies and laboratory for cultural innovation based in the historic Peale Museum building. Previously\, Nancy was Deputy Director of Digital Experience and Communications at the Baltimore Museum of Art (2014-2016)\, Head of Mobile Strategy and Initiatives at the Smithsonian Institution (2010-2014)\, and Head of New Media Initiatives at the Smithsonian’s American Art Museum (2008-2010). With a PhD in American art history and a background in filmmaking\, curation and feminist theory and criticism in the arts\, Nancy lectures and publishes widely on technology and innovation in museums\, in French and Italian as well as English.
URL:https://www.aiabaltimore.org/event/uncovering-the-stories-of-the-peale/
CATEGORIES:Lectures,Virtual Histories
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20200828T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20200929T133000
DTSTAMP:20260410T164526
CREATED:20200820T142317Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200820T142317Z
UID:23511-1598619600-1601386200@www.aiabaltimore.org
SUMMARY:Pioneering Women of Architecture in Maryland
DESCRIPTION:Attendees will learn about the first women to practice architecture in Maryland and their legacies.\n\n\n\nThis program is hosted on Zoom and Facebook Live. Upon registering you will receive an email confirmation and a Zoom link. If you do not receive a link\, please contact ndennies@aiabalt.com. If you do not contact us at least 1 hour prior to the start of the program\, we cannot guarantee admittance. \nThe Baltimore Architecture Foundation (BAF) and Baltimore Heritage present a series of 30 minute live virtual tours and presentations focusing on Baltimore architecture\, preservation and history. \nTickets are donation based. We encourage you to give what you can to support BAF and Baltimore Heritage. Your support helps us make up for lost tour and program revenue from COVID-19 and create more virtual programs like this. \nWomen have been professionally practicing architecture in Maryland for over 80 years\, yet little is known about those from earlier generations. AIA Baltimore and BAF Research of state architecture records have uncovered a number of women architects who practiced through the lean years of the World Wars and the Great Depression\, designing buildings in Maryland and across the country. \nArchitect Jillian Storms will share the stories of these pioneering women and the buildings they designed. \nAbout the Presenter \nJillian Storms\, AIA\, is an architect and capital programs manager at the School Facilities Branch of the Maryland State Department of Education. She is a former President of the Baltimore Architecture Foundation. Jillian led the Early Women of Architecture project\, culminating in a traveling exhibition featuring twelve women practicing architecture from the 1920s to the 1960s. Jillian continues to work with BAF to bring more stories of women architects to light and document their projects.
URL:https://www.aiabaltimore.org/event/pioneering-women-of-architecture-in-maryland/
CATEGORIES:Lectures,Virtual Histories,Webinars
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20200730T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20200730T130000
DTSTAMP:20260410T164526
CREATED:20200714T175136Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200714T175136Z
UID:22990-1596110400-1596114000@www.aiabaltimore.org
SUMMARY:Two Sides of the Redline: How Policy Shaped A City (Maryland Historical Society)
DESCRIPTION:Across the United States\, patterns of racial and economic segregation can be directly attributed to the systematic denial of mortgage and bank lending encouraged in the National Housing Act of 1934. \nThese nation-wide discriminatory practices\, known as redlining\, continued legally until 1968\, when the Fair Housing Act banned racial discrimination in housing. But 50 years after that law passed\, the lingering effects of redlining are clear. In this virtual program\, hosted by the Maryland Historical Society\, experts will outline the practice of redlining in Baltimore and discuss the historical\, demographic\, economic\, and traumatic impact these policies continue to have on Black communities today. \nModerated by David Armenti\, MdHS Director of Education with special guests Dr. Corey J. Henderson\, historical trauma healing expert; Eric Holcomb\, Executive Director of the Commission for Historical and Architectural Preservation (CHAP); Antero Pietila\, journalist\, writer\, and author of Not in My Neighborhood; and Delegate Stephanie Smith\, District 45\, Baltimore City. \nLEARN MORE
URL:https://www.aiabaltimore.org/event/two-sides-of-the-redline-how-policy-shaped-a-city-maryland-historical-society/
CATEGORIES:Lectures,Partner Programs
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20200724T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20200724T133000
DTSTAMP:20260410T164526
CREATED:20200625T175913Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200625T175913Z
UID:22743-1595595600-1595597400@www.aiabaltimore.org
SUMMARY:Roadblocks: The Effects of Highways In and Around Druid Hill Park
DESCRIPTION:Learn about the cultural and environmental impacts of cars in and around Druid Hill Park.\n\n\n\nThis program is hosted on Zoom and Facebook Live. Upon registering you will receive an email confirmation and a Zoom link. If you do not receive a link\, please contact ndennies@aiabalt.com. If you do not contact us at least 1 hour prior to the start of the program\, we cannot guarantee admittance. \nThe Baltimore Architecture Foundation (BAF) and Baltimore Heritage present a series of 30 minute live virtual tours and presentations focusing on Baltimore architecture\, preservation and history. \nTickets are donation based. We encourage you to give what you can to support the BAF\, Baltimore Heritage and Clean Water Action. Your support helps us make up for lost tour and program revenue from COVID-19 and create more virtual programs like this. \nJoin public artist Graham Coreil-Allen and environmental activist Jennifer Kunze as they explore the cultural and environmental impacts of cars in and around Druid Hill Park. Beginning in the 1940s\, car-oriented planning deprived neighboring residents of the public health\, cultural\, and economic benefits of Druid Hill Park. Construction of the Druid Hill Expressway and the Jones Falls Expressway resulted in dangerous five-to-nine-lane-wide highways encapsulating the park\, and blocking access by nearby residents. Further\, this influx of cars brought increased air pollution into the neighborhoods. \nGraham will shed light on The Access Project for Druid Hill Park (TAP Druid Hill)\, his initiative to bring together diverse neighborhood groups to shape the future of transportation around and access to Druid Hill Park. Jennifer will join the conversation from another angle to discuss the environmental and public health impacts of car travel in the city. The transportation sector is responsible for about 1/3 of asthma-causing air pollution\, more than any smokestack\, and Baltimore’s car-centric planning has harmed our air and water. \nAbout the Speakers\n \nGraham Coreil-Allen is a Baltimore-based public artist making places more inclusive and livable through public art\, placemaking\, and civic engagement. Coreil-Allen collaborates with neighbors to interpret and activate public spaces through public art for pedestrian safety and play\, interactive mapping\, radical walking tours\, and neighborhood advocacy. Whether creating artistic crosswalks\, memorable wayfinding\, interactive sculptures\, or light art installations\, Coreil-Allen caringly infuses public space with play and accessibility. \nJennifer Kunze is the Maryland Program Organizer at Clean Water Action\, where she works to support local campaigns in communities across Maryland. In Baltimore\, her work has focused on banning crude oil train terminals\, understanding the risk of lead in our drinking water supply\, supporting offshore wind development\, advocating for better assistance and prevention for people dealing with sewage backups in their homes\, and more.
URL:https://www.aiabaltimore.org/event/roadblocks-the-effects-of-highways-in-and-around-druid-hill-park/
CATEGORIES:Lectures,Virtual Histories
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20200721T083000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20200721T093000
DTSTAMP:20260410T164526
CREATED:20200602T152452Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200722T153503Z
UID:22412-1595320200-1595323800@www.aiabaltimore.org
SUMMARY:Managing Remote Employees in a Post-COVID World
DESCRIPTION:At the start of the COVID-19 pandemic\, many employers were forced to transition their professional employees to remote work due to government orders or to protect their employees from the spread of the disease. Even though many businesses are beginning to reopen\, most experts agree that remote work will continue to be a necessary\, or even desired\, feature of work life in the years to come. For executives\, managers and supervisors\, long-term management of a remote workforce presents unique challenges and opportunities.\nThis webinar will cover: \n• Pros and cons of remote work\, including reasons why companies have implemented or moved away from remote work in the past \n• Strategies for maintaining workplace culture in a remote environment \n• Policies and procedures to ensure effective collaboration \n• Policies and procedures for employee management and engagement \n• Strategies to ensure that confidential and trade secret information is protected \n• Ways to adapt company policies\, such as paid time off\, to fit a remote work model \nPresenter: \nGregory Currey \nWright\, Constable & Skeen\, LLP \n \nGregory Currey is an experienced and efficient attorney who focuses his practice on Labor and Employment Law\, Commercial Litigation and Corporate Immigration matters. Mr. Currey represents companies and individuals at all stages of an issue\, regardless of whether a client is seeking general advice\, an independent sounding board\, is seeking to avoid litigation\, or is already involved in litigation. He enjoys working with his clients to identify their unique goals and tailor customized solutions to achieve their objectives. Mr. Currey also works to keep his clients aware of current developments by frequently speaking and writing on the latest developments in employment and immigration law. \n\n\n\nWatch this previously recorded program
URL:https://www.aiabaltimore.org/event/managing-remote-employees-in-a-post-covid-world/
CATEGORIES:Lectures,Webinars
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20200717T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20200717T133000
DTSTAMP:20260410T164526
CREATED:20200604T194052Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200701T131854Z
UID:22466-1594990800-1594992600@www.aiabaltimore.org
SUMMARY:You Will Find It Handy: Documenting Green Book Sites in Md. (Anne Bruder)
DESCRIPTION:Join historian Anne Bruder to learn about Green Book sites across Maryland\n\n\nThis program is hosted on Zoom and Facebook Live. Upon registering you will receive an email confirmation and a Zoom link. If you do not receive a link\, please contact ndennies@aiabalt.com. If you do not contact us at least 1 hour prior to the start of the program\, we cannot guarantee admittance. \nThe Baltimore Architecture Foundation (BAF) and Baltimore Heritage present a series of 30 minute live virtual tours and presentations focusing on Baltimore architecture\, preservation and history. \nTickets are donation based. We encourage you to give what you can to support the BAF and Baltimore Heritage. Your support helps us make up for lost tour and program revenue from COVID-19 and create more virtual programs like this. \nThe Green Book was created as a guide by and for African Americans to safely find everyday amenities like restaurants\, shops\, and motels in a segregated America. Historian Anne Bruder studied the Green Book to identify sites in eleven states. Research of Green Book sites documents the physical legacy of Jim Crow-era segregation and has revealed over 100 sites in 26 towns across Maryland. \nAbout the Presenter \nAnne E. Bruder is an architectural historian. Her work has allowed her to investigate several post-World War II structures in the suburbs\, including the Atomic Energy Commission Building in Germantown\, Montgomery County. \nAs a transportation historian\, her interests in 20th century events\, travel and the built environment come together in the Green Book studies. She is the author of “Playing and Staying Along Maryland’s Highways\,” which is the poster presentation regarding buildings in eleven states that are listed in The Green Book\, and a contributor to the Green Book overview poster “You Will Find It Handy.” \nMs. Bruder also contributed and presented on the exhibit “Ms. Mod”: Women’s Contribution to Mid-Century Modernism in Maryland\,” about the work of twelve 20th Century women architects in Maryland. She received her AB from Smith College and her MAH from the University of Virginia. Ms. Bruder lives in the Baltimore high rise designed by Mies van der Rohe. \nAbout the Baltimore Architecture Foundation \nThe Baltimore Architecture Foundation (BAF) celebrates design and the built environment. Launched in 1987\, BAF encourages people to explore Baltimore architecture: to be mindful of the area’s history\, and recognize Baltimore’s architectural heritage\, and appreciate its design innovations. \nThrough its tours\, lectures\, educational programs for adults and kids\, exhibitions\, research\, and publications\, the BAF demonstrates how ideas are manifested in the built environment and urban design of the city. \nAbout Baltimore Heritage  \nFounded in 1960\, Baltimore Heritage\, Inc. is Baltimore’s nonprofit historic and architectural preservation organization. With a small staff\, 33 volunteer board members\, and a host of volunteers\, we work to preserve and promote Baltimore’s historic buildings and neighborhoods.
URL:https://www.aiabaltimore.org/event/you-will-find-it-handy-documenting-green-book-sites-in-md-anne-bruder/
CATEGORIES:Lectures,Virtual Histories,Webinars
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20200710T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20200710T133000
DTSTAMP:20260410T164526
CREATED:20200625T175829Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200625T192428Z
UID:22741-1594386000-1594387800@www.aiabaltimore.org
SUMMARY:Preservation Trends in Baltimore and Beyond (Eric Holcomb)
DESCRIPTION:Where is historic preservation going in Baltimore? Learn about initiatives underway at CHAP.\n\n\nThis program is hosted on Zoom and Facebook Live. Upon registering you will receive an email confirmation and a Zoom link. If you do not receive a link\, please contact ndennies@aiabalt.com. If you do not contact us at least 1 hour prior to the start of the program\, we cannot guarantee admittance. \nThe Baltimore Architecture Foundation (BAF) and Baltimore Heritage present a series of 30 minute live virtual tours and presentations focusing on Baltimore architecture\, preservation and history. \nTickets are donation based. We encourage you to give what you can to support the BAF and Baltimore Heritage. Your support helps us make up for lost tour and program revenue from COVID-19 and create more virtual programs like this. \nIn the 54 years since the 1966 Historic Preservation Act\, Historic Preservation has evolved into a sophisticated profession that has sought to holistically preserve our past through the careful study and recognition of America’s built environment. In Baltimore\, historic preservation has become an essential component to neighborhood revitalization\, leading Baltimore’s most successful neighborhood revitalization stories. \nBut where are we now? Where is Historic Preservation going in Baltimore? Eric Holcomb\, the Executive Director for the Commission for Historical and Architectural Preservation\, will lead a discussion on where the Commission for Historical and Architectural Preservation (CHAP) is now\, and the many initiatives currently underway. \nAbout the presenter \nEric obtained a Liberal Arts degree from St. Mary’s College of Maryland and Master’s Degree in Preservation Studies at Boston University. He worked for several remodeling and restoration companies as a tradesman until he joined the staff of the Commission for Historical and Architectural Preservation (CHAP) in 1994. In 2004\, the staff of CHAP merged with the Department of Planning. In 2014\, he became the Executive Director of CHAP and Division Chief where he has worked to further integrate and coordinate historic preservation into Planning activities. He is the author of City As Suburb: A History of Northeast Baltimore Since 1660. In 2016 he was awarded with the Mayor’s Medallion for Meritorious Service and in 2018 the Honorable mention for the 14th annual Richard A. Lidinsky\, Sr. award for Excellence in Public Service. He is married and has two boys\, a one-eyed dog and a cat with a crooked tail. \nAbout the Baltimore Architecture Foundation \nThe Baltimore Architecture Foundation (BAF) celebrates design and the built environment. Launched in 1987\, BAF encourages people to explore Baltimore architecture: to be mindful of the area’s history\, and recognize Baltimore’s architectural heritage\, and appreciate its design innovations. \nThrough its tours\, lectures\, educational programs for adults and kids\, exhibitions\, research\, and publications\, the BAF demonstrates how ideas are manifested in the built environment and urban design of the city. \nAbout Baltimore Heritage  \nFounded in 1960\, Baltimore Heritage\, Inc. is Baltimore’s nonprofit historic and architectural preservation organization. With a small staff\, 33 volunteer board members\, and a host of volunteers\, we work to preserve and promote Baltimore’s historic buildings and neighborhoods.
URL:https://www.aiabaltimore.org/event/preservation-trends-in-baltimore-and-beyond-eric-holcomb/
CATEGORIES:Lectures,Virtual Histories
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20200701T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20200701T173000
DTSTAMP:20260410T164526
CREATED:20200617T165155Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200714T131919Z
UID:22627-1593619200-1593624600@www.aiabaltimore.org
SUMMARY:8 Ways To Re-Invent Yourself In A Crisis
DESCRIPTION:Free for AIA Baltimore members/$20 non-members\n\n\n\nFree for AIA Baltimore members/$20 non-members\n \nBreakout Discussion/Virtual Happy Hour: 5-5:30pm\n \nTimes are hard. At the very least\, times are uncertain. \nWinston Churchill once said\, “a crisis is a terrible thing to waste.” When everything falls apart\, it can be a chance to take stock and remodel your company. \nFor this webinar\, 8 Ways To Re-Invent Yourself In A Crisis\, Vernon Brokke will walk you through a tool to identify areas of your business to invest in while cutting other areas. He’ll also share some case studies of other founders who have pivoted in a crisis. \nThe presentation will address:\n \n• 5 Stages of Recovery and Bounce Back \n• How to pick the parts of your business that are worth keeping (and what to get rid of right now) \n• How one founder decided to use a crisis to exit 6 of 7 business units only to go on and sell the remaining business unit for a double-digit multiple \n• How to leverage digital and virtual channels to bring your product or service to market when your traditional business model is compromised \n• How to leverage social media groups to build your business at little or no cost as more people flock to social media to combat isolation \n• One surprising source of financing for your business right now \nYou’ll leave this webinar clearer on what you need to do and energized to get it done. \nParticipants will receive a copy of eBook 8 Ways To Re-Invent Yourself In A Crisis after the webinar. \nAbout the Presenter \nVernon Brokke is a Business Strategist with over 30 years’ experience in sales\, management\, and entrepreneurship. Currently\, a Strategic Advisor with the Brokke Group\, Vernon has been a partner and owner in companies like Alternate Tax Solutions\, VTR Services\, Jackson Hewitt Tax (with over 13 locations and more than 300 employees)\, City Publications\, and Growth Coach Chesapeake. Vernon won numerous sales and management awards working for IT companies like StrataCom\, Redline and ROLM\, who now operate under Cisco\, Juniper and IBM\, respectively. Vernon served on the CCBC Foundation Board Treasurer until 2019. Vernon’s four children attended Loyola Blakefield and Seton Keough. He currently lives in Catonsville\, Maryland with his wife. \nWatch This Previous Program On Youtube
URL:https://www.aiabaltimore.org/event/8-ways-to-re-invent-yourself-in-a-crisis/
CATEGORIES:Lectures,Webinars
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20200626T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20200626T140000
DTSTAMP:20260410T164526
CREATED:20200610T131529Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200624T155438Z
UID:22550-1593176400-1593180000@www.aiabaltimore.org
SUMMARY:The Future of Workplace Design
DESCRIPTION:Explore the intersection of architecture and new public health protocols through this hour-long conversation with three practitioners.\n\n\nThis program is hosted on Zoom and Facebook Live. Upon registering you will receive an email confirmation and a Zoom link. If you do not receive a link\, please contact ndennies@aiabalt.com. If you do not contact us at least 1 hour prior to the start of the program\, we cannot guarantee admittance. \nThis week\, Baltimore Architecture Foundation and Baltimore Heritage are teaming up with the Baltimore Museum of Industry for a panel discussion about the future of the workplace. How will the design of the workplace have to change as a result of the Coronavirus pandemic? Explore the intersection of architecture and new public health protocols through this hour-long conversation with three practitioners. \nTickets are donation based. We encourage you to give what you can to support BAF\, Baltimore Heritage and the Baltimore Museum of Industry. Your support helps us make up for lost tour and program revenue from COVID-19 and create more virtual programs like this. \nPanel \nModerator: \nSuzanne Frasier\, FAIA\, Associate Professor and Chair | Department of Undergraduate Design\, School of Architecture + Planning | Morgan State University \nPanelists: \nAmah Dokyi\, Under Armour \nAmah Dokyi is a Global Store Designer for the Americas at Under Armour. She graduated Marymount University with a masters in Interior Design in 2019  and is an Adjunct at Morgan State University at the Undergraduate School of Architecture and Planning. She has a passion for textile design and believes that design should evoke an emotion. \nBen Boyd\, PLA\, ASLA – Associate Landscape Architect\, Mahan Rykiel; MDASLA President \nBenjamin Boyd is a registered landscape architect at Mahan Rykiel Associates in Baltimore\, Maryland. Ben brings multiple years of experience on a broad range of project types\, locally and internationally. He has been a project manager and integral team member on many master planning\, academic\, institutional\, hospitality\, and urban design projects around the country as well as in China\, Brazil\, and Dubai. Ben is also the current President of the Maryland Chapter of the American Society of Landscape Architects. He holds a Bachelor’s degree in landscape architecture from the University of Florida. \nEhren Gaag\, AIA\, LEED AP\, Principal & Design Director\, Gensler \nDesign leader\, forward-thinking strategist\, and product design expert\, Ehren brings an inventive\, cross-disciplinary approach to project work. A proponent of dynamic office space that reshapes and transforms with shifting business demands\, Ehren has introduced new and innovative methods to address the corporate office’s shift to a more open and collaborative structure. Ehren advises clients who are adopting next-generation workplaces on the best furniture solutions for their specific needs. He designs products for the commercial furniture industry\, specializing in furniture and casegoods design for both manufacturers and corporate clients. Ehren holds a Bachelor of Architecture from the University of Cincinnati.
URL:https://www.aiabaltimore.org/event/the-future-of-workplace-design/
CATEGORIES:Lectures,Virtual Histories,Webinars
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20200618T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20200618T190000
DTSTAMP:20260410T164526
CREATED:20200617T145809Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200617T150033Z
UID:22624-1592503200-1592506800@www.aiabaltimore.org
SUMMARY:Architectures of Socialization & Control: A Conversation about Schools\, Prisons\, and Housing (SAH\, Latrobe Chapter)
DESCRIPTION:Presented by the New York Review of Architecture + Interference Archive\, the event will focus on the intersections of schools\, prisons\, and housing. It will feature Latrobe’s 2020 symposium keynote speaker Dr. Amber Wiley in conversation with Dr. Joy Knoblauch\, and will be moderated by Dante Furioso. Dr. Wiley’s research concerns architecture of schools in Washington\, DC and prior to earning her PhD from GWU\, she served on the board of directors of the Latrobe Chapter. \nSpeakers \nAmber Wiley specializes in architecture\, urbanism\, and African American cultural studies. Her research interests are centered on the social aspects of design and how it affects urban communities – architecture as a literal and figural structure of power. She focuses on the ways local and national bodies have made the claim for the dominating narrative and collective memory of cities and examines how preservation and public history contribute to the creation and maintenance of the identity and “sense of place” of a city. \nJoy Knoblauch is an Assistant Professor of Architecture teaching history and theory of architecture as an exploration of architecture’s engagement with politics and science. She is on the steering committee of the University of Michigan’s Science\, Technology & Society Program and the steering committee for the Graduate Certificate in Healthy Cities. Her first book on The Architecture of Good Behavior: Psychology and Modern Institutional Design in Postwar America is forthcoming in the spring of 2020. Her current research expands this critique of functional theories of psyche into sensory and empathic arenas including a critical interpretation of ergonomics. \n  \nRegister Here:
URL:https://www.aiabaltimore.org/event/architectures-of-socialization-control-a-conversation-about-schools-prisons-and-housing-sah-latrobe-chapter/
CATEGORIES:Lectures,Partner Programs,Professional Development
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20200616T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20200616T180000
DTSTAMP:20260410T164526
CREATED:20200610T152942Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200610T175321Z
UID:22556-1592326800-1592330400@www.aiabaltimore.org
SUMMARY:Reconsidering Brutalist Architecture
DESCRIPTION:Join the Historic Resources Committee for a discussion on preserving brutalist architecture.\n\n\n\n1 AIA/CES LU available \nThis program is hosted on Zoom. Upon registering you will receive an email confirmation and a Zoom link. If you do not receive a link\, please contact ndennies@aiabalt.com. If you do not contact us at least 1 hour prior to the start of the program\, we cannot guarantee admittance. \nBrutalism is an architectural style that everyone loves to hate\, but is worth a second look for three main reasons: its value to architectural history; its connections to its communities; and our climate future. \nDrawing on examples from her work as an architect and preservationist at Quinn Evans\, Lucy Moore will dig in to those reasons to preserve\, adapt\, or reuse brutalist architecture. She will also outline the challenges facing its preservation.
URL:https://www.aiabaltimore.org/event/reconsidering-brutalist-architecture/
CATEGORIES:Lectures,Webinars
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20200612T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20200612T133000
DTSTAMP:20260410T164526
CREATED:20200528T193342Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200603T202132Z
UID:22361-1591966800-1591968600@www.aiabaltimore.org
SUMMARY:Transforming the Noxzema Factory into the Fox Building (Jessica Damseaux)
DESCRIPTION:This program is hosted on Zoom and Facebook Live. Upon registering you will receive an email confirmation and a Zoom link. If you do not receive a link\, please contact ndennies@aiabalt.com. If you do not contact us at least 1 hour prior to the start of the program\, we cannot guarantee admittance. \n\n\n\nThe Baltimore Architecture Foundation (BAF) and Baltimore Heritage present a series of 30 minute live virtual tours and presentations focusing on Baltimore architecture\, preservation and history. Join architect Jessica Damseaux to learn about how Alexander Design Studio adapted the historic Noxzema factory into a vibrant mixed-use community of apartments and artist workspaces. \nTickets are donation based. We encourage you to give what you can to support the BAF and Baltimore Heritage. Your support helps us make up for lost tour and program revenue from COVID-19 and create more virtual programs like this. \n \nThe Fox Building is an adaptive reuse of a 20th century Noxzema factory located in Hampden just blocks from the Avenue on 36th Street. Noxzema got its start in Maryland and became famous for its skin cream in little blue glass jars. \nThe building has been transformed into a vibrant mixed-use community of apartments and artist workspaces. Many of the building’s original features have been retained and restored including the original maple wood flooring\, glass block windows\, soaring 15’ factory ceilings\, and massive mushroom shaped concrete columns. The renovation was designed to meet the requirements of both National and State Historic tax credits. \nThe result is a decidedly modern mixed use building that celebrates its industrial origins. It includes 96 loft style and studio apartments with original concrete floors and modern kitchens\, studio artist space and gallery\, and common areas including a theater\, gym\, and pool. \nLearn about its transformation from the architect. \nAbout the Presenter \nJessica Damseaux\, AIA\, is a Principal at Alexander Design Studio and was Project Manager/Architect for the Fox Building. Jessica’s background includes multiuse\, multifamily\, commercial\, and institutional projects of varying scales. She has managed complex projects\, coordinating consultants throughout design and construction\, as well as led projects through LEED certification. She has served on the Lecture Series Committee for AIA Baltimore as well as the chapter’s Board of Directors. \nAbout the Baltimore Architecture Foundation \nThe Baltimore Architecture Foundation (BAF) celebrates design and the built environment. Launched in 1987\, BAF encourages people to explore Baltimore architecture: to be mindful of the area’s history\, and recognize Baltimore’s architectural heritage\, and appreciate its design innovations. \nThrough its tours\, lectures\, educational programs for adults and kids\, exhibitions\, research\, and publications\, the BAF demonstrates how ideas are manifested in the built environment and urban design of the city. \nAbout Baltimore Heritage  \nFounded in 1960\, Baltimore Heritage\, Inc. is Baltimore’s nonprofit historic and architectural preservation organization. With a small staff\, 33 volunteer board members\, and a host of volunteers\, we work to preserve and promote Baltimore’s historic buildings and neighborhoods.
URL:https://www.aiabaltimore.org/event/transforming-the-noxzema-factory-into-the-fox-building-jessica-damseaux/
CATEGORIES:Lectures,Virtual Histories,Webinars
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20200605T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20200605T133000
DTSTAMP:20260410T164526
CREATED:20200527T201526Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200603T202111Z
UID:22347-1591362000-1591363800@www.aiabaltimore.org
SUMMARY:Restoring the Roland Water Tower (Suzanne Frasier)
DESCRIPTION:This program is hosted on Zoom and Facebook Live. Upon registering you will receive an email confirmation and a Zoom link. If you do not receive a link\, please contact ndennies@aiabalt.com. If you do not contact us at least 1 hour prior to the start of the program\, we cannot guarantee admittance. \nThe Baltimore Architecture Foundation (BAF) and Baltimore Heritage present a series of 30 minute live virtual tours and presentations focusing on Baltimore architecture\, preservation and history. Join Suzanne Frasier to learn about the ongoing restoration of the iconic Roland Water Tower. \nTickets are donation based. We encourage you to give what you can to support the BAF and Baltimore Heritage. Your support helps us make up for lost tour and program revenue from COVID-19 and create more virtual programs like this. \nThe 115 year old Roland Water Tower is one of only two remaining towers in Baltimore City. At its location on one of Baltimore City’s highest points\, it offers sweeping views of Baltimore’s beautiful cityscape from its rooftop-level belvedere. \nA civic monument of architectural beauty\, exemplifying the design principles of the City Beautiful Movement\, the Roland Water Tower is a gateway landmark anchoring the communities of Cross Keys\, Evergreen\, Hampden\, Hoes Heights\, Keswick\, Medfield\, Roland Park and Wyndhurst . It is situated on a valuable tract of urban green space that is currently compromised by a chain-link fence. \nThe Friends of the Roland Water Tower is a grassroots advocacy group committed to restoring the Tower to a state of engineering stability and aesthetic beauty\, as well as exploring strategies to foster stewardship for the Roland Water Tower and surrounding green space for future generations. \nAbout the Presenter \nSuzanne Frasier\, FAIA\, is Chair of the Steering Committee of the Friends of the Roland Water Tower. Suzanne is also a BAF Board Member and Past President of AIA Baltimore. Suzanne is a licensed and registered architect with over 20 years of professional experience in the design and construction industry prior to becoming a full-time academic. She is Chair of the Department of Undergraduate Design at Morgan State University’s School of Architecture and Planning where she has been a faculty member since 2005. \nAbout the Baltimore Architecture Foundation \nThe Baltimore Architecture Foundation (BAF) celebrates design and the built environment. Launched in 1987\, BAF encourages people to explore Baltimore architecture: to be mindful of the area’s history\, and recognize Baltimore’s architectural heritage\, and appreciate its design innovations. \nThrough its tours\, lectures\, educational programs for adults and kids\, exhibitions\, research\, and publications\, the BAF demonstrates how ideas are manifested in the built environment and urban design of the city. \nAbout Baltimore Heritage  \nFounded in 1960\, Baltimore Heritage\, Inc. is Baltimore’s nonprofit historic and architectural preservation organization. With a small staff\, 33 volunteer board members\, and a host of volunteers\, we work to preserve and promote Baltimore’s historic buildings and neighborhoods.
URL:https://www.aiabaltimore.org/event/restoring-the-roland-water-tower-suzanne-frasier/
CATEGORIES:Lectures,Virtual Histories,Webinars
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20200529T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20200529T143000
DTSTAMP:20260410T164526
CREATED:20200529T135244Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200529T135711Z
UID:22371-1590757200-1590762600@www.aiabaltimore.org
SUMMARY:Autonomous Vehicle Implementation: Implications for Transportation Planning (MDP Smart Growth Network)
DESCRIPTION:Participants of the live webinar are eligible for 1.5 AICP CM credits \nOptimists predict that autonomous vehicles will be sufficiently reliable\, affordable and common to displace most human driving\, providing huge savings and benefits by 2030. \nHowever\, there are good reasons to be skeptical. Join the Maryland Department of Planning and the Smart Growth Network at 1 p.m. Friday\, May 29 as Todd Litman of the Victoria Transport Policy Institute investigates how quickly self-driving vehicles are likely to develop and be deployed; their likely benefits and costs; and how they are likely to affect travel demands and planning decisions such as optimal road\, parking and public transit supply. \nREGISTER NOW
URL:https://www.aiabaltimore.org/event/autonomous-vehicle-implementation-implications-for-transportation-planning-mdp-smart-growth-network/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:Lectures,Partner Programs,Webinars
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20200529T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20200529T133000
DTSTAMP:20260410T164526
CREATED:20200515T050754Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200528T134135Z
UID:17755-1590757200-1590759000@www.aiabaltimore.org
SUMMARY:Baltimore: The Home of America’s Best Garden Cities (Charles Duff)
DESCRIPTION:The Baltimore Architecture Foundation (BAF) and Baltimore Heritage present a series of 30 minute live virtual tours and presentations focusing on Baltimore architecture\, preservation and history. Next up is Charles Duff who will be speaking about the influence of the Garden City Movement on Baltimore. \nTickets are donation based. We encourage you to give what you can to support the BAF and Baltimore Heritage. Your support helps us make up for lost tour and program revenue from COVID-19 and create more virtual programs like this. \nThe Garden City Movement\, devised by an odd London genius named Ebenezer Howard\, has shaped most British development\, and the best British development\, for more than a century. Baltimore has more good examples of Garden City design and development than any American city. Join Charlie Duff to explore the English movement and the wonderful places where Baltimore architects and developers learned what the Garden City movement had to teach. Charlie has been exploring Anglo-American connections for a decade as he worked on his book The North Atlantic Cities\, and he is delighted to know where Baltimoreans got the ideas for some of his\, and our\, favorite places. \nCharles Duff is a planner\, teacher\, developer\, and historian. Since 1987\, Mr. Duff has been President of Jubilee Baltimore\, a non-profit group that has built or rebuilt more than 300 buildings in historic Baltimore neighborhoods and is leading the development of the Station North Arts District. He has been President of the Baltimore Architecture Foundation and Chairman of the Board of the Patterson Park Community Development Corporation. A graduate of Amherst College and Harvard University\, he lectures widely and has taught at Johns Hopkins and Morgan State. He co-wrote Then and Now: Baltimore Architecture in 2005 and contributed to The Architecture of Baltimore. His book The North Atlantic Cities has just been published. \nAbout the Baltimore Architecture Foundation\nThe Baltimore Architecture Foundation (BAF) celebrates design and the built environment. Launched in 1987\, BAF encourages people to explore Baltimore architecture: to be mindful of the area’s history\, and recognize Baltimore’s architectural heritage\, and appreciate its design innovations. \nThrough its tours\, lectures\, educational programs for adults and kids\, exhibitions\, research\, and publications\, the BAF demonstrates how ideas are manifested in the built environment and urban design of the city. \nAbout Baltimore Heritage\nFounded in 1960\, Baltimore Heritage\, Inc. is Baltimore’s nonprofit historic and architectural preservation organization. With a small staff\, 33 volunteer board members\, and a host of volunteers\, we work to preserve and promote Baltimore’s historic buildings and neighborhoods
URL:https://www.aiabaltimore.org/event/baltimore-the-home-of-americas-best-garden-cities-charles-duff/
CATEGORIES:Lectures,Virtual Histories,Webinars
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END:VCALENDAR