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X-WR-CALNAME:AIA Baltimore/Baltimore Architecture Foundation
X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://www.aiabaltimore.org
X-WR-CALDESC:Events for AIA Baltimore/Baltimore Architecture Foundation
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DTSTART:20200308T070000
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DTSTART:20201101T060000
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20200506T173000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20200506T190000
DTSTAMP:20260410T224347
CREATED:20200419T190328Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200515T031744Z
UID:744-1588786200-1588791600@www.aiabaltimore.org
SUMMARY:AIA’s Sustainability Agenda: A Blueprint for Preservation and Community Resilience (CivicLAB Session 4)
DESCRIPTION:1.5 AIA CES HSW/LUs available \nCivicLAB‘s final session is being hosted virtually for free and open to all. Gain the skills to be an advocate for the built environment.\nThe final in the series of four workshops aimed at fostering the next generation of leaders and advocates. This session will feature key elements from AIA’s Sustainability Agenda\, and how advocacy in historic preservation positively support sustainability principles. This virtual session of CivicLAB is free\, but registration is required. \n  \nPresenters\nAnn Powell\, AIA\, LEED AP BD+C\, Principal\, Ziger | Snead Architects\nTom Liebel\, FAIA\, LEED Fellow; Vice President\, Moseley Architects \n\n\n\n\nAs part of AIA Baltimore’s response to the coronavirus (COVID-19)\, this committee meeting is only accessible via tele-conference.  \nCivicLAB Session 4: The final in the series of four workshops aimed at fostering the next generation of leadership in the profession and community advocates. This session will feature key elements from AIA’s Sustainability Agenda\, and how advocacy in historic preservation/adaptive re-use positively support sustainability principles. This virtual session of CivicLAB is free\, but registration is required.  \nPresenters:  \nAnn Powell\, AIA\, LEED AP BD+C\, Principal\, Ziger| Snead Architects  \nTomLiebel\, FAIA\, LEED Fellow; Vice President\, MOSELEY ARCHITECTS \n \n1.5 AIA CES HSW/LU’s available
URL:https://www.aiabaltimore.org/event/aias-sustainability-agenda-a-blueprint-for-preservation-and-community-resilience-civiclab-session-4/
LOCATION:Virtual Webinar
CATEGORIES:Lectures,Professional Development,Webinars
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20200503T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20200503T153000
DTSTAMP:20260410T224347
CREATED:20200417T013144Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200515T031744Z
UID:356-1588514400-1588519800@www.aiabaltimore.org
SUMMARY:ND - Jones Falls Industry talk at Engineers Club (Baltimore Heritage/Garrett Jacobs Mansion Endowment)
DESCRIPTION:
URL:https://www.aiabaltimore.org/event/nd-jones-falls-industry-talk-at-engineers-club-baltimore-heritage-garrett-jacobs-mansion-endowment/
LOCATION:Engineers Club\, 11 W Mount Vernon Pl\, Baltimore\, MD\, United States
CATEGORIES:Lectures
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20200429T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20200429T193000
DTSTAMP:20260410T224347
CREATED:20200419T190323Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200515T031744Z
UID:740-1588183200-1588188600@www.aiabaltimore.org
SUMMARY:[Webinar] 2020 AIA Baltimore & BAF Spring Lecture Series 2: Unfolding
DESCRIPTION:This event will only be available as a webinar as part of AIA Baltimore’s and BAF’s response to the coronavirus (COVID-19). The Webinar will be available to stream via Facebook Live and Zoom.\n1.5 AIA/CES LUs; LA CES PDH and APA CEUs available (LA CES provided by Maryland ASLA) \n  \nOverview\nThe 2020 AIA Baltimore & BAF Spring Lecture Series will explore unbuilt architecture and design work. Speakers will showcase and discuss their unbuilt\, speculative\, and/or dismantled work\, including competitions\, explorations\, and research. The series will explore why projects go unrealized and create a dialogue about what could have been\, what is\, and what can be.\nSee the full calendar of lectures \n  \nLecture 2: Unfolding\nCarla Swickerath\, Studio Libeskind \nSeema D. Iyer\, PhD\, University of Baltimore \nModerator: Katie O’Meara\, MICA Architectural Design \nBetween concept design and project realization\, there is a multitude of unknowable factors that impact the outcome building projects. The architect’s role in navigating the interests of various stakeholders is to compromise\, while staying true to the greater vision for the project. The architect must also consider site context and the needs of the community to achieve just and equitable outcomes. \nCarla Swickerath of Studio Libeskind will explore the currents that impact architecture through the lens of four seminal projects: the rebuilding of the World Trade Center post 9/11; the 1996 extension to the Victoria and Albert Museum in London; a new museum for the Kurds in Iraq; and the iconic sky garden tower\, One Madison\, in the heart of Manhattan. \nSeema Iyer of University of Baltimore will discuss Baltimore’s Vital Signs—the data gathered by the Baltimore Neighborhood Indicator’s Alliance that reveal key indicators that stand as major barriers to truly achieving a more just and equitable city. Importantly\, community-based indicators can expose the magnitude of issues that neighborhoods face in order to help communities set clear and measurable goals towards removing barriers and improving quality of life. \nThis lecture will reveal why projects go unbuilt by reflecting upon lessons learned and examining data gathered through urban research\, and how these factors inform future built work. \n  \nAbout the Speakers\nCarla Swickerath\, Studio Libeskind\nSince joining Studio Libeskind in 1999\, Carla Swickerath has gained diverse experience in cultural\, civic\, retail\, commercial\, residential and planning projects around the world. She has lead many of the Studio’s successful project teams from concept design through to completion—including the Crystals retail complex at CityCenter in Las Vegas\, the Hyundai Haeundae Udong I-Park residential development in Busan\, Korea\, and the Contemporary Jewish Museum in San Francisco. \nMs. Swickerath has also led the complex World Trade Center redevelopment process from the initial competition phase to the present. Today\, her dual management and design skills come into play as she oversees all aspects of operations at Studio Libeskind. Ms. Swickerath leads many of the Studio’s projects\, coordinating the design team and consultants\, liaising with clients and client’s representatives and managing project budgets and schedules. \nShe earned a Masters in Architecture from the University of Michigan\, following undergraduate studies in English and Art History at the University of Florida. She has taught at the Kunsthochschule Berlin-Weißensee in Berlin and University of Michigan. Carla speaks publicly on architecture\, design and planning. Carla is a member of the Board of Trustees at the Van Alen Institute in New York. \n  \nSeema D. Iyer\, PhD\, University of Baltimore\nSeema D. Iyer PhD is associate director and research assistant professor for the Jacob France Institute in the University of Baltimore’s Merrick School of Business. Dr. Iyer oversees the Baltimore Neighborhood Indicators Alliance (BNIA)\, which annually prepares the Vital Signs report\, a compendium of quality-of-life open data for Baltimore’s neighborhoods. BNIA is part of the Urban Institute’s national partnership of sites that provide longitudinal data on demographics\, housing\, crime\, education and sustainability. Dr. Iyer is a recognized expert on strategic planning in community development; recent projects include an Equity Analysis of Baltimore’s Capital Improvement Program\, an evaluation of Baltimore Vacants to Value program and verification of work for the Baltimore Energy Initiative. Her research focuses on the role of data sharing in collaborative public innovation processes. \nDr. Iyer is also director of UB’s Real Estate and Economic Development program and teaches courses on real estate principles and local economic development. In 2019\, she helped launch UB’s Real Estate Fellows Venture competition to create pathways for early-stage developers interested in working with stable\, middle-market communities in Baltimore. \nPrior to joining UB\, Iyer served as Chief of Research & Strategic Planning for Baltimore City’s Planning Department. She holds a Ph.D. in urban and regional planning from the University of Michigan\, Ann Arbor. She earned her MA in regional science and BA in mathematics and Russian studies from the University of Pennsylvania.
URL:https://www.aiabaltimore.org/event/webinar-2020-aia-baltimore-baf-spring-lecture-series-2-unfolding/
LOCATION:Webinar
CATEGORIES:Lectures,Webinars
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20200424T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20200424T133000
DTSTAMP:20260410T224348
CREATED:20200419T190321Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200515T031744Z
UID:738-1587733200-1587735000@www.aiabaltimore.org
SUMMARY:Commemorative Monuments and Adaptive Use (Jackson Gilman-Forlini)
DESCRIPTION:The first in a series of virtual tours and presentations with Baltimore Heritage and the Baltimore Architecture Foundation\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. First up is Jackson Gilman-Forlini\, Historic Preservation Officer for the Baltimore City Department of General Services and BAF board member\, speaking about Commemorative Monuments and Adaptive Use with a focus on the Baltimore War Memorial. \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.  \nCommemorative monuments and memorials are frequently valued for their historical significance as well as their role in representing collective memory. But despite the durable materials from which they are constructed\, the symbolic meaning of commemorative structures is often impermanent\, as evidenced by recent changes in public opinion toward Baltimore’s Confederate monuments. Generally\, the impermanence of collective memory presents a problem for preservationists at these sites since preservation guidelines presume significance of a resource to be inherent to the building material – and therefore permanent. \nUsing the Baltimore War Memorial as a case-study\, this talk will propose a solution to the problem of monument preservation by applying the modern principles of adaptive reuse to their management. In order to preserve the relevance and symbolic usefulness of these places\, the physical markers of their symbolism must periodically be updated to reflect contemporary value-systems and ideas. \nAbout the Presenter \nJackson Gilman-Forlini is the Historic Preservation Officer for the Baltimore City Department of General Services\, where he manages the preservation of city-owned historic landmarks\, including the Baltimore War Memorial. He holds a B.A. and M.A. in Historic Preservation from Goucher College\, where his thesis dealt with the adaptive reuse of monuments and memorials. He is frequently quoted in The Baltimore Sun and has written for Maryland Historical Magazine and the architecture blog McMansion Hell. \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. \nhttp://baltimorearchitecture.org/  \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. \nHome \n \nImage: “Afterimage Requiem” by Kei Ito and Andrew Paul Keiper (2018)
URL:https://www.aiabaltimore.org/event/commemorative-monuments-and-adaptive-use-jackson-gilman-forlini/
CATEGORIES:Lectures,Webinars
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