 |
|
|
|
|
Planks
From the Platforms
Candidates for AIA office respond to questions
The eight candidates running for AIA office in 2004 have
responded
by email to two sets of questions. The National Associates
Committee
asked about public safety, specialization/certification, and
responsibilities
to interns. 
The Professional Interest Areas (PIA Council) wanted
candidates'
opinions on: the future of PIAs, organizational structure,
resource
allocation, collaboration in planning for the convention,
and a
PIA representative to the Executive Committee of the Board.
Find
out what the candidates have to say.

Happy
Earth Day!
AIA’s Committee on the Environment
identifies
2003 Top Ten Green Projects
In recognition of Earth Day 2003, the AIA’s Committee
on the
Environment (COTE) selected examples from new construction
and renovation
of office, retail, residential, academic, and institutional
facilities
as the top 10 design solutions that protect and enhance the
environment.
The projects will be honored May 1 during a ceremony at the
National
Building Museum in Washington, D.C., presented by COTE Chair
Daniel
Williams, FAIA, and then again on May 9 at the AIA national
convention
in San Diego. 
Summit Addresses Bridging Gaps in Diversity
Data
The AIA Diversity Committee, committed to gathering data to
provide
a clearer picture of architecture as a career today,
recently convened
a collateral summit in Washington, D.C. Individuals from the
AIA,
American Institute of Architecture Students, Association of
Collegiate
Schools of Architecture, National Council of Architectural
Registration
Boards, National Architectural Accreditation Boards,
National Organization
of Minority Architects, ArchVoices, and McGraw-Hill
Construction
shared detailed information April 11 on their
organizations’
current data holdings and collection methods. 
Dallas’
JH+P Named 2003 IDP Outstanding Firm
Award recognizes commitment to professional
growth of tomorrow's architects
James, Harwick + Partners, Inc. (JH+P) of Dallas captured
the 2003
Intern Development Program (IDP) Outstanding Firm Award.
Given to
an architecture firm that demonstrates exemplary commitment
and
contributions to interns, this national award recognizes a
firm's
balance of comprehensive training opportunities, continuing
education
programs, and commitment to the IDP. 
Poll: What Do You Think About the Profession
and Knowledge?
Please share your views on these seven
questions
Grassroots Leadership Conference participants expressed
their opinions
on six topics—architecture education, financial
realignment,
the profession, communications, knowledge, and
membership—during
the annual Issues Forum, March 10, in Washington, D.C. Now
it’s
your turn. Please respond to these seven questions about the
fifth
topic: knowledge. AIArchitect
will run polls of the other topics, tally the results, and
share
them in our convention issue, May 9. See also comments from
past
polls. 
Your Kiplinger Connection (members
only)
AIArchitect links members to
three stories a week from the pages of the renowned
Kiplinger
Letter. (Nonmembers
may subscribe to The Kiplinger Letter.)
World Business: International trade
up 4 percent this year, 6 percent next in an increasingly
interconnected
world. Politics: White House targets
Democrats to oust from House and Senate. U.S.
Economy—Price Points: Gas up until Autumn ($1.20 by
year’s end), PCs down 11 percent, softwood low (not
hardwood).

PROJECT
WATCH
Salt Lake City to Build New Children’s
Theater by Helix Architecture
Helix Architecture of Tacoma has just won an invited
competition
to design the new Children’s Theater of Salt Lake in
Salt
Lake City. The architects now are entering fee negotiations
with
the owners and operators, who are based in Seattle. The
30,000-square-foot
facility will house a 450-seat auditorium, a 100-seat black
box
theater, a 200-seat outdoor amphitheater for city-sponsored
summer
performances, and an acting school for 100 students. A
central main
lobby formally separates the facility’s two main
functions:
the theater sits on the north and the school on the south.
Its many
interesting features include a stepped-down stage to allow
interaction
among actors and audience during performance and a
children’s
playground on the south end of the building to allow little
ones
to blow off steam before performances. Helix’s Alex
Protasevich,
AIA, conceived of the building’s exterior as “a
sequence
of unfolding film frames—it is a performance by
itself. As
one goes around the building, one is confronted with a
continuous
unfolding of changing perspectives,” he says.
Protasevich,
a Russian-born architect won a Silver Medal in the
“InterArch
2000” exhibition-competition of the International
Academy
of Architecture, held in Sofia, Bulgaria, for his design of
the
Episcopal Church in Centerville, Utah. The theater complex,
expected
to begin construction in 2004, has a $5 million construction
budget.
Need to catch up on recent editions of AIArchitect
This Week?
March 31
| April
7
| April
14
| April
21

|
|
 |
| |
|
|
|
Use
Your Brain! Put Some Proof Into Your Poetry at Convention
Slated seminars plus some schedule changes
offer new opportunities May 8–10 in San Diego
Architecture and Neuroscience:
A Basic Introduction to the Science and Its Potential
Application
(Seminar FR38, Friday, May 9, 2–3:30 p.m.) is just one
of
the exciting learning opportunities available at the AIA
convention
this year. Check out these last-minute schedule changes,
including
some new program additions, that may allow you to fine-tune
your
plans on the plane to San Diego. 
BEST PRACTICES
(members only)
Architecture and Engineering Curriculum
Inspires Students, Community
A program in southern New York that imparts fundamental
principles
of architecture, provides students with collaborative
student/teacher
“hands-on” learning experiences, and allows them
to
work directly with local architects is one of 17 programs to
receive
an AIA Award for Component Excellence and serves as a model
for
AIA members and components everywhere. 
Six Schools Now Offer
Design/Build Degrees
A new survey from the Design-Build Institute of America
indicates
that five universities now offer design/build master’s
degrees,
while a sixth school offers an undergraduate minor in
integrated
project delivery. Some programs stem from engineering
schools and
others through architecture departments, while one insists
it is
truly integrated. 
AIA Career Center
Here are this week’s featured opportunities:
Architect/Intern, Slocum Platts Architect Design Studio,
P.A.,
Winter Park/Orlando, FL | Architectural
AutoCAD Operator, Personnel One Inc., Washington, DC
| Architectural
Project Manager, DLZ Ohio Inc., Columbus, OH |
Chief Architect, Kling, Washington, DC |
Healthcare
Architect, HLM Design, Denver, CO
|Healthcare
Project Architects, Managers, Planners, architectfinders,
inc. |
Intermediate
Project Architects/Designers, Perkins & Will, Inc.,
Los Angeles |
Project
Architect, Smith Carter Architects and Engineers, Atlanta
| Project
Architect, Steven E. Hutchins, AIA, Architects,
Jacksonville,
FL |
Project
Architect/Production Manager, Blankenship McMillen
Architects,
Longwood, FL |
Project
Architects, Dorwin Thomas Architect, Grand Cayman Islands,
BWI |
Project
Architects, Kling, Washington, DC |
Project
Manager, BJAC, Raleigh, NC |
Project
Manager/Architect, Oliver-Glidden-Spina & Partners,
West Palm Beach, FL | Projects
Managers, Kling, Philadelphia
| Specifications
Professionals, ARCOM, Alexandria, VA. Visit the AIA Career
Center for a full list openings. 

This service is brought to you
as an AIA-member benefit. The email list used to deliver
AIArchitect
This Week is maintained exclusively for that purpose by the
AIA
national component.
To keep up with the universe
of information the AIA gathers exclusively for members,
visit
the AIA's Web page.
AIArchitect This Week is published
by the AIA, Washington, D.C.
Copyright 2003 The American Institute of Architects. Home
page 
|
|
 |
 |
 |
|
|