FALL 2018
SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE BOARD OF ADVISORS Morris M. Adjmi, FAIA, New York, NY
Jason R. Gant, AIA, Los Angeles, CA
Joanna L. Lombard, AIA, Miami, FL
Christopher M. Roth, Chicago, IL
Jose L. Alvarez, AIA, New Orleans, LA
Kathryn Dierks Greene, Dallas, TX
Tiffany K. Melançon, Basel, Switzerland
Christopher A. Sgarzi, AIA, Concord, MA
Eric V. Aukee, Sherman Oaks, CA
Reb Haizlip, FAIA, Memphis, TN
Brad M. Meltzer, Miami, FL
Lloyd N. Shields, New Orleans, LA
F. Macnaughton Ball, Jr., FAIA, New Orleans, LA
Robert G. Hale, Jr., FAIA, Los Angeles, CA
G. Martin Moeller, Jr., Washington, D.C.
I. William Sizeler, AIA, New Orleans, LA
Maziar Behrooz, AIA, East Hampton, NY
Jonathan B. Halle, Potomac, MD
Jenga Z. Mwendo, New Orleans, LA
Albert H. Small, Jr., Bethesda, MD
Michael J. Bell, FAIA, New Orleans, LA
Brad A. Hastings, AIA, Bishopville, MD
L. Scott Paden, AIA, Landisville, PA
Markham H. Smith, AIA, Atlanta, GA
Creed W. Brierre, Sr., FAIA, New Orleans, LA
Jessyca L. Henderson, Catonsville, MD
Paula M. Peer, AIA, New Orleans, LA
Robert Emmett Walker, IV, AIA, Mountain Brook, AL
James E. Bry, AIA, Hoboken, NJ
Michael R. Howard, AIA, New Orleans, LA
Laurie J. Petipas, San Francisco, CA
Simcha Z. Ward, AIA, New Orleans, LA
Jamie H. Bush, Los Angeles, CA
Jean P. Hymel, New Orleans, LA
Richardson K. Powell, FAIA, Lake Wales, FL
John C. Williams, AIA, New Orleans, LA
Robert P. Dean, Jr., FAIA, Atlanta, GA
Janice Ambry Jerde, AIA, Los Angeles, CA
Wellington J. Reiter, FAIA, Phoenix, AZ
Clara Wineberg, Wilmette, IL
James L. Dewar III, Palm Springs, CA
Stephen M. Kern, AIA, Chicago, IL
Robert E. Riccardi II, AIA, Kansas City, MO
Marcel L. Wisznia, AIA, New Orleans, LA
S. Stewart Farnet, Sr., AIA, Mandeville, LA
Peter J. Kilgust, AIA, Austin, TX
Cameron Brown Richard, AIA, New Orleans, LA
Kathleen Favrot, New Orleans, LA
Joy Krause Krimmel, New York, NY
Michelle A. Rinehart, Atlanta, GA
CONTENTS LETTER FROM THE DEAN PROGRAM UPDATES TRIBUTE TO KENNETH SCHWARTZ ADVANCEMENT NEWS NEW FACULTY
TULANE SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE SUMMER NEWS 2018
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ALUMNI NEWS SCHOOL & STUDENT NEWS FACULTY & STAFF NEWS AIA AWARDS EVENTS
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Writing + Editorial Team ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS Writing + Editorial Team Mary Johns, Communications Coordinator Christy Crosby, Director of Administration Graphic Design: Eric Gernhauser Cover Image: Diagram by graduate architecture student Christopher Longman (A *17) Image Above: Richardson Memorial Hall
LETTER FROM THE DEAN It is an enormous honor to join the Tulane School of Architecture community as dean. It is also a great responsibility, and one in which I welcome your help. The continued progress of the school will require the collective effort of students, staff, faculty and alumni. I want to thank Dean Schwartz for his extraordinary accomplishments during the last 10 years, which elevated the school in academia and the community.
THIS IS A HISTORIC MOMENT IN THE BEST POSSIBLE PLACE ON EARTH TO BE AN ARCHITECT AND AN EDUCATOR.
I am excited and confide t about the potential of the school. It is unique already, and well-positioned for the future. I am convinced that our collective duty (and desire!) is to keep pushing for excellence without reservation. Excellence is about ideas and commitment. We will have the best ideas and the best architectural education, and we are getting ready for the challenges ahead. We have a great group of educators and architects in Richardson Memorial Hall, and are growing. It is my
pleasure to introduce you to some extraordinary new additions to the tenure track faculty. Margarita Jover joins the school as associate professor, bringing a substantial multidisciplinary practice with international awards and a new book, “Ecologies of Prosperity.” Adam Modesitt, an assistant professor from New Jersey Institute of Technology, is a national young leader in digital fabrication. Carrie Norman, assistant professor from the University of Pennsylvania and Columbia University, is principal of Norman Kelley, which was recently awarded a United States Artist Fellowship in Architecture and Design.
the opportunity to define the ole of architecture in front of climate change, coastal and riparian crisis, the process of urbanization under these circumstances, and the challenges for social and environmental justice. This is a historic moment in the best possible place on earth to be an architect and an educator. I look forward to working with you,
Iñaki Dean and Koch Chair in Architecture ialday@tulane.edu
Read more about these individuals and another addition to our team, Ann Yoachim, director of the Albert and Tina Small Center for Collaborative Design, on pages six and seven. Our school is located in the heart of the Gulf Coast, in which all the challenges of human inhabitation of the planet are at play. Here, we have
GET TO KNOW DEAN ALDAY Global architect Iñaki Alday began his term as dean and Richard Koch Chair in Architecture of the Tulane School of Architecture in August. He joins Tulane from the University of Virginia, where he served as the School of Architecture’s fi st international chair and a tenured professor. In 2016, Alday was appointed founding director of the Yamuna River Project, a long-term interdisciplinary program that aims to revitalize both the ecology of the Yamuna River and the essential relationship between the river and life in Delhi. With his partner Margarita Jover, Alday is founder and principal of aldayjover architecture and landscape, known for its approach to the relationship between cities and rivers as well as for the urban and civic integration of “hybrid infrastructures” that include both natural and built elements. The firm is esponsible for numerous architecture and landscape works in Spain, including the Water Park for the Expo 2008, the Aranzadi Park and Agriculture Interpretation Center, and the hybrid Power Plant and Video Art Center of Zaragoza.
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1: The Water Park for the Expo 2008 2: Agriculture Interpretation Center at Aranzadi Park 3: Power Plant and Video Art Center
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PROGRAM DIGEST Left: TRUDC Director Grover Mouton (left), City of Gretna Special Projects Director Matthew Martinec, Tulane student Laruschka Joubert and Gov. John Bel Edwards at the April 2018, announcement of state funding for flood esilience projects, including designs by TRUDC.
Preservation Studies The Master of Preservation Studies program marks its 20th anniversary this fall with the fifth biennia Preservation Matters symposium, “Preservation in New Orleans: Looking Back, Moving Forward,” on Oct. 5. An alumni celebration will follow on Oct. 6. This year, MPS students worked with Donaldsonville, Louisiana, to develop ideas for revitalizing the city’s historic district. Students also traveled to Curaçao in the fall for a field tudy, where they documented the ruins of a plantation house. Recent MPS graduates have continued a tradition of success, with many presenting their thesis work at national conferences and securing professional positions across the country.
Sustainable Real Estate Development The Master of Sustainable Real Estate Development program continues to expand its reach across Tulane’s campus and the New Orleans community. A new MBA/MSRED dual degree offering launches this fall, the result of close collaboration with Tulane’s A.B. Freeman School of Business. In March, MSRED teamed up with
the City of New Orleans’ Office of Resilience and Sustainability to offer a daylong symposium on energy benchmarking for commercial and multifamily building owners. The program also graduated its largest graduate major and undergraduate summer minor institute classes in 2017 and 2018. This continuing increase in enrollment shows the demand for high-quality coursework in real estate development.
In April, Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards announced funding for 10 flood resilience projects in six coastal parishes. Gretna City Park recreation and drainage improvements designed by students and faculty with TRUDC for the City of Gretna were among the winning proposals, securing $9 million for the highly anticipated project.
Small Center The Albert and Tina Small Center for Collaborative Design welcomed Ann Yoachim as director in 2018 and Rashidah Williams as assistant director in 2017.
Tulane Regional Urban Design Center TRUDC worked with the City of Gretna on several initiatives, including a new plan for Gretna City Park.
The Small Center’s design/build studio continued its public interest design
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outreach, collaborating with New Orleans City Park (fall) and RUBARB community bike shop (spring). At City Park, students created a gathering space to draw visitors to the waterfront. With RUBARB, the team designed and built a shaded outdoor community space. Small Center also partnered with Jane Place Neighborhood Sustainability Initiative to envision the renovation of their warehouse property into affordable housing. Two previous projects, a youth writer’s room and outdoor day space for homeless shelter residents, received honors at the 2018 AIA New Orleans Design Awards. Small Center also coordinated the 2018 Summer Public Interest Design Fellowship, where fi e Tulane Below: Rendering of a permanently affordable housing concept created by students and faculty in a Small Center studio for Jane Place Neighborhood Sustainability Initiative.
Left: Master of Sustainable Real Estate Development students on tour during a summer field tudy trip to Washington, D.C., and Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
architecture students explored water from the scale of the pothole to the coast. At its home base in Central City, Small Center hosted “Sites of Resistance,” an exhibit mapping social justice demonstrations and movements in New Orleans from 1863 to today.
Taylor & SISE The Social Innovation and Social Entrepreneurship minor provides interdisciplinary opportunities for students to build changemaking skills. The minor is housed within the School of Architecture and run in collaboration with the Phyllis M. Taylor Center for Social Innovation and Design Thinking. Rebecca Otten was recently appointed as SISE program director. A new SISE course, launched by instructor Allison Schiller (A *12) in the spring, empowered students to use design strategies to create ideas for changing campus culture on sexual misconduct. In March, Taylor and the School of Architecture hosted a standing-room only collaborative speaker event with artist, social entrepreneur and urban planner Theaster Gates and public interest design leader Dan Pitera, FAIA. For more information on upcoming Taylor programming and opportunities, visit taylor.tulane.edu.
The single-story structure features generous clerestory lighting, a rain water collection system, and custom sliding door systems and room dividers. The house was designed and built by a team of architecture students, in partnership with Neighborhood Housing Services. URBANbuild12 received the Residential Honor Award at the 2018 AIA New Orleans Design Awards. URBANbuild also launched a new website showcasing the program’s evolution and impact. View in-depth project profiles and the g owing body work at urbanbuild.tulane.edu.
and globe in July for an intensive, engaging introduction to architecture. Guided by Tulane professors and local practitioners, participants were exposed to the blend of visual orientation, creative process, academic investigation and professional training that forms an architectural education. For information on the 2019 program, contact Emily Parsons (eparsons@ tulane.edu).
support from Professor Judith Kinnard. Rome program participants from 2017 created a landing exhibition in Richardson Memorial Hall illustrating their study abroad experience through sketchbook, journal and photo selections.
Study Abroad This year, 13 fourth-year architecture students will travel to Italy for the Tulane Rome Program. Thaddeus Zarse will direct the program with
Below: URBANbuild13, located at 2849 Daneel Street in New Orleans.
Career Development Career Day 2018, the largest yet, brought 25 local and national firms o Tulane in March to meet and network with students. New this year was a PechaKucha style event for firms o share their work. The preceptorship program celebrated its fi st participant completing a year-long work experience at Ennead Architects in New York City. Five more firms h ve confirmed their willingne s to host a preceptorship, and the school hopes to continue to grow this offering.
Career Explorations URBANbuild URBANbuild completed its 13th project this spring, a two-bedroom, two-bath home in Central City.
The school’s summer pre-college program, Career Explorations in Architecture, welcomed 28 high school students from across the country
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A THANK YOU TO DEAN SCHWARTZ “KEN HAS ALWAYS
BEEN EXTRAORDINARILY PATIENT, PROVIDING THE TIME AND SPACE WE NEED TO GROW INTO OUR FULL POTENTIAL. FOR THAT, WE ARE ETERNALLY GRATEFUL. ”
Driven is the word that comes to mind for many when thinking of Kenneth Schwartz, FAIA during his 10 years as dean of the Tulane School of Architecture. Driven to build opportunity for the entire school community. Driven to bring fundraising to new heights, surpassing the school’s entire history of fundraising during his term. Driven to secure national recognition and expand local impact.
- Kentaro Tsubaki, AIA
We could go on, but the public milestones are only one side of the story. Within Richardson Memorial Hall, Dean Schwartz was a persistent force pushing people and programs to think bigger and be better.
KENNETH A. SCHWARTZ SCHOLARSHIP ENDOWED FUND
In early May, we had the chance to thank, and kindly tease, Dean Schwartz at a reception hosted by Tulane President Mike Fitts and Provost Robin Forman. Associate Dean Kentaro Tsubaki, AIA shared the refle tions below on behalf of the faculty and staff. “Here is the question. What kind of M.O. can you extrapolate from a dean who writes 4 a.m. work emails, runs a full marathon, competes in downhill skiing and flies an airplan ? A quintessentially driven person who takes calculated risks and consistently executes exceedingly difficult tas with commitment and care, and here is the kicker, who expects others to do the same. Many of Ken’s accomplishments are tied to what generally referred to as Type A personality. One of the key attributes is time management. Ken is extremely organized and effici t. Always 3-4 steps ahead, impatiently waiting for us mere mortals to catch up. When it comes to business, he expects everyone
The new Kenneth A. Schwartz Scholarship Endowed Fund, formed by the Tulane School of Architecture Advisory Board, creates a lasting legacy of Schwartz’s service to the school. The effort was spearheaded by Marcel Wisznia (A ’73), Sonny Shields (A ’74), Kay Favrot and John Williams (A ’78).
to perform at his level. It is quite challenging to have a boss who works harder than you do. I know this fi st hand. What doesn’t quite fit within th Type A mold is that Ken has always been exceedingly generous with his time and effort when it comes to mentoring. This is particularly true for those willing to step up when needed, take some risks, and work hard for the greater good of the
A LEGACY OF FUNDRAISING Giving to the Tulane School of Architecture has soared since 2008. Kenneth Schwartz, the Advisory Board and Advancement team cultivated a community of alumni, parents and friends dedicated to helping advance the school. This
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generous donor support has touched every corner of the school – creating new scholarships, bringing in distinguished faculty, upgrading studio spaces, enhancing community projects and more. On the right is a snapshot of the collective impact from 2008-2018.
school and beyond. Ken has always been extraordinarily patient, providing the time and space we need to grow into our full potential. For that, we are eternally grateful. ” To Ken, thank you. We wouldn’t be here without you. - The Tulane School of Architecture community
“We know how passionate Ken is about architectural education, so creating a scholarship endowment seemed to be a natural,” said Wisznia. “The response from our current board members, and past chairs of the board during the dean’s tenure, was heartwarming.” The group raised more than $144,000 for an endowed fund that will support academic scholarships for graduate students.
+$23 million Total raised from… Alumni, parents, friends and organizations 1,663 whose generosity set a new benchmark of… $3 million in current yearly giving
ADVANCEMENT NEWS Alumni establish travel fellowship to honor beloved professor Emerita Professor Elizabeth Gamard is remembered by many of her former students as a “guiding light” whose mentorship enlightened and inspired. Following news of her passing in June 2017, Jennifer Gaugler (A *11) and Simcha Ward (A ’11) separately reached out then Dean Kenneth Schwartz expressing a desire to honor their late professor. Schwartz connected the pair, and memorial efforts were soon underway. Gaugler and Ward invited alumni similarly impacted by Gamard’s teaching to discuss a fi ting tribute. Recalling how she encouraged students to follow their passions, the group settled on memorial travel fellowship for a student to study the relationship between architecture and the arts. “When we were brainstorming what we could do, we always remembered that Professor Gamard was so supportive of students pursuing their interests and maybe going outside the box a little bit, maybe having interests outside of the traditional architectural education,” said Gaugler. “So, we created something that would allow a student to pursue a research interest that they may not be able to pursue otherwise.”
To bring the Tulane School of Architecture community together in remembering Gamard, Gaugler and Ward are organizing a weekend event at the school in late September. On Friday, Sept. 21, Perine will present work from her fellowship during an open lunchtime lecture. A memorial service will be held the following day for alumni, faculty and friends to share their memories of Gamard. “We wanted to have the opportunity for the current student body to be involved,” said Ward. “We also wanted the opportunity for friends, alumni and staff who ere touched by Elizabeth from around the country to have a single weekend to get together and remember her, while also remembering each other and building our relationships.”
Elizabeth Gamard Memorial Travel Fellowship Lecture
“The Music of the City: Composing Experiences in Parallel Disciplines” by Erica Perine Friday, September 21, 12-1 PM
Elizabeth Gamard Memorial Service and Lunch
The annual Tulane School of Architecture alumni reception at the AIA Conference on Architecture brought together more than 100 alumni and friends in New York City. Morris Adjmi, FAIA (A ’83) Maziar Behrooz, AIA (A ’85) and Robert P. Dean, Jr., FAIA (A ’68) generously cosponsored the celebration. Congratulations to the four alumni elevated to Fellowship in 2018: Christopher Cooper, FAIA (A ’91), J.R. Coleman Davis-Pagán, FAIA (A ’75), Clemens Schaub, FAIA (A ’76) and Wayne Troyer, FAIA (A ’83).
SAVE THE DATE
AIA Conference on Architecture 2019 June 6-8, 2019 Las Vegas, Nevada
Saturday, September 22, 12:30-2 PM
Through grassroots outreach to fellow alumni, faculty and friends, the group was able to surpass their fundraising goal and establish the Elizabeth Gamard Memorial Travel Fellowship. The fi st fellowship recipient, fourthyear undergraduate architecture student Erica Perine, traveled to Vienna, Austria, this summer to study the intersection of architecture and music.
AIA Conference on Architecture
Undergraduate architecture student Erica Perine in Vienna, Austria, during her summer 2018 travel fellowship.
FY2017 Advancement Report Your support allows the Tulane School of Architecture to build an environment of excellence, provide transformational teaching and work with our community to promote meaningful change. Thank you!
$3,065,340 Total Raised
614 Donors
$150 Median Gift
83 Donors made their fi st gift
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NEW FACULTY
MARGARITA JOVER Associate Professor
Research & Teaching Interests: Architecture and socioecological urbanism Education: Master of Architecture, UPC-Barcelona, Spain Margarita Jover co-founded, with Iñaki Alday, the internationally-awarded firm aldayjover architecture and landscape in 1996 in Barcelona, Spain. The multidisciplinary research-based practice focuses on innovation and is particularly renowned for its leadership in a new approach to the relation between cities and rivers, in which the
natural dynamics of flooding become part of the public space. Jover taught at the Polytechnic University of Catalonia, the University of Navarra, the University of Vic and the University of Virginia, where she was research faculty, a professor of practice and a tenured associate professor.
Jover is co-author, with Alex Wall, of the book “Ecologies of Prosperity” (ORO Editors, 2018), and “The Water Park” (ACTAR, 2008). She has served on juries for honor awards and international competitions such as the FAD Architecture Prize, the Mies van der Rohe European Union Prize for Architecture, the Glories Square Competition in Barcelona, and the Hainan Eco-Island in China. Both in academic research and in practice, Jover promotes a broader
understanding of architecture that aims to contribute to mitigate and reverse socioecological crises. Her academic research line discusses the reform of our model of progress by promoting a specific socioecological urbanism which advocates for the revision of the modernistic archetype of some typologies of architecture and infrastructure. Above: Recovery of the banks of the Rio Gàllego, River Park and Bullring Ampitheater, Zuera, Spain.
ADAM MODESITT
Assistant Professor Research & Teaching Interests: Digital design and fabrication Education: Master of Architecture, Harvard University; Bachelor of Arts in Physics, Wesleyan University Adam Modesitt’s interests focus on adapting, hybridizing and repositioning digital workfl ws to reengage architecture’s traditions and histories. He brings experience teaching at the New Jersey Institute of Technology and the Columbia Graduate School of Architecture,
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Planning and Preservation. Prior to teaching full-time, Modesitt was a project director at SHoP Architects in New York. He also held positions at Preston Scott Cohen, Inc. in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and Foster + Partners in London.
At Tulane, Modesitt will teach design/build studios, and technology and fabrication courses. He will also oversee the strategic direction of the school’s digital output and fabrication labs.
Above: The Cenotaph for Richard Feynman is one of a series of speculative projects exploring large assemblies of standardized structural framing. The Cenotaph is organized around a system of interconnected distributed load paths and is composed of more than 10 million discrete members.
CARRIE NORMAN Assistant Professor
Research & Teaching Interests: Design theory and representation Education: Master of Architecture, Princeton University; Bachelor of Science in Architecture, University of Virginia Carrie Norman is co-founder of the New York and Chicago-based design collaborative Norman Kelley. The practice’s professional and theoretical work, which includes building additions, interior renovations, site-specific d awings and furniture, explores reproduction and copy
in architecture, and their roles as conceptual, cultural and perceptual instruments. Norman has taught design studios and representation seminars at New Jersey Institute of Technology, Columbia’s Graduate School
of Architecture, Planning and Preservation, Barnard College and the University of Pennsylvania. At Tulane, she will teach design studios and representation-focused digital media courses.
Above: “Wrong Chairs” - Adapted from expert craftsman Dr. John Kassay’s drawings of 18th- and 19thcentury Windsor chairs, the collection purposefully disrupts the notion of “correctness.” The Wrong Chairs comment on the ability for an object to be, at once, wrong and right. Photo courtesy of Volume Gallery.
ANN YOACHIM
Director, Albert and Tina Small Center for Collaborative Design Professor of Practice Research & Teaching Interests: Health, ecology, design, collaborative and engaged learning Education: Master of Public Health, Tulane University; Bachelor of Environmental Studies and Political Science, Dickinson College Ann Yoachim stepped into the dual role of Small Center director and professor of practice in April 2018. She brings 15 years of experience building partnerships across campus-community boundaries to amplify community voice and support meaningful change. An
educator, scholar and administrator, Yoachim is focused on facilitating interdisciplinary collaboration and shaping built, natural and social environments that positively impact health and wellness.
Above: “Wetland Urbanism”- A paradoxical struggle — to maintain an association with the natural while the landscape and economy continue to bend to the resource extraction industry — defines ontemporary southeast Louisiana. The goal of this project (book & traveling exhibit) was to represent these potentials and advocate for a reframed debate that
engaged with definitions f rural and urban and considered permanence and impermanence in the context of a changing climate. Editors: Jonathan Tate, Rebecca Fitzgerald, Ann Yoachim. Research Team: Natan Diacon-Furtado, Rebecca Fitzgerald, Jessica O’Dell, Antonio Pacheco, Jonathan Tate, Neena Verma, Ann Yoachim
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ALUMNI NEWS The Mississippi Institute of Arts and Letters awarded Robert Ivy, FAIA (A ’76) the Noel Polk Lifetime Achievement Award. Ivy is executive vice president and chief executive officer of the American Institute of Architects. The U.S. Postal Service used a photograph of the National Museum of African American History and Culture by architectural photographer Alan Karchmer (A ’78) as artwork for a commemorative Forever® stamp. Angela O’Byrne, FAIA (A ’83), president of New Orleans-based firm erez, spoke at the 2017 AIA Women’s Leadership Summit about her experience building and leading an international firm. Tulane Magazine featured Morris Adjmi, FAIA (A ’83) in a July 2017 article on the Standard at South Market development he designed in New Orleans. Adjmi’s work on a residential building at 83 Walker St. in New York City caught the eye of The Architect’s Newspaper, who highlighted the project in the June 2017 article, “Inverted facade pays tribute to history of cast iron architecture.” California-based March Studio, founded by Todd Erlandson, AIA (A ’87) and Sherry Hoffman (NC ’84) celebrated its 20th anniversary in 2018. The PBS television series “Impossible
Builds” featured construction of the One Thousand Museum by Zaha Hadid Architects, a luxury condominium project in Miami, Florida, in February. Brad Meltzer (A ‘90) is president of Plaza Construction, the firm verseeing the building process. Andy Byrnes (A ’92) and colleagues presented case studies from their Arizona practice, The Construction Zone, Ltd., at the Small Center in a November 2017 session titled, “Process and Practice: Lessons from the Construction Zone.”
Architectural Digest featured work by Jamie Bush (A ’93) on the iconic coastal California Butterfly House designed by architect Frank Wynkoop in the May article, “AD Goes Inside Carmel’s Iconic Butterfly Hous .” Artwork by Jacob Brillhart (A ’99) was included in “Flat Land: Four Architects Drawing Miami,” an art exhibit considering Miami’s struggle to accommodate growth, confli ting interests and natural threats in an area surrounded by water. The Miami-Dade Public Library presented the exhibit. Dwell Magazine’s July 2017 article, “A
Professor and Designer Tests a New Hybrid Material on His Miami Beach Home,” profiled Nick Gelpi’s (A ’02) family home renovation using a new wood-based concrete. Allison Albericci, AIA (A ’04) received the 2018 AIA Young Architects Award. The award recognizes those who demonstrate exceptional leadership and make significa t contributions to the profession early in their careers. A New York City apartment renovation by Christopher Kitterman, AIA (A *04) of Stadt Architecture was
Top: Watercolor by Jacob Brillhart (A ‘99) of Hattersley House in Miami, Florida, for the Miami Public Library’s “Flat Land: Four Architects Drawing Miami” exhibition. Left: Photo of the National Museum of African American History and Culture by Alan Karchmer (A ‘78) used in a U.S. Postal Service commemorative Forever® stamp.
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IN MEMORIAM a 2018 NYCxDESIGN Awards Honoree in the Kitchen/Bathroom category. Jing Liu (A ’04) received the 2018 Vilcek Prize for Creative Promise in Architecture for her innovative interdisciplinary work and new approaches to urban housing. Liu’s firm, O – IL, in collaboration with Laisné Roussel architects, won the Paris Reinventer La Seine competition for the Place Mazas site. Online culture and entertainment publication The Vulture featured Mara LePere-Schloop (A ’05) for her production design work on the TNT drama, The Alienist. The January article is titled, “How The Alienist Recreated 1896 New York in Budapest.” Work by Nicholas Cecchi, AIA (A ’10) and Emily Handley, Assoc. AIA (A ’10) was included in AIA Chicago’s “Functional Objects by Architects,” a pop-up exhibit in conjunction with the 2017 Chicago Architecture Biennial. The Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans named Danielle Del Sol (MPS ’11) as executive director in February 2017. Del Sol is also an adjunct lecturer in the Preservation Studies program. Corey Squire, AIA (A *12) was selected to serve on the AIA Committee on the Environment Advisory Group. Squire is co-leading a committee project to create an AIApublished sustainable design guide. Wells Megalli (A *17) is one of 10 emerging architecture professionals chosen for AIA New York’s 2018 Civic Leadership Program. Chris Daemmrich (A ’17) received the Graduate Student Research Honor Award from the 2017 AIAS Honor Awards.
Richard Barksdale (A ‘61)
Leonard Huber (A ‘55)
Robert Price (A ‘60)
Ralph Clampitt (A ‘60)
John Irion (A ‘62)
Philip Vazzana (A ‘58)
Andrew Donaldson (A ‘94)
Robert Kohler (A ‘81)
Leo Wagner (A ‘54)
Fernando Farah (A ‘57)
Thomas Lacour (A ‘57)
William Wright (A ‘75)
Jack Forbes (A ‘93)
Albert Ledner (A ‘48)
James Gibert (A ‘47)
Henry Millon (A ‘53)
Mary Louise Christovich Preservationist extraordinaire Mary Louise Mossy Christovich (A&S ’49), who died on Dec. 25, 2017, in New Orleans, left behind an outstanding legacy of civic and literary achievements. She was a tireless advocate and leader of historic preservation and other civic causes in New Orleans, and a longtime friend and supporter of the Tulane School of Architecture. Christovich skillfully applied her Tulane journalism major and art history studies to produce 10 books. Among her most influe tial works are the fi st six volumes in the New Orleans Architecture series (1971-
80), which drew urgent attention to preserving historic districts other than the Vieux Carré. She also helped found Friends of the Cabildo and Save Our Cemeteries, among other initiatives. Through the buildings and neighborhoods she saved, and the example she set as a caring spokesperson for the city’s historic built environment, she will be long remembered. - John H. Stubbs, Christovich Senior Professor of Practice & Preservation Studies Director
Albert Ledner 2017 marked the end of the wonderful life of Tulane School of Architecture graduate Albert Ledner (A ’48). His remarkable career spanned 70 years with innovative design projects, mostly in New Orleans but also, importantly, in New York City. He received a splendid obituary in The New York Times, noting his “personal, often whimsical spin” on Modernism. Ledner’s thoughts as an architect and inventor are captured beautifully in the 2017 documentary
film, “Designing Li e: The Modernist Architecture of Albert C. Ledner,” directed by his daughter, Catherine Ledner, and filmma er Roy Beeson. Ledner’s residential projects are now prized in New Orleans, and all three of his institutional projects in New York have been sympathetically renovated for ongoing use, a testament to the strength of his work. - John P. Klingman, Emeritus Professor of Architecture
The One Thousand Museum by Zaha Hadid Architects in Miami, Florida. Brad Meltzer (A ‘90) is president of the company managing the build, Plaza Construction.
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SCHOOL AND STUDENT NEWS SCHOOL NEWS DesignIntelligence ranked the school’s undergraduate architecture program 17th in the nation in its 2017-18 rankings of “America’s Best Architecture and Design Schools.” This is the school’s second consecutive appearance in the top 20.
and Planning Competition (IAH) hosted by the U.S. Department of Housing & Urban Development. The teams included students in the school’s architecture, sustainable real estate development and preservation studies programs.
Total undergraduate enrollment at the School of Architecture saw a 20 percent increase for the 201819 academic year. The fi st-year design studio welcomes 47 freshman architecture majors from 21 states and fi e countries, along with 12 sophomore Bachelor of Science in Architecture majors, this fall.
Recent graduate Jesse Williams (A ’18) is part of a Tulane team picked for the invention reality show “Make48” on PBS. Billed as the “world’s fastest invention competition,” “Make48” is a MakerSpace-inspired show in which student teams have 48 hours to plan, prototype and pitch a new commercial product idea to a panel of judges. The episode will air in September 2019.
STUDENT NEWS
STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS
The National Organization of Minority Architects board selected Michelle Barrett (A *19) to serve as the 2018 student representative.
Design Symposium “Constructing Justice: Design as a Tool for Equity and Social Change”
Graduate Colloquium “River Cities: Architecture’s Role in a World Built on Water”
Tulane Architecture Student Government (ASG) hosted the Design Symposium, an annual student-curated weekend of lectures, discussions and workshops in March.
The annual Graduate Colloquium, hosted by Tulane Architecture Graduate Student Government in March, considered New Orleans’ precarious position as a “river city,” with a lively discussion of what it means to live with water. In a broad conversation, a panel of field leade s looked to other cities along the Mississippi to examine the unique position New Orleans finds itself in ecologically, geographically, politically and socially.
This spring, two teams of Tulane University students placed in the top 10 of the 2018 Innovation in Affordable Housing Student Design
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This year’s event explored how designers can - and if they should - utilize design to enact a positive social agenda. Speakers included Aaron Frumin, Ramsey Ford and B Mike Odums.
AIAS The American Institute of Architecture Students Tulane chapter participated in numerous offcampus activities last year, including the AIAS National Convention in Austin, Texas, and the AIAS Regional Convention in Puerto Rico. The group
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PHOTO: HANNAH BAHNEY
also continued to connect with local professional organizations including AIA New Orleans and AIA Louisiana. Alpha Rho Chi Alpha Rho Chi hosted collaborative firm T+E+A+M in ebruary for a weekend workshop on photogrammetry and a public lecture. The group also doubled in size, with a successful rush of students from the School of Architecture and other disciplines.
NOMAS TU The National Organization of Minority Architecture Students Tulane chapter partnered with Project Pipeline and the University of New Orleans Upward Bound program to present a day-long workshop introducing students to the importance of design, the design process and architecture at Tulane in March. The group also hosted Diversity Month events in April, including an exhibition and lecture. 1: Students participate in a photogrammetry workshop led by T+E+A+M. 2: Part of the URBANbuild13 team takes a break from construction to fl x their muscles. 3: Local high school students pose with their models at Design Day, an event led by NOMAS-TU.
2018 Commencement Awards 2018 TRAVEL FELLOWSHIP RECIPIENTS John William Lawrence Travel Fellowship Maggie Harris, M.Arch I ’19 The Space Between Public and Private: Analyzing Global Site Strategies for Women’s Shelters
Commencement 2018 celebrated the bright futures of the newest Tulane School of Architecture graduates. The following students were recognized for their outstanding achievements during the graduation ceremony on May 19, 2018, in Dixon Hall. UNIVERSITY AWARDS
Dylan Goldweit-Denton, M.Arch ’19 Vues De La Ville: A Sketched Experience of Paris
Tulane 34 Award Braham Jenner Buck Berg, M.Arch. and MSRED
Alyson Demskie, M.Arch ’19 Greenland Melting: How Increasing “Green Land” Might Affect the Icy Country
Senior Scholar Nicole Marie Saville, M.Arch.
Clayton Hakes, M.Arch ’19 Life-Cycle Design in Japan: Synthesizing Contemporary Design and Passive Dwelling
Tau Sigma Delta Elaine Marie Damico, M.Arch. Carson Charles Donnell Hall, M.Arch. Paul Harrison Holmes, M.Arch. Rachel Anne Neu, M.Arch. Nicole Marie Saville, M.Arch. Arielle Beth Scher, M.Arch
Camille Bernsten, M.Arch ’19 Art as a Spatial Experience Class of ’73 Travel Fellowship Nathan Leonard, M.Arch ’19 Color to Form, Form to Color: A Comparative Analysis of the Abstraction of Architecture to Color and the Reific tion of Color to Architecture. Ann and Frank Masson Travel Fellowship Emily Ketterer, MPS ’18 19th Century Scottish Stonemason Traditions: Their Manifestations in Vermont, & Future Preservation and Best Practices
MASTER OF ARCHITECTURE
American Institute of Architects Henry Adams Medal and Certific te of Merit Nicole Marie Saville, M.Arch. Elliott Michael Petterson, M.Arch. I
American Institute of Architects Louisiana Celebrate Architecture Award David Robert Maples, M.Arch.
Alpha Rho Chi Medal Sarah Paige Narrow, M.Arch. Thomas J. Lupo Awards Eric H. McCutcheon, M.Arch. Arielle Beth Scher, M.Arch. John William Lawrence Memorial Medal Pavlo Ihor Iosipiv, M.Arch. Ronald F. Katz Memorial Award Paul Harrison Holmes, M.Arch. Outstanding Thesis Award Pavlo Ihor Iosipiv, M.Arch. Teva Belle Kaplan, M.Arch., MPS Graduate Design Excellence Award Hannah Cecilia Berryhill, M.Arch. I Elliott Michael Petterson, M.Arch. I Graduate Leadership Award Me’osha Maria Solsberry, M.Arch. I, MSRED Thesis Commendations Carson Charles Donnell Hall, M.Arch.* Paul Harrison Holmes, M.Arch. Pavlo Ihor Iosipiv, M.Arch.* Carolyn Marie Isaacson, M.Arch. I* Teva Belle Kaplan, M.Arch., MPS Eric H. McCutcheon, M.Arch.* David Robert Maples, M.Arch.* Sarah Paige Narrow, M.Arch. Rachel Anne Neu, M.Arch.* Rachel Anne Rockford, M.Arch. Nicole Marie Saville, M.Arch.* Arielle Beth Scher, M.Arch.* Annika Lena Schneider, M.Arch.*
MASTER OF PRESEREVATION STUDIES
Distinguished Thesis Award Brittany Creehan Foley, MPS Outstanding Service to the Program Award Ashley Nicole Gaudlip, MPS Outstanding Practicum Report Award Nicholas Glenn Harris Hopkins, MPS
MASTER OF SUSTAINABLE REAL ESTATE DEVELOPMENT
Academic Distinction Award Lucas Robert Elser, MSRED Leadership Award Lucas Robert Elser, MSRED Outstanding Service to the Mission of the Program Award Kyle Everett Goggans, MSRED Research Awards Robert Lynn Denham Jr., MSRED Lucas Robert Elser, MSRED Celeste Freret Favrot, MSRED Sam Mathew Levison, M.Arch I, MSRED
*Included in Thesis Exhibition
Elizabeth Gamard Memorial Travel Fellowship Erica Perine, M.Arch ’19 The Music of the City: Composing Experiences in Parallel Disciplines
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FACULTY AND STAFF NEWS AWARDS & APPOINTMENTS The Tulane Alumni Association recognized Favrot Associate Professor of Architecture Scott Bernhard, AIA and Favrot Professor of Architecture John Klingman as Honorary Tulane Alumni for their significa t contributions to the university. The Tulane ByWater Institute awarded Senior Professor of Practice Richard Campanella and School of Liberal Arts professor Kevin Gotham an interdisciplinary collaboration fellowship to examine how local business owners engage with coastal restoration, mitigation and resiliency strategies. Campanella also received the Malcolm Heard Award for Excellence in Teaching from the 2018 Tulane School of Architecture graduating class. The Phyllis M. Taylor Center for Social Innovation and Design Thinking appointed Professor of Practice Marianne Desmarais (A ’95) as a Taylor Faculty Fellow.
Cordula Roser Gray, AIA as a Social Entrepreneurship Professor. The Tulane Center for Public Service honored Favrot Professor of Practice and Small Center Design/ Build Manager Emilie Taylor Welty (A *06) with the 2017 Barbara E. Moely Service Learning Teaching Award. Taylor Welty also spoke at the AIA South Carolina 2018 Design Conference, “Community: By Design.” Associate Dean for Academics and Favrot Associate Professor of Architecture Kentaro Tsubaki, AIA and Adjunct Lecturer Charles Jones received a $100,000 grant from the PCI Foundation to develop a classbased research project investigating how precast concrete watermanagement structures can enhance landscapes and support resiliency in coastal cities.
PROJECTS & EXHIBITIONS
The City of New Orleans hired MSRED Adjunct Lecturer Lianna Elliot as deputy chief of staff.
Professor of Architecture Errol Barron, FAIA displayed “Water Land,” a collection of paintings examining the impact of climate change on coastlines, at the Boyd Satellite Gallery in New Orleans in November 2017.
The Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture named Professor of Architecture and Harvey-Wadsworth Chair of Landscape Urbanism Judith Kinnard, FAIA a 2018 Distinguished Professor.
Preservation Studies Assistant Director Laura Ewen Blokker (MPS ’07) secured recognition for the medical office of Mississippi civil rights leader Dr. Gilbert R. Mason Sr. on the National Register of Historic Places.
Preservation Studies Adjunct Lecturer Ann Masson received the 2018 Harnett T. Kane Award from the Louisiana Landmarks Society for distinguished, lifelong contributions to preservation.
The New Orleans Contemporary Arts Center exhibited “samples + patches,” a collection of wall sculptures by Professor of Practice Marianne Desmarais, from January-April.
The Phyllis M. Taylor Center for Social Innovation and Design Thinking appointed Professor of Practice
Professor of Architecture Carol McMichael Reese curated an exhibit honoring the legacy of Louisiana architect and Tulane alumnus A. Hays Left: Emilie Taylor Welty receives the 2017 Barbara A. Moely Service Learning Award from Tulane University Provost Robin Forman.
Town (A ’26) at the Hilliard University Art Museum in Lafayette, Louisiana, on display through Dec. 29, 2018. “DATAField,” a project by Professor of Practice Cordula Roser Gray, AIA and Marcella Del Signore, was included in the “Data & Matter” exhibition at the 2018 Venice Architecture Biennale.
ARTICLES, PUBLICATIONS & SPEAKING Dean Iñaki Alday published a new book, “The Yamuna River Project,” this year. An April launch event was held in New Delhi, India, with Shri Hardeep Singh Puri, Hon. Minister of State for Housing and Urban Affairs, as the main speaker. Senior Professor of Practice Richard Campanella published his latest book, “Cityscapes of New Orleans,” a look at the historical and cultural forces that have shaped New Orleans, in October 2017. Campanella contributed monthly “Cityscapes” articles to local news outlet NOLA. com/The Times Picayune and also wrote pieces in The Atlantic and Places Journal. Campanella was interviewed on broadcast channels including C-Span and WGNO. New Orleans Magazine published Favrot Professor of Architecture John Klingman’s annual list of “Best New Architecture” in New Orleans in March. Michael Shoriak, a Preservation Studies adjunct lecturer, spoke at the “New Technologies for the Historic Preservation of Earthen Structures in the State of New Mexico” conference in October 2017. His presentation was titled, “Digital Technologies, a Present and Future Use in Student Historic Preservation Work.” “From Drawings to Drawls,” an article by Assistant Professor of Architecture and Graduate Program Director Benjamin Smith, was published in the proceeding for the 2017 SAHANZ Conference.
PHOTO: GIGSY.
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Above: Work from Marianne Desmarais’ exhibit, “samples + patches,” displayed at the Contemporary Arts Center New Orleans this year.
IN THE MEDIA Adjunct lecturers Aron Chang (Architecture) and Jackie Dadakis (Sustainable Real Estate Development) were selected for Gambit Weekly’s 2017 “40 Under 40” list honoring local movers and shakers. Private University Products and News September 2017 edition profiled Associate Professor of Architecture Tiffany Lin, AIA in an article titled, “Building People: Tulane School of Architecture.” Architect Magazine featured Small Center Public Programs Manager Sue Mobley in May as an emerging champion of social change in architecture for her work with Bryan Lee Jr. and Colloqate Design.
NEW HIRES & RETIREMENTS Bob Hale, FAIA (A ’77), a creative director at Rios Clementi Hale Studios in Los Angeles, California, was named Visiting Favrot Professor for the fall 2018 semester. Favrot Professor of Architecture John P. Klingman and Adjunct Associate Professor of Architecture Grover E. Mouton retired from full-time teaching. New full-time faculty members effective fall 2018 include Associate Professor Margarita Jover, assistant professors Carrie Norman and Adam Modesitt, and Visiting Assistant Professor Elizabeth McCormick. The Small Center named Rashidah Williams as assistant director in September 2017 and Ann Yoachim as director in March. Abby Lukens joined the school in September as senior admissions and career coordinator.
2018 AIA NEW ORLEANS DESIGN AWARDS South Carolina Botanical Garden Tree House Memorial
Tulane School of Architecture URBANbuild12: Toledano Street
Members’ Choice Award Rome Office Christopher Longman (A *17), Gustavo Rodas (A ’16)
Residential Honor Award BILD Design, URBANbuild Senior Professor of Practice Byron Mouton, AIA (A ’89), Adjunct Lecturer John Tyler Young
Southwest Pass Station Excellence in Sustainability Honorable Mention NANO LLC Ian Dreyer, AIA (A *01), Terri Dreyer, AIA (A *01), Marcus Allen (A ’13), Kristine Kobila Johnstone, AIA (A *01)
Big Class Writer’s Room
Green Trees Early Childhood Center Isidore Newman School
The Shop at the CAC
Excellence in Sustainability Award of Merit, Architecture Honorable Mention Waggonner & Ball Architecture/ Environment Mac Ball, FAIA, Advisory Board, David Curtis (A ’82), Steve Scollo (A ’97)
Patrick F. Taylor Science and Technology Regional Academy Excellence in Sustainability Honor Award Perez, APC and VergesRome Architects Angela O’Byrne, FAIA (A ’83), Ian Dreyer, AIA (A *01), Jenn Lilos (A ’06), Joe Crowley (A *07), Josh Mings, AIA (A ’12), Richard Quelch (A *05), Rodney Dionisio (A *98), Terri Dreyer, AIA (A *01), Victoria Yee (A ’05)
Greater New Orleans Foundation Center for Philanthropy Excellence in Sustainability Honor Award, Architecture Honor Award Waggonner & Ball Architecture/ Environment Mac Ball, FAIA, Advisory Board, Steve Scollo (A ’97), David Curtis (A ’82), Jerry Blanchard (A *06), David Demsey, AIA (A ’07), Charles Sterkx (A ’88)
Higher Power House Unbuilt Architecture Honorable Mention Rome Office Christopher Longman (A *17), Gustavo Rodas (A ’16)
The Cheick Hamala Diabaté Institute for the Performing Arts Unbuilt Architecture Award of Merit Gould Evans + Billes Architects, Robert Riccardi, AIA (A ’91), Brian Webber (A *15), Gerry Billes (A ’70)
Interior Architecture Award of Merit Albert and Tina Small Center for Collaborative Design Professor of Practice Emilie Taylor Welty (A *06)
The Pythian
PHOTO: GEORGE LONG
Greater New Orleans Foundation Center for Philanthropy
PHOTO: WILL CROCKER
Interior Architecture Honor Award Eskew+Dumez+Ripple Jose Alvarez, AIA (A *97)
May & Ellis Mixed-Use Development Historic Preservation, Restoration and Adaptive Re-use Award of Merit Trapolin-Peer Architects Peter M. Trapolin, FAIA (A ’77), Ashley King, AIA (A ’98), Shea Trahan, AIA (A *13)
The Pythian Historic Preservation, Restoration and Adaptive Re-use Honor Award studioWTA Wayne Troyer, FAIA (A ’83), Julie A. Babin, AIA (A ’06), Ray Croft (A *14), Alyce Deshotels, AIA (A *14)
Ozanam Inn Day Space Divine Detail Award of Merit Albert and Tina Small Center for Collaborative Design Professor of Practice Emilie Taylor Welty (A *06), Project Manager Nick Jenisch (A ’03)
US Freedom Pavilion: The Boeing Center The National World War II Museum Architecture Award of Merit Voorsanger Mathes, L.L.C. Peter Priola, AIA (A ’78), Scott Evans, AIA (A *98), Joyce Bergman (A ’03)
YAYA Arts Center
YAYA Arts Center Architecture Award of Merit BILD Design Byron Mouton, AIA (A ’89), Lauren Hickman, AIA (A ’06), Emile Lejeune (A ’13), Daniel McDonald (A ’13)
Schindler-Winingder Residence Residential Honorable Mention studioWTA Wayne Troyer, FAIA (A ’83), Tracie Ashe (A ’02), Ross Karsen, AIA (A ’06)
Ozanam Inn Day Space
PHOTO: NEIL ALEXANDER
UPCOMING EVENTS
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Fall 2018
OCT 29
SEPT 10
Lecture: Jorge Rigau, FAIA, Principal, Arquitectos PSC
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Elizabeth Gamard Memorial and Lunch
OCT 4 Lecture: The Post-Carbon Cities of Tomorrow (POCACITO) Project: Charlotte Lovera, Camille Chapuis, Mauro Gil-Fournier and Luis Calderon
OCT 5 Preservation Matters V Preservation in New Orleans: Looking Back, Moving Forward
OCT 6
Homecoming Celebration
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NOV 9
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Spring 2019
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JAN 25-26
engaging with Tulane School of Architecture
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students and graduates. Contact Abby Lukens, at alukens@tulane.edu, to get involved.
Master of Preservation Studies 20th Anniversary Alumni Celebration
MAY 13 Thesis Exhibition
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OCT 8
MAY 18
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OCT 22
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Lecture: Bob Hale, FAIA, Visiting Favrot Professor; Creative Director, Rios Clementi Hale Studios
Help us continue to foster the growth of innovative, engaged and responsible design professionals by making a gift to the Tulane School of Architecture. Your support has a tangible impact on current and future generations of students. Tulane’s Only the Audacious campaign is its most ambitious fundraising endeavor to date. Be part of the effort to transform Tulane by making a gift today. To learn more, visit audacious.tulane.edu. To give, visit giving.tulane.edu/ARCH or contact Christiane Walker at cwalker11@ tulane.edu or 504.314.2494.
PHOTO: PHILIP ALPERSON
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Above: More than 150 alumni, faculty, students and friends gathered in April for “Talk About Architecture: Retrospect & Prospect,” a symposium hosted by Professor John P. Klingman. Videos from the day’s sessions, including alumni forums, a keynote by Klingman and talks from special guests are available at https://vimeo.com/tulanearchitecture.
CONTACT Tulane School of Architecture Richardson Memorial Hall 6823 St. Charles Ave. New Orleans, LA 70118-5698 (504) 865-5389
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