March 1, 2019
Student Showcase
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Circus Support Team
We are grateful to the many people and organizations who helped make the 2019 Circus possible, including the 2019 Distinguished Visiting Fellows, our wonderful student body, and CED's incredible faculty, staff and student volunteers.
CED Dean’s Advisory Council Fred Blackwell Kofi Bonner Ricardo Capretta Vishaan Chakrabarti Darrell Chan
Christopher Kent Sylvia Kwan Brian Lee Michael Lin Bernadette Ma
Barbara Wachsman Allison Williams Judd Williams John Wong Joseph Wong
James Crawford Jeffrey Gherardini Ben Gilmartin Jhaelen Hernandez-Eli
Clarence Mamuyac Jenny Pham Lydia Tan Warren Techentin
Kenneth Wong Darrin Woo Thomas Yee
Circus Coordinators
CED Staff
Sponsors
Jessica Ambriz Sarah Hwang Victoria Jaschob Bradley Jong Valeria Spall Jennifer Wang
Jeffrey Allen Kathleen Aycock Alejandro Blanco Mike Bond Marciana Burke Chris Glick Jill Martin Avi Salem Alex Warren
Thanks to this generous business for its support of this event.
2019 CIRCUS
College of Environmental Design University of California, Berkeley March 1, 2019 Schedule of Events • • • • 4 Presentation Review Guidelines • • • • 5 Circus Exhibits • • • • 7 Faculty Leadership & Speakers • • • • 10 Afternoon Presentation Schedules • • • • 14 2019 Distinguished Visiting Fellows • • • • 25 Wurster Hall Map • • • • 32-33
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SCHEDULE
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10 - 10:30 AM
Check In • Wurster Hall Lobby
10:30 AM - 11 AM
Welcome from Dean & Introduction of Chairs • 112 Wurster Hall
Jennifer Wolch • Dean, College of Environmental Design Renee Chow • Chair, Architecture Teresa Caldeira • Chair, City & Regional Planning Elizabeth Macdonald • Chair, Landscape Architecture & Environmental Planning Chris Calott • Faculty Director, Master of Real Estate Development + Design; Co-Director, Master of Urban Design
11:00 AM - 11:55 AM
Faculty Panel: Building Resilience by Design • 112 Wurster Hall
Nicholas de Monchaux • Professor, Architecture and Urban Design; Director of the Berkeley Center for New Media Kristina Hill • Associate Professor, Landscape Architecture & Environmental Planning and Urban Design Stephen Collier • Professor, City & Regional Planning
11:55 AM - 12:10 PM
Distinguished Visiting Fellow Group Photo • Wurster Hall Courtyard
12:10 PM - 1:00 PM
Lunch • Wurster Hall Courtyard
1:00 - 4:15 PM
Afternoon Reviews • Various Locations
First Half
1:00 - 2:30 PM Student Presentations
Break
2:30 - 2:45 PM
4:15 - 4:30 PM
Second Half 2:45 - 4:15 PM Student Presentations
4:30 - 5:30 PM
Closing Celebration • Wurster Hall Courtyard
Dean's Closing Remarks • Wurster Hall Courtyard
Presentation Review Guidelines The College of Environmental Design is honored to welcome such a diverse and accomplished group of Distinguished Visiting Fellows to the 2019 Circus. A wide variety of disciplines are represented at this year’s celebration, which creates many exciting opportunities for students to share their work and learn.
Visiting Fellow Responsibilities
Presentation Guidelines For Students
During reviews, Visiting Fellows are expected to engage student presenters with questions that promote further insight into the issues being investigated. After each student or student group is finished presenting, Fellows will have the opportunity to provide constructive and collegial feedback and commentary to students. It is important that Fellows participate in full through the end of all presentations. CED Faculty have been assigned to each group to assist with timekeeping, and to moderate discussions.
Presentations at the CED Circus provide students with an opportunity to introduce their current work to a knowledgeable and interested audience in a casual, nonclassroom setting. In the limited time allotted for presentations, the primary focus should be to communicate one or two of the most important features of the project to the Visiting Fellows and to invite their feedback. Only a brief project overview to preface the primary topics of discussion will be necessary.
BE CED SOCIAL AND SHARE YOUR CIRCUS PHOTOS! Tag #wursterlife and #CEDCircus
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Invest in the future of CED Today, you will meet a group of inspiring students who are the next generation of designers, planners, and developers — with a passion for making our world better. Your philanthropic support ensures that these students have opportunities to not only graduate without undue debt burdens, but also to supplement their education through travel awards, internships, and sponsored studio and research experiences.
We hope you enjoy your experience at the CED Circus, continue your relationship with the College, and consider investing in these future leaders. With your help, we can continue to attract the most promising and
diverse students, retain the best faculty and create a stimulating and collaborative environment in Wurster Hall. Read below to learn more about how you can support students at the College of Environmental Design.
Ways to give #CEDBigGive
Support our Events
Leave a CED Legacy
We'd love your participation and support during UC Berkeley's day of giving — Big Give — on March 14, 2019. Consider making an online gift, or sharing a CED memory on social media by tagging #CEDBigGive + #CalBigGive.
Consider sponsoring the next CED Circus or hosting an alumni event at your firm or office. Do you attend national conferences like AIA, APA or ASLA? We do too, and we'd love to see you there!
Make the Berkeley dream possible at the College of Environmental Design by making a bequest.
Your CED gifts during Big Give will go towards our Diversity Fund for Student Support to promote a vibrant and diverse CED student body. Learn more at ced.berkeley.edu/ biggive.
To learn more about sponsorship opportunities or hosting a CED-related event, contact Gail Stanley at gstanley@berkeley.edu or (510) 643-1105.
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There are many ways to make a bequest: you can give CED a percentage of your estate, a contingent gift, a specific amount of money, or a specific piece of property. Learn more at ced.berkeley.edu/bequest.
CED Circus Exhibits Wurster Hall
Design Installation by Room One Thousand Journal — Wurster Courtyard Room One Thousand, UC Berkeley's student-run architecture journal, recently held a design competition, tasking the winning student to design a "building block" unit of any size, scale, and material (be it edible, slippery, ephermal, wet, soft or airy) that can be assembled, disassembled, stacked, piled, pilfered, prepared, and so on. This "building block" must then be duplicated 100 times for today's event in order to be experienced, played with, and assembled by the public.
Portable Weather Station — Wurster Courtyard Last fall, students in Associate Professor of Landscape Architecture & Environmental Planning Iryna Dronova’s LA110: Ecological Analysis course were introduced to research methods in urban microclimate analysis used to evaluate the thermal effects of built and natural environments. Funded by the UC Berkeley Collegium Grant for Curricular Innovation, two portable weather stations were acquired, one of which is on display. The weather station, which introduces students to the analysis of environmental factors and ecosystem properties in relation to decision-making for landscape planning and design, includes an anemometer with a data logger and temperature, humidity and solar radiation sensors.
Architectural Possibilities for Domestic Violence Shelters — 108 Wurster Hall Marking the 50th anniversary of the first formal Women’s Shelter, this exhibition examines the architectural evolution and typologies for sheltering victims of domestic abuse and proposes new architectural potentials for designing purpose built shelters. Organized into three research and design explorations, [On] Context & Camouflage, [On] Site & Security, and [On] Retreat & Restoration, the exhibition's proposition is that from extreme constraints and parameters arise great opportunities for innovation. Curated by CED lecturer and alumna Mia Zinni, collaborators include Amos Goldreich Architecture; Building Dignity; Sophora Acheson, Executive Director of Ruby’s Place; Cheryl O’Connor, Executive Director of Homeaid Northern California; Margret Hobart and Corrie Rosen of KTGY Architecture + Planning; and Emma Jasinksi. 7
CED Circus Exhibits Virtual Reality Deep Dive — Second Floor Lobby In the Virtual and Augmented Reality Lab led by Professor of Architecture Luisa Caldas, students use virtual reality as a new conceptual platform to address issues such as climate change and inequality, or to experience their own architectural designs. From a research perspective, CED students are developing new ways to design interior immersive environments by connecting parametric design/Grasshopper to VR as well as studying daylighting by creating new platforms to interactively navigate accurate light simulations in real time.
The Book as Place: Visions of the Built Environment — Environmental Design Library This exhibition of artists' books centers on ideas about the built environment and has been curated by Berkeley-based book artist Julie Chen for UC Berkeley’s Environmental Design Library. Featuring works by 25 artists including Robbin Ami Silverberg, Clifton Meador, Inge Bruggeman, Karen Kunc, Sarah Bryant and Barbara Tetenbaum, the exhibition explores the built environment through text, image, materials and the architectural capabilities of book structures.
James Prestini Sculpture Unveiling James L. Prestini was an internationally known sculptor in wood and metal and a well-respected teacher. Brought to UC Berkeley's architecture school by William Wurster in 1956 as a lecturer, Prestini along with Charles Eames, Jesse Reicheck, and others, reimagined the freshman architecture curriculum, breaking away from the BeauxArts tradition. He was instrumental in establishing the CED Fabrication Shop, which he called the “design laboratory.” One of his sculptures, “Untitled,” was generously donated to CED by Professor Emeritus of Architecture Richard Peters, FAIA. The sculpture will be unveiled today before moving to a permanent display location in the CED Fabrication Shop. 8
CED Student Publications First Floor Lobby
Room One Thousand Room One Thousand is UC Berkeley’s annual architecture journal, student-run and supported by the Department of Architecture. It acts as an observatory of our time, viewing and linking architecture, the city, the landscape, and the many ideas, processes, institutions, and people that help shape them. The journal is as engaged with what architecture can offer other disciplines, as with what other fields can offer the study of architecture. Open and eclectic, it spans the larger panorama of the humanities and the sciences, by engaging both professionals and scholars in the study of architecture and the built environment. Room One Thousand aspires to gather a community around discourses of architecture to see what vast new vistas may be revealed. It is also a room they occasionally meet in at the very top of Wurster Hall.
Ground Up Ground Up is the student journal of the Department of Landscape Architecture & Environmental Planning. Published annually, each issue centers on a theme of contemporary relevance with interdisciplinary possibilities. Ground Up is intended to stimulate thought, discussion, visual exploration and substantive speculation about emerging landscape issues affecting contemporary praxis. Each issue focuses on a critical theme arising from the tension between contemporary landscape architecture, ecology and pressing cultural issues. Ground Up is intended as a discursive platform to explore concepts grounded in local issues with global relevance.
Berkeley Planning Journal The Berkeley Planning Journal is the peer-reviewed scholarly journal produced by City & Regional Planning Ph.D. students since 1984. Published annually, BPJ offers a collection of innovative and research-oriented articles on contemporary topics in planning and urbanism. Authors include students, faculty, and others in the planning community, as well as scholars from other institutions. Their blog, The Urban Fringe, is a space of exchange and dialogue between students and readers, exploring planning-related issues from a range of perspectives. 9
Faculty Leadership and Speakers JENNIFER WOLCH
William W. Wurster Dean, College of Environmental Design Professor of City & Regional Planning Jennifer Wolch is an urban planner, whose past work has focused on urban homelessness and the delivery of affordable housing and human services for poor people. She has also studied urban sprawl and alternative approaches to city-building. Her recent work analyzes connections between city form, physical activity, and urban-nature-society relations and their implications for planning and design. Wolch has authored or co-authored over 130 academic journal articles and book chapters. She has received fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation, the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences, the Rockefeller Foundation’s Bellagio Study Center, and other prestigious honors for her research, teaching and service.
RENEE CHOW Professor and Chair, Architecture Renee Chow joined the Department of Architecture in 1993 and currently teaches beginning and advanced design studios, design seminars and a housing seminar entitled “Mid-rise Urbanism.” Both her practice and research focus on the intersection between architecture and its locale. Chow is principal of Studio URBIS, an architecture and urban design practice formed in collaboration with her partner, Thomas Chastain. Projects include single- and multi-family residences, institutional and commercial projects as well as urban and community specific development plans and studies. Chow was honored by the College of Environmental Design with the Eva Li Chair in Design Ethics from 2005 to 2010, by Architecture Magazine as one of its “Ten Top Architectural Educators” in 2009, and by the AIA California Council with its Research and Technology Honor Award.
ELIZABETH MACDONALD
Chair, Landscape Architecture & Environmental Planning; Professor of City & Regional Planning and Urban Design Elizabeth Macdonald studies public space design with a focus on challenging long-standing and entrenched street design standards and norms that prioritize motorized vehicle movement over other uses, the evaluation of implemented urban design plans and projects, and designing for livability and environmental responsibility. Macdonald is a principal of Jacobs Macdonald: Cityworks, an urban design practice formed in collaboration with her partner Allan Jacobs. She works nationally and internationally on urban design and planning projects, and is the recipient of numerous design awards, including from the American Planning Association, the Federal Highway Administration, and the California Transportation Foundation. 10
Faculty Leadership and Speakers CHRISTOPHER CALOTT
Lalanne Chair in Real Estate Development, Architecture & Urbanism; Associate Professor of Architecture; Faculty Director, Master of Real Estate Development + Design Christopher Calott is an award-winning architect, urban designer, academic and real estate developer. Before arriving at Berkeley, he was a principal at CALOTT + GIFFORD Architecture / Urban Design and a founding partner of the real estate development firm INFILL SOLUTIONS: Innovative Urban Design and Development. His two firms worked together to create innovative regional urban typologies in mixed-use urban housing, dense infill developments, affordable housing, transit-oriented development, and vibrant public plazas in the Southwest, often working with urban Native American populations and traditional Hispanic communities. He also co-chairs the Master of Urban Design program at the College of Environmental Design.
TERESA CALDEIRA Chair and Professor of City & Regional Planning Teresa Caldeira’s research focuses on the predicaments of urbanization, such as spatial segregation, social discrimination, and the uses of public space in cities of the global south. She studies the relationships between urban form and political transformation, particularly in the context of democratization. Her work is interdisciplinary, combining methodologies, theories, and approaches from the different social sciences, the humanities, and the design disciplines. She has been especially concerned with reshaping ethnographic methods for the study of cities. Caldeira’s three current research projects seek to investigate new formations of urban life and city space as they intersect with new technologies of the public, new forms of governance, and new paradigms of urban planning.
NICHOLAS DE MONCHAUX
Professor of Architecture and Urban Design; Director, Berkeley Center for New Media Nicholas de Monchaux is Professor of Architecture and Urban Design and Director of the Berkeley Center for New Media. He is the author of Spacesuit: Fashioning Apollo (MIT Press, 2011), an architectural and urban history of the Apollo Spacesuit, winner of the Eugene Emme award from the American Astronautical Society and shortlisted for the Art Book Prize, and Local Code: 3,659 Proposals About Data, Design, and the Nature of Cities (Princeton Architectural Press, 2016). With Kathryn Moll, he is principal of Modem. His work has been exhibited widely, including at the Biennial of the Americas, the Venice Architecture Biennale, the Lisbon Architecture Triennial, SFMOMA, and the Chicago MCA. 11
Faculty Leadership and Speakers KRISTINA HILL
Associate Professor of Landscape Architecture & Environmental Planning and Urban Design Kristina Hill studies urban ecology and hydrology in relationship to physical design and social justice issues. Her primary area of work is in adapting urban districts and shorezones to the new challenges associated with climate change. Hill currently focuses her research on adaptation and coastal design in the San Francisco Bay Area, but engages in comparative studies in the US Mid-Atlantic, Europe, and Hawaii. Before coming to Berkeley, she served as chair of the Landscape Architecture Department at the University of Virginia. Her book, Ecology and Design: Frameworks for Learning, was published by Island Press in 2002, and her current book project proposes adapting urban waterfronts to climate change while incorporating productive ecosystems.
STEPHEN COLLIER Professor of City & Regional Planning Stephen Collier’s work examines city and regional planning from the broad perspective of the forms of political rationality in modern societies—the way government is taken up as a problem of expert reflection and is constituted as a field of intervention. He has studied the planning of cities, and planning in cities, in relationship to problems such as national development, military mobilization, social welfare, vulnerability, and resilience. Much of his research has focused on infrastructure systems, as these have been planned, built, programmed, and reformed to address such problems. His work lies at the intersection of geography, anthropology, sociology, and science and technology studies, and touches on themes that have been central to these fields in recent years, including neoliberalism, risk society, splintering urbanisms, and the political category of emergency.
Building Resilience By Design: Speaker Abstracts “For all the new technical, ecological, and political challenges of climate change, designing for resilience is also a problem for the traditional tools of design - drawings, models, and now renderings and moving images as well. How do we represent both the certainty of climate change and the uncertainties that it brings to our cities and landscapes? How do we make proposals that produce tangible benefits for physical resilience, while still allowing open-ended collaboration with clients and communities that will produce social, cultural, and economic resilience as well? I will present this work, alongside experiments in studio teaching around related themes in the M.Arch sequence, to begin a conversation on how design, and designers, need to adapt to climate change as much as our buildings and landscapes do.” — Professor Nicholas de Monchaux "Our professions want to lead cities to resilience. But an honest look at the long-term climate crisis that’s unfolding around us will require us to rethink some of our fundamental approaches to design. Participating 12
Faculty Leadership and Speakers in the Bay Area's Resilient by Design competition gave us a window on the future of practice, and what we saw was different in several key ways. Planning and design firms will have to rethink their qualifications, how they define their responsibilities and their narratives. Public practice will require new perspectives on time, since the literal ground under cities is changing, and the rate of change is accelerating. The exciting part is that we can also see new opportunities for our creativity and skills to matter. But our professions need to adapt, and develop a new strategic perspective. I’ll offer an example of that perspective from our team’s proposal for Oakland." — Associate Professor Kristina Hill "The post-Superstorm Sandy Rebuild by Design competition in New York City was an experiment in postdisaster reconstruction planning in the US. Focusing on one project that emerged from the competition, the East Side Coastal Resiliency Project (ESCR), I will discuss three dimensions of this experiment that seem important for climate adaptation, particularly in a framework of urban justice: (1) the reform of urban finance, specifically post-disaster reconstruction finance, to address future risk; (2) the planning of multifunctional projects that address adaptation at multiple scales, from the community to the region; (3) the emphasis on justice, both as a matter of distribution and as a matter of recognition. I will also suggest that the ESCR shows us how difficult and ultimately fragile such political experiments may prove to be as we contemplate bold new initiatives like the still-undefined Green New Deal." — Professor Stephen Collier
Your Big Give donation will go towards the Diversity Fund for Student Support, which provides scholarships and fellowships to underrepresented students at CED.
ced.berkeley.edu/ biggive 13
Afternoon Presentation Schedules Architecture
GROUP 1
FA18 ARCH STUDIOS
Studio Description Time
Instructor Student(s)
ARCH 205A Studio One 1:00 - 1:30 p.m.
Nicholas de Monchaux
Arine Aprahamian Dongxu Cai Bowen Li Reechal Mevada
ARCH 201 Architecture & Urbanism Design Studio 1:30 - 2:00 p.m.
Mark Anderson Yuxi Wei Zachary Whiteman
2:00 - 2:30 p.m.
Neeraj Bhatia Douglas Lee Ziyang Xu
Shuang Yan Yuanpei Zhuang
2:45 - 3:15 p.m.
Rene Davids Ho Ming Chau Jie Chen
Yanhang Ren Reagan Lauder
3:15 - 3:45 p.m.
M. Paz Gutierrez Meaghan Lyons Mian Qin
3:45 - 4:15 p.m.
Sarah Hirschman Anna Samsonov Tara Shi
Faculty Leads Nicholas de Monchaux & Mark Anderson
Location: First Floor Lobby
Konstantinos Moustakas Joanna Sotiriou Lei Ye Mathieu Franck Iniesta
2:30-2:45 p.m. Break ARCH 201 Architecture & Urbanism Design Studio
Distinguished Visiting Fellows: Marc Fisher Andrea Gaffney Marc Guberman 14
David P. Howerton Jonathan Kershner William Leddy David Nieh Adam Noble
Cathy J Simon Lori Tsung John L. Wong Paul Woolford
Afternoon Presentation Schedules Architecture
GROUP 2
FA18 ARCH STUDIOS
Studio Description Time
Instructor Student(s)
Faculty Leads Dan Spiegel, Susan Ubbelohde & Kyle Steinfeld
Location: First Floor Lobby
ARCH 203 Integrated Design Studio 1:00 - 1:20 p.m.
Roddy Creedon Vincent Lai Yang Liu
1:20 - 1:40 p.m.
Lisa Iwamoto Yaming Fu
1:40 - 2:00 p.m.
Dan Spiegel Bianca Doerschlag Rachel Solomon
2:00 - 2:30 p.m.
Susan Ubbelohde Yuchen Lei JingPeng Li Megan Stenftenagel Matthew Turlock
2:30-2:45 p.m. Break ARCH 200A Introduction to Architecture Studio 1 2:45 - 3:15 p.m.
Eleanor Pries, Ronald Rael & Kyle Steinfeld Tathya Yuki Abe Xinwei Chen
3:15 - 3:45 p.m.
Cari Hartigan
Elliot Kwon
3:45 - 4:15 p.m.
Yafei Li
Haoyu Wang
Distinguished Visiting Fellows: Richard Bender Marc Cavagnero Dennis Dong
Rudolph Letsche Patricia Lynn Janet Moody McMurtry Stephan Paliwoda Rona G. Rothenberg
Chris Wasney Steven Winkel
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Afternoon Presentation Schedules Architecture
GROUP 3
Faculty Leads Raveevarn Choksombatchai & Eric Cesal Studio Description Time
FA18 ARCH STUDIOS Location: 172 Wurster Instructor Student(s)
ARCH 100A Fundamentals of Architectural Design 1:00 - 1:30 p.m.
Andrew Atwood Peter Martinka Barbara Nasila
1:30 - 2:00 p.m.
Raveevarn Choksombatchai Daniel Barrio Sarah Dey
2:00 - 2:30 p.m.
Joris Komen Claire Li Richard Miranda
2:30-2:45 p.m. Break
ARCH 100C Architectural Design III 2:45 - 3:15 p.m.
Jean-Paul Bourdier Michelle Deng Aryan Rozbayani
3:15 - 3:45 p.m.
Jason Campbell Ian Erickson Loretta Koch
3:45 - 4:15 p.m.
Eric Cesal Andrea Aguilar John Diven
Distinguished Visiting Fellows: Michael C. F. Chan Thom Greving D. Greg Henderson 16
Roy R. Hernandez Sylvia Kwan Kurt Lavenson Larry Schadt Jessica Seaton
Jackeline Torres
Carol Shen Janet Tam
Afternoon Presentation Schedules Architecture
GROUP 4
Faculty Leads David Jaehning and Keith Plymale Studio Description Time
FA18 ARCH STUDIOS Location: 170 Wurster Instructor Student(s)
ARCH 100A Fundamentals of Architectural Design 1:00 - 1:30 p.m.
David Jaehning Tam Nguyen Saharut Siringoenyuang
1:30 - 2:00 p.m.
Jennifer Ly Tiger Fu Jennika Wenzel
2:30-2:45 p.m. Break ARCH 100C Architectural Design III 2:45 - 3:15 p.m.
Mark Cavagnero & Ben Golze Darren Pirono Debby Putri Yifan Li Sunny Su Man Yi Tee Keith Plymale Sahil Dharam Mรถhan Gene Lee
3:15 - 3:45 p.m. 3:45 - 4:15 p.m.
Distinguished Visiting Fellows: Eron Ashley Michael Bell Hsin-Hsien Chiu
Rose Brooke Aguilar McGhee Adelaide Deley
Anthony Grand Gerry MacClelland Gordana Pavlovic Nan Peletz Richard C. Peters
Alice Roche Franz F. Steiner Jeffrey Zieba
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Afternoon Presentation Schedules Architecture
GROUP 5
FA18 ARCH STUDIOS
Faculty Leads Mia Zinni & Neyran Turan
Location: 104 Wurster Instructor Student(s)
Studio Description Time ARCH 100A Fundamentals of Architectural Design 1:00 - 1:30 p.m.
David Orkand Lucas Almassy Yiluo Li
1: 30 - 2:00 p.m.
Alex Spatzier Jon Couch Jian Li
2:00 - 2:30 p.m.
Mia Zinni Nick Doerschlag Kei Takanami
2:30-2:45 p.m. Break ARCH 100C Architectural Design III 2:45 - 3:15 p.m.
Rudabeh Pakravan Cherri Jeong Nana Komoriya
3:15 - 3:45 p.m.
Dominique Price Yuan Li Bryce Pallera
3:45 - 4:15 p.m.
Neyran Turan William Dolin Lynn Wang
Distinguished Visiting Fellows: Laura Allen Kevin Day Charles (Chuck) Daymond 18
Rod Henmi Charles A. Higueras Christopher Jung Katia McClain Alessandro Rozza
Ryan Shin Chloe Zhang
Chandni Sheth Jose Vilar Keith Wilson
Afternoon Presentation Schedules Landscape Architecture & Env. Planning
GROUP 6
FA18 LAEP STUDIOS
Faculty Lead: Chip Sullivan
Location: Wurster Gallery
Studio Description Time
Instructor Student(s)
LA 101 Fundamentals of Landscape Design Paul McGehee Fabiha Fairooz Adeline Belsby
1:00 - 1:30 p.m. LA 103 Energy, Fantasy & Form
Chip Sullivan Grace Ann Amundson Youzi (Olive) Xu
1:30 - 2:00 p.m. LA 200A Fundamentals of Landscape Design
Richard Hindle & Tomas McKay Hannah Pae Grace Adams
2:00 - 2:30 p.m. 2:30-2:45 p.m. Break LA 201 Ecological Factors in Urban Landscape Design
Kristina Hill & Jamie Phillips Sarah Fitzgerald Alexander Broad Jessica Colvin Brenna Castro
2:45 - 3:15 p.m. LA 203 Landscape Project Design
Geoff di Girolamo & Nick Gotthardt Daria Kieffer Heidi Loosen
3:15 - 3:45 p.m.
Distinguished Visiting Fellows: Austin Allen Brian Aviles Achva Benzinberg Stein Ari Daman
John Dennis Reed Dillingham John Gibbs Chris Kent Tom McKeag
Ian McRae Willett Moss John Lambert Pearson John N. Roberts Roderick Wyllie 19
Afternoon Presentation Schedules City & Regional Planning
GROUP 7
Faculty Leads Elizabeth Macdonald & Peter Albert Studio Description Time
FA18 DCRP STUDIOS Location: 491 Wurster Instructor Student(s)
CP 208 Plan Preparation Studio Elizabeth Macdonald Abigail Granbery
1:00 - 1:30 p.m.
CP 248 Advanced Studio: Urban Design/ Environmental Planning 1:30 - 2:00 p.m. John Ellis Soraya El Alami Brendan Hurley ENVDES 201 Urban Places Advanced Design Studio John Ellis Gerrard Allam Jia Zhang
2:00 - 2:30 p.m. 2:30-2:45 p.m. Break CP 218 Transportation Planning Studio
Peter Albert Deeksha Rawat
2:45 - 3:15 p.m. CP 204C Introduction to GIS and City Planning
John Radke Andrew Nelson Melisa Krnjaic
3:15 - 3:45 p.m.
Distinguished Visiting Fellows: A. Ghigo DiTommaso Benjamin Fu Marsha Gale 20
Gordon L. Linden David J. Neuman Kenneth Olivola Christopher Pizzi Ingrid Stromberg
Ben Waldo
Afternoon Presentation Schedules City & Regional Planning
GROUP 8
RESEARCH POSTERS
Faculty Lead Carolina Reid
Location: 489 Wurster
Studio Description Time
Instructor Student(s)
CP 201A Planning Methods Gateway 1:00 - 1:30 p.m.
Carolina Reid Anna Driscoll
1:30 - 2:00 p.m.
Natalie Koski-Karell
2:00 - 2:30 p.m.
Shannon McCarthy
2:30-2:45 p.m. Break CP 238 Development Design Studio 2:45 - 3:15 p.m.
Carol Galante Cynthia Armour Julie Mendel
3:15 - 3:45 p.m.
Matt Fairris Matt Turlock
Distinguished Visiting Fellows: Sean Charpentier Karen Christensen Frank L. Fuller, FAIA
Joan Lamphier Joe Leitmann Dan Lindheim Ayse Pamuk
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Afternoon Presentation Schedules Real Estate Development + Design
GROUP 9
Faculty Leads: Greg Morrow, Joseph King & Marcial Chao Studio Description Time
SP19 MRED+D STUDIO Location: 494 Wurster Instructor Student(s)
ARCH 202/CYPLAN 238 Development & Design Studio 1:00 - 1:30 p.m.
Greg Morrow, Joseph King & Marcial Chao Alex Chau Caroline Chen Oliver Katz Jenny Lin Zhe Zhao
1:30 - 2:00 p.m.
Mac Carlsen Harsh Jain Zhekun Luo
Canran Chen Jane Lin
2:00 - 2:30 p.m.
Kati Albee Erik Granum Max Tang
Jenna Frowein Sam Mitchell
2:30-2:45 p.m. Break 2:45 - 3:15 p.m.
Greg Morrow, Joseph King & Marcial Chao Kirsten Morris Brett Vernon Chengxi Xie Ren Yanhang Zhu Zhin
3:15-3:45 p.m.
Frankie Arias Ken Chu Jerilyn Tseng
Jing Cheng Kirsten Smith
3:45 - 4:15 p.m.
Steven Fisher Andrea Medina
Ziyi Guo Joseph Palmer
Distinguished Visiting Fellows: Mike Berne Therese A. Brekke Richard Duff 22
David Greensfelder Nori Jabba Heidi Lubin David Lynn Mark Rhoades
Charles Shin Elliot R. Stein
Other Works Non-Juried Exhibitions
OTHER WORKS
Non-juried projects
ARCH 259: Solar Skins — First Floor Elevator Lobby Arfa Aijazi, Julie Anderson, Xinyi Chen, Athena Do (Team 1) Megan Dawe, Francisco Alvarez, Tanner Glackin, Joseph Palmer (Team 2) LeeAnne Brown, Valerie Green, Ben Taube, Zachary Whiteman (Team 3) Kati Albee, Jenna Frowein, Sophie Ruf, Matthew Turlock (Team 4) "Global Urban Humanities: Five Years of Interdisciplinary Experiments" — Second Floor Lobby CED Global Access Program — First Floor Lobby Xiaboi Ji, Huiwen Shi (Team 1) Ruiqi Dong, Guannan Jiang, Xiangming Zeng, Yifan Zhu (Team 2) "Drawing Air" — First Floor Lobby Jordan Cayanan, Architecture "The Toilet's 'Second Skin'" — First Floor Lobby Tanner Glackin, Architecture "A Manifesto: The New Urban Housing in China" — First Floor Lobby Can Ge, Architecture "An Adaptive Mechanism of Spatial Structure: Chung King Mansions of Hong Kong" — First Floor Lobby Lei Ye, Architecture "A Path of Stone" — First Floor Lobby Emiel Cockx and Luke Wilson, Architecture "Wall Flower" — First Floor Lobby Jenna Frowein, Matt Turlock and Yang Xie, Architecture "KOI" — First Floor Lobby Qiaoxi (Chelsea) Wang, Architecture "Architects vs. Engineers: A Race for Form" — First Floor Lobby Xiaoyu Ma, Architecture "The Brutalist Bench" — First Floor Lobby Dan Liu, Architecture
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Other Works Non-Juried Exhibitions
OTHER WORKS
Non-juried projects
"Chillscape" — First Floor Lobby Honglin Li and Yafei Li, Architecture "Towards a New Architect" — First Floor Lobby Jordan Coffey, Architecture "Pixelscape" — First Floor Lobby Zach Dinh, Landscape Architecture & Environmental Planning "Deep Peak" — First Floor Lobby Felix de Rosen, Landscape Architecture & Environmental Planning "The Borderlands Archive" — First Floor Lobby Cheyenne Concepcion, Landscape Architecture & Environmental Planning "Tidal by Design" — First Floor Lobby Lucky Li, Siyu Hou, Michelle Wray and Hanqing Zhao, Landscape Architecture & Environmental Planning "Climate Change Vulnerability of Public School Infrastructure in Alameda County" — First Floor Lobby Donna Leong and Sandra Mukasa, City & Regional Planning
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Distinguished Visiting Fellows Austin Allen, Ph.D., ASLA (B.A. Landscape Architecture '82) Partner, Design Jones LLC
Laura Allen, AIA, LEED AP (M.ARCH '07) Associate and Project Leader, TEF Design
Eron Ashley Managing Principal, Hart Howerton
Brian Aviles Chief of Planning, National Park Service, Golden Gate NRA
Michael Bell (M.Arch '87) Professor of Architecture, Columbia University
Richard Bender Dean & Professor Emeritus, College of Environmental Design
Professor Achva Benzinberg Stein (B.A. Landscape Architecture '69) Professor Emerita, City College of New York and Lecturer, UC Berkeley
Mike Berne President, MJB Consulting - Berkeley, CA
Therese A. Brekke (M.C.P. '86) Senior Planning Director, FivePoint
Marc Cavagnero (M.Arch '83) Founding Principal, Mark Cavagnero Associates Architects
Michael C. F. Chan, AIA (B.A. Architecture '08) Principal, Michael C.F. Chan & Associates Inc.
Sean Charpentier (M.C.P. '02) Interim City Manager, City of East Palo Alto
Dr. Hsin-Hsien Chiu (M.Arch '07, M.S. Architecture '09) Lecturer, Department of Architecture
Karen Christensen (M.C.P. '77, P.h.D. '80) Emerita Professor, City and Regional Planning, UC Berkeley 25
Distinguished Visiting Fellows Ari Daman AICP, LEED AP, SITES AP, RLA Bionic Landscape
Kevin Day, AIA (M.Arch '95) Design Principal and Director of HGA Architects and Engineers
Charles (Chuck) Daymond (B.Arch '60) Architect, Charles Daymond Architecture
John Dennis (B.A. Landscape Architecture '98, M.L.A. '00) Landscape Architect, City and County of San Francisco
Reed Dillingham (B.LARC '65) Landscape Architect
A. Ghigo DiTommaso Gehl Architects
Dennis Dong (B.A. Architecture '72) Senior Principal, Calpo Hom & Dong Architects
Richard Duff President, Redwood Investment Management
Marc Fisher, AIA Vice Chancellor of Administration, UC Berkeley
Benjamin Fu (B.Arch '98) Interim Director of Community Development Department, City of Cupertino
Frank L. Fuller, FAIA (M.Arch '73, M.C.P. '76) Architect and Urban Designer, Urban Field Studio
Andrea Gaffney (M.C.P. '09, M.L.A. '09) Urban Designer
Marsha Gale (M.C.P. '86, M.L.A. '87) Managing Principal, Environmental Vision
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Distinguished Visiting Fellows John Gibbs, WRT (M.L.A. '00) Principal, WRT
Anthony Grand, AIA ,LEED AP, BD+C Design Director, ELS Architecture & Urban Design
David Greensfelder Managing Principal, Greensfelder Real Estate Strategy
Thom Greving Regional Design Director, HKS Inc.
Marc Guberman, AIA, LEEP AP Partner, Foster & Partners
D. Greg Henderson, AIA, NCARB (M.Arch '03) Co-Founder and CEO, ArxPax
Rod Henmi, FAIA and NOMA Director of Design, HKIT Architects
Roy R. Hernandez President/CEO, ThirdWave Corporation
Charles A. Higueras, FAIA (M.Arch '81) Program Manager, San Francisco Public Works Justice Facilities Improvement Program
David P. Howerton, FASLA, AICP (M.L.A. '77) Chairman, Hart Howerton
Nori Jabba President, Jabba Development Strategies
Christopher Jung (B.Arch '90) Design Director, Associate Principal, ELS Architecture & Urban Design
Chris Kent (M.L.A. '93) Managing Principal, PGA Design
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Distinguished Visiting Fellows Jonathan Kershner (M.Arch '12) Associate, WRNS Studio
Sylvia Kwan, FAIA, LEED AP (B.Arch '76, M.Arch '78) Principal, DLR Group|Kwan Henmi
Joan Lamphier (M.C.P. '70) JML Planning
Kurt Lavenson (B.A. Architecture '83) Principal Architect, Lavenson Design and Lecturer, Department of Architecture
William Leddy, FAIA Founding Principal, Leddy Maytum Stacy Architects
Dr. Joe Leitmann (P.h.D. City and Regional Planning '92) Resilience Team Leader, The World Bank
Rudolph Letsche (M.Arch '15) Intermediate Designer, WRNS Studio
Gordon L. Linden, AIA, AICP (B.Arch ’68) Senior Consultant, Expo 2020, Dubai
Dan Lindheim (M.C.P. '72) Assistant Professor of Practice, Goldman School of Public Policy
Heidi Lubin Principal, HSL Development
David Lynn (B.A. Architecture '84) CEO and Founder, Everest Healthcare Properties
Patricia Lynn (B.A. Architecture '86 ) Deputy Regional Commissioner & Chief of Staff, Public Buildings Service, U.S. General Services Administration
Gerry Macclelland (B.Arch ’68) Vice President, URS
Katia McClain Northern California Managing Principal, Steinberg Hart 28
Distinguished Visiting Fellows Tom McKeag (M.L.A. '87) Executive Director, Berkeley Center for Green Chemistry
Ian McRae (M.L.A. '17) Visiting Professor, University of Tennessee; Research Analyst, UC Berkeley
Janet Moody McMurtry (B.A. Architecture '81) Board Member, BAMPFA Board of Trustees
Willett Moss CMG Landscape Architecture
David J. Neuman, FAIA, LEED AP, BD+C Neu Campus Planning, Inc
David Nieh (M.Arch '89) Founding Partner & Managing Director, Clear Peak Group
Adam Noble (B.A. Architecture '91) Managing Partner & Founder, Fastcast
Kenneth Olivola (B.A. Architecture '74) Director, International Division, John Snow Inc.
Stephan Paliwoda, AIA, CSI, LEED (B.Arch '68) Principal Architect, Alaska District of the U.S. Corps of Engineers
Ayse Pamuk (M.C.P. '89, P.h.D. City & Regional Planning '94) Professor of Urban Studies and Planning; Director, Center for Applied Housing Research, San Francisco State University
Gordana Pavlovic Principal, Gordana LLC
John Lambert Pearson (B.A. Landscape Architecture '08) Senior Associate, Office of Sheryl Barton
Nan Peletz (B.A. Architecture '71) Former Co-Founder & Partner, Hearst (now Peletz) & Chen Architects 29
Distinguished Visiting Fellows Richard C. Peters, FAIA, DPACSA Emeritus Professor of Architecture, UC Berkeley
Christopher Pizzi Senior Associate, Hart Howerton
Mark Rhoades, AICP CEO, Rhoades Planning Group
John N. Roberts (M.L.A. '74) Principal, John Northmore Roberts & Associates
Alice Roche (M.Arch '01) Founder, Alice Roche Jewelry
Rona G. Rothenberg, FAIA (M.Arch '83) Capital Program Manager, County of Alameda
Alessandro Rozza, AIA (M.Arch '05) Skidmore Owings & Merrill
Larry Schadt (B.A. Landscape Architecture '91, M.Arch '99) Principal, Gelfand Partners
Jessica Seaton (M.Arch '80) Principal, Seaton Wilson Architects
Carol Shen (B.A. Architecture '69) Managing Principal Emeritus, ELS Architects
Chandni Sheth (M.Arch '16) Designer, Valerio Dewalt Train Associates
Charles Shin (B.Arch '04) Vice President of Development, Prado Group
Cathy J Simon, FAIA Architecture + Urbanism
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Distinguished Visiting Fellows Elliot R. Stein (B.A. Architecture '71) Former Executive Director, ULI
Franz F. Steiner (B.Arch ’61) Architect
Ingrid Stromberg (M.L.A. '08) Knowledge Manager of Urban Design, Perkins+Will
Janet Tam (B.A. Architecture '76) Principal, Noll & Tam Architects
Lori Tsung (Ph.D. City & Regional Planning '98, M.C.P. '98) Jose Vilar (B.A. Architecture '73) Managing Partner, Baker Vilar Architects
Ben Waldo (M.L.A. '15) Landscape Designer, SWA Group
Chris Wasney (M.Arch '88) Founding Principal, CAW Architects
Keith Wilson (B.Arch'76, M.Arch '79) Founding Partner, Seaton Wilson Architects
Steven Winkel, FAIA, PE, CASP (B.A. Architecture '71) Building & Accessibility Code Consultant, Preview Group
John L. Wong, PLA, FASLA, FAAR (B.A. Landscape Architecture '74) Principal, SWA Group
Paul Woolford Design Principal, HOK San Francisco
Roderick Wyllie Partner, Surfacedesign, Inc.
Jeffrey Zieba Principal, ELS Architecture and Urban Design 31
WURS 4th
+ GROUP 6 + WURSTER GALLERY
WOMEN’S RESTROOM
MEN’S RESTROOM
101 Other Works Other FELLOWS CHECK IN
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108 “Architectural Possibilities” Exhibit
STER HALL h FLOOR
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“The Book as Place” Exhibit
Virtual + Augmented Reality Lab Other Works
WURSTER HALL 2nd FLOOR
Works
1ST FLOOR LOBBY
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170 RICE & BONES CAFE
170
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172 172
+ GROUP 3 +
WURSTER HALL 1st FLOOR
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