AIA YAF Connection 19.04 - Practice Innovation

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Connection

Practice Innovation Lab: AIA Kentucky/AIA Indiana The AIA Kentucky/AIA Indiana Practice Innovation Lab was a hybrid event that brought participants together both virtually and in person to focus on practice models to help the profession move forward after experiencing the COVID-19 pandemic. The half-day workshop took place on Sept. 23 as part of the AIA Kentucky/AIA Indiana Convention in Louisville. This workshop continued into a convention session where the two participating teams presented their concepts and led an open discussion on how other firms have adapted over the past two years. This Practice Innovation Lab workshop was a continuation of the 2017 YAF Summit, where the first PIL focused on developing concepts for innovative future business models for the profession of architecture. The AIA Kentucky/AIA Indiana PIL was originally to have three teams of five participants each. These teams had a mix of students, associates, architects, firm owners, and fellows. Each team had access to a Miro Board and Google Drive folder prior to the event to start brainstorming and to make introductions. However, on the day of the workshop six participants were not able to attend, so two teams formed with a total of nine participants instead.

Above: Keynote presentation from Gensler’s strategy director, David Craig. (Photo provided by Dream Crew Productions)

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The workshop began with opening remarks to thank all the sponsors of the event and a keynote presentation from Gensler’s strategy director, David Craig. He presented to the teams via Zoom about Gensler’s Workplace Survey and how people have adapted to a hybrid work schedule in response to the pandemic. Following the keynote presentation, the teams started working to answer the initial PIL question: With so much of the world in flux, through changes as a response to the COVID-19 pandemic, how will architects adapt ways of practicing that will advance the profession? Teams spread out around the office in different conference rooms to work through concepts on how the architectural profession could evolve. The original idea was to prepare slides for the team pitches and convention session, but the use of Miro Boards, Post-it notes, and whiteboards proved to be more successful to present ideas and have a discussion. The discussion from the team pitches carried over to the convention session attended primarily by firm owners. We found the audience had all taken different approaches last year

Above: Team pitches to the workshop participants and employees of Luckett & Farley. (Photo provided by Dream Crew Productions)


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