SCHEDULE: Saturday, MARCH 22, 2025
Below is the schedule for Saturday, March 22, 2025, featuring session descriptions. You can read the research abstracts by clicking HERE. The conference schedule is subject to change.
Obtain Continuing Education Credits (CES) / Learning Units (LU), including Health, Safety and Welfare (HSW) when applicable. Registered conference attendees will be able to submit session attended for Continuing Education Credits (CES).
Conference Registration Hours:
Saturday, March 22 8:30am-7:00pm
Exhibit Hall Hours:
Saturday, March 22 at 8:30am-8:30pm
ABSTRACT BOOK
CONFERENCE | Saturday, MARCH 22, 2025
9:00am-10:30am
Research Sessions
Society + Community: Design for Spatial Justice: Processes
1.5 AIA/CES LU
Moderator: TBD
Problematic Poche: Architectural Misunderstanding and the Underground Railroad
Karen Lewis, The Ohio State University
Endangered African American Burial Grounds of the Lower Mississippi: Acts of Reparation and Preservation
Annicia Streete & Brendan Harmon, Louisiana State University
Nicholas Serrano, University of Florida
Sensorial Making as a Bridge for Mutual Learning Between Computational Designers and Disability Communities
Yi-Chin Lee & Sean Ahlquist, University of Michigan
Just Circular Communities: Mapping Circular City Networks to Foster Their Impact and Implementation
Gundula Proksch, Christoph Strouse & Catherine De Almeida, University of Washington
Design: Material Practices: Reuse
1.5 AIA/CES LU
Moderator: TBD
Neonomads At Sea: Designing And Building A Mobile Studio To Understand The Impact Of Shipping On The Environment
Patrick Rhodes & Tania Ursomarzo, American University of Sharjah
Remaking Granger: Leveraging Adaptive Re-Use for All in Garland, Texas
Amy Leveno, University of Oklahoma
Expressing Energy Transitions: Transforming Existing Buildings and Perceptions
Ralph Nelson, Lawrence Technological University
San Diego, Texas: Radical Acts of Architecture in the Hinterland
Kyriakos Kyriakou, University of Texas at Austin
Luxe Lakes CPI SIGHT Art Center: Making Average Temperature and Subtle Scenary
Dingliang Yang, University of Minnesota
Faculty Design Award Honorable Mention
History, Theory, Criticism: Shifting Paradigms
1.5 AIA/CES LU
Moderator: TBD
Grassroots Urbanism: The Pilsen Neighborhood Plan of Chicago as a Model for Equitable Housing and Activism
Melissa Rovner, University of California, Los Angeles
Where Water, Land and Air Meet: Elemental Edges and the New Chinese City
Victoria Nguyen, Amherst College
From Ivrea to Massa: The Rise and Fall of Olivetti Company Towns
Shirley Dongwei Chen, Texas A&M University
Women in Southern European Architecture Syllabi: Contributions Toward Fostering Gender Inclusion
Leonor Silva & Ana Vaz Milheiro, University Institute of Lisbon
Hector Guimard’s Visions of Eternal Peace
Etien Santiago, New Jersey Institute of Technology
Pedagogy: Representation and Memory
1.5 AIA/CES LU
Moderator: TBD
Representing Renovation/ Reuse/ Time
Ryan Roark, Illinois Institute of Technology
Architectural Custodians: Retroactive Urban Photography in Berlin, Seville & Santurce
Armando Rigau, Universidad De Puerto Rico
New Faculty Teaching
Amanda Ortland, University of Southern California
New Faculty Teaching Award
Landscape Pedagogy into Architecture: Un-Build and Go Public
Dragana Zoric & Jason Lee, Pratt Institute
Mining Memory: Remembering the River
Amanda Aman, University of Texas at Arlington
Ecology: Ecology and Building Science
1.5 AIA/CES LU
Moderator: TBD
Control Horizon: Ruins, Disaster Prevention Museums, and Datum Mapping in the Littoral Hazard Zones of Japan
Elijah Huge, Wesleyan University
Bio-Intelligent Stabilization: Exploring Mycelium-Based Soil Systems for Sustainable Construction
Ipsita Datta & Ehsan Baharlou, University of Virginia
Continuous Architectural Mycelium Textiles: Bonding Strategies For Scaling Bio-leather For Interior Applications
Assia Crawford, Sarah Ruthanna Miller, William Leary & Matthew Johnson, University of Colorado Denver
Dimitar Stefanov, Middlesex University
Embodied Carbon and Adaptive Reuse: Towards a Union of Design and Analysis in Architectural Pedagogy
Fleet Hower & Josh Draper, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
9:00am-10:30am
Special Sessions
Community-Engaged Educators Round Table: Value Setting Workshop
1.5 AIA/CES LU
Organizers:
Ceara O’Leary, University of Detroit Mercy
Alexis Gregory, Mississippi State University
Julia Grinkrug, California College of the Arts
Description:
Community-engaged architectural education takes different forms across institutions. We know that studios and other courses that engage with community can be extractive and problematic, if not guided by an ethics of practice and partnership. This session will continue to build a community of engaged-architectural educators and work toward repair in our methods of working with community in the classroom, ensuring equitable processes, and elevating both community value and pedagogical outcomes. The session will share restorative case studies in community-engaged curricula and develop an ethics of engaged-education, leveraging existing resources and building support for this work within our institutions.
Research & Scholarship Committee Session
1.5 AIA/CES LU
Organizers:
TBD
Description:
TBD
9:00am-12:30pm
Workshop
Mental Health Accommodations within Design Education Workshop
3.5 AIA/CES LU
Organizers:
Sara Queen, Rosa McDonald, Allison Grubbs & Emily Burdo, North Carolina State University
Description:
This workshop will unpack shifting requirements of contemporary undergraduate student populations and outline the need for architecture curriculum to expand accessibility in relation to common mental health challenges. Through both interactive lectures and group discussions, faculty and administrators will come away equipped with resources to build flexible, empathetic, and mental-health informed approaches to learning accommodations while maintaining the rigor fundamental to design pedagogy. The session will be led by a team of social workers, faculty, and administrators who have collaborated on a multi-year funded project to strengthen student mental health within the College of Design at NC State.
10:30am-11:00am
Coffee Break
11:00am-12:30pm
Research Sessions
Society + Community: Repairing Ecologies
1.5 AIA/CES LU
Moderator: TBD
Three Local Repair Ecologies: The Case For Place-based Repair Infrastructures
Cynthia Deng, Instituto Tecnológico y de Estudios Superiores de Monterrey
Elif Erez, Studio Gang Architects
Mapping Entropy: An Alternative Demolition Model
Tieru Huang, Wenzhou-Kean University
Tidal Territories
Jess Vanecek, University of Virginia
Here for the Foreseeable Future: Toward a Scalar System of Resilience on the Southeastern US Gulf Coast Christian Ayala Auburn University
Rusty Smith, Elizabeth Garcia, Rob Holmes & Daniel, Meyer Auburn University
Design: Material Practices: Wood
1.5 AIA/CES LU
Moderator: TBD
Recreation, Preservation, and Repair: Architecture of the U.S. National Forest System
Andrea Alberto Dutto, University of Idaho
D.E.P.O.T.: A Staging-Ground for Broken World Design
Amelyn Ng, Columbia University
Mass Haptic
Christopher Meyer, University of Miami
Sylvan Scrapple
Katie MacDonald & Kyle Schumann, University of Virginia
Faculty Design Award
Full Resolution Studies (FRS), Exquisite Corpse
Erin Kasimow, Ryan Tyler Martinez & Jimenez Lai, University of Southern California
Design Build Award
Digital Technology: Additive Manufacturing
1.5 AIA/CES LU
Moderator: TBD
Eco-resilient Tectonics: Living Building Materials In Multi-species Earthen Construction
Ehsan Baharlou, University of Virginia
Innovative 3D-Printed Ceramic Evaporative Cooling Systems for Sustainable Architecture: Pedagogy, Design, and Outcomes
Erin Hunt, Texas Tech University
Earth Based Materials for Robotic Fabrication
Zoe Wall & Erin Hunt, Texas Tech University
Developing Resource-Informed Lightweight Lattice Systems: Hybrid of 3D Printable Lattice and 3D Scanned Non-Standard Wood
Edgar Montejano Hernandez & Sina Mostafavi, Texas Tech University
Pedagogy: Building Community
1.5 AIA/CES LU
Moderator: TBD
Community Practice: A Skills-based And Applied Learning Pedagogy Teaching Students To Design With/in Their Communities
Ashley Tannebaum, Zachery LeMel & Shaunta Butler, Boston Architectural College
Rashmimala Ramaswamy, Boston Building Resources
Community College Transfer Pathways
La Tanya Cobb, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Mark Pearson ,College of DuPage
Diversity Achievement Award
Chinatown Repaired, Reimagined, and Rehearsed
Leyuan Li, University of Colorado Denver
Building Community Through Education: The Pedagogy of Kocher, Linn, and Mockbee
Patricia Fraile Garrido, Escuela Técnica Superior de Arquitectura de Madrid
Inés Martín-Robles & Luis Pancorbo, University of Virginia
Pedagogy: Repairing Pedagogy
1.5 AIA/CES LU
Moderator: TBD
Restoring the Rupture: Decolonizing Narratives of Architectural Education
Farhat Afzal, University of Cincinnati
Expired Studio Culture Policies
Federico Garcia Lammers, Nathan Eckstein, Daniel Dorr, Heather Willy & Isabelle Marty, University of Minnesota
Sound, Body, Space: A Collaborative, Kinesthetic, Situated Approach to Pedagogy
Rachel Dickey & Jessica Lindsey, University of North Carolina Charlotte
Questioning the Privilege of Service: Repairing Community Engagement Practices in Architectural Service-Learning Pedagogies
Nathan Jones, The University of Colorado Boulder
Façade City: The Courthouse Town as Pedagogical Device
David Turturo, Texas Tech University
11:00am-12:30pm
Special Sessions
University-Based Community Design Center Round Table: The Future of the Field Workshop
1.5 AIA/CES LU
Organizers:
Ceara O’Leary, University of Detroit Mercy
Ann Yoachim, Tulane University
Michaele Pride, University of New Mexico
Stephen Luoni, University of Arkansas
Matthew Bernstine, Washington University in St. Louis
A.L. Hu, Columbia University & Association for Community Design
Darius Sollohub, New Jersey Institute of Technology
Cathi Ho Schar, University of Hawai’i Manoa
Description:
As the field of public interest design evolves to include new modes of practice, university-based community design centers continue to offer longstanding and newfound models for designing in partnership with communities. This second-annual round table for university-based community design centers will include a recent survey of design centers, a new “atlas” from the Association of Community Design, and a deeper dive into assessment and the professionalization of community design as they relate to the future of the field. The session will also point attendees to Tulane’s Small Center, a marquee host city case study, and conclude with a social mixer.
Lessons from the 2024-2025 Tulane Prize for Climate Curriculum in the Built Environment
1.5 AIA/CES LU
Organizers:
Adam Marcus & Jesse Keenan, Tulane University
Panelists:
TBD
Description:
This panel event is centered on highlighting recent pedagogical innovations in course and studio instruction on climate change. Building upon advances drawn from submissions to Tulane’s Center on Climate Change and Urbanism’s 2024-2025 “Tulane Prize for Climate Curriculum in the Built Environment,” this panel explores a wide range of multidisciplinary topics in science, social science, applied science, humanities and applied professional practices in architecture that inform core and elective architectural education. Participants will highlight their own experiences with everything from modifying core curriculum to the development of new courses that incorporate specific elements of climate mitigation and adaptation.
12:30pm-2:30pm
Lunch (on your own)
2:30pm-4:00pm
Research Sessions
Society + Community: Memory, Knowledge, Action
1.5 AIA/CES LU
Moderator: TBD
Ms. Goody: Respectability and Memory in the Liminal Spaces of Jamaican Mothers
Stacy Scott, University of Virginia
Black Repair as Architectural Practice: Relations, Refusal, Refuge in Alabama’s Black Belt
Morgan Newman, Carnegie Mellon University
Cultural Mapping: Visibilizing 20th Century African American Heritage in Fayetteville, AR
Stephen Luoni, University of Arkansas
Community Design Center (UACDC)
Practice + Leadership Award
An Action-Based Framework to Expand Understanding Through Design
Karla Sierralta, University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa
Diversity Achievement Award
Design: Representing Repair
1.5 AIA/CES LU
Moderator: TBD
Bias in the Machine: Standardized Tools and Irregular Materials
Kyle Schumann, University of Virginia
Just Throw It!!! : A Preliminary Study Of Non-Contact Construction Based On Block Interlocking
Jin Young Song, University at Buffalo, SUNY
Public Utilies
Erik Herrmann & Ashley Bigham, The Ohio State University
The Fowl Housing Project: A Satirical Campaign for Advocating for Deeply Affordable Housing
Emmanuel Osorno, Northeastern University
Evolutive Housing: Common Property and Addressing the Middle Scale in Houston
Omar Ali, Syracuse University
Nimet Anwar, Tulane University
Digital Technology: The Algorithm
1.5 AIA/CES LU
Moderator: TBD
The Work of Art in the Age of Algorithmic (Re)production
Mark Stanley, University of Tennessee-Knoxville
Architect as Developer Developer: Custom Tools for Architect-Developer Collaboration
Nate Imai, Texas Tech University
Matt Conway, University of California, Los Angeles
Reframing Authorship: The Evolving Role of Architects in the Age of Generative AI
Karla Saldana Ochoa, University of Florida
Lee Su Huang, Lawrence Technological University
Drawing Codes: Experimental Protocols of Architectural Representation
Andrew Kudless, University of Houston
Adam Marcus, Tulane University
Creative Achievement Award
Ecology: Ecology, Urban, Society and History
1.5 AIA/CES LU
Moderator: TBD
Blurred Ecologies and Infrastructural Repair
Jordan Kanter, University of Massachusetts Amherst
Teaching Pavilion for Food Justice and Water Management
Jose Cotto, Nick Jenisch, Emilie Taylor & Ann Yoachim, Tulane University
Design Build Award
Visualizing the Desert: Karl S. Twitchell and the Environmental Imaginaries of the Saudi Arabian Desert, 1936-1948
Dalal Musaed Alsayer, Kuwait University
JAE Narrative Award
Challenges in Combating Climate Change: Lessons from Latin American and Caribbean Case Studies
Fabio Capra-Ribeiro, Louisiana State University
Appalachian Climate Futures: Understanding the Contemporary Mountain Vernacular
Brent Sturlaugson, Morgan State University
Jeff Fugate, University of Kentucky
2:30pm-4:00pm
Special Sessions
Climate Justice Education in the Mississippi Gulf Coast
1.5 AIA/CES LU
Organizers:
Silvina Lopez Barrera, David Perkes, SaMin Han, Jacob A. Gines & Michael Herndon, Mississippi State University
Description:
Nearly two decades have passed since Hurricane Katrina devastated thousands of homes along the Mississippi Gulf Coast. In the aftermath, the vacant land left by Katrina led to uneven development that continues to negatively impact coastal communities. This session highlights the underlying climate justice issues in the Gulf Coast region that affect communities’ resilience capacity. Panelists will discuss research and pedagogy focused on resilience and environmental justice, examining the roles architects and landscape architects can play in crafting equitable and healthy communities that respond and adapt to climate change. This session will discuss a multi-year design/research initiative supported by NASEM.
Building the Collective Field
1.5 AIA/CES LU
Organizers:
TBD
Description:
What does design repair look like beyond the scale of a building, beyond our current polarized context, and in the face of intensifying global and social crises? How might design foster greater collaboration, capacity building, co-strategy and mutual benefit? This action session will aspire to model the ethos of what we teach and work towards, to think on expanding and enriching spatial design and our own relationships as novel practice that counteracts exploitation and builds a system of care. Join this session to participate in an exchange of ideas and initiatives with the UDAC, and organize!
4:00pm-4:30pm
Coffee Break
4:30pm-6:00pm
Research Sessions
Society + Community: Urban Design and Participatory Processes
1.5 AIA/CES LU
Moderator: TBD
Reconnect South Park: Community Repair through Youth Engaged Design Education
Richard Mohler & Julie Parrett, University of Washington
Engaging Histories of Repair: Ruggles Station and Boston’s Southwest Corridor
Mary Hale, Amanda Lawrence, Lucy Maulsby & Sara Carr, Northeastern University
Sankofa Community Research: Towards Repair in Detroit’s Black Bottom and Paradise Valley
Marcia Black, Black Bottom Archives
Emily Kutil, University of Michigan
Everyday Forms of Care: Learning from the Incremental Industrial Architecture in South China
Vincent Peu Duvallon, Linnéa Moore, Ziyi Zhou & Tieru Huang, Kean University
Design: Global Practices: Collective Memories, Heritages, and Placemaking
1.5 AIA/CES LU
Moderator: TBD
A Critical Study Of The Aguda (Afro-brazilians) Architectural Style In Benin And Its Influence In The Urban Morphology Of Porto-novo
Hlanganiso Mokwete, Northeastern University
(Counter) Cosmogonies: Rituals for the (un) Dead
Stephanie Choi Rhode Island School of Design
Architecture as Immersive Teaching Aid: Reimagining the Pieces of the Government-General Building of Korea, Seoul
Seungbin Yoo Waterfront Toronto
Code Repair: Enabled Rituals/Disabled Canon, an ADA Compliant Ablution Basin
Mohamad Ziad Jamaleddine, Columbia University
Narratives of Repair: Re-Imagining Stone Town / Ng’ambo
Aziza Chaouni & Bomani Khemet, University of Toronto
Digital Technology: Digital Doppelgangers
1.5 AIA/CES LU
Moderator: TBD
Mapping Human Agency in the AR-Enabled Co-Production of an Urban Community Podium
Sina Mostafavi, Bahar Bagheri, Edgar Montejano Hernandez, Asma Mehan, Caleb Scott & Cole Howell, Texas Tech University
Navigating Collaboration: Enhancing Open Office Environments with Autonomous Robotic Partitions
Marta Nowak, The Ohio State University
Lightweight Construction/Reconstruction/Deconstruction
Stephanie Sang Delgado, Kean University
Galo Cañizares, University of Kentucky
How Will The 3d Concrete Printing Technology Affect The Future Of Architectural Design?
Soo Jeong Jo & Meredith Gaglio, Louisiana State University
Pedagogy: Innovations in Housing
1.5 AIA/CES LU
Moderator: TBD
At Home with the Collective: A Seminar and Studio on the Future of Housing
Alexander Eisenschmidt, University of Illinois at Chicago
Housing Design Education Award
Common Ground: Reimagining a Residential Block for Collective Living
Leyuan Li, University of Colorado Denver
Housing Design Education Award
Take Care: Collective Elder Care Housing for Los Angeles’s Chinatown
Jeffrey Liu, California Polytechnic State University
Models as Systems, Models at Scale: New Spatial Matrices for Housing
Adam Dayem, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
4:30pm-6:00pm
Special Sessions
Tradition and Transformation: Reflecting on 40 Years of Research on Beginning Design Education
1.5 AIA/CES LU
Hosts:
Meg Jackson, University of Houston
Liane Hancock, University of New Mexico
Matt Shea, University of Colorado Denver
Pasquale de Paola, Louisiana Tech University
Panelists:
Leen Katrib, University of Kentucky
Masataka Yoshikawa, Lawrence Technological University
Samantha Schuermann, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
Katie Stranix, University of Virginia
Kory Beighle, Kansas State University
Sara Queen, & Burak Erdim, North Carolina State University
Description:
In honor of the 40th Anniversary of The National Conference on the Beginning Design Student (NCBDS), this 90-minute focus session provides an analysis of decades of design research tracking contextuality, continuum, and change over time. The findings map the conference’s influence on the trajectory of academic discourse in beginning design education and valuable insights into the historical and contemporary priorities of architectural education in relation to changing global contexts. A selection of projects from the most recent conference presents the newest research in foundation pedagogy. This session concludes with a discussion of educational strategies and policymaking that address future potentialities for beginning design education.
JAE Session
1.5 AIA/CES LU
Organizer:
TBD
Description:
TDB
6:30pm-7:30pm
Plenary
KEYNOTE
1 AIA/CES LU
2025 TAU SIGMA DELTA GOLD MEDAL
Kate Orff
Please join us for the 2025 Tau Sigma Delta Gold Medal | Closing Keynote.
7:30pm
Networking
Closing Reception
Continuing Education Credits
Obtain Continuing Education Credits (CES) / Learning Units (LU), including Health, Safety and Welfare (HSW) where applicable. Registered conference attendees will be able to submit sessions attended for Continuing Education Credits (CES). Register for the conference to gain access to all the AIA/CES credit sessions.
Conference Partners
Michelle Sturges
Conferences Manager
202-785-2324
msturges@acsa-arch.org
Eric W. Ellis
Director of Operations and Programs
202-785-2324
eellis@acsa-arch.org