South Dakota State University

The Master of Architecture degree at South Dakota State University has earned NAAB initial accreditation.  We started teaching architecture here in 2010.  This is the first new program started in this region of the USA in a century.  The program is comprised of a 4 year Bachelor of Fine Arts in Architecture and a two year Master of Architecture.  By nature of the setting we have developed into a small program focused on small places built by small practices focusing on workflows, processes, labor, public space, and the building arts.

Our growing faculty of seven and student body of 140 look forward to becoming fully engaged in the dialog and activities of the ACSA on both a national and regional scale.

Learn more about South Dakota State University!

AASL in Detroit

Barbara Opar and Lucy Campbell, column editors
Column by Rebecca Price, Architecture, Urban Planning, and Visual Resources Librarian, University of Michigan

Final arrangements are falling in place and travel plans are confirmed; soon AASL will be meeting together in Detroit with ACSA! The AASL conference theme this year is Detroit: a new model. Detroit is both analogy and case study. Just as our libraries are reinventing themselves in the digital age; Detroit is undergoing massive and fundamental changes. One can truly talk about a new model of a city growing from the ground up.

AASL welcomes faculty colleagues to join us to learn more about new resources, how libraries and their services are changing, and ways individual architecture librarians are working to meet the evolving needs of their faculty and students.

AASL members will be discussing the newest models of library services and resources. Our sessions will focus on initiatives that are transforming our libraries and our jobs, and collaborations that help us achieve success. Our popular and inspirational lightning session in which we hear tales from the field takes place on Thursday, March 23 from 2:30 p.m. to 4:00 in the Esquire Room. On Friday, March 24, in the same room, we will hear papers focusing on collaboration from 9:00 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. and papers highlighting transformative initiatives from 11:00 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.

Our vendor Session this year will be an informal Meet & Greet, allowing for direct conversations with each vendor. This takes place on Friday from 3:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. in the third floor Ambassador Room.

We’ll also have two special Plenary Panel sessions. We invite our ACSA colleagues to join us for these sessions, which will be held in the Esquire Room on the third floor of the hotel. The first, on Thursday afternoon, will focus on current trends in architectural publishing. Invited panelists include editors from the Journal of Architectural Education and the new Journal of Technology, Architecture, and Design, as well as a University of Michigan faculty member actively publishing in both the journal and monograph worlds. The second one, on Friday afternoon, will focus on Detroit. Invited panelists include architect and artist activists working on the front line of reinventing the city. The panel promises to offer a vibrant, compelling account of Detroit as it emerges from the ruins brought on by deindustrialization and urban blight. A particular focus will be on the arts as spurs for growth.

An AASL conference wouldn’t be complete without meaningful and awe-inspiring tours. Kicking off the conference Thursday morning is a walking tour that takes us past Art Deco skyscrapers, along the new RiverWalk and DeQuindre Cut pedestrian parks, into Mies van der Rohe’s Lafayette Park, and through Greektown, one of Detroit’s oldest commercial districts. A highlight will be tours of the interiors of two of the Lafayette Park condo units. Saturday’s full day tour will start with a bus ride from the downtown area to historic neighborhoods including Corktown, Mexicantown, Brush Park, Cass Corridor and the New Center. At New Center, we’ll disembark to tour the Fisher Building, a stunning architectural highlight from the 1920s. From there we’ll travel to Eastern Market for a tour of the oldest open-air farmer’s market in the US and a discussion of the new initiatives for urban agriculture in the city. The afternoon will include a visit to the Detroit Institute of Arts. We’ll be treated to a tour of the museum library and archives before seeing the museum collections. Though the Museum of Contemporary Art Detroit (only two blocks south of the DIA) is not officially on the tour, those who choose can include a visit in their afternoon plans. One of the current exhibits is the recent Venice Biennial US Pavilion exhibit organized by the University of Michigan Taubman College of Architecture and Urban Planning.

We hope there will also be plenty of time and opportunity to talk together, re-acquaint ourselves with colleagues, and welcome new members into the AASL. We look forward to interacting with ACSA attendees, many of whom we pass in the hallways of our home institutions, but whom we enjoy seeing in a new context at the conference. The lessons we learn, information we gather, and connections we make at the conference enable us to be strong partners with our architecture faculty. The Conference Planning Committee is eager to share Detroit with AASL members and our ACSA colleagues, allowing us learn from the city and be inspired by its current reinvention.

The full AASL schedule is available at: https://aasldetroit2017.wordpress.com/program/ ACSA members are encouraged to attend any of the sessions highlighted above. For questions about tours and other events, contact Rebecca Price at rpw@umich.edu

University of Virginia

The University of Virginia School of Architecture has appointed Bradley Cantrell as the new chair of Landscape Architecture.  Currently an associate professor of landscape architectural technology and director of the Master in Landscape Architecture degree program at Harvard University’s Graduate School of Design, Cantrell will assume the role June 25, 2017.

Cantrell comes to the University with a rich background in environmental and ecological design and its relationship to emerging technologies. His research investigates the role of digital media and computation in directing an environmental design process that operates as living model of landscape.

Cantrell proposes “synthetic ecologies”—infrastructure innovations that use the complexity already in nature to inform data-driven processes and environmental decisions, from river spillways to pollution remediation.  “Brad’s research rethinks the relationship of landscape design to material and ecological systems through the use of computational and responsive technologies, allowing him to choreograph the forces found in nature,” said Ila Berman, Dean of the School of Architecture.

“His work is at the cutting edge of landscape architecture and he will no doubt be a tremendous addition to the UVA School of Architecture faculty. My thanks to the search committee for their leadership in bringing Brad to the School and larger university community.”   

Cantrell’s previous academic appointments include The Rhode Island School of Design and the Louisiana State University Robert Reich School of Landscape Architecture. One of the two books Cantrell has co-authored won a 2012 American Society of Landscape Architects Award of Excellence and is used as a standard text in many landscape architecture programs; it is currently in its second edition. He is widely published in a range of peer reviewed architecture journals.

Julie Bargmann and Michael Lee, both associate professors in Landscape Architecture and co-chairs of the search committee, echoed Berman’s enthusiasm about the hire. “We are thrilled to have Brad Cantrell join us at UVA. Cantrell is at the leading edge of innovations linking computational logics, ecological analysis, responsive environments and site design. His expertise will complement that of our current faculty and be a draw for students as we continue to expand the frontiers of landscape architecture.” 

“I am excited to be joining the faculty at UVA,” said Cantrell. “I have always admired the school’s commitment to craft and building that is advanced through design speculation. I look forward to working with the faculty to tune the department as we develop curriculum, collaborations, and student experiences to help form the future trajectory of the school and our disciplines.” 

Cantrell received a Bachelor of Science in Landscape Architecture from the University of Kentucky in 2001, and a Master in Landscape Architecture II from the Harvard University Graduate School of Design in 2003. There he was the recipient of the Harvard Graduate School of Design Digital Design Prize for his innovative work in animation, film, and responsive technologies. Cantrell spent a year in Rome as a Rome Prize Fellow, where he pursued advanced studies in landscape architecture. In 2014, Cantrell was a 2014 TED Global Fellow.  He has been awarded substantial grant funding for his projects and participated in both academic and industry competitions, winning significant recognition for his innovative designs. He is currently the principal architect and owner of Visual Logic, a firm specializing in responsive environments and design visualization.  

University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign

Thérèse Tierney has published a new book, Intelligent Infrastructure: Zip Cars, Invisible Networks, and Urban Transformation (University of Virginia Press 2017). She has been asked to speak at the Workshop on Urban Mobility in the Era of Smart and Connected Communities, co-organized by the Chicago Department of Innovation & Technology, Transportation, and the Array of Things (AoT). The workshop focuses on new opportunities to link growing data streams to the critical urban mobility challenges.

Kathryn Anthony has published a new book, Defined by Design: The Surprising Power of Hidden Gender, Age, and Body Bias in Everyday Products and Places (Prometheus Books 2017).

ROPE pavilion, a temporary winter shelter designed by Associate Professor Kevin Erickson and built alongside other pavilions by Anish Kapoor, Frank Gehry and others in Winnipeg, is featured in Philip Jodidio’s new book The New Pavilions published by Thames & Hudson. http://www.thamesandhudsonusa.com/books/the-new-pavilions-hardcover

Professor Joy Monice Malnar, AIA, retired from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign on January 15, 2017, after nearly two decades on the faculty of the School of Architecture. Upon retirement, she was awarded emeritus status by the university’s Board of Trustees. Malnar’s career exemplifies the value of situating an architecture school within an arts college at a research university. In her scholarship, her experience as a licensed architect was carefully integrated with other disciplines—some far beyond architectural studies—to fashion a specialization that inquires into the sensory experience of the built environment.

Associate Professor Erik Hemingway’s project mies[UPGRADE] in a Mies van der Rohe space in Chicago, was recently published in Blur: d3:dialog, international journal of architecture + design.  

University of Texas at Austin

Michelle Addington has been chosen to be the new dean of the University of Texas at Austin’s School of Architecture. She is the first woman to be appointed to the role, a program that was founded in 1910.

Professor Christopher Long received the Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture (ACSA) Distinguished Professor Award for 2016-2017. 

Professor Anthony Alofsin has been named an American Institute of Architects (AIA) Fellow.

Metropolis Magazine spotlighted UTSOA’s commitment to diversity in the article, “Diversity Champions: 8 Schools that Aren’t Just Paying Lip Service to Diversity.

Associate Professor Larry Doll’s house in Marfa, Texas, has been featured in the book Marfa Modern: Artistic Interiors of the West Texas High Desert by Helen Thompson.

Associate Professor Matt Fajkus and his practice, Matt Fajkus Architecture, was included in Architectural Record’s online “Featured Houses” section, which highlights three residential projects each month.

Assistant Professor Junfeng Jiao and Professor Ming Zhang served as advisors and judges for the UT Austin edition of the Net Impact and Toyota Next Generation Mobility Challenge.

Fernando Lara‘s timely op-ed, Use architecture to make our southern border an economic driver, was featured by the Dallas Morning News, McAllen Monitor, and San Angelo Standard-Times.

Mark Macek designed curved, Walnut wood podiums that were featured prominently during Super Bowl LI Opening Night and the Super Bowl post-game show.

Associate Dean Juan Miro‘s practice, Miro Rivera Architects, was spotlighted by The Architect’s Newspaper as a “shining star” of Austin’s lively architecture scene.

Distinguished Professor Larry Speck, FAIA, will present a Learn by Design session at SXSWedu (March 6-9) alongside Sue Cox, MD, Executive Vice Dean at the Dell Medical School.

The Texas Landscape Project, a new book by David Todd and Jonathan Ogren, received a very positive review in the February issue of Landscape Architect Magazine. 

Associate Professor Nichole Wiedemann has been elected National ACSA Secretary/Treasurer.  

Iowa State University

Architecture Student Appointed AIAS Representative on AIA Institute Honor Awards Jury

Fifth-year architecture student David Cordaro, Urbandale, has been appointed the student representative for the American Institute of Architecture Students on the 2017 American Institute of Architects Institute Honor Awards for Architecture jury and 25-Year Award Jury. He will serve on the jury with eight architects and client representatives from Albuquerque, New Mexico; Chicago; Houston; Los Angeles; New York City; Pittsburgh; Seattle; and Sleepy Hollow, New York.

Ji’s Firm Wins International Architecture Competition

EUS+ Architects, the South Korean architecture firm co-founded by architecture Lecturer Jungwoo Ji, is part of a three-firm consortium (with Space Group and Idea Architects) that won first place out of 54 international entries in the Seoul Animation Center Design Competition. The 21,000-square-meter, mixed-use complex with exhibition and performance halls features three stories above ground and three stories below ground. The total construction budget is $40 million; the winning team will submit design development and construction documents in 2017.

Senske’s YouTube Channel Named Among Top 12 for Architects

ArchDaily has named architecture Assistant Professor Nick Senske‘s YouTube channelone of the Top 12 Architecture Channels on YouTube. Two tutorials Senske created specifically for ARCH 230: Design Communications I at Iowa State University were cited as among his best. He uses the video tutorials for “flipped classroom” teaching in the recently revised version of this required course for architecture majors. Senske’s channel has passed 1 million viewers and 15,000 subscribers.

Leslie, Paxson Honored with University Awards

Tom Leslie, Pickard Chilton Professor in Architecture, has been named a Morrill Professor and Lynn Paxson, professor of architecture, has been named a University Professor by Iowa State University. Both were recognized at the University Faculty and Staff Awards Ceremony Monday, Sept. 26, at the Iowa State Memorial Union. The Morrill Professorship recognizes faculty members whose professional work has demonstrated outstanding success in teaching and learning in undergraduate, graduate and/or Extension/outreach programs which is reflected by a national or international reputation in the nominee’s discipline. A University Professor must above all else have acted as a change agent by having made significant contributions that have improved the university. This professional work must go beyond excellence in teaching or research. In addition to the area of these contributions, a University Professor must have demonstrated outstanding performance in at least one other area of faculty responsibility: (1) research and/or creative activities, (2) teaching and advising, or (3) extension/professional practice.

Bogdanovic Co-edits Book on Capital Cities’ Political Landscapes

Political Landscapes of Capital Cities, co-edited by Jelena Bogdanovic, assistant professor of architecture, has been published by the University of Colorado Press. The book investigates the transformation of the natural landscape into the culturally constructed and ideologically defined political environments of capital cities 

Article by Bogdanovic Published in JSAH

“Evocations of Byzantium in Zenitist Avant-Garde Architecture,” an article by Jelena Bogdanovic, associate professor of architecture, was published in the Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians, Vol. 75, No. 3, September 2016. JSAH is a leading journal on the history of architecture, landscape architecture and urbanism. The cover page of this issue also featured a drawing of the Villa Zenit from Bogdanovic’s article. Her research on the references to Byzantium in the architecture and philosophy of Zenitism—an Eastern European avant-garde movement founded by Ljubomir Micic in 1921—was supported by a grant from the ISU Center for Excellence in the Arts and Humanities.

Senske’s Book Review Published in Journal of Architectural Education

An invited book review by Nick Senske, assistant professor of architecture, was published in the Journal of Architectural Education 70:2 October 2016. The book is A Prehistory of the Cloud (MIT Press) by Tung-Hui Hu, a critical examination of digital infrastructure and its connections to physical and political space.

University of Nebraska-Lincoln


The College of Architecture is pleased to announce the following faculty accolades and achievements:

Awards
Architecture Assistant Professor Jason Griffiths and his design studio students were honored with a 2017 Regional Excellence in Wood Design Award by Woodworks for their studio project titled “Emerge”. The students on the design team included: David Rogelio Alcala, Alfredo Vera F, Virginia Michelle Gormley, Ruslan White, Eric Lee Engler, Danielle Alexa Durham, Devin Bayles McLean, Scott Christopher Kenny, Justin Philip DeFields, Darian Johnathon Scott, Kristen Michelle Schulte, Joseph Roy Croghan and Hanna Christy.
The “Emerge” project is a 100 square foot structure designed to hold small gatherings of teachers and students visiting the Bauman Tree Farm in Eugene, Oregon. Details about their project are included on the Woodworks’ website and featured in their 2017 Wood Design Award video. The video will be presented at five Wood Solutions Fairs and two Wood Design Symposia across the country this year and in the hardcover book, Celebrating Excellence in Wood Architecture 2016-2017, to be published next fall. For full project details click here.
Community and Regional Planning Assistant Professor Dan Piatkowski’s abstract titled “Promoting bicycling in the face of “Bikelash” – Why bicyclists break the law, and what it means for encouraging active transportation” was selected for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Excellence in Safety Research for Active Living award. The honor will be presented to Piatkowski at the 2017 Active Living Research conference on February 28th.
Papers

Architecture Assistant Professor David Karle and master of architecture student Caitlin Tangeman’s abstract “Decentralized Consumerism” has been accepted and will be developed into a full essay for the international journal MONU. MONU examines topics that are important to the future of cities and urban regions from a variety of perspectives and provides a platform for comparative analysis. Their essay mergers Karle’s research on Great Plains urbanism and Tangeman’s thesis interests on contemporary rural issues and the growing urban-rural divide. The essay will be published in April 2017.
Community and Regional Planning Assistant Professor Daniel Piatkowski’s survey work, which was presented in Washington DC last month, was featured in February’s issue of Greater, Greater Washington. The article was titled “Guess who wants to teach cyclists a lesson?” The full article can be reviewed here.
Piatkowski’s research focuses on investigating land use and transportation planning and how it can foster equitable and sustainable communities. Piatkowski is particularly interested in the ways in which planning for walking and bicycling, as viable modes of transportation, can transform communities.
Presentations

Architecture Professor Rumiko Handa presented a paper titled “Presenting the Difficult Past: Günther Domenig’s Documentation Center of the National Socialist Party Rally Grounds at Nuremberg” at the Atmosphere 9 conference held at the University of Manitoba.
Handa’s paper presentation reflected on how a piece of architecture has a way of presenting the past and the history that took place there. She posed the question, “what contributions, if any, does the architect make when dealing with a pre-existing building that carries a difficult past.” For example the city of Nuremberg, where German citizens hosted Nazi rallies annually from 1933 to 1938, took a half a century to generate an institution, the Documentation Center, a place that would constantly remind its visitors of the genocide that happened there. Handa explored the community’s transition and asked the audience to ponder “whether and how the architect should take advantage of the pre-existing architecture as a memory place.” Full abstract can be found here.   
From the Interior Design program, Professor Mark HinchmanAssistant Professor Nate Bicak and Associate Professor and Interim Program Director Lindsey Bahe have all had peer-reviewed papers accepted to be presented at the Interior Design Educator’s Council National Conference in Chicago in March. Mark Hinchman will be presenting “The Hotel Interiors of Dale and Patricia Keller, 1961 – 1981: Oral History in the Digital Age”. Nate Bicak and Lindsey Bahe co-authored “Design Making as a Recruiting Tool: Body, Space and Agility”.
Achievement:

Architecture Professor and Program Director Jeffrey L. Day’s “Blue Barn Theatre and Boxcar 10” projects in Omaha, Nebraska, have been featured on the internationally renowned architecture website ArchDaily. Full feature can be found here

Day’s design team combined a 13,000 square foot facility for Blue Barn with Boxcar 10, a 10,000 square foot restaurant and residential building and a 7,500 square foot public open space. Designed for separate owners, the projects share a common language and a unified site strategy including innovative storm water management and unconventional materials. The architects envisioned a collective and collaborative approach for the theater, restaurant and housing, embracing the precision programming required for each.

 

ACSA Announces Agenda for Annual Business Meeting and Regional Caucuses

ACSA members are invited to attend the ACSA Annual Business Meeting and Regional Caucuses on Saturday, March 25 in Detroit.

ANNUAL BUSINESS MEETING AGENDA

Saturday, March 25, 2017, 12:30 pm
Westin Book Cadillac Detroit
Woodward AB

  1. Call to Order
    Bruce Lindsey, President
  2. Member School Registration
    Rashida Ng, Secretary/Treasurer
  3. Introduction of Current and Incoming ACSA Board Members and Guests
    Bruce Lindsey
  4. Vice President’s Report
    Francisco Rodriguez-Suarez
  5. Secretary/Treasurer’s Report
    Rashida Ng
  6. President’s Report
    Bruce Lindsey
  7. Other Business
    ACSA Data Presentation
  8. New Business
  9. Adjournment and Recognition of Outgoing Board Members

REGIONAL CAUCUSES AGENDA

Saturday, March 25, 2017, 2:00–3:00 pm

  1. Input on Tenure & Promotion White Paper Draft
  2. Input on ACSA Governance Change Proposal
  3. StudyArchitecture and Communications Campaign
  4. Open Discussion or New Business

All conference participants are encouraged to attend the meeting of their region at rooms throughout the hotel.

University of Buffalo

Assistant Professor Jin Young Song’s Façade Research entitled ‘Snapping Façade’ was awarded 1st Prize in the 2016 Laka Competition.

https://lakareacts.com/competition/winners/1st-prize-snapping-facade/
http://bustler.net/news/5363/investigating-architecture-that-reacts-in-the-2016-laka-competition-the-winning-entries

Assistant Professor Jin Young Song’s proposal PAMO(Prefabricated Adaptive Mobile Offices) was awarded an Honorable Mention at 2016 Tomorrow’s Workplace Design Competition. The  competition was sponsored by Metropolis and Staples Business Advantage.
http://www.metropolismag.com/Point-of-View/November-2016/tomorrows-workplace-announcement-2016/

Professor Brian Carter has been appointed External Examiner by the School of Architecture & Planning at Dalhousie University. 

Steven Chodorisky is the 2016/2017 Banham Fellow at the University at Buffalo. The Banham Fellowship celebrates Banham’s legacy of experimental criticism and his role as Chair of the Design Studies at SUNY Buffalo. Awarded annually at UB it supports the research and creative activity of an emerging practitioner. For more information, please visit http://ap.buffalo/People/related/emplyment/banham-fellowship.html.   


Learn more about University of Buffalo’s Architecture Program. 

2017 ACSA Board Candidates & Results

RESULTS
The ACSA board of directors is pleased to announce the results of the 2017 ACSA Elections:

Second Vice PresidentRashida Ng, Temple University
Secretary / TreasurerNichole Wiedemann, The University of Texas at Austin
Northeast Director: Bethany Lundell Garver, Boston Architectural College
Mid Atlantic DirectorJosé L.S. Gámez, University of North Carolina at Charlotte


CANDIDATES & Online Voting
Below is information on the 2017 ACSA election, including candidate information. Official ballots were emailed to all full-member ACSA schools’ Faculty Councilors, who are the the voting representatives. Faculty Councilors must complete the online ballot by close of business, February 10, 2017.

2017 ACSA SECOND VICE PRESIDENT CANDIDATES
The Second Vice President will serve on the Board for a four-year term, beginning on July 1, 2017, with the first year served as Second Vice President, the second year served as First Vice President/President-Elect, the third year served as President, and the fourth year served as Past President. The links below include campaign statements written by each candidate and short curriculum vitae.

   

Rashida Ng, RA
Temple University

 

Christine Theodoropoulos, AIA
Cal Poly San Luis Obispo

2017 ACSA SECRETARY / TREASURER CANDIDATES

The Secretary/Treasurer serves for a three-year term, beginning on July 1, 2017, and is responsible for the corporate and financial records of the Association. In fulfilling these responsibilities, the Secretary/Treasurer oversees preparation of minutes of meetings and maintenance of the Bylaws of the Association, the Rules of the Board of Directors, and other policy documents. The Secretary/Treasurer oversees the financial affairs of the organization by serving as Chair of the Finance Committee and working with the staff and independent accounting personal on organizational budgets, reports, and annual audits.

   
Nadia M. Anderson
University of North Carolina at Charlotte 
 Nichole Wiedemann
The University of Texas at Austin 

2017 ACSA REGIONAL DIRECTOR CANDIDATE
The Regional Director will serve on the Board for a three-year term, beginning on July 1, 2017. Regional Directors serve as leaders of their regional constituent associations and chair meetings of their respective regional councils. They maintain regional records and have responsibility for the fiscal affairs of the constituent associations, and are accountable to their regional council for these funds. They provide assistance to regional schools and organizations applying for institutional membership. They prepare annual reports of regional activities for publication in the Association’s Annual Report. They participate in the nomination and election of their respective succeeding regional directors; and perform such other duties as may be assigned by the board, Regional Directors also sit on the ACSA board and are required to attend up to three board meetings a year. The links below include campaign statements written by each candidate and short curriculum vitae.

Northeast Regional Director Candidates

Carey Clouse
University of Massachusetts, Amherst 
Bethany Lundell Garver, AIA, NCARB
Boston Architectural College 

Mid Atlantic Regional Director Candidates

  
José L.S. Gámez, PhD
University of North Carolina at Charlotte

 Dana K. Gulling
North Carolina State University



ACSA Election Process

ACSA Bylaws, Article IX, Section 3: Election Process: “Elections shall be held in accordance with the Rules of the Board of Directors. Faculty Councilors of member schools shall be responsible for encouraging colleagues to express their views regarding candidates for Association elections, and shall submit the vote of the member school they represent on behalf of all members of the faculty. The Association shall announce the results of elections and appointments as soon as feasible, consistent with the Rules of the Board of Directors”.

 

The Faculty Councilor from each ACSA full-member school is the voting representative. Faculty Councilors must complete the online ballot by close of business, February 10, 2017.

2017 ACSA Board Election Timeline
   January 10, 2017     Ballots emailed to all full-member schools, Faculty Councilors
   February 10, 2017    Deadline for receipt of completed online ballots
   March 2017              Winners announced at ACSA Annual Business Meeting in Detroit

The Faculty Councilor from each ACSA full-member school is the voting representative and must completed the online ballot by close of business, February 10, 2017.  

Contact
    Eric Ellis, ACSA Director of Operations and Programs
    phone: 202.785.2324
    email: eellis@acsa-arch.org