Posts

Kennesaw State University

Liz Martin-Malikian named AIAS Educator of the Year 2020

Kennesaw State University professor Liz Martin-Malikian was recently named Educator of the Year at the American Institute of Architecture Students (AIAS) Honor Awards.

Martin-Malikian, thesis coordinator and professor of architecture in KSU’s College of Architecture and Construction Management, was recognized by AIAS for her outstanding contribution to the education of architecture students, the impact she has made on the education of architecture students and for championing the virtues of excellence in architecture and the environment to the general public. The award also honors educators who align with the AIAS mission to “advance leadership, design and service among architecture students.”

“This award confirms what we already knew about Liz – that she is a first-rate educator who embodies KSU’s value of putting students first,” said Andrew Payne, dean of the College of Architecture and Construction Management. “We are privileged to have her among the faculty in the Department of Architecture, and I’m sure many more accolades will come her way in the future.”

Martin-Malikian has taught at the University since 2006 and has since become the thesis coordinator of the architecture department’s advanced core sequence, one of the few programs nationwide that requires students to pursue thesis projects while earning an architecture degree. Aside from her involvement with thesis sequences, Martin-Malikian teaches courses on environmental technology, materials and methods, third-year studios and urban design. She taught in Auburn University’s School of Architecture, Planning and Landscape Architecture as the Paul Rudolph Visiting Professor of Practice prior to arriving at Kennesaw State.

See Kennesaw State University News Link HERE

Kennesaw State University

Ed Akins II selected as Interim Chair of Architecture

The College of Architecture and Construction Management is proud to announce Associate Professor Ed Akins II as the Interim Chair for the Department of Architecture. Professor Akins will assume this role on July 1, 2020 at which time Dr. Rizzuto will return to full-time teaching. The department is at a critical point in its development as we prepare for an upcoming NAAB accreditation visit while balancing the temporary transition to remote learning due to COVID-19. Continuity in strong leadership is needed and Professor Akins is well-capable of providing such.

Ed Akins II, AIA, LEED AP, graduated with a Master of Architecture Degree in 1996 from the Georgia Institute of Technology. He has worked locally with Atlanta communities to achieve LCI grants and with the Architecture firms Thompson Ventulett Stainback and Smith Dalia Architects.

From 2002 to 2009, he taught at the Georgia Institute of Technology and at Kennesaw State University (KSU).  In 2009, he began full-time instruction within the Architecture department at KSU and is currently an Associate Professor and Coordinator of Integrative studios.

Ed was a lead partner for the Atlanta Sustainable Building Ordinance (ASBO) in 2009 and the moderator for Atlanta’s AIA+ARCH2030 Sessions in 2011. He has received multiple certificates of service from AIA and was the recipient of the Emerging Professional Award in 2007 from AIA Georgia, the Emerging Voices Award in 2008 (from AIA Atlanta’s YAF chapter), and the recipient of AIA Atlanta’s John A. Busby Medal in 2010.  In 2018, he was awarded the R.C. Paul Excellence in Sustainability Award for his outstanding efforts toward promoting environmental sustainability in the educational and operational practices of the Kennesaw State University (KSU) campus community.

Ed has served as Co-Chair and Chair on the President’s Commission for Sustainability at KSU and has taught Ecological Urbanism within the USG European Council Paris program.  He was chosen as KSU Sustainability Fellow for the 2016-2017 Academic year and was chosen to attend the 2017 EAO Workshop in Germany focused on the topic “Sustainability – Challenges for the World of Tomorrow.”  Ed is currently an active board member of the Architecture Design Center (ADC) of Atlanta and is a registered Architect, practicing in the Atlanta area.

He continues to involve students in the process of design inquiry seeking ecologically sensitive building design and technologies that respond to the needs of human comfort and site priorities. His passion to infuse practice within the explorative environment of academia produces a dynamic and fruitful environment for student and faculty growth.

Please join me in welcoming Professor Akins as Interim Chair.

Kathryn Bedette, AIA to serve as Associate Dean for Student Success and Accreditation

Kathryn Bedette, AIA, is an award-winning architect in the State of Georgia and an Associate Professor of Architecture at Kennesaw State University.  Professor Bedette has extensive experience coordinating across the curriculum of KSU’s Bachelor of Architecture degree program, having coordinated First-, Second- and Fifth-Year Architecture Studios, as well as the program’s Architecture History and Theory course sequence.  She also served as the Architecture Department’s first Academic Engagement Coordinator.  Her professional experience includes a broad range of institutional projects as well as adaptive reuse office, retail and high-rise mixed-use projects and her design studios have prioritized the cultivation a meaningful and responsible built environment by foregrounding interrelationships between architectural technologies and program in design advocacy and posthumanist design.

Kathryn has an accomplished record of advocating for the profession of architecture and the built environment through her work as Advocacy Chair on the AIA Georgia Board of Directors and served as the 2018 President of AIA Georgia.  As President, she led a successful national campaign to create a new leadership development pipeline that encourages a range of ethnically diverse women to pursue national AIA leadership positions.  She has also made a positive impact on the profession in multiple national professional service leadership roles and currently serves as the NCARB Architect Licensing Advisor for Georgia and as a Subject Matter Expert for ArchiPrep, the AIA’s ARE study platform.

Professor Bedette was awarded the 2003 Emerging Voices Award from the Young Architects Forum of AIA Atlanta for her built design work and the 2016 AIA Atlanta James Gant Fausett, FAIA, Service to the Profession Award for her advocacy accomplishments.  In 2018, Kathryn was named one of Engineering Georgia’s  “100 Influential Women to Know” and her work and scholarship have been exhibited in multiple venues and presented internationally.  Professor Bedette earned her B.S. in Architecture from the Georgia Institute of Technology, where she studied abroad at the Ecole d’Architecture Paris-Tolbiac, and her Master of Architecture from Arizona State University, where she studied abroad at the Städelschule in Frankfurt, Germany.

Bedette will serve the college by focusing administrative efforts on all things related to student success. Her immediate focus will be on establishing the CoACM Center for Student Success which will house all academic advising services and provide workshops and training on student related issues and aid in developing meaningful pathways to graduation. Bedette will also be the point of contact for all accreditation and assessment processes.

Please join me in welcoming Professor Bedette to this role.

KENNESAW, Ga. — Kennesaw State University President Pamela Whitten and Provost and Senior Vice President for Academic Affairs Kathy Schwaig have named Andrew Phillip Payne as dean of the College of Architecture and Construction Management, effective January 1.

As dean, Payne will provide academic and scholarly leadership for the College of Architecture and Construction Management. He will also work with faculty and staff to advance the goals of the College and its reputation at the local, state, and national level. Reporting to the Provost, Payne will lead external funding efforts and further relationships within the architecture and construction management professional communities.

“With this position, we sought someone who could bring a bold vision for the College and a commitment to fostering an inclusive learning environment for our students, all of which have been demonstrated by Dr. Payne,” Whitten said. “We believe his extensive industry experience and strong research background will galvanize our mission of becoming a top R2 institution, and we are excited to have him join the University.”

Payne currently serves as chair and professor at Indiana State University’s Department of Built Environment, positions he has held since August 2013. At Indiana State, Payne worked extensively with the Department of Built Environment’s assessment and accreditation process, earning recognition for his university service and community engagement in the classroom with the 2019 College of Technology Faculty Service Award. With more than 12 years of professional experience in architectural design firms across the Southeast, Payne has been an invited speaker at numerous conferences and has contributed to several written bodies of work.

Prior to joining Indiana State, he served as an architecture professor at the Savannah College of Art and Design, teaching and serving as a graduate and undergraduate coordinator while researching building materials and construction.

“I am pleased to have Dr. Payne lend his leadership and experience as dean of our College of Architecture and Construction Management,” Schwaig said. “We were impressed by his student-first approach to academe, which will undoubtedly make a profound impact on our students’ educational journeys and eventual careers in and around the built environment.”

Payne earned a Bachelor of Environment Design, Master of Architecture and Ph.D. in Design from North Carolina State University’s College of Design. His academic research centers around visually impaired pedestrians’ ability to navigate their environments. Payne also specializes in campus planning and design, human use of space and accessibility. He is an honorary member of construction management honors fraternity Sigma Lambda Chi and has received the American Institute of Architecture Students (AIAS) National Educator Honor Award.

“Kennesaw State’s College of Architecture and Construction Management is well known across the region for the quality of its graduates, and I am overjoyed to play a role in supporting our faculty and staff in bolstering this first-class educational experience for our students,” Payne said. “The built environment is ever-growing and the demand for professional architects and construction managers remains unquenched. It is my goal to ensure KSU is at the forefront of meeting that demand.”

Promotions:

Professor Tim Frank has been tenured and promoted to Associate Professor of Architecture. Professor Frank currently teaches Architecture Studio, Design Communication II, and Thesis Research in addition to working as Design Communication Coordinator. He teaches a responsibility to serve both society and the environment and believes that architectural education should prepare students for a practice where social, environmental, and material factors are work hand-in-hand within a cohesive building domain. In addition to his work at Kennesaw State, he also owns a nationally recognized interdisciplinary architecture studio in Atlanta. He has also had work published in several publications such as the Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture Journal of Technology, Architecture, and Design.

Professor Arief Setiawan has been tenured and promoted to Associate Professor of Architecture. He teaches in the areas of design and architecture: history, theory, and criticism (HTC), teaching Architecture Studio I and II, Introduction to Architecture, and courses in architecture history. He serves as the coordinator of the First-Year Design, developing a design pedagogy based on the notion of thinking through making. He integrated the First-Year course and studio through Learning Community: Fundamental in Design Thinking. Professor Setiawan has been researching design pedagogy and HTC focusing on the questions of modernity and identity, which he has presented and published in conferences. He helped lead the Architour program taking students around the country to experience masterful work in architecture and urbanism. He hopes to expand and develop further his teaching and research.

Kennesaw State University

Thesis students presented their individual research work at the Architecture Research Consortium Center (ARCC 2019) conference in Toronto from May 28-June 2, 2019. It was extremely eye opening and exciting for students to be part of collaborative discussions regarding the practice of research in architecture.
Photo (left to right): Dyesha Holmes, Brittany Adkins, Joshua Robinson, Corey Jones and Jeremy Bowen.

Associate Professor Liz Martin-Malikian and department chair, Tony Rizzuto, PhD also presented a paper exploring applied research as a bridge between theory and practice.

Kennesaw State University

Kennesaw State Univesity Architecture Thesis Students Receive URCA Funding

The 2019-2020 academic years starts out strong with the department of architecture being awarded a total of $7,000 during this first round of Undergraduate Research & Creative Activities (URCA) funding from the Office of Undergraduate Research.

Congratulations to 7-architecture thesis students—Jared, Devon, Ana, Breck, Caleb, Marysia and Chase— for receiving URCA awards for the maximum amount of $1,000 each to present their research at professional conferences this fall: ACSA: Less Talk | More Action: Conscious Shifts in Architectural Education Conference at Stanford University, California and  Southeast Chapter of the Society of Architectural Historians (SESAH) Conference at Clemson University, South Carolina.

Jared TriemerFaith in Humanity: an exploration of spiritually inclusive architecture (advisor: Tim Frank)
Devon Sams, Golden Scrutiny: from Analog-to-Digital  (advisor: Peter Pittman)
Ana Giron, Imaginative Engagement: Consolidating Play and Learning through the Spatial Design of Classrooms(advisor: Arash Soleimani)
Breck Small, Primary Focus: A New Precedent for Ugandan Education (advisor: Giovanni Loreto)
Caleb Lawrence, Atlanta, The Forest City? (advisor: Ed Akins)
Marysia LaRosa, Urban Revitalization of the Rust Belt City (advisor: Ed Akins)
Chase Sisk, How the Automobile Changes Monroe (advisor: Marietta Monaghan)

For information on annual student travel funds available to KSU students, please visit the Office of Undergraduate Research’s website.

Kennesaw State University

Kennesaw State University thesis students presented ‘Miniatures: A Snapshot of Thesis’ during a 3-hour gallery-style critique. Reviewers consisted of 35-alumni, local practitioners, and faculty divided into 7-teams providing feedback on students critical research as a method of intellectual investigation. Each student’s research culminates in a Theorem that serves as the intellectual grounding of the work to be undertaken in the Thesis Studio during the following semester. This ‘Miniatures’ exhibition is an attempt to help students bridge the gap between idea and project.

 

Kennesaw State University

Taught by Professors Liz Martin-Malikian, Peter Pittman and Arash Soleimani, 60-Students display their ‘Materials Exploration’ projects from Environmental Technology: Materials & Methods course. Exploring material characteristics, students worked in teams of 2-3  to make three parametric tiles in concrete, wood, and polymer all with the same design, but with a different material.

Under the direction of Professor Zamila Karimi, architecture students are challenging what constitutes an urban space by creating outdoor furniture that is interactive and playful instead of drab and utilitarian. This fall, students taking the Tactical Urbanism course offered by the Department of Architecture were tasked with creating a series of so-called “urban chairs.” The chairs were designed and built by the students with the intent that they could be configured in multiple ways in order to make public spaces more appealing. See link to video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A25fR5nLBFk

Kennesaw State University

Co-chaired by Dr. Saleh Uddin from Kennesaw State University and Dr. So-yeon Yoon from Cornell University, KSU Architecture was well-represented by Dr. Saleh Uddin and Associate Professors Kathryn Bedette, Chris Welty and Michael Carroll at the recent Design Communication Association (DCA) hosted by Cornell University in Ithaca, NY.

Prof. Carroll’s paper on ‘Digital_Hand_Materiality’ was part of a session looking at Virtual and Actual: Process and Product moderated by Prof. Chris Welty, AIA. Examining creative processes, Prof. Kathryn Bedette, AIA paper on Drawing Motion through Stillness: Comparing Disciplinary Approaches; Prof. Chris Welty, AIA paper co-authored with Dr. Arief Seitawan paper entitled Embracing Slowness, Methods to Digital Fluency; and Dr. Saleh Uddin’s paper Current Decline of Design Grammar during the Rise of the Digital Fabrication Era all challenged the relationship between digital/analog and its influence on the way we link the process and product of design.

We are also very proud to note that Architecture Student Kathryn Stapleton received the DCA Juror’s Choice Award in Undergraduate Design Foundation for her “Kinetic Structural System from Geometry.” Congratulations!

See DCA link: http://www.dcaconference2018.org/

Kennesaw State University

KSU Architecture’s Associate Professor Kathryn Bedette, AIA and President of the American Institute of Architects (AIA) Georgia Chapter proposed the Diversity Pipeline and National Representation resolution to AIA leadership on June 20th at the 2018 Conference on Architecture in New York, New York. The initiative passed asserting a need for a national leadership pipeline of ethnically diverse women candidates for positions on the Institute Board of Directors and Strategic Council, this resolution called for a plan to support the Institute’s commitment to diversity and inclusion. Bedette also serves as the Architect Licensing Advisor for Georgia and was awarded the 2016 AIA Atlanta James Gant Fausett, FAIA, Service to the Profession Award.

Associate Professor Chris Welty, AIA is currently the President-Elect for the AIA-Atlanta and serving as the KSU Architect Licensing Advisor for the National Council of Architectural Registration Board. Building upon his experience in practice, Welty also is the coordinator for KSU Department of Architecture’s Profession Program Sequence. His pedagogical interests center on integration of digital technologies and the art of craft focused around the notion of making.

Alumna Jessika Nelson, Assoc. AIA is currently serving as the Programs Director for AIA Atlanta, and was previously the 2013-2014 Chapter President of American Institute of Architecture Students (AIAS). Remaining active in the department, Nelson participated as a volunteer for the Georgia Regional Future City Competition hosted by Kennesaw State University. 

Assistant Professor Tim Frank, AIA received an 2018 AIA Georgia Design and Honor Award for his Angier Springs Monumental Work located along the Atlanta Beltline. Frank’s permanent structure creates a new kind of urban room for the city, offering a retreat for those traveling the promenade. Akin to a budding forest, the open field of slender pillars explores the light demarcation of public space without explicit boundaries. See link:  https://www.aiaga.org/design-award/angier-springs-monumental-work/

Kennesaw State University


Exciting afternoon of presentations at Kennesaw State University for the 3-Minute Thesis Preliminary Round, where 22- architecture students competed for the final round. The exercise challenges students to present a compelling oration on their thesis topic and its significance in just three minutes.  3MT® is a research communication competition developed by The University of Queensland (UQ). 

Kennesaw State University

Parking Day Tactical Urbanism

Having won an award in 2017 Park(ing) Day, the students in Professor Zamila Karimi’s Tactical Urbanism class was invited to participate in Park(ing) Day 2018 at Lenox Mall, Atlanta on Friday September 14. This event was sponsored by Liveable Buckhead Inc.

Morphogenesis Chair is an exploration on how design contributes to the material production of space. Using the concept of ‘PLAY’ students designed a set of six-chairs using slats of birch plywood cut on CNC. Each slat is finished with two colors – red and blue on either side to read as one field of color in one direction. The chairs are designed as a kit of parts which can be configured in multiple ways playing with perception to create a fun colorful playscape for all to be in.

Students (design team): Christine Vu, Steven Yang, Dyesha Holmes, Nhan Luu, Asbiel Samaiego, Eduardo Parra, Michelle Nguyen, Diego Vazquez, Nelly Mehrjerdian, Dayzha King, Andrew Smith, Morgan Fredrick.