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X-WR-CALNAME:AIA Baltimore/Baltimore Architecture Foundation
X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://aiabaltimore.org
X-WR-CALDESC:Events for AIA Baltimore/Baltimore Architecture Foundation
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210917T080000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210917T170000
DTSTAMP:20260423T030516
CREATED:20210830T134608Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210830T134618Z
UID:28197-1631865600-1631898000@aiabaltimore.org
SUMMARY:AIA Baltimore 33rd Annual Golf Outing
DESCRIPTION:This year’s outing is being held on Friday\, September 17\, at the Eagle’s Nest Golf Course in Phoenix\, Maryland. Located within easy driving distance of the city\, the course accommodates beginners and practiced golfers alike\, making it an ideal opportunity for emerging professionals and associates to play alongside principals and property owners. The golf outing is the perfect chance to network with firm principals and industry leaders\, while supporting the great work of AIA Baltimore and the Baltimore Architecture Foundation. \nAbout the CourseThe championship golf course\, known as Eagle’s Nest for the property’s namesake on the Maryland Historical Registry\, opened in 1971 under the direction of designer Geoffrey Cornish. Located near the Loch Raven Watershed\, our 18-hole golf course offers a rustic\, rural splendor that is a serene hideaway only minutes from the beltway. Majestic dawn redwoods and sycamores frame the landscape\, accented by streams\, ponds and bunkers that challenge all levels of golfers. Penn A-1 bentgrass provides consistently smooth\, fast greens to complement lush bentgrass fairways and bluegrass roughs. Course yardages range from 6\,719 from the championship tees to 5\,598 from the forward tees. \nTicket Prices \nEarly Bird registration – until 8/13 \no Member Rate: $185 \no Non-Member: $200 \nRegular registration 8/13-9/15 \no Member: $200 \no General Admission/Non-Member:$225 \nREGISTER HERE \n\nSponsor This Event \nOur sponsors play a large part in making the annual outing such a success. Attracting hundreds of architects and other A/E/C professionals\, the golf outing provides many great opportunities for corporate giving and marketing. Click here to see our current sponsorship menu. \nSEE ALL 2021 SPONSORS ON ANNUAL GOLF OUTING WEBPAGE\n \n\n\nFor Your Safety We Are: \nRequiring Proof of Vaccination (or a 72 hour time marked negative COVID test) \nRead Our Full 2021 COVID-19 Event Policy Here. \nBy registering for this event\, you agree to comply with our Covid policy and to terms of the event waiver.
URL:https://aiabaltimore.org/event/28197/
CATEGORIES:Networking,Special Events
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210917T080000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210917T150000
DTSTAMP:20260423T030516
CREATED:20210810T182348Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210810T202232Z
UID:28064-1631865600-1631890800@aiabaltimore.org
SUMMARY:AIA Baltimore 33rd Annual Golf Outing
DESCRIPTION:This year’s outing is being held on Friday\, September 17\, at the Eagle’s Nest Golf Course in Phoenix\, Maryland. Located within easy driving distance of the city\, the course accommodates beginners and practiced golfers alike\, making it an ideal opportunity for emerging professionals and associates to play alongside principals and property owners. The golf outing is the perfect chance to network with firm principals and industry leaders\, while supporting the great work of AIA Baltimore and the Baltimore Architecture Foundation. \nAbout the CourseThe championship golf course\, known as Eagle’s Nest for the property’s namesake on the Maryland Historical Registry\, opened in 1971 under the direction of designer Geoffrey Cornish. Located near the Loch Raven Watershed\, our 18-hole golf course offers a rustic\, rural splendor that is a serene hideaway only minutes from the beltway. Majestic dawn redwoods and sycamores frame the landscape\, accented by streams\, ponds and bunkers that challenge all levels of golfers. Penn A-1 bentgrass provides consistently smooth\, fast greens to complement lush bentgrass fairways and bluegrass roughs. Course yardages range from 6\,719 from the championship tees to 5\,598 from the forward tees. \nTicket Prices \nEarly Bird registration – until 8/13 \no Member Rate: $185 \no Non-Member: $200 \nRegular registration 8/13-9/15 \no Member: $200 \no General Admission/Non-Member:$225 \nSponsor This Event \nOur sponsors play a large part in making the annual outing such a success. Attracting hundreds of architects and other A/E/C professionals\, the golf outing provides many great opportunities for corporate giving and marketing. Click here to see our current sponsorship menu. \n\n\nREGISTER HERE \nThank You to Our Sponsors \nLUNCH SPONSOR\nForbes Design Center \nPATRON\nInnovative Metals Company \nConstantine Commercial Construction \nDONOR\nBaltimore Fabrication\nAron Lighting \nPAR 3\nNorth Point Builders \nBEVERAGE CART\nCenero \nSite Resources \nLUNCH BEVERAGE\nPella Mid-Atlantic \nTEE\nHillis Carnes Engineering Associates \nRockwool \nSwirnow Systems \nSIGNS\n \nEast West Sign Group \n\n<SEE FULL 2021 ANNUAL GOLF OUTING PAGE
URL:https://aiabaltimore.org/event/aia-baltimore-33rd-annual-golf-outing/
LOCATION:Eagle’s Nest Country Club\, 12801 Stone Hill Road\, Phoenix\, MD\, 21131\, United States
CATEGORIES:Networking,Partner Programs,Professional Development,Special Events
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210826T184500
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210826T193000
DTSTAMP:20260423T030516
CREATED:20210816T145524Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210816T145524Z
UID:28090-1630003500-1630006200@aiabaltimore.org
SUMMARY:AIA Baltimore Practice Management Committee Book Club
DESCRIPTION:AIA Baltimore Practice Management Committee book club will meet to discuss\, Art’s Principles: 50 years of hard-learned lessons in building a world-class professional services firm. \nDate: August 26\, 2021 (Virtual)\nTime: 6:45 pm – 7:45 pm\nZoom Access: \nhttps://us06web.zoom.us/j/83289714157?pwd=d09PRlowOUNDaFhaS21DYnl5MHJFdz09\nMeeting ID: 832 8971 4157\nPasscode: 729521\nFind your local number: https://us06web.zoom.us/u/kel1FT8viZ \nArt’s Principles (by Arthur Gensler) reveals the blueprint behind one of the most successful professional services firms\, giving career-minded individuals the tools they need to excel in business. The book covers the essentials of leadership\, talent acquisition and operations while outlining the creative strategies that propelled a small business into one of the largest and most admired in its industry.
URL:https://aiabaltimore.org/event/aia-baltimore-practice-management-committee-book-club/
CATEGORIES:Continuing Education,Special Events
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210806T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210806T140000
DTSTAMP:20260423T030516
CREATED:20210714T140642Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210714T140708Z
UID:27973-1628254800-1628258400@aiabaltimore.org
SUMMARY:SAY IT LOUD Maryland “Hear Our Voices” Virtual Panel
DESCRIPTION:Join us for a panel discussion to celebrate the virtual launch of SAY IT LOUD Maryland.\n\n\nThis program is hosted on Zoom. Upon registering you will receive an email confirmation and a Zoom link. If you do not receive a link\, please contact ndennies@aiabalt.com. If you do not contact us at least 1 hour prior to the start of the program\, we cannot guarantee admittance. \nThe Baltimore Architecture Foundation (BAF) and Baltimore Heritage present a series of 30 minute live virtual tours and presentations focusing on Baltimore architecture\, preservation and history. This special presentation is hosted in partnership with Bmore NOMA. \nTickets are donation based. We encourage you to give what you can to support BAF and Baltimore Heritage and Bmore NOMA. Your support helps us make up for lost tour and program revenue from COVID-19 and create more virtual programs like this. \nTo celebrate the virtual launch of SAY IT LOUD Maryland\, join us for a panel discussion featuring four of the winners included in the exhibition. They will speak to their experiences as diverse professionals in Baltimore and the projects they are most proud of. \nThe physical SAY IT LOUD Maryland exhibition will open at the Baltimore Center for Architecture and Design in October 2021. \nPascale Sablan\, FAIA\, founder and Executive Director of Beyond the Built Environment will introduce the exhibition and moderate the panel. \nPanel: \nHelen Ross Staley \nHelen Ross Staley is the first woman to become a member of the Baltimore Chapter of the American Institute of Architects (1955). She studied Interior Design at Stephens College in Missouri & transferred to University of Pennsylvania in 1940 for a Bachelors of Architecture degree. She won 1st place in a national Beaux Arts Institute of Design competition and was offered her first job working in New York City by one of the judges. Eventually she moved to Maryland to be with her high school sweetheart who returned from the war. They raised 4 beautiful children while she had her own practice\, mostly residential work\, with some commercial & institutional projects. \nCharlston Britton Jr.\, Assoc. AIA\, NOMA \nA native of New Orleans\, Charlston Britton is an architectural designer working in Baltimore. In 2015 he was named as a LSU McNair Scholar and conducted design research on urban resilience and flood shelters. While studying at the WAAC in 2016\, he was awarded the Product Making Award in Experimentation for his distinguished process in the exploration of materials and forms. He currently serves as chair of the AIA Baltimore EP Committee and has recently completed their 2021 CivicLAB program. \nNakita Reed\, AIA\, CPHC\, LEED AP BD+C\, NOMA \nNakita Reed is an award-winning preservation architect who focuses on sustainability. She’s a registered architect\, LEED AP\, and a certified Passive House Consultant. She serves on the boards of Preservation Maryland\, the Baltimore Architecture Foundation and is the host of the Tangible Remnants podcast\, which explores the intersection of architecture\, preservation\, sustainability\, race & gender. She has a MArch and a MS in Historic Preservation from UPENN and a BS in Architecture from UVA. \nSarsfield Williams Jr. \nSarsfield Williams Jr. is a native Baltimorean youth advocate\, with 30+ years of organizational development and construction experience. My work seeks to inspire imagination in Baltimore City’s most vulnerable children by revitalizing mixed-income communities that foster life-long relationships and simultaneously address Black wealth inequality. As the Founding Principal at ASPIREhomes\, we build in support of Black families and the need for restorative cultural pride in the African Diaspora. \n\nREGISTER HERE
URL:https://aiabaltimore.org/event/say-it-loud-maryland-hear-our-voices-virtual-panel/
CATEGORIES:Special Events,Virtual Histories
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20210730
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20210731
DTSTAMP:20260423T030516
CREATED:20210601T182640Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210601T182706Z
UID:27140-1627603200-1627689599@aiabaltimore.org
SUMMARY:Call For Entry: 2021 AIA Baltimore Student Awards
DESCRIPTION:Are you an architecture student in the final year of your degree program? Apply to the 2021 AIA Baltimore Student Awards presented by Future Architects Resources (FAR for a chance to win up to $500 towards your degree and recognition of your work in the professional community! \nEligibility Requirements: \n\nEntries are open to students entering/beginning the final year of their architectural studies program (community college/undergraduate/graduate school) in Maryland.\nThe work can be a studio project\, a competition\, a self-directed project\, or a graduate research/theory paper.\nThe student must be the sole author of the work and it must have been realized exclusively in an academic setting.\nDesigns completed in a professional office are not eligible. Students who submit to the FAR Awards are encouraged to also submit to student awards for AIA Maryland and AIA Chesapeake Bay\nFaculty sponsorship is required for all submissions.\nApplication is FREE to all eligible students! \n New extended deadline to apply is Friday\, July 30\, 2021\n\n\nAPPLY NOW
URL:https://aiabaltimore.org/event/2021-aia-baltimore-student-awards/
CATEGORIES:Awards,Special Events
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210722T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210722T190000
DTSTAMP:20260423T030516
CREATED:20210610T174902Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210709T163336Z
UID:27189-1626973200-1626980400@aiabaltimore.org
SUMMARY:AIA Baltimore Happy Hour
DESCRIPTION:Join us for a night of networking\, fellowship\, and discussion on the state of equity in the AEC industry at our very first in-person happy hour of 2021! \nThis event gives members a unique opportunity to mingle and network while being the first to explore our recently opened Baltimore Center for Architecture and Design. The Center for Architecture and Design serves as a high-profile\, visible space to showcase the important role of architectural practice and design\, and as a dynamic hub to engage professionals\, students\, and the public. Shared exhibition and gallery spaces\, classrooms\, and event spaces will offer engaging new programming on architecture\, urban design\, neighborhood history\, historic architecture and new design projects\, and the role of design in shaping the city’s future. Learn More \nREGISTER HERE \n\nSponsor This Unique Event!\nMajor sponsor ($500): Company logo on website and marketing materials. Recognition at event and 2 tickets for company representatives. \n \nEncore Sustainable Architects \n \n3-Form \nSponsor ($250): Company name included on website and marketing materials. Recognition at event\, and 1 ticket for company representative. \nSchluter Systems\nHillis Carnes Engineering Associates\nFor more information on how to sponsor this event\, please contact Margaret Stella Melikian\, Programs\, Publications\, & Research Manager at: membership@aiabalt.com \n\nCOVID-19 Attendee Waiver\nBy register for this event attendee understands that participation in an AIA Baltimore Event is entirely voluntary and requires attendees to abide by any applicable rules of conduct or local or state laws that may be announced at any time. In consideration of the right to attend an Event\, Attendee assumes all risks and accepts sole responsibility for any injury (including\, but not limited to\, personal injury\, disability\, and death)\, illness\, damage\, loss\, claim\, liability\, or expense\, of any kind\, that attendee may experience or incur in connection with attending an AIA Baltimore Event. While AIA Baltimore is the convener of the meeting\, Attendee understands and acknowledge that AIA Baltimore has no direct control over and is not responsible for the acts or omissions of any meeting venue personnel or others involved in producing this event\, or any other attendees at the meeting. Attendee has carefully considered the risk involved and hereby releases\, covenants not to sue\, discharges\, and holds harmless Urban Land Institute\, its officers\, directors\, employees\, agents\, and representatives\, of and from any such claims\, including all liabilities\, claims\, actions\, damages\, costs\, or expenses of any kind (including reasonable attorney’s fees) arising out of or relating thereto.  \nSpecifically relating to the global COVID-19 pandemic\, attendee acknowledges the highly contagious nature of COVID-19 and voluntarily assumes the risk of exposure or infection by attending an AIA Baltimore Event\, and understands that such exposure or infection may result in personal injury\, illness\, disability\, and/or death to attendee. Attendee understands that the risk of becoming exposed to or infected by COVID-19 at an AIA Baltimore Event may result from the actions\, omissions\, or negligence of others who may attend an AIA Baltimore Event or their families\, colleagues\, or others with whom they may have contact. Accordingly\, attendee understands and agrees that this release includes any claims based on the actions\, omissions\, or negligence of AIA Baltimore\, its officers\, directors\, employees\, agents\, and representatives\, whether a COVID-19 infection occurs before\, during\, or after participation in an AIA Baltimore Event.  \nIn addition to all other rules and regulations relating to the attendee’s attendance\, attendee agrees to comply with all COVID-related procedures that may be implemented by Urban Land Institute and Event Venue\, including\, but not limited to\, mask-wearing and social distancing requirements and restrictions on certain activities that carry higher COVID-related risk\, in order to protect as much as possible the health and safety of all AIA Baltimore meeting attendees.  \nBy completion and submission of the meeting registration form\, I certify that I have read and fully understand this Liability Waiver and Assumption of Risk agreement and understand that it affects my legal rights. I agree and acknowledge that this waiver and release (1) shall be binding on me\, my heirs\, family\, estate\, representatives\, and assigns and (2) is intended to be as broad as permitted under applicable law\, and each waiver or provision herein is severable and shall apply notwithstanding the invalidation of any other provision herein.
URL:https://aiabaltimore.org/event/aia-baltimore-happy-hour/
CATEGORIES:Networking,Professional Development,Special Events
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210702T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210702T160000
DTSTAMP:20260423T030516
CREATED:20210628T151051Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210628T174339Z
UID:27301-1625216400-1625241600@aiabaltimore.org
SUMMARY:The Making of The Center: Design Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:On view in the Center Gallery through September: \nIn August of 2019\, four firms participated in a design competition to bring to life the vision for the Baltimore Center for Architecture and Design\, located at One Charles Center. AIA Baltimore ultimately selected the Baltimore office of Quinn Evans Architects to design the Baltimore Center for Architecture and Design. \nSee how the Quinn Evans team made it to their final design with our latest exhibition “The Making of the Center”\, offering insight in the design ideas\, and innovative\, flexible solutions to accommodate a variety of  Center programs\, and to complement original iconic modernist building design by Mies van der Rohe. \nSee our new exhibition by making an appointment here. \nAlso on view in the Plaza level Lobby:  AIA Baltimore/BAF 2020 Design Excellence Awards\, and ULI Baltimore Wavemaker Awards. \n\nAbout The Center\n\nPhotograph Courtesy of Nate Smith Photography \nThe Center for Architecture and Design serves as a high-profile\, visible space to showcase the important role of architectural practice and design\, and as a dynamic hub to engage professionals\, students\, and the public. It is a place where local designers can gather and network\, where students can engage in STEM workshops\, and where all Baltimoreans can participate and learn. Shared exhibition and gallery spaces\, studios\, and event spaces will offer engaging new programming on architecture\, urban design\, neighborhood history\, historic architecture and new design projects\, and the role of design in shaping the city’s future. \nLearn More Ways To Support The Center\n 
URL:https://aiabaltimore.org/event/the-making-of-the-center-design-exhibition/2021-07-02/
CATEGORIES:Special Events
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210602T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210602T133000
DTSTAMP:20260423T030516
CREATED:20210503T183622Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210524T170932Z
UID:26991-1622635200-1622640600@aiabaltimore.org
SUMMARY:Equity in Public Schools: Supporting our Communities through School Design
DESCRIPTION:Join the AIA Baltimore CAE\, AIA DC\, and AIA North Virginia for a webinar exploring the equity in education systems and communities…\n\n\n1.5 AIA LUs/HSW Available \nThis event is in partnership with AIA Baltimore\, AIA DC\, and AIA Northern Virginia. \nThis virtual event will explore equity in the education systems\, communities\, and school facilities of three local public school districts – Alexandria City Public Schools\, Baltimore City Public Schools\, and Prince George’s County Public Schools – each with distinctive challenges\, demographics\, populations\, and settings. We will hear presentations from school system leaders facing challenges of inequity and resource disparity in their communities and schools\, and the unique strategies established by each for the planning\, design\, and procurement of school facilities\, followed by a facilitated discussion. \nThis event will focus on: \n• The specific equity goals of each local school system \n• Considerations and strategies for the allocation of resources to optimize educational equity and support surrounding communities \n• Approaches to community engagement and distinct impacts of improved neighborhood connections \n• Strategies to overcome diversity and inclusion obstacles in our education systems \nFor special accommodations to this event\, please contact Olivia Miles\, AIA Baltimore Communications at omiles@aiabalt.com \n\n\nAbout Our Presenters: \n \nDr. Gregory C. Hutchings\, Jr.\, Superintendent\, Alexandria City Public Schools \nAs an experienced educator and administrator\, Dr. Hutchings served as a teacher and in leadership roles at the middle and high school levels as well as in central office administrative positions. He began his teaching career in Manassas at Prince William County Public Schools and then served as an assistant middle school principal with Chesterfield County Public Schools\, near Richmond. In Nashville\, Tennessee\, he was promoted from an assistant high school principal to middle school principal. He was named Tennessee Middle School Principal of the Year by the Tennessee Association of Middle Schools for his role in increasing student achievement and becoming thenumber one middle school in metropolitan Nashville based on value-added. \nDr. Hutchings holds a bachelor’s degree in interdisciplinary studies from Old Dominion University and a master’s in educational leadership from George Mason University. He earned a doctorate in educational policy\, planning and leadership in 2010 from the College of William and Mary. \n \n\n\nCyndi Smith\, Director of Facilities Design and Construction\, Baltimore City Public Schools \nCyndi Smith is the Director of Facilities Design and Construction at Baltimore City Public Schools in Baltimore\, Maryland. Prior to this\, she was the Senior Educational Facilities Planner for City Schools. In her Director role\, she oversees the design and construction of all of the City Schools Capital projects across the portfolio of 156 buildings\, which is approximately 20-30 projects and about $35 – $45M per year of work. In addition\, she is involved in the 21st Century Schools initiative which City Schools is currently undertaking. \nCyndi received her Bachelor’s degrees in Architectural Engineering and Civil Engineering with a Structural Concentration from Drexel University. She also holds a Master’s degree in Technical Management from Johns Hopkins University as well as an Advanced Graduate Certificate in Educational Facilities Planning from San Diego State University’s National Center for the 21st Century Schoolhouse. Cyndi is a registered Professional Engineer (P.E.) in Maryland\, a Project Management Professional (PMP)\, and an Accredited Learning Environments Professional (ALEP). \nCyndi is active in the Association for Learning Environments (A4LE)\, the Structural Engineering Institute (SEI) and the American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE)\, and she has been recognized as a Fellow in both SEI and ASCE for her contributions (F.SEI\, F.ASCE). Cyndi has served on both the Northeast Region Board of A4LE as well as the Chesapeake Bay Delaware Valley Chapter Board. \n \n\n\nDr. Alicia J. Hart\, Executive Director of Facilities and Operations\, Alexandria City Public Schools \nDr. Hart has been with ACPS since December 2019. She joined the organization in the role of Director of Educational Facilities where she was responsible for the management and execution of non-capacity Capital Improvement projects. In December 2020\, she was promoted to Executive Director of Facilities and Operations. In her role as Executive Director\, she oversees multiple support operations for the division\, to include Transportation\, School Nutrition\, Safety and Security\, Maintenance and Custodial Services\, and Capital Projects.Prior to joining ACPS\, she held the post of Assistant Director of Public Works\, Maintenance and Operations with Prince William County. Within this role\, she handled the planning\, operation and execution of the Buildings and Grounds Division administering a divisional budget in excess of $14 million dollars annually and managing a staff of 82 employees. Before her time in Prince William County\, she held the capacity of Administrative Budget Manager for Maryland National Capital Parks and Planning Commission where she developed\, managed and administered an annual operating budget of $250M for the Department of Parks and Recreation. Some of her early career positions included Facilities Coordinator with Portsmouth Public Schools and Assistant Director of General Services with the City of Portsmouth.Dr. Hart holds a doctorate in Business Administration from Walden University\, a masters in Business Administration from Strayer University and a bachelors in Business Management from Hampton University. \n \n\n\nErika Gulick\, Director of Capital Programs\, Planning\, and Design\, Alexandria City Public Schools \nErika Gulick is the Director of Capital Programs\, Planning and Design for Alexandria City Public Schools (ACPS)\, and has been working as part of the ACPS Facilities and Operations team since 2015. Some of her main responsibilities with ACPS include developing the Capital Improvement Program with a team annually\, acting as a liaison to City departments\, planning for and leading major new facilities projects through design and construction\, facilitating enrollment projections and conducting capacity and utilization analyses. Prior to coming to ACPS\, Erika worked as an environmental scientist on redevelopment sites for an engineering and planning consultant firm in her home-state of New Jersey. She also has her Geographic Information Systems Professional (GISP) license from GISCI and her American Institute of Certified Planners (AICP) certificate from American Planning Association. \n \n\n\nJason Washington\, Director of Public-Private Partnerships Program\, Prince George’s County Public Schools \nSince beginning his career as a teacher\, Jason has always sought out opportunities that can have a direct impact on the lives of others. From practicing law to working in community development and in his current position\, leading the development and implementation of the Nation’s first K-12 bundled schools concessionaire model\, he has sought positions that allow him to serve and create dynamic programs. \nPrior to leading this effort\, he was executive director of the National Council for Public-Private Partnerships\, vice president of Business and Economic Development at Corvias and he led the Metropolitan Washington Community Wealth Building Initiative at City First Enterprises as senior vice president. Jason has also served as a White House fellow\, assigned to U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development\, where he supported the Hurricane Sandy Rebuilding Task Force. Previously\, he was senior policy advisor to the mayor of Baltimore\, and served as chair of the Mayor’s School Construction Task Force. Prior to joining city government\, Jason practiced law as a corporate associate at Kirkland & Ellis LLP. \nRegister Here\n\n\n\n\nLearn More About The Committee on Architecture in Education\nThe CAE is a forum for the exploration\, discussion\, and dissemination of ideas on educational facilities. CAE strives to bring together diverse stakeholders interested in creating\, building and implementing great learning environments. \nLearn more about CAE and its mission here.
URL:https://aiabaltimore.org/event/equity-in-public-schools-supporting-our-communities-through-school-design/
CATEGORIES:Special Events,Webinars
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210522T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210522T150000
DTSTAMP:20260423T030516
CREATED:20210511T195103Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210517T204707Z
UID:27056-1621692000-1621695600@aiabaltimore.org
SUMMARY:Architecture Sketching in Mount Vernon Place
DESCRIPTION:Spend the day sketching architecture with Morgan State University architecture professor Gabriel Kroiz\, AIA…\n\n\nJoin architect and Morgan State University architecture professor\, Gabriel Kroiz\, AIA\, for a beginner sketch class\, while learning about the rich architectural history of Mount Vernon Place.  \nThis one-hour class is geared to beginners\, and to learning an “elevation”: an easy entry point to architectural drawings. We will focus on 8 West Mount Vernon Place\, pointing out the organizing grid and proportions and introducing architectural terms such as balustrade\, piano nobile\, etc. Please note: this tour will be limited to twelve participants in light of COVID-19 restrictions. Facemasks required. \n8 West Mount Vernon Place (now the Mt Vernon Club) was built around 1842\, and is one of the oldest homes on Mount Vernon Place. \nPreviously known as the Blanchard Randall House and the Tiffany-Fisher House\, the home was built by William Tiffany\, a wealthy Baltimore commission merchant. The building is a fine example of the Greek Revival architectural style and set a high standard for the new homes being built around the Washington Monument. In 1941\, The Mount Vernon Club purchased the building\, which has housed the Club since then. \nFor more info on the history of Mount Vernon Place\, see the Mount Vernon Place Conservancy’s website. \nInstructor \nGabriel Kroiz\, AIA founder and principle of Kroiz Architecture has over 25 years of experience as an architect\, builder\, and educator. As an architect\, Kroiz’s experience includes award-winning projects in the US and Asia. As a builder\, he has focused on small\, detail intensive projects which allow for a high level of research and experimentation with materials and their application. In 2008 Kroiz joined the School of Architecture and Planning at Morgan State University as its first Program Director working to achieve the school’s missions of providing access to the design professions for underrepresented minorities and performing research focused on the redevelopment of Baltimore and the surrounding region. Kroiz is also a member of the board of directors of the Baltimore Chapter of the American Institute of Architects (AIA Baltimore). \nPlease bring:  \nA sketchbook of any size (if you have one)\, and assorted pens and pencils. There may be limited seating available in the park. You may also wish to bring a folding chair\, and bottled water. \nAll participants are encouraged to submit sketches to BAF’s Building Love Instagram exhibit in honor of the 150th anniversary of AIA Baltimore. See details here.\nRegister Here\nDon’t forget to stop by the Charles Street Promenade that will be happening all day from 9:00 am to 9:00pm on North Charles street. Find out more information here.
URL:https://aiabaltimore.org/event/architecture-sketching-in-mount-vernon-place/
LOCATION:Hotel Revival (Outside on Monument St)\, 101 W Monument St\, Baltimore\, MD\, 21201\, United States
CATEGORIES:Special Events
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210522T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210522T120000
DTSTAMP:20260423T030516
CREATED:20210511T195010Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210513T135030Z
UID:27053-1621681200-1621684800@aiabaltimore.org
SUMMARY:Station North Architecture Walking Tour
DESCRIPTION:Join Charlie Duff on a special tour of Baltimore’s Station North Arts District…\n\n\nPhotograph Courtesy of Vivian Doering \nJoin us for our first in-person tour since February\, 2020! On May 22\, much of Charles Street will be closed to vehicular traffic\, so we’re taking advantage of it with a tour of Station North led by Charlie Duff. Located in the heart of Baltimore\, Station North was the first area in Baltimore to receive the State designation as an Arts & Entertainment District in 2002. \nSpanning the neighborhoods of Charles North\, Greenmount West\, and Barclay\, Station North is a diverse collection of artist live-work spaces\, galleries\, rowhomes\, and businesses\, all just steps away from Penn Station\, Mount Vernon\, Charles Village\, the Maryland Institute College of Art\, the University of Baltimore\, and Johns Hopkins University. Please note: this tour will be limited to fifteen participants in light of COVID-19 restrictions. Facemasks required. Meet at the Male/Female Statue in front of Penn Station. It’s impossible to miss! \nAbout the Presenter \nCharles Duff is a planner\, teacher\, developer\, and historian. Since 1987\, Mr. Duff has been President of Jubilee Baltimore\, a non-profit group that has built or rebuilt more than 300 buildings in historic Baltimore neighborhoods and is leading the development of the Station North Arts District. He has been President of the Baltimore Architecture Foundation and Chairman of the Board of the Patterson Park Community Development Corporation. A graduate of Amherst College and Harvard University\, he lectures widely and has taught at Johns Hopkins and Morgan State. He co-wrote Then and Now: Baltimore Architecture in 2005 and contributed to The Architecture of Baltimore. His book The North Atlantic Cities has just been published. \n\nRegister Here \nDon’t forget to stop by the Charles Street Promenade that will be happening all day from 9:00 am to 9:00pm on North Charles street. Find out more information here.
URL:https://aiabaltimore.org/event/station-north-architectural-tour-with-charlie-duff/
LOCATION:Penn Station-Baltimore\, 1500 North Charles Street\, Baltimore\, MD\, 21201\, United States
CATEGORIES:Special Events,Tours
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210423T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210423T133000
DTSTAMP:20260423T030516
CREATED:20210210T164715Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210210T164715Z
UID:26267-1619182800-1619184600@aiabaltimore.org
SUMMARY:Trailblazing Architects: Leon Bridges\, FAIA\, NOMA
DESCRIPTION:Join us for a conversation with trailblazing architect Leon Bridges\, FAIA\n\n\nThis program is hosted on Zoom. Upon registering you will receive an email confirmation and a Zoom link. If you do not receive a link\, please contact ndennies@aiabalt.com. If you do not contact us at least 1 hour prior to the start of the program\, we cannot guarantee admittance. \nVirtual Histories are back in 2021! The Baltimore Architecture Foundation (BAF) and Baltimore Heritage present a series of 30 minute live virtual tours and presentations focusing on Baltimore architecture\, preservation and history. \nTickets are donation based. We encourage you to give what you can to support BAF and Baltimore Heritage. Your support helps us make up for lost tour and program revenue from COVID-19 and create more virtual programs like this. \nAs part of the celebration of AIA Baltimore’s 150th anniversary\, we are hosting conversations with trailblazing architects in Baltimore\, discussing their impact on the profession and our communities. \nLeon Bridges\, FAIA\, NOMA\, is a Fellow of the American Institute of Architects\, and a Past Vice President of the organization. Since entering the architecture profession as a draftsman in 1956\, Bridges has won 20 national\, regional and local awards for design excellence including the restoration of Baltimore’s Penn Station and Baltimore City College. Bridges is also a Past President of the National Organization of Minority Architects (NOMA). Bridges semi-retired from active practice in 2005 to become an Assistant Professor in the Morgan State University School of Architecture and Planning. His major interest is in preparing African American students for the practice of architecture. \nModerating the conversation is Melanie Ray\, AIA\, NOMA\, a board member of AIA Baltimore and Bmore NOMA. She is an architect at Hord Coplan Macht\, and is active in the design community and various neighborhoods of the city\, including as a volunteer with the Neighborhood Design Center.
URL:https://aiabaltimore.org/event/trailblazing-architects-leon-bridges-faia-noma/
CATEGORIES:Special Events,Virtual Histories,Webinars
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210421T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210421T193000
DTSTAMP:20260423T030516
CREATED:20210208T140518Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210405T183122Z
UID:26182-1619028000-1619033400@aiabaltimore.org
SUMMARY:AIA Baltimore & BAF Spring Lecture Series: Architecture + Social Justice
DESCRIPTION:Join AIA Baltimore and The Baltimore Architecture Foundation for the 2021 Spring Lecture Series…\n\n\nCover photo: National Slavery Museum at the Lumpkin’s Slave Jail\, image courtesy of SmithGroup \n1.5 AIA LU HSW Available\, ASLA 1.5 LU/HSW \n\n\nArchitecture is a manifestation of culture. On the occasion of AIA Baltimore’s 150th anniversary\, the AIA Baltimore and Baltimore Architecture Foundation 2021 Lecture Series will explore how the built environment simultaneously reflects and influences culture\, in Baltimore and beyond. Each lecture will expose how cultural values shape design. The three lectures are focused around themes with specific local resonance in Baltimore\, a city in which the arts and culture are key to community identity\, history\, and future vitality: Architecture and Identity\, Art and Architecture\, Architecture and Social Justice. Visiting and local speakers will examine and highlight the built environment and its relationship with the arts\, community initiatives\, sustainability goals\, preservation\, equity\, the vernacular\, and more\, as we reflect on how these have been shaped by design practice throughout AIA Baltimore’s 150 year history. \nArchitecture + Social Justice lecturers will speak about designing for social justice in urban and landscape projects.\n \n\nRegister Here\n  \n \nNational Slavery Museum at the Lumpkin’s Slave Jail\, image courtesy of SmithGroup \nDayton Schroeter\, AIA\, SmithGroup\, Design Principal \nDayton Schroeter\, AIA with SmithGroup will address how architecture has the power to uncover buried stories and hidden history. The African American experience is a story of disruption and lost history compounded by the transatlantic slave trade\, colonialism\, imperialism and capitalist globalization. As such African American history has been tragically distorted\, removed and/or hidden from contemporary discussions about race and Black life in America. Architecture can be a redeeming force in reconciling this loss\, reconnecting African Americans with their history and telling a more complete story of American history. \n \nDear Chinatown\, DC\, Image courtesy of The Urban Studio \nMaisie Hughes\, ASLA\, APA\nThe Urban Studio\nCo-Founder + Treasurer\, Urban Planner | Landscape Architect | Certified Arborist \nMasie Hughes will discuss a project that precedes the Urban Studio; co-Founders Maisie Hughes and Kendra Hyson piloted a 10-week environmental education program that taught high school students how to develop design solutions to some of the DC-area’s most pressing stormwater issues. The students were tasked with addressing stormwater and water quality issues in the students’ neighborhoods\, which are located in some of the most polluted watersheds in the city according to DOEE. These brilliant students developed a comprehensive landscape plan that included much-needed community amenities and green infrastructure strategies to capture and clean the stormwater on their perspective sites. The program not only inspired us to launch the Urban Studio\, it inspired us to put values at the center of our work. This presentation will discuss how values centered work can inform and transform how we practice. \n  \nAbout the Presenters \nDayton Schroeter\, AIA\, SmithGroup\, Design Principal \nDayton is a Design Principal who has championed design justice advocacy throughout his career at SmithGroup. As a leader of the firm’s Justice\, Equity\, Diversity and Inclusion Committee\, his charge is to lead design projects that address the systemic injustice that architecture and planning have perpetuated for historically disenfranchised communities of color. Leveraging his tenacious passion for design justice with authenticity and creativity\, he is currently leading antiracism efforts in design projects including an installation called Society’s Cage that sheds national awareness of the intersectional effects of racism on our society’s collective health\, safety and welfare\, as well as Lumpkin’s Slave Jail\, also known as the “Devil’s Half Acre\,” an interpretive museum in Richmond\, Virginia. \nMaisie Hughes\, ASLA\, APA \nThe Urban Studio\, Co-Founder + Treasurer\, Urban Planner | Landscape Architect | Certified Arborist \nMaisie brings decades of leadership and management to her practice. As a 2018-2019 Leadership and Innovation Fellow with the Landscape Architecture Foundation\, she brings honest and unvarnished insights to provide a framework for people-centered design. Maisie won the National Capital Area Chapter of the American Planning Association 2016 Fredrick Gutheim Award for Distinguished Leadership by a Professional Planner and the 2014 Award of Merrit for the “Citizen Advocate Handbook”. Maisie is an ISA Certified Arborist\, with an Executive Certificate in Nonprofit Management from Georgetown University\, a Master of Landscape Architecture degree from Morgan State University\, and a Bachelor of Arts degree in Afro-American studies from Howard University. \nThank You To Our Generous Sponsors!\nMajor Sponsor \n\n\n \n \n \n \n  \nSupporting Sponsor\n\n  \n \n  \n                                               \n \n \n \n \n \nCapitol Sponsor \nShaw \nCorinthian Sponsor \nGWWO Architects \nJames Posey Associates \nMueller Associates \nMurphy Dittenhafer Architects \nMohawk Group \nNorthpoint Builders \nPotomac Valley Brick & Supply \nSite Resources \nSTV Inc. \nIonic Sponsor \nAPA Maryland \nAmerican Cedar & Millwork \nAmes & Gough \nBudova Engineering \nCianbro \nCraig Gaulden Davis Architects \nDoubleEdge Design \nHope Furrer Associates \nMorabito Consultants \nMoseley Architects \nPella Mid-Atlantic \nPlano Coudon \nQuinn Evans \nSouthway Builders \nSuzanne Frasier\, FAIA \nT3XTURE \nZiger|Snead \n\n\n  \n \nThis project was made possible by a grant from Maryland Humanities\, with funding received from the Maryland Historical Trust in the Maryland Department of Planning. Maryland Humanities’ Grants Program is also supported by the National Endowment for the Humanities and private funders. Any views\, findings\, conclusions\, or recommendations expressed in the Spring Lecture Series do not necessarily represent those of Maryland Humanities\, Maryland Historical Trust\, Maryland Department of Planning\, or National Endowment for the Humanities.
URL:https://aiabaltimore.org/event/aia-baltimore-baf-spring-lecture-series-architecture-social-justice/
CATEGORIES:Lectures,Special Events,Webinars
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210415T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210415T130000
DTSTAMP:20260423T030516
CREATED:20210304T161700Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210408T130136Z
UID:26486-1618488000-1618491600@aiabaltimore.org
SUMMARY:Creating Your Submission for SAY IT LOUD Maryland
DESCRIPTION:*Due to a sudden conflict in scheduling\, we are updating our program to next Thursday\, April 15th at 12:00 pm. Please let us know if this does not work with your schedule and we would be happy to send you a recording of the presentation. Email our Communications Manager Olivia Miles at omiles@aiabalt.com\n \n\nThis informational session will go over how you can enter a project for SAY IT LOUD Maryland \n\n\n\nBaltimore Architecture Foundation\, AIA Baltimore\, and Bmore NOMA are partnering to develop SAY IT LOUD Maryland\, an exhibition that will spotlight the contributions of diverse design professionals to the built environment. Created by Beyond the Built Environment\, SAY IT LOUD will launch a virtual exhibition in Summer 2021 and a physical exhibition at the Baltimore Center for Architecture and Design in Fall 2021. \nPascale Sablan\, FAIA\, of Beyond the Built Environment will go over everything you need to know to enter a project for SAY IT LOUD Maryland. BIPOC and women architects\, landscape architects\, interior designers\, planners\, engineers\, and all who work in built environment professions who practice or reside in Maryland\, as well as students of these disciplines\, are encouraged to submit to attend.. \nThe deadline to submit an entry is May 30\, 2021. \nRegister Here
URL:https://aiabaltimore.org/event/creating-your-submission-for-say-it-loud-maryland/
CATEGORIES:Special Events,Webinars,Workshops
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210407T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210407T130000
DTSTAMP:20260423T030516
CREATED:20210310T201647Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210317T143652Z
UID:26552-1617796800-1617800400@aiabaltimore.org
SUMMARY:2021 AIA Baltimore & BAF Spring Lecture Series: Signal Station North: On Light and Visibility in Baltimore City
DESCRIPTION:Join AIA Baltimore & The Baltimore Architecture Foundation for a Lunchtime Lecture.\n\n\nPhotograph Courtesy of Merrell Hambleton \nArchitecture is a manifestation of culture. On the occasion of AIA Baltimore’s 150th anniversary\, the AIA Baltimore and Baltimore Architecture Foundation 2021 Lecture Series will explore how the built environment simultaneously reflects and influences culture\, in Baltimore and beyond. Each lecture will expose how cultural values shape design. The three lectures are focused around themes with specific local resonance in Baltimore\, a city in which the arts and culture are key to community identity\, history\, and future vitality: Architecture and Identity\, Art and Architecture\, Architecture and Social Justice. Visiting and local speakers will examine and highlight the built environment and its relationship with the arts\, community initiatives\, sustainability goals\, preservation\, equity\, the vernacular\, and more\, as we reflect on how these have been shaped by design practice throughout AIA Baltimore’s 150 year history. \n \nPhotograph Courtesy of Neightborhood Design Center \nThe infrastructure of public lighting in Baltimore City is often overlooked\, and yet our street lamps\, porch lights\, illuminated windows and park lights animate the nighttime environment. For the past year and half\, Signal Station North\, a project of the Neighborhood Design Center\, has sought to understand the nightscape of the Station North Arts District through analysis\, observation\, activation and conversation. We’ve learned that light can be warm and welcoming\, but also aggressive; that it can invite us in or keep us out; and that at its best it can make us feel safe\, secure\, and at home. Through a history of light in Baltimore and insights from the Signal analysis\, research\, and engagement process\, this talk will explore how light impacts our neighborhoods—and how neighbors can impact light in their places.  Learn More About Signal Station Here \nRegister Here\n  \nAbout The Presenter \n \nMerrell Hambleton leads Signal Station North\, an NEA-funded project to plan for\, invest in\, and improve access to high-quality lighting in the public realm. As Program Manager for the Neighborhood Design Center\, Merrell supports implementation and design-build services\, including a forthcoming Designer-in-Residence program that will activate key green spaces in East Baltimore neighborhoods. Prior to her work with NDC\, Merrell produced pathbreaking public art projects with NY-based nonprofit Creative Time and artist Stephen Powers. She has a dual MA in Social Design and Critical Studies from MICA and BA in History from Columbia University. \n\n\nThank You To Our Generous Sponsors!\nMajor Sponsor  \nAyers Saint Gross \nHord Coplan Macht \nMaryland ASLA  \nWilldan \nSupporting Sponsor \nOak Contracting \nDesign Collective \nGensler \ninPLACE Design \nJMT Architecture \nMerritt Construction \nPrice Modern \nTW Perry \nVision Technologies \nWhiting-Turner  \nWohlsen \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nCapitol Sponsor \nShaw \nCorinthian Sponsor \nGWWO Architects \nJames Posey Associates \nMurphy Dittenhafer Architects \nMohawk Group \nNorthpoint Builders \nPotomac Valley Brick & Supply \nSite Resources \nMueller Associates \nIonic Sponsor \nHope Furrer Associates \nCraig Gaulden Davis Architects \nAPA Maryland  \nAmerican Cedar & Millwork \nAmes & Gough \nBudova Engineering  \nDoubleEdge Design \nMorabito Consultants \nMoseley Architects \nPlano Coudon \nQuinn Evans \nSouthway Builders \nSuzane Frasier\, FAIA \nT3XTURE \nZiger|Snead \n\n\n\nThis project was made possible by a grant from Maryland Humanities\, with funding received from the Maryland Historical Trust in the Maryland Department of Planning. Maryland Humanities’ Grants Program is also supported by the National Endowment for the Humanities and private funders. Any views\, findings\, conclusions\, or recommendations expressed in the Spring Lecture Series do not necessarily represent those of Maryland Humanities\, Maryland Historical Trust\, Maryland Department of Planning\, or National Endowment for the Humanities.
URL:https://aiabaltimore.org/event/signal-station-north-on-light-and-visibility-in-baltimore-city/
CATEGORIES:Lectures,Special Events,Webinars
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210331T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210331T193000
DTSTAMP:20260423T030516
CREATED:20210205T204106Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210312T210522Z
UID:26150-1617213600-1617219000@aiabaltimore.org
SUMMARY:2021 AIA Baltimore & BAF Spring Lecture Series: Art + Architecture
DESCRIPTION:Join AIA Baltimore and The Baltimore Architecture Foundation for the 2021 Spring Lecture Series…\n\n\nCover photo: United States Olympic & Paralympic Museum (Diller Scofidio + Renfro) \n1.5 AIA LU\,  1.5 LA/CES LU Available \nArchitecture is a manifestation of culture. On the occasion of AIA Baltimore’s 150th anniversary\, the AIA Baltimore and Baltimore Architecture Foundation 2021 Lecture Series will explore how the built environment simultaneously reflects and influences culture\, in Baltimore and beyond. Each lecture will expose how cultural values shape design. The three lectures are focused around themes with specific local resonance in Baltimore\, a city in which the arts and culture are key to community identity\, history\, and future vitality: Architecture and Identity\, Art and Architecture\, Architecture and Social Justice. Visiting and local speakers will examine and highlight the built environment and its relationship with the arts\, community initiatives\, sustainability goals\, preservation\, equity\, the vernacular\, and more\, as we reflect on how these have been shaped by design practice throughout AIA Baltimore’s 150 year history. \nArt + Architecture: This lecture will address the intersection of art and architecture\, and the ways in which art\, as an expression of culture\, is reflected in the built environment. Speakers will discuss globally renowned cultural projects and museums\, and local art and culture in Baltimore. \n\nRegister Here \n\nBenjamin Gilmartin\, AIA of Diller Scofidio + Renfro\, will discuss how the studio’s significant cultural projects were acts of conservation\, adaptation\, and radical rethinking for contemporary use.  With the transformation of the Lincoln Center for Performing Arts campus and the recent MoMA expansion\, DS+R sought to preserve the original DNA of two of New York’s most iconic modernist projects\, while opening up and democratizing these traditional citadels of “high art.” The recently completed US Olympic & Paralympic Museum in Colorado Springs remediates an industrial brownfield area at the edge of the city center\, to both revitalize the downtown core and build one of the most universally accessible museums in the nation. \n \nCara Ober\, Founding Editor and Publisher of BmoreArt will address artist and museum culture and the way they intersect and collide\, assessing how this impacts art communities and establishes hierarchies of value. \nAbout the Presenters \nBenjamin Gilmartin \nBenjamin Gilmartin joined Diller Scofidio + Renfro (DS+R) in 2004 and became a partner in 2015. Ben led the redesign of Alice Tully Hall\, multiple public spaces within the Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts campus\, and the Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive at the University of California\, Berkeley. Most recently\, Ben completed the United States Olympic & Paralympic Museum in Colorado Springs\, hailed as one of the most accessible museums in the country. He is currently leading multiple projects in London\, including a 5 kilometer-long public space network at Greenwich Peninsula. In addition to completing DS+R’s first building in Australia at the University of Sydney\, Ben is also currently co-leading the design of a facility for MIT’s School of Architecture and Planning in Cambridge and a major tech headquarters in the Pacific Northwest. \nCara Ober  \nCara Ober is an artist\, arts writer\, curator\, and the founding editor and publisher at BmoreArt\, Baltimore’s art and culture magazine. She writes regularly about artist\, museum\, and material culture\, with emphasis on context and subtext in the art world. \nIn 2019\, she was awarded a Rabkin Art Writers Grant and was commissioned by the Warhol Foundation to write “Artspeak and Audience” for Common Field’s Field Perspectives Series. In addition to her regular writing and editing for BmoreArt\, Ober has published articles in Vulture: New York Magazine\, Hyperallergic\, Burnaway\, Art Papers\, ARTnews\, and The Baltimore Sun. Cara has taught classes and lectured at MICA\, Johns Hopkins\, American University\, UMBC\, and Goucher College. \nShe holds an MFA in painting from MICA and a degree in fine arts from American University. Over the past decade\, Ober’s critical reviews\, essays\, and interviews have explored the political and economic impact of the arts in Baltimore and the way artists maintain a professional practice and thrive in a city full of rich and diverse cultural traditions as well as serious social issues. \n  \nThank You To Our Generous Sponsors!\nMajor Sponsor\n\n \n \n \n \n  \nSupporting Sponsor\n\n  \n \n  \n                                               \n \n \n \n \n \nCapitol Sponsor \nShaw \nCorinthian Sponsor \nGWWO Architects \nJames Posey Associates \nMueller Associates \nMurphy Dittenhafer Architects \nMohawk Group \nNorthpoint Builders \nPotomac Valley Brick & Supply \nSite Resources \nSTV Inc. \nIonic Sponsor \nAPA Maryland \nAmerican Cedar & Millwork \nAmes & Gough \nBudova Engineering \nCianbro \nCraig Gaulden Davis Architects \nDoubleEdge Design \nHope Furrer Associates \nMorabito Consultants \nMoseley Architects \nPella Mid-Atlantic \nPlano Coudon \nQuinn Evans \nSouthway Builders \nSuzanne Frasier\, FAIA \nT3XTURE \nZiger|Snead \n\n\n\n\n \nThis project was made possible by a grant from Maryland Humanities\, with funding received from the Maryland Historical Trust in the Maryland Department of Planning. Maryland Humanities’ Grants Program is also supported by the National Endowment for the Humanities and private funders. Any views\, findings\, conclusions\, or recommendations expressed in the Spring Lecture Series do not necessarily represent those of Maryland Humanities\, Maryland Historical Trust\, Maryland Department of Planning\, or National Endowment for the Humanities.
URL:https://aiabaltimore.org/event/2021-aia-baltimore-baf-spring-lecture-series-art-architecture/
CATEGORIES:Lectures,Special Events,Webinars
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210326T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210326T133000
DTSTAMP:20260423T030516
CREATED:20210302T192218Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210319T144718Z
UID:26393-1616763600-1616765400@aiabaltimore.org
SUMMARY:Trailblazing Architects: Kathleen Sherrill
DESCRIPTION:To cap off Women’s History Month\, we are highlighting trailblazers who rose to leadership in the community and the profession.\n\n\nThis program is hosted on Zoom. Upon registering you will receive an email confirmation and a Zoom link. If you do not receive a link\, please contact ndennies@aiabalt.com. If you do not contact us at least 1 hour prior to the start of the program\, we cannot guarantee admittance. \nVirtual Histories are back in 2021! The Baltimore Architecture Foundation (BAF) and Baltimore Heritage present a series of 30 minute live virtual tours and presentations focusing on Baltimore architecture\, preservation and history. \nTickets are donation based. We encourage you to give what you can to support BAF and Baltimore Heritage. Your support helps us make up for lost tour and program revenue from COVID-19 and create more virtual programs like this. This presentation is also co-hosted by the AIA Baltimore EQUITY Committee and the Maryland Chapter of ASLA.\n \nAs part of the celebration of the 150th anniversary of the Baltimore Chapter of the American Institute of Architects (AIA)\, we are hosting conversations with trailblazing architects in Baltimore\, discussing their impact on the profession and our communities. To cap off Women’s History Month\, we are featuring Kathleen P. S. Sherrill\, AIA\, NOMA\, NCARB\, LEED AP\, the first (and only) African American to serve as president of AIA Baltimore in 2012 and AIA Maryland in 2016. Kathleen founded the AIA Baltimore’s Women in Architecture Committee in 2012 (now EQUITY Committee) who are co-hosting this event. \nKathleen will highlight her work along the Pennsylvania Avenue corridor\, Maryland’s only designated Black Arts and Entertainment District\, as well as touch on several other projects in different areas of Baltimore\, including Edmondson Village\, Hampden\, Upton and Reservoir Hill.  In highlighting these projects\, she will call on the needed leadership development of the professional community. She firmly believes that architects should challenge themselves to play a key role in improving and supporting Baltimore’s underserved neighborhoods. Guiding communities to invest in themselves and the next generation through ownership. Raising awareness of what a community can become through revitalization\, not gentrification. Helping residents discover “pride of place” in where they identified as home. It’s critical to the survival of these communities and our city. \nAbout Our Presenter \nKathleen founded her firm of SP Arch Inc. in 2005 with former partner Mahendra Parekh (who retired in 2008). It offers a broad array of planning\, architectural design\, and landscape architecture services. In 2011\, Kathleen was awarded both Top 100 Minority Business Enterprises in the Mid-Atlantic Region and outstanding alumni by the School of Architecture and Planning at Morgan State University (MSU). She has served as a guest lecturer at MSU and as an adjunct professor teaching Management\, Practice\, and Law. In 2017\, Kathleen helped establish the local chapter of the National Organization of Minority Architects (NOMA) and served as its first president. She enjoys mentoring aspiring architects through her office and leadership roles. www.spa-corp.com \nIntroducing Kathleen Sherrill is Jillian Storms\, AIA\, who co-chaired the Women in Architecture Committee with her and went on to lead the Early Women of Architecture in Maryland project\, culminating in a traveling exhibit and extensive programming for which she received BAF’s Roger Redden Award and Preservation Maryland’s Volunteer Award. She currently serves as co-chair of BAF’s research committee\, the Dead Architects Society\, and continues to highlight the stories of women’s achievements in the design profession. \n\n\nRegister Here
URL:https://aiabaltimore.org/event/trailblazing-architects-barbara-wilks-kathleen-sherrill/
CATEGORIES:Special Events,Virtual Histories,Webinars
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210324T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210324T180000
DTSTAMP:20260423T030516
CREATED:20210122T165413Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210728T151519Z
UID:25917-1616605200-1616608800@aiabaltimore.org
SUMMARY:Good Design = Good Health: AIA Baltimore Health & Wellness Annual Showcase
DESCRIPTION:This event has been moved to September 1\, 2021 and is now tentatively planned as an in-person event. More information to follow… \nJoin the AIA Baltimore Health & Wellness Committee in the 6th Annual Design Showcase- Good Design=Good Health. \nDate: September 1\, 2021\nTime: 5:00-6:00 PM \n\n\n\nProject Submission Deadline: August 19 \nThe AIA Baltimore Health & Wellness Committee will be hosting its 6th Annual Design Showcase- Good Design=Good Health on Wednesday\, March 24th\, 2020 from 5-6PM. This exhibition is intended to be a fun way for architects\, engineers\, urban planners\, interior designers\, contractors\, and others to show the local community how they have been creating healthy spaces. The goal of this exhibition is to showcase designs that promote health and wellness in a variety of ways. \nThe theme of the showcase\, Good Design=Good Health\, paints a broad stroke of healthy design. Cities and communities that foster healthy living\, mental well-being and social connectedness don’t just happen. It takes forward thinking and innovative designers to create spaces that elevate a community’s way of life. For our showcase\, we are encouraging architects\, engineers\, general contractors\, landscape architects\, urban planners\, and artists to submit projects and designs that broadly speak to community health. From the urban planner who designed new bike lane routes throughout the city\, to the landscape architect’s healing garden for children\, to the contractors bringing the adaptive reuse vision to life\, to the architect’s design of community schools bringing to life one’s vision of academics and healthcare access coming together under one roof- everyone brings their own idea of a healthy environment and how to create it. \nWhat you can look forward to: The AIA Baltimore Health & Wellness Committee is interested in bringing members of the design community together with a BRAND-NEW forum to showcase their designs with peers\, while also being afforded the opportunity to observe the creative work of others. On this night we will come together to celebrate our successes\, share best practices\, strategize solutions\, and discuss adaptation. To ensure our committee and community members maintain their health\, this year’s event will be held virtually. Break out groups will be created\, with 5 submissions in each\, coupled based on a common underlying theme. This will allow for more intimate conversation and a deeper dive into each project. \nCost \nPresenters: $25 for AIA Baltimore and MD ASLA members; $45 for non-members. \nAttendees (those not presenting): FREE for AIA Baltimore and MD ASLA members; $20 for non-members. \nSubmissions: We are seeking submissions from the design community for projects that speak to the idea of a healthy city or a healthy environment. The promotion of good health comes in so many shapes and sizes; we want to celebrate them all! \nEligibility: Projects must have been designed or constructed within the past 3 years (2018-2020). Projects may be of any size or value. \nFormat: Slides (in PDF format)\, maximum of 4. Slides are due to AIA Baltimore by August 19th. Firms may make multiple submissions\, if interested\, but will need 1 presenter for each project to accommodate this year’s virtual format. \nAfter purchasing your presenter ticket please: Click Here To Access Your Project Submission Form! \nQuestions? \nContact Kathleen Lane\, Executive Director at klane@aiabalt.com \n  \nRegister Here\n  \n\nBecome A Sponsor For This Event! \nSponsoring the showcase is a great way to bring exposure to your company at an event promoting the best in healthy design. \nMajor Sponsor ($500)\nCompany logo listed on the AIA Baltimore event page\, newsletter promotion\, and logo recognition in the virtual Showcase presentation. Additionally\, your firm will receive two complimentary project submissions\, to include event registration. \nSponsor ($250)\nCompany name listed on the AIA Baltimore event page\, newsletter promotion\, and logo recognition in the virtual Showcase presentation. Additionally\, your firm will receive one complimentary project submissions\, to include event registration. \nFor more information on sponsorship contact Margaret Stella Melikian at mstella@aiabalt.com. Sponsorship registration is available via Eventbrite or by check\, or credit card payment.
URL:https://aiabaltimore.org/event/good-design-good-health-aia-baltimore-health-wellness-annual-showcase/
CATEGORIES:Networking,Special Events
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210310T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210310T193000
DTSTAMP:20260423T030516
CREATED:20210205T173324Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210312T153620Z
UID:26118-1615399200-1615404600@aiabaltimore.org
SUMMARY:2021 AIA Baltimore & BAF Spring Lecture Series: Architecture\, Identity\, & Place
DESCRIPTION:Cover Photo: New Beginnings Homeless Transition Village Fayetteville\, UACDC \n1.5 AIA LU\,  1.5 LA/CES LU Available \nArchitecture is a manifestation of culture. On the occasion of AIA Baltimore’s 150th anniversary\, the AIA Baltimore and Baltimore Architecture Foundation 2021 Lecture Series will explore how the built environment simultaneously reflects and influences culture\, in Baltimore and beyond. Each lecture will expose how cultural values shape design. The three lectures are focused around themes with specific local resonance in Baltimore\, a city in which the arts and culture are key to community identity\, history\, and future vitality: Architecture and Identity\, Art and Architecture\, Architecture and Social Justice. Visiting and local speakers will examine and highlight the built environment and its relationship with the arts\, community initiatives\, sustainability goals\, preservation\, equity\, the vernacular\, and more\, as we reflect on how these have been shaped by design practice throughout AIA Baltimore’s 150-year history. \nOur first lecture will explore the overall theme and how architecture and the built environment are directly influenced by cultural values. It will examine this through the lens of community-based design initiatives nationally and projects specific to Baltimore. \nWatch Full Lecture On Youtube \nStephen Luoni\, Associate AIA\, Director of University of Arkansas Community Design Center will address public-interest design and its role in producing public goods\, the very definition of what it means to be a professional. Placemaking platforms in housing and food will be discussed through urban design projects underway. \nArchitects are asked with greater frequency to solve for complex public-interest problems\, or “wicked problems” with multi-variate challenges characterized by social complexity. The University of Arkansas Community Design\, a teaching office with professional staff\, has developed building blocks for a new ecology of the city. A repertoire of eight placemaking platforms triangulates public policy\, best practices\, and design in agricultural urbanism\, missing middle-scale housing\, context-sensitive street design\, development-oriented transit\, watershed urbanism\, and low impact development. Our focus on expansive problem-solving through new design tools and pattern languages address the public good in addressing the grand challenges that enlarge the design professions. \n \nGreenmount West Bright Lane: Community Design Workshop \nBecky Slogeris\, Associate Director at the Center for Social Design at Maryland Institute College of Art (MICA) will present Made You Look: Design as if People Mattered. \nThe Center for Social Design at Maryland Institute College of Art (MICA) is dedicated to demonstrating and promoting the value of design in advancing equity and social justice\, and to inspiring and preparing the next generation of creative changemakers. In July 2018\, a team of students and staff at the Center launched Made You Look\, an ongoing initiative to create a safer Baltimore for pedestrians and bicyclists. In collaboration with community stakeholders and the support of Maryland Department of Transportation\, Made You Look aims to make Baltimore a safer place for pedestrians and bicyclists by increasing visibility on two levels: (1) raising the visibility of individuals walking or biking in the city and (2) making local safety concerns visible to policymakers. \nAbout the Presenters \nStephen Luoni \nStephen Luoni is Director of the University of Arkansas Community Design Center (UACDC) where he is the Steven L. Anderson Chair in Architecture and Urban Studies and a Distinguished Professor of Architecture. UACDC is one of a few university-based teaching offices in the United States dedicated to delivering urban design work. His work at UACDC specializes in interdisciplinary public-interest design combining ecological\, urban\, and architectural design. UACDC has developed several place-making platforms to shape civic design and public policy\, including work in missing middle housing\, agricultural urbanism\, transit-oriented development\, context-sensitive street design\, watershed urbanism\, and low impact development. \nUnder his direction since 2003\, UACDC’s work has won more than 175 awards for urban design\, research\, and education\, including Progressive Architecture Awards\, American Institute of Architects Honors Awards for Regional and Urban Design\, Charter Awards from the Congress for the New Urbanism\, American Society of Landscape Architecture Awards\, Environmental Design Research Association Awards\, American Architecture Awards\, and the international LafargeHolcim Awards. \nLuoni directed production of the center’s books: Houses for Aging Socially\, Conway Urban Watershed Framework Plan\, and Low Impact Development: a design manual for urban areas—which has been translated into Chinese. His work has been published in Architectural Record\, Landscape Architecture\, Progressive Architecture\, Architect\, Places\, and in international journals. He was appointed a 2012 United States Artists Ford Fellow. Luoni has a BS in Architecture from Ohio State University and a Master of Architecture from Yale University. \nBecky Slogeris \nBecky Slogeris is Associate Director at the Center for Social Design at Maryland Institute College of Art (MICA)\, where she brings MICA students together with outside partners to advance equity and social justice through design. Her work touches many of the most pressing challenges in Baltimore – from hearing healthcare for older adults to underage drinking prevention\, reproductive justice for women to smoke free homes\, HIV stigma to pedestrian and bicyclist safety. She is a graduate of MICA with a BFA in graphic design and an MA in Social Design. \nQuinton Batts & Vilde Ulset are Associates at MICA’s Center for Social Design and graduates of the MA in Social Design program. As leads of the Center’s Made You Look initiative in collaboration with the Maryland Department of Transportation (MDOT) Highway Safety Office\, they work to equip communities with the tools needed to create safer places for pedestrians and bicyclists. \n  \nThank You To Our Generous Sponsors!\n\n\n\nMajor Sponsor\n \n \n \n \n  \nSupporting Sponsor\n\n  \n \n  \n                                               \n \n \n \n \n \nCapitol Sponsor \nShaw \nCorinthian Sponsor \nGWWO Architects \nJames Posey Associates \nMueller Associates \nMurphy Dittenhafer Architects \nMohawk Group \nNorthpoint Builders \nPotomac Valley Brick & Supply \nSite Resources \nSTV Inc. \nIonic Sponsor \nAPA Maryland \nAmerican Cedar & Millwork \nAmes & Gough \nBudova Engineering \nCianbro \nCraig Gaulden Davis Architects \nDoubleEdge Design \nHope Furrer Associates \nMorabito Consultants \nMoseley Architects \nPella Mid-Atlantic \nPlano Coudon \nQuinn Evans \nSouthway Builders \nSuzanne Frasier\, FAIA \nT3XTURE \nZiger|Snead \n\n\n\nThis project was made possible by a grant from Maryland Humanities\, with funding received from the Maryland Historical Trust in the Maryland Department of Planning. Maryland Humanities’ Grants Program is also supported by the National Endowment for the Humanities and private funders. Any views\, findings\, conclusions\, or recommendations expressed in the Spring Lecture Series do not necessarily represent those of Maryland Humanities\, Maryland Historical Trust\, Maryland Department of Planning\, or National Endowment for the Humanities.
URL:https://aiabaltimore.org/event/2021-aia-baltimore-baf-spring-lecture-series-architecture-identity-place/
CATEGORIES:Special Events,Webinars
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210308T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210308T180000
DTSTAMP:20260423T030516
CREATED:20210301T211852Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210301T211852Z
UID:26364-1615222800-1615226400@aiabaltimore.org
SUMMARY:Dead Architects Society Meeting
DESCRIPTION:March 8\, 2021 at  5:00 pm | Free Event \nIn addition to discussing the ongoing celebration of 150th Anniversary of AIA Baltimore\, Jillian Storms\, AIA will virtually share how researchers can tap the vast treasure trove of primary materials on the Olmsteds’ work in Baltimore ahead of Olmsted 200 – the Bicentennial of Frederick Law Olmsted’s birth. \nFor zoom access email Jillian Storms\, AIA at jillian.storms@maryland.gov \nAs part of AIA Baltimore’s and BAF’s response to the coronavirus (COVID-19)\, this committee meeting is only accessible via tele-conference. The call in information is only sent out via email. If you are not on the list serve for this committee reach out to BAF staff\, Margaret Stella Mstella@aiabalt.com\, for call in information.
URL:https://aiabaltimore.org/event/dead-architects-society-meeting/
CATEGORIES:Committee Meetings,Lectures,Special Events
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20210301
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20210413
DTSTAMP:20260423T030516
CREATED:20210201T165628Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210414T154649Z
UID:26010-1614556800-1618271999@aiabaltimore.org
SUMMARY:Baltimore Architecture Madness
DESCRIPTION:Baltimore Architecture Foundation is celebrating AIA Baltimore’s 150th anniversary with a March Madness tournament of Baltimore buildings built between 1870 and 2021. Public voting will determine which buildings advance to each round of the tournament. \nCongratulations to Architecture Madness Champion:\nAmerican Visionary Art Museum  – Alex Castro\, Rebecca Swanston\, and Davis\, Bowen & Friedel (1995)\, Diane Cho\, Cho Benn Holback + Associates (2004)\nView Championship Voting Results \nVIEW THE ARCHITECTURE MADNESS BRACKET \n  \nVisit Our Championship Match-Up Page \n\nView Early Round Voting Results:\nSee Round of 64 voting results\nSee Round of 32 voting results\nSee Sweet 16 Match-Up Page!\nSee Sweet Sixteen Voting Results\nSee Quarterfinals Voting Results \n\nHow We Selected the Building Nominations \nBAF sought to include a diverse selection of buildings built over the course of AIA Baltimore’s history. 10 buildings were selected from each decade. AIA Baltimore and BAF committee leaders led the effort to select buildings using sources such as the AIA Baltimore Design Awards\, The Architecture of Baltimore: An Illustrated History\, A Guide to Baltimore Architecture\, and National Register listings. Public voting then determined which buildings were entered into the tournament. \nThe following rules were used: \n\nBuildings must be in the Baltimore region (AIA Baltimore zone)\n\nBaltimore City\, Baltimore County\, Howard County\, Harford County\, Carroll County\, Cecil County\n\n\nBuildings must be built within AIA Baltimore’s lifespan (1870-2021)\nBuildings must be extant\n\nFor the most part\, BAF avoided including single-family homes to protect the privacy of current homeowners. \nWhy Create an Architecture March Madness Tournament? \nThe tournament is intended to celebrate 150 years of architecture since the founding of AIA Baltimore in 1871. This is not a definitive ranking of the ‘best’ buildings in Baltimore. We want to see which buildings you love and learn why you love them.  BAF’s overall goal is to spread more awareness about Baltimore architecture.  As the tournament goes on we will be including articles about the buildings and from experts about the features of architecture that stand the test of time. \nPlease direct questions and comments to Nathan Dennies at ndennies@aiabalt.com. 
URL:https://aiabaltimore.org/event/aia-baltimore-150-architecture-march-madness/
CATEGORIES:Special Events
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210202T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210202T190000
DTSTAMP:20260423T030516
CREATED:20210112T143544Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210128T165556Z
UID:25797-1612288800-1612292400@aiabaltimore.org
SUMMARY:Groundhog Day Architecture Trivia Night
DESCRIPTION:Architecture Trivia Night is back with a Groundhog Day special!\n\n\n\nTrivia Night will be held via Zoom. Upon registering you will receive an email confirmation and a Zoom link. If you do not receive a link\, please contact omiles@aiabalt.com \nWe’re hosting a virtual trivia night for our annual Groundhog Day Party and Fundraiser. Join in on the fun and compete against fellow architecture lovers with questions about Baltimore architecture and history\, world architecture\, architectural pop culture\, Guess the Building and more. \nPrizes available and bragging rights on the line. Play as an individual or as a team. Prizes available for both the individual with the highest score and the team with the highest average score. Teams can have up to 6 players. \nFestive attire encouraged. Dust off those party clothes\, dig out the costume jewelry\, fiddle with those pocket squares. We’ll be greeting Punxsutawney Phil in style. \nFeatured Brewery – Peabody Heights Brewery \nIt’s not trivia night without a delicious cold beverage! We’ll be drinking beers from one of our favorite local breweries: Peabody Heights Brewery. Peabody Heights offers carry out\, and delivery for Baltimore City residents. \nThe individual winner of Architecture Trivia Night will win a $25 Peabody Heights Brewery gift card and a pint glass. \nTickets are donation based. This program is a major fundraiser for BAF. We encourage you to give what you can. Your support helps us make up for lost tour and program revenue from COVID-19 and supports programs like Doors Open Baltimore and our Virtual Histories series. \nUpon joining the event on Zoom you will be given instructions on how to play the trivia game. \nSponsorship \nBAF invites you to sponsor our virtual Groundhog Architecture Trivia Night. BAF holds a fundraiser each year on Groundhog Day to support programs like Doors Open Baltimore and Kids in Design. BAF continues to adapt to COVID-19 with virtual programs like our Virtual Histories Series. Your support is crucial this year as we begin another challenging year\, while taking on new initiatives such as launching the SAY IT LOUD Maryland exhibition which will spotlight the works of minority architects and designers practicing in in the state\, and a major research project to document buildings designed by Maryland’s early women architects for the National Register of Historic Places. \nDOWNLOAD SPONSOR PACKAGE \nThank you to our sponsors\n \n \n\n\n  \nBaltimore National Heritage Area  
URL:https://aiabaltimore.org/event/groundhog-day-architecture-trivia-night/
CATEGORIES:Special Events
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210113T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210113T170000
DTSTAMP:20260423T030516
CREATED:20201221T133457Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201221T193940Z
UID:25609-1610553600-1610557200@aiabaltimore.org
SUMMARY:AIA Baltimore 150th Celebration!
DESCRIPTION:AIA Baltimore Celebrates 150 years of supporting Baltimore’s architecture community\n\n\nLet’s toast to 150 years! During this very special birthday party\, you’ll hear from city and cultural leaders on the impact of Baltimore architecture and architects\, learn about upcoming 2021 AIA Baltimore programs and opportunities\, and enjoy a night of memorable toasts\, history\, and trivia! \nFollow Us on Facebook and Instagram so you can keep up with all our exciting 2021 programs. We will be presenting various fundraisers\, trivia nights\, lectures\, and networking events. Stay in the loop by giving us a follow! \nCheck out our Youtube Channel that hosts various lectures\, virtual tours\, historical overviews\, and more! Become a Subscriber to see all our upcoming 150th Programs virtually from the comfort of your home! \nAs we enter our 150th year\, consider giving a gift to The Center Fund. A monumental move for us means monumental opportunities\, and we need your help to make the exciting opportunities ahead of us a reality. Our aim is to raise $1 million for The Center Fund\, our capital campaign to sustain the Baltimore Center for Architecture and Design. Your individual contribution or firm/corporate sponsorship will match these funds to sustain costs for the design and construction and ongoing operations of the Center. \nContribute to the Center Fund by making a check out to “AIA Baltimore” and mailing it to: \nAIA Baltimore\nThe Center for Architecture and Design\nOne Charles Center\n100 N. Charles Street\nSuite P-101\nBaltimore\, MD 21201 \nLearn more about our 2021 annual sponsorship opportunities here. \nSpeakers: \nBaltimore City Mayor Brandon Scott\n2021 AIA President Peter Exley\, FAIA\n2021 AIA Baltimore President Scott McGovern\, AIA\nWalter Schamu\, FAIA\, Past President\, AIA Baltimore and Founder\, Baltimore Architecture Foundation\nJennifer Goold\, Neighborhood Design Center
URL:https://aiabaltimore.org/event/aia-baltimore-150th-celebration/
CATEGORIES:Networking,Special Events
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20201210T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20201210T173000
DTSTAMP:20260423T030516
CREATED:20201012T155357Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201123T194636Z
UID:24022-1607616000-1607621400@aiabaltimore.org
SUMMARY:The Ultimate Gingerbread Design Competition
DESCRIPTION:It’s the Ultimate Gingerbread Design Competition! We want to see your most creative designs\, from classic Baltimore landmarks to the avant-garde of gingerbread home design. Participate in the competition or join as a spectator!\nSign Your Team Up Here!\n\n\nWe ask our design teams to compete in fundraising for our AIA Baltimore/BAF scholarships. The team that raises the most will win a $250 gift card to a local bakery! \nProceeds of the event\, including sponsorship and registration fees\, will be donated to AIA Baltimore and Baltimore Architecture Foundation scholarship programs for students of architecture at Morgan State University\, and Maryland community colleges and Universities. Proceeds also support Future Architects Resources/Kids In Design\, programs for underserved middle and high school students to encourage career opportunities in architecture\, design\, and construction\, and major BAF programs like Doors Open Baltimore. \nWe will also host a festive holiday cocktail demo with architect and mixologist Nikolas Hill. Participants can learn how to make a twist on the classic “Tom and Jerry” — a warm\, holiday-based\, traditional spin on egg nog. \nNikolas X. Hill is the proprietor of threeSPICE Fruit Shrubs and The Congenial Hour online blog & mobile bartending services. Nikolas meshes his industry experience from both architectural design and service hospitality to produce this time-tested\, seasonal\, sweet-and-sour treat. \nTo request a Shrub Kit from our mixologist email threespice.shrubs@gmail.com \nOR \nSend him a message on Facebook or Instagram: https://www.facebook.com/threeSPICE/ \nInstagram: @three_spice \nWant to skip the work and just see the final projects? That’s okay too. Purchase one of our virtual unveiling tickets for a suggested donation of $25 and see all the final houses! \nEach Gingerbread House will be displayed at the new Center for Architecture and Design at One Charles Center.\n \nGingerbread Building Specifics \n*Design must fit within the theme/categories \n*Design must fit a base that is 24”x24” \n*Video: Due 12/8\, 2 minutes maximum\, this allows for virtual judging\, please no smartphone filters\, and be as creative as you want! (videos are not necessary\, but any submissions without video will not be judged). \n*Delivered To The Center of Architecture and Design by 12/9 \nCategories:\nBawlmer Hon (landmarks\, movies\, iconic Baltimore)\nWe want to see our Baltimore icons come to life! Whether it’s Natty Boh\, Mr. Trashwheel\, John Waters\, or Old Bay–the possibilities of celebrating Baltimore through the cookie medium are endless!\nPhotograph Courtesy of Preservation Maryland\, “Domino Sugar factory in Baltimore by BCT Architects\, 2015”. \nInnovation (structural creativity\, mobile/ kinetic)\nWe have The American Visionary Museum and its kinetic sculpture race\, and now it’s time for kinetic gingerbread houses! Use the best of STEAM learning to create something truly structurally unique. \n \nPhotographs Courtesy of Pinterest \nBaltimore Through the Seasons\nCelebrate your favorite scenery through your gingerbread creation: be it winter\, spring\, summer\, or fall!\n \nPhotographs Courtesy of Pinterest \n\nUgliest Gingerbread House\n\nLet’s celebrate the art of making–even when things don’t go as planned! Watch a few episodes of Nailed It! for inspiration.\nImage Courtesy of Business Insider\, “19 gingerbread house fails that will make you cringe“. \nSports (current & past Baltimore sports teams)\nWho doesn’t love finding a creative way to represent your favorite team? Pass the purple icing! \n \nImage Courtesy of Ms. Mary\, DeviantArt \nNeed More Inspiration? No Problem!\n \n\n11 Borderline Genius Tips For Making A Gingerbread House-Buzzfeed\n\n20 Unbelievable Gingerbread Houses You’ll Want To Live In-Buzzfeed\nThe Ultimate Gingerbread Architecture Style Guide by Preservation Maryland\nHow to Make a Gingerbread House-NYT Cooking\nTOP 10 TIPS FOR BUILDING A LARGE GINGERBREAD HOUSE\n\n\n  \nGet Your Tickets Here!\nUltimate Gingerbread House Design Competition Judges\n*Judging will be done LIVE!\n \nMarco Legaluppi \nMarco Legaluppi\, PE is the President of Whitney Bailey Cox & Magnani LLC (WBCM)\, a full-service\, multi-discipline engineering firm headquartered in Baltimore\, MD. As a portion of his duties\, Mr. Legaluppi is responsible for coordinating structural design efforts across multiple offices and overseeing the architecture department. Marco is a life-long Baltimorean who graduated from the University of Maryland\, College Park with a Bachelor of Science in Civil/Structural Engineering and a Master’s of Science in Civil Engineering. A Registered Professional Engineer in over 15 states\, Marco has 38 years of experience with structural engineering design\, inspection\, and assessment. Marco is currently on the Executive Committee Board of the Engineering Society of Baltimore (ESB)\, sits on the University of Maryland Board of Visitors for the School of Civil Engineering\, and is an active member of numerous industry organizations. \nSuzanne Frazier \nSuzanne Frasier\, FAIA is the Chair of the Department of Undergraduate Design at Morgan State University’s School of Architecture and Planning where she has been a faculty member since 2005. She is a licensed and registered architect with over 20 years of professional experience in the design and construction industry prior to becoming a full-time academic. Suzanne has been actively involved with the AIA for over three decades. \nMonica Amtower \nA baking and pastry graduate of the Culinary Institute of America in Hyde Park New York\, Monica Amtower is a Baltimore native who spent her career grinding in some of the best establishments that she could get into: Cafe Boulud in Palm Beach\, the Inn at Little Washington\, the Four Seasons in Baltimore\, the James Beard nominated Forman and Wolf group\, Montage International at the Sagamore Pendry Luxury Hotel\, and currently is the Executive Pastry Chef at a Forbes 5 star hotel in downtown Washington D.C. \nInterested in sponsoring this unique event? Contact Margaret Stella at mstella@aiabalt.com or find our Sponsorship Guide here. \nRegistration directly supports The Baltimore Architecture Foundation. \n\n\n  \nThank You To Our Generous Sponsors!\nGum Drop Sponsors \n\n\n\n\nIce Sculpture Sponsor\n\nSchluter Systems
URL:https://aiabaltimore.org/event/the-ultimate-gingerbread-design-competition/
CATEGORIES:Networking,Special Events
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20201118T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20201118T193000
DTSTAMP:20260423T030517
CREATED:20201012T160113Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201112T195242Z
UID:24133-1605722400-1605727800@aiabaltimore.org
SUMMARY:ARE/ART Licensure Kick-Off!
DESCRIPTION:Presented by the AIA Baltimore Emerging Professionals Committee and NCARB\n\n\n\n1.5 AIA CES LUs available \nThis program will provide an overview of the AIA Baltimore Achieving Registration Together (ART) ARE Prep course and study program. It will also cover the process for architectural licensure in Maryland\, and NCARB’s Architectural Experience Program (AXP) and the Architect Registration Examination® (ARE®). \nA representative from the National Council of Architectural Registration Boards (NCARB) will present on a range of licensure topics relevant to students\, interns\, supervisors\, architects\, and people in the architecture profession. The presentation will review the steps necessary to achieve licensure to become an architect and other programs to get the most out of your career in architecture. \nA representative from Maryland’s DLLR Division of Occupational and Professional Licensing department will speak on state-specific requirements for licensure. \nAll attendees will be entered into a drawing for a free AIA Baltimore ART/ARE study session! \nAbout Achieving Registration Together (ART) \nAIA Baltimore’s ART Program seeks to provide aspiring architects with the tools and resources necessary to successfully complete all divisions of the Architectural Registration Exam. The program is organized as a series of study sessions which extend over a six month period. Sessions are proctored by piers who have recently completed Registration. A course schedule would be available on the AIA Baltimore website later this fall. \nAbout the Presenters \n\n \nNicholas R. Respecki\, AIA\, NCARB \nManager\, Examination Development\, NCARB \nNicholas Respecki is a Manager of Examination Development at NCARB. In this position\, he works primarily on development of the Architect Registration Examination® (ARE®). \nPrior to joining NCARB\, Respecki worked as an architect and designer for multiple firms in Washington\, DC. He has experience in all phases of design and construction\, with work primarily focused on large scale university\, sports\, healthcare\, and cultural projects. \nRespecki holds a Bachelor of Science degree and a Master of Architecture degree from Ball State University in Muncie\, IN. He is licensed to practice architecture in the District of Columbia\, is a member of the American Institute of Architects\, and holds the NCARB Certificate for national reciprocity. \n \nJEREMY FRETTS\, AIA\, NCARB\, M.A. Ed. \nAssistant Vice President\, Experience+Education \nBefore joining NCARB as the Assistant Vice President for Experience + Education\, Jeremy worked as a designer and project architect for 22 years at various firms in the Midwest and Mid-Atlantic regions. Jeremy is passionate about helping architects and the architectural profession become their best through excellence in education\, training\, and management practices. \nJeremy received his B. Arch. from Ball State University and M.A. in Education and Human Development from The George Washington University. He is a registered architect in Virginia and Indiana\, and has extensive volunteer leadership experience. He is a member of the American Institute of Architects and holds the NCARB Certificate for national reciprocity.
URL:https://aiabaltimore.org/event/are-art-licensure-kick-off/
CATEGORIES:ARE Prep,Special Events,Webinars,Workshops
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20201117T113000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20201117T130000
DTSTAMP:20260423T030517
CREATED:20201014T140929Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201014T140929Z
UID:24163-1605612600-1605618000@aiabaltimore.org
SUMMARY:JUST: The Certification for Socially Just and Equitable Organizations”
DESCRIPTION:Join AIA Baltimore for an in-depth look at JUST certification.\n\n\n\n1.0 AIA/CES LU \nJoin Alison Wilson of Ayers Saint Gross\, Peter Doo of Doo Consulting\, and Ben Roush of FSi Engineers\, the three Baltimore firms that are JUST certified\, in this wide-ranging discussion on JUST certification (https://living-future.org/just-overview/). We’ll discuss each of our firms’ reasons for certification\, the highlights of the JUST program\, what we learned in the process about our business practice\, and what we changed from certification. The JUST program is akin to a nutrition label on corporate practice in the areas of diversity\, equity\, safety\, worker benefit\, local benefit\, and stewardship and is publicly available. You can see our individual JUST labels and the general reporting framework here: \nAyers Saint Gross: \nhttp://justorganizations.com/node/308 \nDoo Consulting: \nhttp://justorganizations.com/node/361 \nFSi Engineers: \nhttp://justorganizations.com/node/331 \nIn this webinar participants will: \n1. Learn about the ILFI JUST certification program intents and goals \n2. Learn about reporting framework and outward facing information \n3. Learn about the LEED Social Equity in the Design Team credit and using the JUST certification \n4. Discuss potential changes to business practice when tracking metrics are publicly disclosed. \nAbout the Presenters \nAllison Wilson\, AIA\, LEED AP BD+C\, WELL AP  \nAllison Wilson\, AIA\, LEED AP BD+C\, WELL AP is an architect and the Sustainability Director of Ayers Saint Gross\, a nationally recognized leader in high-performance design for colleges\, universities\, and cultural institutions. In this role she supports high-performance building and planning objectives across the firm\, providing analytical support to the design process\, integrating sustainability into campus master plans\, developing sustainability master plans\, and helping projects achieve third-party sustainability certifications. She is currently working on Sustainability Master Plans for both UCLA and Montclair State University as well as celebrating the LEED Platinum certification of the Arizona State University Hayden Library Reinvention. \nBen Roush\, PE-ME\, FPE\, LEED AP BD+C\, ASHRAE BEMP and BEAP\, Certified Commissioning Professional\, Principal at FSi Engineers \nIn his 15 year career\, Ben has attained an unusually wide variety of certifications\, reflecting his unusually wide range of expertise. He is one of a small group of professionals in the United States licensed as mechanical and fire protection engineers\, who are also Certified Commissioning Professionals. He holds LEED AP BD+C accreditation\, and serves as a board member of the Maryland Chapter of the US Green Building Council. All of this combines to give him a wide lens through which to view his clients’ projects\, as he takes in maintainability\, industry best-practices\, working within limited budgets\, and looking for innovative ways to maximize sustainability in each project. \nPeter C. Doo\, FAIA\, LEED® FELLOW\, LBC HERO \, Principal at Doo Consulting \nPeter Doo\, FAIA\, LEED Fellow\, is founder and partner of Doo Consulting\, LLC. He is a recognized leader in the sustainability industry with over 35 years of experience assisting companies and project teams to meet their sustainability goals. Peter co-chaired the Baltimore City Green Building Task Force\, which researched and made recommendations to the Baltimore City Council and Mayor on implementing a green building policy in Baltimore City. Those recommendations resulted in the creation in the Baltimore City Office of Sustainability\, and the passage of the City’s Green Building Law. Peter was also a commissioner on the Baltimore City Sustainability Commission and a past member of the State of Maryland Green Building Council. As a consultant\, he brings this experience to assist design teams in developing creative\, project specific and appropriate strategies for sustainability and green building certification.
URL:https://aiabaltimore.org/event/just-the-certification-for-socially-just-and-equitable-organizations/
CATEGORIES:Special Events,Webinars
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20201106T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20201106T123000
DTSTAMP:20260423T030517
CREATED:20201019T193619Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201102T162800Z
UID:24220-1604664000-1604665800@aiabaltimore.org
SUMMARY:Public Artworks of Lake Clifton High School
DESCRIPTION:Join artist Ryan Patterson for a presentation about Lake Clifton High School and the legacy of Baltimore’s mid-century public art\n\n\n\nThis program is hosted on Zoom. Upon registering you will receive an email confirmation and a Zoom link. If you do not receive a link\, please contact ndennies@aiabalt.com. If you do not contact us at least 1 hour prior to the start of the program\, we cannot guarantee admittance. \nIn 1969\, Lake Clifton Highschool was the largest public school campus on the east coast and a high profile example of Baltimore’s art in schools program. Now the building sits vacant and awaits demolition. Through the lens of public art we will examine the history of the location\, the seven artists commissioned to create contemporary works for the school\, and touch on the current predicament of unmaintained mid-century public artworks in aging school buildings across Baltimore City. \nC. Ryan Patterson is an artist and arts administrator who lives with his family in Better Waverly\, Baltimore. From 2013 to 2019 he was the Public Art Administrator at the Baltimore Office of Promotion & The Arts where he worked closely with advocates and volunteer collaborators to establish an updated inventory of public artworks across Baltimore. He currently serves as a state contractor for public art project management. \nTickets are donation based. We encourage you to give what you can to support BAF and Baltimore Heritage. Your support helps us make up for lost tour and program revenue from COVID-19 and create more virtual programs like this.
URL:https://aiabaltimore.org/event/public-artworks-of-lake-clifton-high-school/
CATEGORIES:Lectures,Special Events,Tours
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20201105T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20201105T170000
DTSTAMP:20260423T030517
CREATED:20200928T155045Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201104T193724Z
UID:23940-1604592000-1604595600@aiabaltimore.org
SUMMARY:The Ultimate Gingerbread House Design Competition Happy Hour
DESCRIPTION:AIA Baltimore and the Baltimore Architecture Foundation is excited to announce the Gingerbread House Competition Kick-Off! Join us for the first part of a two part networking event\, on November 5. We will announce the categories and will use Zoom breakout rooms for a fun evening of networking! And then join us December 10 for the Gingerbread House Design Competition\, it will also be held on zoom due to the ongoing public health crisis. \nWe will also host a 2 drink demo with architect and mixologist Nikolas Hill \nNikolas X. Hill is the proprietor of threeSPICE Fruit Shrubs and The Congenial Hour online blog & mobile bartending services. Nikolas meshes his industry experience from both architectural design and service hospitality to produce this time-tested\, seasonal\, sweet-and-sour treat. \nTo request a Shrub Kit from our mixologist email threespice.shrubs@gmail.com \nOR \nSend him a message on Facebook or Instagram: https://www.facebook.com/threeSPICE/\nInstagram: @three_spice \n\nUltimate Gingerbread House Design Competition Judges \n \nMarco Legaluppi \nMarco Legaluppi\, PE is the President of Whitney Bailey Cox & Magnani LLC (WBCM)\, a full-service\, multi-discipline engineering firm headquartered in Baltimore\, MD. As a portion of his duties\, Mr. Legaluppi is responsible for coordinating structural design efforts across multiple offices and overseeing the architecture department. Marco is a life-long Baltimorean who graduated from the University of Maryland\, College Park with a Bachelor of Science in Civil/Structural Engineering and a Master’s of Science in Civil Engineering. A Registered Professional Engineer in over 15 states\, Marco has 38 years of experience with structural engineering design\, inspection\, and assessment. Marco is currently on the Executive Committee Board of the Engineering Society of Baltimore (ESB)\, sits on the University of Maryland Board of Visitors for the School of Civil Engineering\, and is an active member of numerous industry organizations. \n \nSuzanne Frazier \nSuzanne Frasier\, FAIA is the Chair of the Department of Undergraduate Design at Morgan State University’s School of Architecture and Planning where she has been a faculty member since 2005. She is a licensed and registered architect with over 20 years of professional experience in the design and construction industry prior to becoming a full-time academic. Suzanne has been actively involved with the AIA for over three decades. \n \nMonica Amtower \nA baking and pastry graduate of the Culinary Institute of America in Hyde Park New York\, Monica Amtower is a Baltimore native who spent her career grinding in some of the best establishments that she could get into: Cafe Boulud in Palm Beach\, the Inn at Little Washington\, the Four Seasons in Baltimore\, the James Beard nominated Forman and Wolf group\, Montage International at the Sagamore Pendry Luxury Hotel\, and currently is the Executive Pastry Chef at a 5 star hotel in downtown Washington D.C. \n\nProceeds of the event will be donated to AIA Baltimore and Baltimore Architecture Foundation scholarship programs for students of architecture at Morgan State University and Maryland community colleges and universities. Proceeds also support Future Architects Resources/Kids in Design programs for underserved middle and high school students to encourage career opportunities in architecture\, design\, and construction\, and major BAF programs like Doors Open Baltimore. \nWe would love to have you participate! If you are interested in participating in the competition\, please sign up here! \nInterested in sponsoring this unique event? Contact Margaret Stella at mstella@aiabalt.com or find our Sponsorship Guide here. \n\n\n\nSpecial Thanks To Our Generous Sponsors!\nGum Drop Lights Sponsor\n\n\n\n\nIce Sculpture\nSchluter Systems
URL:https://aiabaltimore.org/event/the-ultimate-gingerbread-house-design-competition-happy-hour/
CATEGORIES:K-12 and Family,Networking,Special Events,Webinars
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20201031T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20201031T123000
DTSTAMP:20260423T030517
CREATED:20201005T203106Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201005T203140Z
UID:24020-1604145600-1604147400@aiabaltimore.org
SUMMARY:Baltimore Arabbers Past and Present
DESCRIPTION:A special Doors Open Baltimore presentation\n\n\n\nThis program is hosted on Zoom. Upon registering you will receive an email confirmation and a Zoom link. If you do not receive a link\, please contact ndennies@aiabalt.com. If you do not contact us at least 1 hour prior to the start of the program\, we cannot guarantee admittance. \nArabbers are street vendors who sell fruits and vegetables from colorful horse-drawn carts. Arabbing began in the early 19th century in cities along the East Coast\, and many African American men entered the trade following the Civil War. With the prevalence of supermarkets and the challenges associated with establishing and maintaining stables\, the arabber tradition is now on the brink of extinction. \nThe Arabber Preservation Society was formed in 1994 to renovate and promote the preservation of arabber stables. Learn about the history of arabbers in Baltimore and the important role they play in Baltimore communities today. \nPhoto courtesy Tiffany James \nThis event has been organized by the Baltimore Architecture Foundation and the Arabber Preservation Society. Learn more about Doors Open Baltimore 2020.
URL:https://aiabaltimore.org/event/baltimore-arabbers-past-and-present/
CATEGORIES:Special Events,Webinars
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20201030T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20201030T150000
DTSTAMP:20260423T030517
CREATED:20200928T152231Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201027T174912Z
UID:23929-1604066400-1604070000@aiabaltimore.org
SUMMARY:The Baltimore Center for Architecture and Design: Virtual Opening
DESCRIPTION:Join us for a celebration of Baltimore’s newest design hub!\n\n\n\nJoin us for a virtual ribbon-cutting and opening of The Center for Architecture and Design at One Charles Center. The festivities will include an exclusive virtual tour of our new space! \nAdmission is FREE or pay what you can donation to the Center Fund. \nBe sure to join us earlier that day at 1 pm for Modernist Renaissance: The Development of Charles Center. This presentation is part of the BAF Virtual Histories Series and Doors Open Baltimore. \nWhat legacy will you or your company build at Baltimore’s design and architecture hub? Consider supporting our mission with a donation to The Center Fund. \nAbout The Center \nAIA Baltimore and the Baltimore Architecture Foundation (BAF) are now completing the Center for Architecture and Design at One Charles Center\, a landmark building designed by world-renowned modern architect Mies van der Rohe. The 4\,000 square feet space is located at the retail level fronting onto Fayette Street\, and adjacent to Center Plaza. Quinn Evans was selected as the design team for the Center through a design competition with a national jury. \nThe Center will be AIA Baltimore and the Baltimore Architecture Foundation’s new headquarters\, and will provide collaborative administrative and program space for allied professional industry\, advocacy\, and education organizations\, including Baltimore Heritage\, Inc.\, the Baltimore Chapter of the National Organization of Minority Architects (Bmore NOMA)\, the Baltimore Chapter of the Urban Land Institute (ULI Baltimore)\, the Maryland Chapter of the American Society of Landscape Architects (ASLA Maryland)\, and the Charles Street Development Corporation. The Center will also include flexible space for exhibitions\, education programs\, and gatherings\, as well as public programs in adjacent Center Plaza \nSee All of Our Construction Progress! \nFind more information on the background of the Center and our design competion. \n 
URL:https://aiabaltimore.org/event/the-baltimore-center-for-architecture-and-design-virtual-opening/
CATEGORIES:K-12 and Family,Networking,Special Events,Tours
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20201030T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20201030T133000
DTSTAMP:20260423T030517
CREATED:20201009T190317Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201009T190317Z
UID:24117-1604062800-1604064600@aiabaltimore.org
SUMMARY:Modernist Renaissance: The Development of Charles Center
DESCRIPTION:Presented as part of Doors Open Baltimore 2020 Design Excellence Week\n\n\n\nThis program is hosted on Zoom. Upon registering you will receive an email confirmation and a Zoom link. If you do not receive a link\, please contact ndennies@aiabalt.com. If you do not contact us at least 1 hour prior to the start of the program\, we cannot guarantee admittance. \nArchitect Sara Langmead will present the history of Charles Center\, the urban redevelopment of Baltimore’s Central Business District that began in the 1950s and was a catalyst for the development of Inner Harbor. Charles Center proposed a new model for downtown city centers\, integrating modern skyscrapers and historic buildings with a network of connected public spaces. The project involved leading architects of the modern movement\, such as Mies van der Rohe\, who designed One Charles Center\, the new home of the Center for Architecture and Design. \nSara Langmead\, AIA\, PE\, LEED AP is an Associate at Quinn Evans and a member of the AIA Baltimore Board of Directors. She is a licensed architect and professional engineer specializing in historic preservation and creative renovation. \nTickets are donation based. We encourage you to give what you can to support BAF and Baltimore Heritage. Your support helps us make up for lost tour and program revenue from COVID-19 and create more virtual programs like this. \nThis program precedes the The Baltimore Center for Architecture and Design: Virtual Opening. We hope you can join us for both programs! \nLearn more about Doors Open Baltimore 2020.
URL:https://aiabaltimore.org/event/modernist-renaissance-the-development-of-charles-center/
CATEGORIES:Special Events,Webinars
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