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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20200820T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20200820T130000
DTSTAMP:20260617T124032
CREATED:20200729T172323Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200803T152040Z
UID:10000191-1597924800-1597928400@aiatriangle.org
SUMMARY:Live Webinar - The Restorative Impact of Perceived Open Space
DESCRIPTION:AIA Triangle Virtual Lunch Program \nSponsored by \n \nThe Restorative Impact of Perceived Open Space \nThursday\, August 20 | 12:00 pm – 1:00 pm \n1 HSW Credit \nAIA Members/AIAT Annual Partners (Sponsors): $0 | Non-members: $25 \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nDeadline to register is 10:00 am on Thursday\, August 20\nZoom meeting link will be sent to registrants on the morning of the program\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nPROGRAM \nIn this course we explore the impact of enclosed interiors and deep-plan buildings on human performance. We analyze the role circadian light and perceived open space play in shaping cognitive function\, as well as how our psycho-physiology changes in interior environments. \nWe discuss a new approach that proposes the restorative value of perceived open space in its two essential orientations: perceived zenith and perceived horizon line. In contrast to how we perceive these spatial reference frames outdoors\, in enclosed interiors where such reference frames are often not visible\, we can stage architectural cues to alter our perception of interior space. Restoring these spatial reference frames through a valid multisensory illusion restores a range of wellness benefits normally associated with interiors applying biophilic design principles. \nLEARNING OBJECTIVES \n\nDiscuss how and why isolating the qualities of light—intensity and color temperature—from their natural medium\, the sky\, has a profound effect on perception: Light loses its spatial attributes as an organic connection to nature.\nDefine the role Circadian Photoreceptors play in regulating circadian function and why the environmental context in which our physiology detects circadian light—in open\, natural space—may play a fundamental role in generating a restorative effect.\nDescribe how our sensorimotor system and our memory share the same wetware (neural pathways) to perceive and map out our environment\, making our memory a neural repository of spatial reference frames.\nSummarize the malleable nature of human perception and how multisensory illusions can be designed in architectural settings\, transforming how our physiology experiences the built environment.\nExplain the implications of deep plan buildings on human health and productivity and how biophilic design technologies minimize their deleterious impact.\n\nPRESENTED BY: \nGeof Northridge\, Marketing\, Product Presentations\, and Continuing Education Instructor \nMr. Northridge has extensive experience in both commercial real estate and the commercial construction industry.  For the past seven years he has been developing and presenting continuing education courses on topics including the effects of biophilic design elements on human physiology\, how biophilic illusions can be created to provide many of the same physiological benefits as actual biophilic design elements\, and how knowledge of the mechanics of human perception can be paired with carefully crafted illusions of nature to alter how humans experience interior spaces.  He has presented Sky Factory’s various AIA-approved continuing education courses more than 400 times to architectural and design firms as well as to AIA chapter meetings and other events.
URL:https://aiatriangle.org/event/live-webinar-the-restorative-impact-of-perceived-open-space/
LOCATION:Online Meeting
CATEGORIES:Lunch and Learn
ORGANIZER;CN="Chris Stetkiewicz":MAILTO:info@aiatriangle.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200825
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200828
DTSTAMP:20260617T124032
CREATED:20200806T150840Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200825T131635Z
UID:10000187-1598313600-1598572799@aiatriangle.org
SUMMARY:Live Webinar - AIA Triangle Accessibility Seminar
DESCRIPTION:AIA TRIANGLE ACCESSIBILITY SEMINAR \n \nAUGUST 25 – 26 – 27 \nJoin us for a three-day accessibility webinar led by Dominic Marinelli of Accessibility Services. Dom will be joined online by experts in the field covering topics related to accessibility requirements for residential and non-residential projects as well as discovering what government experts will identify during inspections. \nDAY 1: What Architects Should Know About Accessibility (Non Residential) \nDAY 2: What Architects Should Know About Accessibility (Residential) \nDAY 3: Good Plans Gone Bad – Preparing for Department of Justice/HUD Inspections \n\nSAVE by registering for full program and earn 12.5 HSW credits \nor\, select individual programs to fit your schedule! \n\n\n\n\nAIA Member|Allied Member|AIAT Partner \n\nAssoc. AIA Member|Full-time Student\nNon Member\n\n\n\nFull Program (3-days): $120 \nSingle Day: $50 per day \n\n\nFull Program (3-days): $75 \nSingle Day: $35 per day \n\n\nFull Program (3-days): $165 \nSingle Day: $65 per day \n\n\n\n\nDAY ONE: What Architects Should Know About Accessibility (Non Residential) \nTuesday\, August 25 | 12:00 pm – 4:30 pm | 4.5 HSW credits \nThe session will update participants on important unwritten accessibility rules or interpretations in addition to the accessibility requirements in the 2010 ADA Standards and the North Carolina Building Code and its accessibility standard – A117.1 – 2009 as well as the maintenance of accessible features required during the re-opening of public accommodations. Typical accessibility questions impacting non-residential occupancies. \nLearning Objectives: \n1) Participants will acquire a historical perspective on the anniversary of the passage of the Americans with Disabilities ACT (ADA) \n2) Participants will analyze unwritten accessibility requirements and interpretations \n3) Participants will determine how to maintain required accessibility requirements during COVID-19 reopening \n4) Participants will demonstrate typical accessibility questions on non-residential occupancies received by North Carolina Department of Insurance (NCDOI) \nDay One Agenda: \n12:00 pm – 12:30 pm The Anniversary of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) \nDavid Capozzi\, Board of Directors\, United Spinal Association former Executive Director US Access Board – A lifelong Buffalo Bills fan\, David M. Capozzi\, was the Executive Director of the U.S. Access Board\, the only Federal agency whose primary mission is accessibility for people with disabilities. He recently retired in June. Capozzi has over 35 years of experience directing programs focused on national accessibility policies in the Federal and non-profit sectors. He was a member of a nine-person legal team that helped craft sections of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA)\, the civil rights law that prohibits discrimination against individuals with disabilities. \n12:30 pm – 2:00 pm “Unwritten” Accessibility Requirements – What Architects Need to Know \nMarsha Mazz\, Accessibility Services – Previous to joining the ACS team\, Marsha headed the United States Access Board’s Office of Technical and Information Services which is responsible for the development and maintenance of the Access Boards accessibility guidelines and standards as well as its training and technical assistance programs.  Marsha is best known for leading the development of accessibility guidelines under Americans with Disabilities Act and the Architectural Barriers Act. \n2:00 pm – 2:15 pm Break \n2:15 pm – 3:45 pm COVID and Accessibility \nKatherine (Kay) Pearson\, Accessibility Services –  Kay Pearson has over 15 years of experience in accessible design and construction. Her work has included site surveys\, compliance reviews\, technical assistance\, continuing education/trainings\, and litigation. She is a respected subject matter specialist on the Fair Housing Act\, the Americans with Disabilities Act\, and Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act. She received a Bachelors in Sociology and Human Services from the George Washington University and a Masters in Human Environment Relations from Cornell University \n3:45 pm – 4:30 pm Question & Answers \nTara Barthelmess\, Chief Accessibility Code Consultant\, North Carolina Department of Insurance (NCDOI) – Tara Barthelmess is the Chief Accessibility Code Consultant for the North Carolina Department of Insurance and the Office of the State Fire Marshal.  She works with all members of the design\, construction and inspection process regarding accessibility requirements for the state of North Carolina.  Previously she has taught architecture\, interior design and engineering on the secondary and post-secondary level\, as well as run her own interior design firm and worked with architects in New York and Arizona. Tara is a native to New York and her design degree is from Syracuse University. \n\nDAY TWO: What Architects Should Know About Accessibility (Residential) \nWednesday\, August 26 | 9:00 am – 1:00 pm | 4 HSW credits \nThe session will the review safe harbor standards and the status of HUD’s adoption of A117.1 – 2009 and will compare the differences between the Fair Housing Accessibility Guidelines\, the North Carolina Building Code (A117.1 – 2009) and the requirements of the North Carolina Housing Finance Agency\, the application of Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 and the Uniform Federal Accessibility Standard (UFAS). \nLearning Objectives: \n1) Participants will analyze Safe Harbor Standards for complying with the Fair Housing Accessibility Guidelines \n2) Participants will clarify the difference between the North Carolina Building Code (A117.1 – 2009)\, the Fair Housing Act Accessibility Guidelines & North Carolina Housing Finance Agency Requirements \n3) Participants will assess typical accessibility issues identified during construction inspections of North Carolina Residential Projects \n4) Participants will identify the application of Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 and the Uniform Federal Accessibility Standard (UFAS) \nDay Two Agenda: \n9:00 am – 12:30 pm: Comparing the Building Code\, A117.1\, Fair Housing Act Accessibility Guidelines & Accessibility Requirements of the North Carolina Housing Finance Agency.  \nTopics of discussion include: Exterior Accessibility & Routes – Exceptions – Site Amenities – Accessible Parking – Public & Common Use Areas – Live Work Units – Type A\, Type B\, Mobility & Communication Units – Multistory Units – Entry Doors – Kitchens – Bathrooms – Operable Parts – Laundry Equipment – Patios & Balconies. \nRuss Griffin\, Senior Construction Specialist\, NC Housing Finance Agency – Russ has served with the agency since 1996 as a Senior Construction Analyst and Senior Compliance Monitor. His activities include visiting proposed building sites\, performing plan reviews\, inspecting both new construction properties and properties undergoing rehabilitation. He review scopes of work and repair budgets and review project development costs for all proposed projects. Rus is mostly a development team member to hundreds of development staff and partners. He helps “encourage” the building of communities that have great designs\, use quality materials and constructed in a professional manor while stressing the importance of meeting and exceeding local\, state and federal building codes and standards. \nDominic Marinelli\, Accessibility Services – Dominic Marinelli\, a certified New York State Code Enforcement Official\, has been with the United Spinal Association for over 32 years and heads the organization’s Accessibility Services (ACS) team of Attorney’s\, Architects\, Accessibility Specialists\, Certified Code Enforcement Officials/Building Inspectors and Plans Examiners\, assist builders\, building owners\, design professionals\, municipalities\, colleges/universities as well as other entities comply with city\, state and federal accessibility requirements.  \n12:30 pm – 1:00 pm Safe Harbor Update \nKermit Robinson\, Accessibility Services – Before joining the Accessibility Services team\, Kermit was Secretariat for the ICC A117.1 Standard for Accessible and Usable Buildings and Facilities during the development of the 2017 edition. He also serves as Secretariat for the International Building Code – General Code Development Committee; Co-Secretariat for the ICC Sustainability\, Energy\, High Performance Code Action Committee and Liaison to International Energy Conservation Code Development Committee. Kermit has over three decades of experience in the development\, implementation and administration of building and land development regulations.  \nThere will be ample opportunity for questions and answers throughout the day. \n\nDAY THREE: Good Plans Gone Bad – Preparing for Department of Justice/HUD Inspections \nThursday\, August 27 | 9:00 am – 1:00 pm | 4 HSW credits \nNow that accessibility requirements impacting commercial and residential occupancies have been reviewed\, this session will the review typical accessibility issues that are identified during Accessibility Plan Reviews\, during As-Built Accessibility Inspections and the issues that Department of Justice (DOJ)/HUD US Housing and Urban Development experts identify during their inspections of North Carolina properties. \nLearning Objectives: \n1) Participants will acquire knowledge to improve accessibility provided in architectural plans \n2) Participants will differentiate typical accessibility issues during construction \n3) Participants will discover what government experts will identify during their inspections \n4) Participants will recognize remediation of government complaints \n9:00 am – 1:00 pm  \nTypical Accessibility Issues – Plan Review & Built Inspections \nResults of Department of Justice (DOJ)/ HUD (US Department of Housing & Urban Development Residential Accessibility Inspections \nThere will be ample opportunity for questions and answers throughout the day. \nDominic Marinelli\, Accessibility Services – Dominic Marinelli\, a certified New York State Code Enforcement Official\, has been with the United Spinal Association for over 32 years and heads the organization’s Accessibility Services (ACS) team of Attorney’s\, Architects\, Accessibility Specialists\, Certified Code Enforcement Officials/Building Inspectors and Plans Examiners\, assist builders\, building owners\, design professionals\, municipalities\, colleges/universities as well as other entities comply with city\, state and federal accessibility requirements.  \nRuss Griffin\, Senior Construction Specialist\, NC Housing Finance Agency – Russ has served with the agency since 1996 as a Senior Construction Analyst and Senior Compliance Monitor. His activities include visiting proposed building sites\, performing plan reviews\, inspecting both new construction properties and properties undergoing rehabilitation. He review scopes of work and repair budgets and review project development costs for all proposed projects. Rus is mostly a development team member to hundreds of development staff and partners. He helps “encourage” the building of communities that have great designs\, use quality materials and constructed in a professional manor while stressing the importance of meeting and exceeding local\, state and federal building codes and standards. \n\nImportant program details to note: \n\nThis is a live online program. The Zoom meeting link will be emailed to registrants daily on the morning of the program.\nTo receive CE credit\, it is required that each person register individually.\nRefunds must be requested in writing (by email) 7 business days prior to program date. The refund amount will be paid by check or credit card depending on original payment method and may be subject to a service fee. AIA Triangle withholds the right to deny or approve any refund based on condition or circumstance.
URL:https://aiatriangle.org/event/live-webinar-aia-triangle-accessibility-seminar/
LOCATION:Online Meeting
CATEGORIES:CE Program
ORGANIZER;CN="Chris Stetkiewicz":MAILTO:info@aiatriangle.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20200827T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20200827T140000
DTSTAMP:20260617T124032
CREATED:20200817T150723Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200827T142604Z
UID:10000184-1598533200-1598536800@aiatriangle.org
SUMMARY:AIA Triangle/NC State College of Design Virtual Lecture Presented by Jennifer Newsom
DESCRIPTION:AIA Triangle and NC State College of Design \nVirtual Joint Lecture \n \nPresented by \nJennifer Newsom AIA\, LEED AP\, NOMA\, NCARB \nThursday\, August 27 | 1:00 pm – 2:00 pm | 1 LU Credit \n\n\n\nREGISTRATION REQUIRED:  Deadline to register is 10:00 am on Thursday\, August 27th\nThis is a live online presentation and a link to join the Zoom meeting will be emailed to registrants on the morning of the program. \n\n\n\n\n\nPROGRAM \n\nMy research lies in the space between real\, tangible bodies made of flesh\, steel\, glass\, etc\, and the perception of these bodies through vision. As scholar Sarah Lewis has noted: “Seeing has become a mode of reading the world. We make meaning of what we see through conditioned sight\, and the question becomes what conditions the mode of seeing? When it comes to race and equity\, this has become increasingly important to understand.” (Osterheldt) As an architect\, I examine racial constructs in the context of built constructions\, where these spatial metaphors act as mechanisms for engagement. People are the activating agents in my work\, and their presence is needed for a reconsideration\, a “reconditioning” to use Lewis’ term\, of our bodies in relation to one another. \n\nThrough Dream The Combine\, which was founded with Tom Carruthers in 2013\, we have produced numerous site-specific installations in the U.S. and Canada. Each conflates what is real with what is imagined to create perceptual uncertainties that cast doubt on our “known” understanding of the world. They are images deconstructed sectionally\, a three-dimensional expansion of interior ambiguities like those found in Velasquez’ Las Meninas or Jeff Wall’s Image for Women. Through techniques such as doubling (mirrors)\, juxtaposition (collage)\, overlay (projection)\, or mimicry (casting)\, we make architectural works that convey a multitude of viewpoints at a time. We insert an oscillation into the figure-ground dialectic central to architectural practice and the basis of metaphor.\n\nJennifer’s NCSU lecture will provide a survey of the firm’s past works and how they encourage participatory engagement.\n\nLEARNING OBJECTIVES\n\n\n\n\nParticipants will be able to explore compelling approaches to designing and building temporary structures\nParticipants will be able to understand competition processes and selection criteria\nParticipants will be able to better understand the complexities of construction on a restricted site and timeline\nParticipants will be able to gain insight into how other artistic disciplines (i.e. literature\, sculpture\, performance) influence architectural practice\n\n\n\nPRESENTED BY \nJennifer Newsom AIA\, LEED AP\, NOMA\, NCARB \nJennifer Newsom is a licensed architect\, artist\, and co-founder (with Tom Carruthers) of Dream The Combine\, based in Minneapolis\, MN. She is Assistant Professor at the University of Minnesota School of Architecture.\n\nDream The Combine’s work consists of large-scale\, public art installations exploring metaphor\, perceptual uncertainties\, and the boundary between real and illusory space. They are winners of the 2018 Young Architects Program at MoMA PS1 for their installation Hide & Seek.\n\nDream the Combine has exhibited at MoMA and MoMA PS1 in New York\, NY\, and in Seattle WA\, East Haddam CT\, Vancouver BC\, Rome Italy\, Minneapolis MN and St. Paul MN. Their work has been published widely\, including Metropolis Magazine\, Architect\, Log\, Architectural Record\, The Architects Newspaper\, and Dezeen. They are currently at work on upcoming installations in Cincinnati OH\, Wilkinsburg PA\, and Columbus IN as winners of the 2020 J. Irwin and Xenia S. Miller Prize.
URL:https://aiatriangle.org/event/aia-triangle-nc-state-college-of-design-virtual-lecture-presented-by-jennifer-newsom/
LOCATION:Online Meeting
CATEGORIES:Joint Lecture Series
ORGANIZER;CN="Chris Stetkiewicz":MAILTO:info@aiatriangle.org
END:VEVENT
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