Joint Lecture Series – Roger Clark Endowed Lecture with Carol Wilson
AIAT x NCSU College of Design Fall Lecture Series -- Roger Clark Endowed Lecture -- Carol Wilson
AIAT x NCSU College of Design Fall Lecture Series -- Roger Clark Endowed Lecture -- Carol Wilson
AIAT x NCSU College of Design Fall Lecture Series -- Kelley Van Dyck Murphy -- Beauty in Enormous Bleakness: The Design History of the Interned Generation of Japanese American Designers
AIAT x NCSU College of Design Fall Lecture Series -- Arthur J. Clement, AIA -- What Can and Can't be Designed: The Museum Architecture of Phil Freelon
For countless reasons, mass timber in the United States is typically associated with the Pacific Northwest. And while it is true that most wood used for production of mass timber in North America comes from Canada and the Pacific Northwest, the southeast United States is emerging as a serious contender in the market, now contributing a significant proportion of the North American lumber used for mass timber. While the sourcing of mass timber from the southeast is important by itself, it matters just as much for major organizations to adopt mass timber construction within the region and across the country. This session will explain the timber supply chain, regional variation, manufacturing limitations, and the impacts on carbon emissions.
NC State Joint Lecture presented by Yasmin Vobis and Aaron Forrest
NC State Joint Lecture presented by Lyndon Neri, Founding Partner, Neri&Hu Design & Research Office
Hitomi and Takuro Shibata, potters from Shigaraki, Japan, run Studio Touya in Seagrove, North Carolina. They make handmade pottery and sculptural work using natural material, wild clays and wood firing techniques.
David Benjamin is Founding Principal of The Living and Associate Professor at Columbia GSAPP. He also directs the GSAPP Incubator. Benjamin’s work combines research and practice, and it involves exploring new ideas through prototyping. Focusing on the intersection of biology, computation, and design, Benjamin has articulated three frameworks for harnessing living organisms for architecture: bio-processing, bio-sensing, and bio-manufacturing.
Felecia Davis is an associate professor of architecture, lead researcher in the Stuckeman Center for Design and Computation, and director of SOFTLAB in the Stuckeman School. Davis’s work in architecture and textiles connects art, science, engineering and design and re-imagines how we might use textiles in our daily lives and in architecture.
2022 Spring Joint Lecture presented by Guy Nordenson. Join us in-person at Burns Auditorium or attend online via Zoom.