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AIA New Jersey
Sunday, Oct. 14 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
AIA New Jersey members will gather to discuss the profession, practice, our values, and show how the AIA can offer support to Established and Emerging Professionals in their future career endeavors. Small group discussions will focus on topics that most impact women in the Architectural profession and engage our newest members to further the AIA Values we all stand behind, which promote the health, safety and welfare of the public.
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AIA New Jersey
The AIA New Jersey Annual Design Awards Program brings public and professional recognition to architectural projects which exhibit design excellence. Architects are invited to submit their work for review by the distinguished Design Awards Jury.
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AIA New Jersey
Still time to submit – Deadline Sept. 28
The AIA NJ annual Service Awards are given to recognize accomplishments of individuals and firms that have provided distinguished service to the profession and to the Society. They are designed to focus on the accomplishments of members and non-members on issues of public awareness of the built environment, service to the community and other non-design aspects of Architecture.
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AIA New Jersey
While New Jersey will likely be spared from the full impact of Hurricane Florence, it is still wise for homeowners and businesses to prepare for strong winds, flooding, and rip currents. Please refer to the recommendations provided here by the National Weather Service and check here for updates on the storm. Be safe and take caution.
AIA New Jersey
Jessica O’Donnell, AIA was selected to serve on the AIA Knowledge for the Young Architects Forum. The Young Architects Forum, a program of the American Institute of Architects and the College of Fellows, was organized to address issues of particular importance to recently licensed architects.
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AIA New Jersey
My name is David Sepúlveda and I bring more than 18+ years of experience to architecture, urbanism & artistic exploration. I am currently an owner/ partner at Gidich + Sepúlveda Architecture and a professor at the New York School of Interior Design. I am the first generation born in the United States and currently reside in New Jersey.
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AIA New Jersey
I was born and raised in Mexico City in a family of architects. My study of architecture began at the Universidad Iberoamericana in Mexico City, where I earned a Bachelor of Architecture. From there, I became a Registered Architect in Mexico. Early in my professional career, I had the privilege of working for one of the most prominent architecture firms in Mexico City, Serrano & Associates. I also served as an adjunct professor at my alma mater.
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AIA New Jersey
Courtney Reid of West Deptford, N.J., has completed the architect registration exam, a series of six tests to earn an architectural license. Reid is currently an intern at Solutions Architecture in Verona, N.J. She earned a bachelor’s in architecture from Philadelphia University in 2013.
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AIA New Jersey
Architecture Firm in Red Bank looking for a freelancer for a few months. Someone with a couple of years of experience with AutoCAD pertaining to building envelopes and construction documentation. Pay rate $28/hour and up based on experience. It should be full-time for a few months.
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AIANJ would like to welcome its newest members
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AIA New Jersey
Mr. Tejas G. Shah, Assoc. AIA
Mrs. Lorena E. Vargas, Assoc. AIA
Ms. Amelia Vieira, AIA
Wilson J. Woodridge, AIA
THANK YOU FOR YOUR MEMBERSHIP!
Bloomberg
Immediately after World War II, large swaths of Europe lay in ruins. Concrete, which is both sturdy and cheap, swiftly became the material of choice for the apartment blocks and municipal buildings meant to accommodate a ballooning, often displaced population. Eventually, the aesthetic of raw concrete structures became known as brutalist, after the French béton brut, or “exposed concrete.”
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ArchDaily
Architecture, while a profession that is very visibly and tangibly realized, has deep wells of research, thought, and theory that are unseen on the surface of a structure. What urges architects to design the way they do? What are their motivations, their affiliations, their interests? For practitioners and students alike, books on architecture offer invaluable context to the profession, be it practical, inspirational, academic, or otherwise.
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The New York Times
Architecture was long called a “gentleman’s profession,” which may have been true if by that you meant one that systematically excluded women for most of its existence. Before World War II, you could count the number of noted female architects on one hand. As late as the 1990s, the percentage of architecture firms owned by women in the U.S. was still in the single digits.
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ArchDaily
Le Corbusier stated in his seminal text, Towards a New Architecture, that “ ... man looks at the creation of architecture with his eyes, which are 5 feet 6 inches from the ground.” Logical and rational codes such as this form the standard for much of architectural production — but of course, these "norms" are as constructed as architecture itself. This particular standard is especially irrelevant when designing for children, for whom the adult-centric assumptions of architecture do not and should not apply.
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By Lucy Wallwork
The Cittaslow ("Slow City") movement, launched by a group of small Italian towns in the late 1990s, professes to "do for urban planning what the Slow Food movement has done for agriculture." It calls for a slower form of city- and town-making based on values of environmental sustainability, craft, seasonality, and the revaluing of local history and heritage. As their manifesto states, the movement strives for "towns where men are still curious of the old times."
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Metropolis Magazine
Nearly every morning, Jason Sterling starts his day by designing houses. He takes his time carefully fine-tuning the layout, choosing the color of the walls, and executing his aesthetic vision for the project. Some days, the structure is a countryside cottage, and on other days, it’s a sleek midcentury Modern estate. But Sterling isn’t an architect, and the house’s walls, along with everything else about it, are virtual — he’s building them in The Sims, one of the best-selling video game series of all time.
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The New York Times Style Magazine
In our Insta age, the life cycle of a design trend has never been shorter: An idea that seemed so fresh one day feels dead the next, gone the way of so many millennial pink sofas and Beni Ourain rugs. How, then, does one create a real home, built to endure the whims of fashion? And how do designers, dependent on cultivating a certain recognizable vernacular for clients, manage to create an identity without becoming their own cliché?
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ArchDaily
Within the architecture field, the relationship between design and education has gained prominence, especially when it comes to children’s education. The relationship between architecture, philosophy, and sociology is well known. Frequently, when designing, issues introduced by these fields work as tools to reflect upon the relationship between the space and the user. When we consider children’s education, we must go beyond ergonomics and think of architecture as an educational tool.
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Building Design + Construction
It’s the little things that sometimes spark big questions. Transitioning into a new hospital is no easy feat and daily tasks can have a huge impact. One may think that a robust design process would account for everything that impacts team efficiency and satisfaction, but that’s often not the case.
There are hundreds of minute details to address: dozens of employees need to clock in and out during shift changes, the re-allocation of funds affects staffing and building design impacts the ability to transport patients in need of multiple services. The list is endless.
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The Seattle Times
NOTICE ANYTHING DIFFERENT these days about the place you call home?
Other than EVERYthing?
Mary Johnston notices the big-city big picture, and the subtler, smaller, neighborhood-level pixels that shape it. But then, she’s an architect — she and her husband, Ray Johnston, founded Johnston Architects in 1991 — and plugged-in visionaries have a way of noticing things.
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| THANK YOU TO OUR SPONSORS |
| THANK YOU TO OUR AIA NEW JERSEY STATE ALLIED MEMBERS |
Atlantic Architectural Millwork |
Hall Construction Company, Inc. |
Bancroft Construction |
Handi-Lift Inc. |
Bellari Design Div. Of Somerville Aluminum |
KSI Professional Engineers, LLC |
Benjamin Moore |
Marquis Agency |
Blackman Plumbing Supply |
Oradell Construction Company, Inc. |
Carol Franklin Associates |
PBA Engineering, P.C. |
Dannah Asrejadid Interiors, LLC |
Pella Windows & Doors |
DPK Consulting, LLC |
Prince Windows And Doors LLC |
DuBell Lumber Co. |
Structure Studio |
Gilsanz.Murray.Steficek, LLP |
WoodWorks/Wood Products Council |
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