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AIA New Jersey
When: Saturday, Jan. 13, 2018
Time: 6 p.m. to 11 p.m.
(Cocktails, Dinner, Dancing)
Where: Clarks Landing, Sampson Road, Point Pleasant Beach, NJ 08742
Cost: $130/person (early bird rate – ends 11/23)
$150/person (regular rate after 11/23)
$75 associates/students
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AIA New Jersey
If your office was a little quiet at the end of last week, perhaps your colleagues were participating in the 2017 AIA QUAD States conference in Albany, New York. This program was a joint venture between AIA New Jersey, AIA New York State, AIA Pennsylvania and AIA Connecticut.
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AIA New Jersey
Deadline for application Feb. 1, 2018.
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AIA New Jersey
Job Description – Project Manager (FT) – Princeton, NJ
For this full-time position, JRS is seeking an architectural degree graduate with 3 to 5 years of consecutive work experience in the corporate sector with preferred experience also in education, retail and/or hospitality. The candidate will need a proven track record in interior fit outs with experience in adaptive reuse and ground up.
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AIA New Jersey
Saturday, Jan. 6, 2018 from 6 p.m. - 9 p.m.
Honoring
2017 President
Thomas Haggerty, AIA,
2018 President
Joseph E. David, AIA
and the ALNNJ Board of Trustees
The Tides Estate
1245 Belmont Avenue
North Haledon, New Jersey 07508
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Combine the simple elegance of glass with the precision of aluminum. ALUR glass walls transform what was once hidden into an inspiration of form and function, while still allowing natural light to cascade in. Architectural details are accentuated. Mechanical components are beautifully concealed. Finally, a wall system that’s truly alluring! Download our latest brochure, start planning your project and see why ALUR is better!
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AIA New Jersey
Jan. 20, 2018 from 6 p.m. - 11 p.m.
Mayfair Farms
481 Eagle Rock Avenue
West Orange, NJ 07052
Additional information can be found here.
AIA New Jersey
AVAILABLE IN-PERSON (Madison, NJ) OR VIA LIVE WEBINAR
Registration required.
TWO HALF DAYS – Thursday, Dec. 7 (Part 1) and Friday, Dec. 8 (Part 2) – 12 p.m. – 4 p.m.
Gain essential knowledge of sustainable building concepts fundamental to all LEED rating systems. Learn LEED intents and concepts at the credit category level and basics of the LEED certification process. This course provides a foundation for pursuing the LEED Green Associate exam. This course will include LEED v4 updates.
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AIA New Jersey
The nonprofit rise held its inaugural fundraiser, rise in the city, on Oct. 25 at the Angel Orensanz Foundation, 172 Norfolk St, New York. The inspiring art exhibit, auction and social gathering was attended by over 280 people including many leaders from the design and architecture community.
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Calm, cool and emotionally connected, this inviting palette is a collection of contemporary comfort and elegance. Its soft tones, smooth surfaces and warm hues refresh us, creating a personal experience for any space or client. Explore the full SurfaceSet® 2018 Collection by Formica Corporation at Formica.com/lookbook
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Vectorworks Architect Software
Contrary to how other programs force creative constraints upon the design, Vectorworks Architect software allows you to maintain creative freedom while making it easy for everyone involved in the project to efficiently work together.
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The Architect's Newspaper
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The AIA is gearing up to fight the House’s and Senate’s tax plan, both of which eviscerate historic tax credits and disadvantage architecture firms, especially smaller ones.
In a statement released last night, the professional organization said it would lobby hard against provisions in both versions of the bill, which is officially known as Tax Cuts and Jobs Act.
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Dezeen
After our survey revealed a lack of gender diversity in the world's biggest architecture firms, five prominent female architects from the U.K. gave us their views on what's gone wrong and how it can be changed.
The survey, which looked at the 100 biggest firms from around the globe, revealed that only one in 10 senior positions are occupied by women, and that 16 percent of firms have no women in their management teams.
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CNN
Architectural Digest have released their annual list of the most important and influential men and women working in interior design and architecture, who are changing the world, one room, one building, and one garden at a time.
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By Curtis Skolnick
Planners are often asked to test a facilities concept, define how much space it will take and determine how much it will cost to complete. These questions are useful in the early-concept phase of a project, but the basis for planning is missing: What am I solving for, and how does this potential "bricks and mortar" solution meet a defined service, market or strategic need of the organization? It's all about scoping the right concept before getting too far down the facility planning phase.
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The Architect's Newspaper
City planning operates on decades-long cycles, while infrastructure is typically built out using forecasts that extend current trends. If self-driving vehicles are poised to deliver the revolution in urban transportation that Silicon Valley has been promising, how should urban infrastructure accommodate them? With less parking spots needed, how can designers effectively reclaim this urban space? Anticipating the Driverless City, a recent conference hosted by the AIA New York, brought together Uber executives, planners, architects, and policymakers in pursuit of a holistic approach to adapting to life with autonomous vehicles.
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The New York Times
Vincent Scully, the Yale art historian whose lectures inspired students for more than 60 years and whose writings on architecture had a decisive influence on its practice in the last half of the 20th century, died on Thursday night at his home in Lynchburg, Va. He was 97.
Yale University announced the death, giving the cause as complications of Parkinson’s disease.
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The Architect's Newspaper
This is the fourth column of “Practice Values,” a bi-monthly series by architect and technologist Phil Bernstein. The column focuses on the evolving role of the architect at the intersection of design and construction, including subjects such as alternative delivery systems and value generation. Bernstein was formerly vice president at Autodesk and now teaches at the Yale School of Architecture.
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By Susan Mulholland
Since I was a kid, I was told I had a gift, and that I was lucky because I am creative. As I got older, I was always amazed by people who thought I was special because it seems like I can pull great design ideas out thin air. The whole notion was beyond me until I started thinking about the people I thought were gifted — gymnasts, musicians and scientists. These talents exist because of how we humans are designed. We don't have just a brain; we have something more.
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Common Edge
While many architects have long clung to the old “form follows function” adage, form follows brain function might be the motto of today’s advertisers and automakers, who increasingly use high-tech tools to understand hidden human behaviors, and then design their products to meet them (without ever asking our permission!)
Biometric tools like an EEG (electroencephalogram) which measures brain waves; facial expression analysis software that follows our changing expressions; and eye-tracking, which allows us to record “unconscious” eye movements, are ubiquitous in all kinds of advertising and product development today — beyond the psychology or medical departments where you might expect to see them.
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ArchDaily
By recognizing and analyzing the multiple architectural possibilities of bamboo — a construction material mostly native to warm and tropical areas—the following questions arise: How can we take advantage of its qualities and enhance its use in colder climates? Such regions necessarily require a certain level of thermal isolation in walls, floors, and roofs — but for these climates, we can combine bamboo with materials that complement it.
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Building Design + Construction
Why do some firms experience strong growth year after year, while others grow slowly, if at all? At Hinge, we’ve spent a decade trying to answer this question, and we’ve developed a pretty good understanding of what high-growth firms do differently from their average-growth peers.
Let’s begin by considering average firms. These businesses have a few things working against them from the start.
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