2013 Undergrad Final Reviews Brochure

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Undergrad Spring 2013

School of Architecture || University of Virginia


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FROM COURTYARD MARRIOT

COLONNADE CLUB


Dear Guests, Faculty and Students, Welcome and thanks for attending the final reviews of the semester of the studios of the School of Architecture of the University of Virginia! Almost all the studios of the undergraduate program, from the beginning advanced, are part of this event. We want all our students and faculty exposed, learning and enjoying from the experience and challenge of discussing work and ideas among us and with our guests. Throughout, students will be encouraged not only to listen, but be part of the conversation, making it an amazing opportunity of learning across all levels, in as many reviews as the schedule allows. At 8:30 jurors and faculty will meet at the school to have breakfast together, to be introduced and have a short chat before starting reviews at 9:00. In this guide you will find the schedules, bios and descriptions of the jurors, students and studios, as well as some practical information of the Undergraduate Studios review week. We are looking forward to benefiting from your contribution. This is an important moment for our students and faculty, combining the intellectual challenge with the joy of the celebration of the end of the semester. We also hope this is going to be a fruitful time for you in Charlottesville. Thanks for your generosity in sharing your time and ideas with us, I単aki Alday Chair of the Department of Architecture Cell 434-249-2763 Design and edition: Carlos Jennings, BSArch '13


SCHEDULE Monday, April 29th ARCH 2020 GoHome 1:00-5:00pm Studio Studio Studio Studio

Bailo - Elmaleh Gallery Nebot - Room 305 Roettger - Room 205 Somers - Room 405

Wednesday, May 1st 6:00 PM - 3020/4020 Production Deadline 8:00 PM - 3020/4020 Pin-up Deadline Thursday, May 2nd 3020/4020 Reviews 9:00 - 1:00 Studio Li Room 205 Jury A

9:00 - 1:00 Studio Marcu Room 302 Jury B

Full Scale Afternoon

2:00 - 5:00 Studio Kitchen East Gallery Jury A

2:00 - 5:00 Studio McDowell Milton Airport Jury B

5:30 - 6:30 Gallery Walk/Reception at Milton Airport 7:00 - 9:00 Dinner With Guests


Friday, May 3rd 3020/4020 Reviews 9:00 - 1:00 Studio Ripple Room 305 Jury A

9:00 - 1:00 Studio Mark Exhibit C Jury B

2:00 - 6:00 Studio Dripps Abassy Elmaleh Gallery Jury A

2:00 - 6:00 Studio Phinney Room 405 Jury B

6:00 - 7:00 Discussion Saturday, May 4th 1030 Reviews The Naug, North Terrace - 1:00 - 4:00


JURY A Eric Gartner is a partner at SPG Architects since 1993, Eric first began working with the firm in 1989. He received both his BS in Architecture and his MArch degrees from the University of Virginia. At SPG, Eric has worked to broaden the firm's range of project types and helped it to expand its national and international presence. SPG Architects' built work is now located not only across the US, but also throughout Latin America and in Africa, and it has been published worldwide. Eric's on-going commitment to both environmental and social responsibility has instigated and informed a series of projects that explore the benefits of sustainable design. He serves on the Board of Advisors of E3NYC, an organization establishing an environmentally sustainable economic development plan for New York City, and continues working as the design architect for Kageno Worldwide Community development project in Banda, Rwanda. Eric is a member of the American Institute of Architects and is a LEEDAccredited Professional.

Lisa Iwamoto is Associate Professor at University of California Berkeley. Her research focuses on digital fabrication and material technologies for architecture. Her best-selling book, Digital Fabrications: Architectural and Material Techniques was published in 2009 by Princeton Architectural Press as part of their series Architecture Briefs. Iwamoto received her Master of Architecture degree with Distinction from Harvard University where she was recipient of the Faculty Design Award, and a Bachelor of Science degree in Civil Engineering from the University of Colorado.

Matthew Slaats is native of Wisconsin, he completed his MFA and MA from the University of Wisconsin-Madison in 2005 and his BA in Archaeology from the University of Evansville in 1999. His artistic career has a vast array of interests focusing around community engagement, performance, installation, video, and sound. This has led him to pursue various media based projects that explore the relationship between people and place. In 2009 he completed a community image archiving project in Hyde Park, NY and a mobile gaming project in Poughkeepsie, NY. In 2010 he started working with Middle Main Revitalization to support the development of cultural assets in Poughkeepsie. That same year he travel to the Philippines as a part of the Bagasbas Beach International Eco Arts Festival which lead him to start PAUSE.


Joy Wang is a lead designer at RUR Architecture in New York. She received her B.S.Arch from UVA in 2006, and her M.Arch from Princeton in 2011, where she was awarded the Suzanne Kolarik Underwood Prize for her thesis on sea level change and anthropomorphic building systems.

JURY B Margaret Griffin, A.I.A. is a co-founder and Principal of the Los Angeles-based, Griffin Enright Architects, a collaborative practice that yields creative, forward-thinking designs. Their work combines innovation and experimentation with a desire to explore cultural complexities relative to the built environment. Griffin Enright Architects has been published extensively locally, nationally and internationally, and has received numerous awards for design excellence including, local and state AIA Awards and most recently the 2006 American Architecture Award from the Chicago Athenaeum. In addition to guiding an emergent practice, Margaret is an educator with more than fourteen years of experience teaching at universities including SCI-Arc (Southern California Institute of Architecture), USC, UCLA and Syracuse University. She earned a Bachelor of Architecture degree from Syracuse University and a Master of Architecture degree from the University of Virginia.

Olle Lundberg, a native of Cincinatti is the CEO and founder of Lundberg Design, a specialty practice that focuses on industrial reuse and intertwining the relationship between hardscape and natural environment. Earning his MArch at UVA he started working at SMWM in San Francisco (Now Perkins + Will) before starting his own firm. Lundberg Design has garnered much praise for their works showcasing a strong sculptural element, a natural aesthetic and a touch of industrial grace.


Armando Montilla is an Assistant Professor of Architecture, History & Theory and Criticism as Celemson University. He received a Master of Architecture from Pratt Institute in New York, a Bachelor of Architecture from Universite de Montreal, and a Master of Urban Geography at the Universitat Autonomade Barcelona. He has worked in Miami and Los Angeles, with firms such as Arquitectonica, RTKL and the JonJerdeParternship and with Ricardo Bofill Taller de Arquitectura in Barcelona. His essays and writings have been quotes by authors such as Roberto Segre, and been published internationally. He has been since 2005 part of the Faculty at the Metropolis Master Program of Architecture and Urban Culture at the Centro de CUltura ontemporanea de Barcelona and the Polytechnic Unversity of Catalonia in Barcelona; and is presently a PhD Candidate at Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona, on dissertation on the multicultural city and as study of ethnicity and urbanity.

Brian Osborn, who is trained as an architect and a landscape architect, is the director and founding partner of BOTH Landscape and Architecture a multidisciplinary design firm with offices in New York City and California's Bay Area. Osborn is also a visiting assistant professor in the School of Art and Design (Interior Design Department) at Pratt Institute in Brooklyn. He previously worked as a designer for SYSTEMarchitects in New York, NY, and as an associate planner/project manager/lead project designer for RRM Design Group (based in San Luis Obispo and San Clemente, CA).

FRIDAY 3rd SPECIAL JURORS Sally Gilliland is the Director of Architecture, Hudson Companies Incorporated has 24 years of experience in architecture, including the past 21 years as a licensed architect. She is responsible for managing the architecture and engineering process throughout the design and construction of our projects. Sally joined Hudson in 2001 after 10 years as Project Architect at the architectural firm of Beyhan Karahan & Associates where she was responsible for design and management of a wide range of commercial and residential projects. Prior to her work with BK&A, Sally was a designer with the architectural firm of Kohn, Pedersen, Fox & Associates. She graduated from Trinity College with a Bachelor of Arts in Art History, studied at the Institute for Architecture and Urban Studies in New York City, and received a Master of Architecture degree from Columbia University.


Governor Baliles is Director and CEO of the Miller Center, a nonpartisan institute that seeks to expand understanding of the presidency, policy and political history, providing critical insights for the nation's governance challenges. Governor Baliles previously served as a Virginia legislator, Attorney General (Outstanding Attorney General in 1985) and Governor (1986-1990). During his tenure as Governor, he served as Chairman of the National Governors Association. As a partner at the law firm of Hunton and Williams, he chaired the section on international law, and practiced aviation law, as well as chaired such national and regional entities as the Presidentially-appointed Commission on Airline Competitiveness, the Southern States Energy Board, the Chesapeake Bay Blue Ribbon Panel, the Education Quality Committee of the Southern Regional Education Board, the AGB Commission on Academic Presidency, and the AGB Commission on the State of the Presidency in Higher Education.

Nader Tehrani is a Professor and Head of the Department of Architecture at MIT SA+P. He is also Principal and Founder of NADAAA, a practice dedicated to the advancement of design innovation, interdisciplinary collaboration, and an intensive dialogue with the construction industry. Previously Tehrani was a Principal and Founder of Office dA (1986-2011), where he designed award-winning projects such as Tongxian Art Gatehouse in Beijing, Fleet Library at RISD, the LEED-certified Helios House in Los Angeles, the Multi-faith Spiritual Center at Northeastern University, Banq restaurant and the LEED-Gold certified Macallen Building in Boston. Examining spaces of pedagogy, Tehrani recently completed the renovation of the Hinman Building at Georgia Institute of Technology, and is currently redesigning schools of architecture at the University of Melbourne and the University of Toronto.


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ARCH 2020 GoHome Instructor - Bailo Baralt, Jessica Bergman, Alexandra Elaine Brondstater, Rachel Lindsay Gordon, Callum Haynes, WIlliam RIchard Hu, Xinyuan Kenzhegaliyeva, Aigul Lasayo, Mariangeles Lockier, Conor J. McGlothlin, Charlton Asher Neel, Sara A Roberts Jr., Matson Lamar Roynesdal, Kari Ann Stovall, Joseph Todd

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ARCH 2020 GoHome Instructor - Nebot Atwood, Oliver James Bost, Jennifer Clare Bruno, Danielle Nicole Hess, Ryan Walker Huggins, Jared Chase Kim, Sean Lee, Jae Hyun Lovern, Bess Nguyen, Christine Ngoc Anh Osborne, Chloe Tara Peterson, Micheal Joel Preciado, Isabel Del Carmen Tomruk, Ceylan Weller, Christopher William

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ARCH 2020 GoHome Instructor - Roettger Amato, Victoria Katlin Brackmann, Amelia M Eldredge, Samuel WHeeler Greenber, Jodrana Remi Hajjar, George Hanna Himes, Rachel NIcole Iaccarino, ALexandra Xavier Kronau, Kimberly Marie Lank, ALlison O'Hara, Kevin Matthew Partdige, Medeleine Lily Rappaport, Brett Harmon Sharp, Suzanne Catherine Wallace, Christopher James

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ARCH 2020 GoHome Instructor - Somers Basham, Joshua Wayne Brazer, Henry Elkan Escorbar, Luke Eli Habbab, Karim Abdel Holsinger, Sarah Jayne Keehan Courtney Janet Lei, Xiaoshuo Light, Michael Alexander McPherson, Jaline Nersten, Margaret Mary Nilsson, Caroline Rebecca Peters, Alexander John RIchards, EMily ELizabeth Sherdil, David Sarage Ward, Allen Neil

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ARCH 3020 AN INSTITUTE FOR MATERIALS RESEARCH Shiqiao Li We seem to relate to materials in three ways: economic, experiential and artistic. We tend to stress experiential and artistic relationships with materials in design, and deservingly so, as they are fundamental to the human psyche and intellect, understood through science, phenomenology and critical theory. The economic relationship with materials, on the other hand, is much less discussed in relation to design.

Chen, Michelle Chu, Christopher Dobbs, Briana Grooms, Robert Francis Kim, Isaac Mayorga, Paola McMillen, Anna Huizhong Moore, Jamar Dimitri Marales, Monique Morris, Timothy Munford, William Dunborrow Watson, Megan Weiser, Samantha


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ARCH 3020 DESOLATED YET MONUMENTAL: BETWEEN THE THICK AND THE THIN Mara Marcu While considering specific architectural affects such as monumentality and desolation this studio proposes to reassess and challenge an actual definition of the building retrofit. We will consider interventions that mitigate between the sterile and the specific, between horizontality and verticality, between the thick and the thin.

Gates, Luke Gillwald, Eric Michael Gutierrez, Carolina Jennings, Carlos Halaf, Tareq Klett, George Lemly, Kate Adger Lohr, Graham Harris Mahtani, Roshni Porada, Barbara Robelo, Ximena Skipper, Demi WIlkins, Dirk Matthew


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ARCH 3020/4020 FORMS OF CONCRETE Alexander Kitchin The spring studio will advance the module ideas and skills by reintroducing the studio to the shop research. We will take a look at the history or concrete architecture, and then explore todays cutting-edge uses of concrete as building components and systems. The intention is to explore forms and applications that are uniquely concrete. This will require some technical knowledge, but this research will focus on exploring the tactile and formal potential of the material, and therefore its significance in a larger context. We will consider the scale of the person our one-to-one interaction with the material, and the scale of the city as concrete realizes a place in a new architecture.

Berndt, Annesley Brennan, Peggy Eads, Danielle Lee, Soo Lester, Claire Majali, Jude Mundy, Sydna Winfree O'Neill, TImothy Rhees, Anna Tai, Fung Siang Vejar, Danussa Wheeler, Marcy WIlkinson, Emma Jane Williams, Ashton Van-Nicholas


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ARCH 3020/4020 TRASH TECTONICS Seth McDowell Upcycling is the process of converting waste materials and products into new materials of better quality and environmental value. TRASH TECHTONICS will be a design studio structured as a construction laboratory investigating the opportunities for upcycling waste and post-consumer products for spatial and architectural purposes. The ecological mandate of the work is to develop methods and processes for remediation by transforming waste into building materials. Emphasis is placed on developing energyefficient methods for material transformation rather than relying on energy intensive procedures that re-process the material compositions. Thus, a ready-made approach is prioritized and transformation is achieved by low-tech and innovative strategies of assembly. Upcycling is about the way we remake things.

Badlato, Kaity Burch, Evan Burden, Laura Carpenter, Megan Jane Cronauer, Nancy Helen Deusterhaus, Emily Edwards, Timothy Fajardo, Karly Ford, Ethan Wayne Hightower, Rebecca Lee, ARnold Lees, Clinton Downey Piccano, Alex Thompson, Brianna Scott, Emily


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ARCH 3020/4020 MANUFACTURING + STRUCTURAL SURFACES Jeana Ripple Advances in material science and in digital manufacturing have enabled the combination of structure and skin into single systems. Composite or layered materials can be engineered to meet performance criteria in increasingly thin, light sections. In addition, new software plugins make structural analysis more accessible during the design process. This studio will combine an investigation of composite material systems, rigid structural surfaces, and local manufacturing potential

Artip, WIlliam Bewley, Jackson Cruz, Roderick Fang, Jennifer Hu, Jia Jin, Han Lavelle, Kathleen Lawson, Ben Merced-Figueroa, Allen Park, Tae Joon Rivera Deneke, Valeria Stackman, Morgan Stanley, Michael Walker, Austin Reid


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ARCH 3020/4020 DOWN EAST STUDIO: SCHOODIC POINT, MAINE Earl Mark The protection of coastlines and climate change may cause a paradigm shift in how buildings near oceans are made and occupied. Schoodic Educational Research Center (SERC) at Schoodic Point within Acadia National Park in Down East Maine is situated within a dramatic pink granite coastal setting, a place of abundant ocean life, seabirds, powerful waves, undersea fjords, and the mixing of water currents from the Canadian Maritimes and the Gulf of Mexico. Less than 10 people live at SERC in winter. During warmer months SERC may lodge 300 people overnight. During the summer Schoodic Point attracts roughly 250,000 daytime visitors.

Baskin, Taylor Nicole Cabler, Tracie Jordan Curry, Mark Hays, Jessica MIller, Charlotte Rose Morecock, Mac Morgan, Olivia Christine Payson, Mikhail Maclaine Pierce, Emma Purdy, Bella Redpath, Phillip Hoover Smid, Stephanie Truesdale, Jason Zhang, Peiwei


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ARCH 3020/4020 MONSTER Robin Dripps & Ghazal Abbasy-Asbagh The concept of deviating from the normal shape, behavior, or character, suggests the existence of a normal condition. The premise of this studio is to re-consider this normal condition and explore various hybrid conditions that would result in an abnormality. Building on the premise that the normal -- the current modes of urbanism -are no longer sustainable ecologically or socially, this studio will be an investigation in hybridities -- cultural, phenomenal, economical, ecological, programmatic, spatial, formal, and others -- as vehicle for new urbanisms.

Amenyah, Adede Brandy, Katherine Parrish Brown, Seth Cavelier, Enrique Chaney, Ephraim Coles, Zachary Cruz, Joshua Cuttler, Max Elliot Garrido, Alejandro Antonio Gerson, Kaitlin Haley, Tyler Herring, Michael Himes, Charles Matthew Hofmann, Henry Lai, Ketherine

Preciado, Irene Cecilia Sions, MIchael Spong, Julia Tavetian, Anne Julia Teng, Lee Tammy Tuzzo, Jake Uygur, Sonad Zu, Lu Cheryl Yeager, Hayley Zomorodi, Saman


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ARCH 3020/4020 PARAMETRIC FICTION Lucia Phinney The dystopian and semi-abandoned cities of the 2st century America, with their dependence on vulnerable supply networks and an increasing susceptibility to weather-related calamity, will form the territory for a re-telling of Homers Odyssey. Many careful speculative re-readings of this text will lead to urban landscapes and other constructs for Odysseus American homecoming. Through the semester, textual themes, structures, and descriptions will form the baisis for a sequence of projects addressing: the nature of narrative from verbal to spatial, waste, dystopia, resilience, evolody and conservation, chronos and hora, atmospheric phenomena, and human conceptions of nature.

Camuzzi, Chase Ashby, Emily Kathryn Bixler, Kelsey Arisa, Chentaphun Elpey, Jamie Fowler, Kathryn Gearhart, Arliss Lane Gordon, Matt Kaplan, Alexander Lee, Laura Emma Turpin, Ellison Wertman, Christopher Matthew


School of Architecture Administration Kim Tanzer Dean and Edward E. Elson Professor of Architecture I単aki Alday Chair, Dept of Architecture || Quesada Professor

Timothy Beatley Chair, Dept of Urban & Environmental Planning || Teresa Heinz Professor of Sus-

tainable Communities

Nancy A. Takahashi

Chair, Dept of Landscape Architecture || Distinguished Lecturer

Richard Guy Wilson

Chair, Dept of Architectural History || Commonwealth Professor

Phoebe Crisman

Associate Dean for Research || Director of Global Sustain-

Allen Lee Associate Dean for Finance & Administration Kirk Martini Associate Dean for Academics || Associate Professor John Quale Director of Graduate Architecture Program || Associate Professor Betsy Roettger Director of Undergraduate Architecture Program || Lecturer Daniel Bluestone Director of Historic Preservation Program || Professor Department of Architecture I単aki Alday Quesada Professor || Chair W.G. Clark Edmund Schureman Campbell Professor Robin Dripps T. David Fitz-Gibbon Professor Edward Ford Vincent and Eleanor Shea Professor Karen Van Lengen William R. Kenan, Jr. Professor Peter Waldman William R. Kenan, Jr. Professor ability Minor || Associate Professor

Manuel Bailo Associate Professor Phoebe Crisman Associate Professor || Associate Dean for Research tor of Global Sustainability Minor

|| Direc-

Anselmo Canfora Associate Professor Sanda Iliescu Associate Professor Nana Last Associate Professor Earl Mark Associate Professor Kirk Martini Associate Professor || Associate Dean for Academics Charlie Menefee Associate Professor John Quale Associate Professor || Director of Graduate Architecture Program Bill Sherman Associate Professor || Associate Vice President for Research Matthew Jull Assistant Professor Seth McDowell Assistant Professor Jeana Ripple Assistant Professor Ghazal Abbasy-Asbagh Lecturer C. Pamela Black Lecturer Mara Marcu Lecturer || Virginia Teaching Fellow Karolin Moellmann Lecturer


Gwenedd Murray Lecturer Jordi Nebot Lecturer Lucia Phinney Distinguished Lecturer Betsy Roettger Lecturer || Director of Undergraduate Architecture Program Schaeffer Somers Lecturer Charles Sparkman Lecturer Lester Yuen Lecturer Architectural History Daniel Bluestone Professor || Director of Historic Preservation Program Richard Guy Wilson Commonwealth Professor || Chair Cammy Brothers Associate Professor || Valmarana Professor Yunsheng Huang Associate Professor Louis Nelson Associate Professor Lisa Reilly Associate Professor Sheila Crane Assistant Professor Fraser D. Neiman Lecturer Landscape Architecture Reuben M. Rainey William Stone Weedon Professor Emeritus Julie Bargmann Associate Professor Teresa Gali-Izard Associate Professor Elizabeth Meyer Associate Professor Michael Lee Reuben M. Rainey Professor in the History of Landscape Architecture Jorg Sieweke Assistant Professor C. Cole Burrell Lecturer Leena Cho Lecturer Chloe Hawkins Lecturer Rob McGinnis Lecturer Brian Osborn Lecturer || Virginia Teaching Fellow Peter O'Shea Lecturer Adalie Pierce-McManamon Lecturer Lauren Sasso Lecturer Mary Warinner Lecturer Urban and Environmental Planning

Timothy Beatley Heinz Professor of Sustainable Communities || Chair Richard C. Collins Lawrence Lewis Jr. Professor Emeritus William H. Lucy Lawrence Lewis Jr. Chair David L. Phillips Professor Emeritus Daphne Spain James M. Page Professor Ellen Bassett Associate Professor Suzanne M. Moomaw Associate Professor Guoping Huang Assistant Professor Justin Beights Lecturer Charles Denney Lecturer Karen Firehock Lecturer


Kathleen Galvin Lecturer Satyendra Huja Lecturer Joseph Maroon Lecturer Richard Price Lecturer William Wuensch Lecturer All School Faculty Shiqiao Li Weedon Professor of Architecture Margarita Jover Lecturer George Sampson Lecturer Affiliated Faculty David Neuman Architect for the University John Casteen University Professor and Professor of English Cassandra Fraser Professor, Dept of Chemistry Harry Harding Dean, Batten School of Leadership and Public Policy Paxton Marshall Professor, Dept of Electrical and Computer Engineering Visiting Faculty Vishaan Charkrabarti Robertson Professor 2009 Lionel Devlieger Robertson Professor 2011 Eduardo Arroyo Robertson Professor 2012 Adriaan Geuze Robertson Professor 2013 Pankaj Gupta Shure Professor Emeritus Faculty Michael Bednar Warren Bochenstein Warren Byrd A. Bruce Dotson Matthias Kayhoe K. Edward Lay William McDonough Jaqueline Robertson Elissa Rosenberg Theo Van Groll Bob Vickery

Dean's Office Cynthia Smith Assistant to the Dean Seth Wood Communications Coordinator Cally Bryant Graphic Designer


Administrative Support Adela Su Administrative Services Coordinator Patty DeCourcy Administrative Assistant Tim Kelley Assistant to the Chair Student Services Sharon McDonald Director of Student Records and Registration Kristine Nelson Director of Admissions and Financial Aid Cypress Walker Student Services Coordinator Financial and Human Resources Lisa Benton Business Manager Leslie Fitzgerald Business Officer Kathy Woodson Human Resources Coordinator Computing and Information Technology Jake Thackston Systems Manager || Systems Engineer Eric M. Field Director of the Insight Lab, Applied & Advanced Technology Dav Banks Webmaster || Systems Engineer Tony Horning Classroom Support Terrance Sheltra Labs & Studios John Vigour Student & Faculty Support Fabrication Facilities Melissa Goldman Fabrication Facilities Manager

Building Manager

Dick Smith Facilities Manager Institute for Environmental Negotiations Frank Dukes Director Tanya Denckla Cobb Associate Director Melissa Keywood Program Manager, Va Natural Resources Leadership Institute Ellen J. Martin Supervisory Grants and Office Manager Tammy Switzer Administrative Assistant

School of Architecture Foundation Warren Buford Executive Director Kimberly Wong Haggart Associate Director of Alumni Relations June Yang Associate Director of Development Donna Rose Office Manager


Guest Information

Wifi: Instructions and guest passcodes will be available in a Manila envelope taped to Adela Su's office door (please go by at your convenience).

Breakfast: Coffee, fruit and Bodo's bagels are available for guests and faculty in Bishop conference room (2nd floor). Please join and allow introductions

Lunch: Lunch with home made desserts will be provided for guests and faculty in Bishop conference room (2nd floor). Please, notify Adela Su any dietary restrictions (there will be vegetarian options)

Dinner: Guests and studio faculty will be offered a dinner in in the evening, either in 947 Rosser Ln (10 min walk from the school along Rugby Rd, during Ugrad and Grad weeks) or Hereford College (Grad week)


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