Faculty Work
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Lost in a Thousand Leaves with Luca Padroni
Italian artist and long-time Cornell in Rome visiting critic Luca Padroni reflects on his depiction of the human condition in relation to time and the natural world.
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Stories Last Longer Than Symbols
With Who is Afraid of Natasha?, Art Professor of the Practice Joanna Malinowska and collaborator C.T. Jasper bring a monument (back) to life.
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Oil, Gas, Dust: From the Sahara to Europe
History of Architecture Assistant Professor Samia Henni examines how petroleum and gas pipeline export under African and Sharan aquifers to Europe resulted in "a new world (dis)order." In e-Flux Coloniality of Infrastructure.
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Carl Ostendarp: Greatest Hits Exhibition Catalogue Kunstverein Heilbronn
The exhibition catalog from Associate Professor Carl Ostendarp's 2017 solo exhibition at Kunstverein Heilbronn, edited by Matthia Löbke with German/English text by Matthia Löbke and Lane Releya. Published by the Heilbronn Art Association (2021).
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Political Partisanship in Transportation Overshadows Strong Overall Support for Reform
An op-ed in The Hill coauthored by CRP's Nicholas Klein explains his research showing that while the nation is divided by partisanship, most Americans agree the transportation system isn't working and want change.
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Theorizing Global History Symposium Talks
Professor Esra Ackan, architecture, presented "A Global History of Architecture for the Age of Reparations" at the symposium hosted by Global Architectural History Teaching Collective in January.
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Historical Marker To Honor Ithaca Birthplace of Tuskegee Airman Verdelle Louis Payne
A chance connection led CRP's Professor Thomas J. Campanella to tell the story of Verdelle Louis Payne, Ithaca-born and among the first Black pilots from Upstate New York as well as a military pilot in the U.S. Armed Forces.
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Announcing the 2021 MASterworks Awards
Professor of the Practice in architecture Florian Idenburg and his practice SO-IL have won MASNYC's Best New Building: Recognizing Outstanding Architectural Design award for Amant, an art "campus" in Brooklyn, New York.
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Husserl and Spatiality A Phenomenological Ethnography of Space
In his new book, Assistant Professor Tao DuFour, architecture, combines in-depth architectural philosophical investigations of Husserl's work with a rich and intimate ethnography, speaking to themes in social and cultural anthropology.
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The Forest City in Xingu
An article by Visiting Associate Professor in architecture Anna Dietzsch in Select takes as its starting point the urban technology of Amerindian peoples in a Brazilian indigenous territory.
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States That Prioritized Access to Water at Height of Pandemic Saved Lives
Featured by the Cornell Chronicle, a paper by lead author and public policy expert Professor Mildred Warner, CRP, says states that implemented moratoria on water shutoffs to protect vulnerable citizens reported better public health outcomes.
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ACHP Chairman Nominee Sara Bronin Takes Step Forward in Confirmation Process
In a Senate committee hearing, CRP Professor Sara Bronin pledged support for disaster recovery response to historic places, private investment in preservation, and the Tribal Historic Preservation Offices and Native Hawaiian organizations.
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Depth of Field: Tao DuFour on We Love We Self Up Here
Assistant Professor Tao DuFour, architecture, discusses his transdisciplinary, collaborative film that captures people, labor, migration, and landscape in Trinidad and Tobago.
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Publishing as Practice
Centered on three contemporary artists/book publishers with a fresh take on the political in publishing, the book is the culmination of a residency program curated by coeditor and contributor Kayla Romberger, Visiting Critic in Art.
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The Co-evolution of Commodity Flows, Economic Geography, and Emissions
A new book co-authored by Kieran P. Donaghy, Professor Emeritus of City and Regional Planning, presents a dynamic analysis that incorporates features of input substitution, transportation pricing, economies of scale and scope, and emissions sources.
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Lessons From the Rise and Fall of the Pedestrian Mall
Associate Professor of Planning Stephan Schmidt's op-ed in Bloomberg looks at successful and resilient pedestrian malls built in the 60's and 70's and finds lessons that urban planners can implement now.
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Long Commutes, Home Crowding Tied to COVID Transmission
The Cornell Chronicle details a study coauthored by architecture's Timur Dogan on how the built environment influences coronavirus propagation in urban settings by identifying predictors and sustainable mitigations for virus spread.
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Dream the Combine at Exhibit Columbus: COLUMBUS COLUMBIA COLOMBO COLÓN
Jennifer Newsom, Tom Carruthers
Architecture faculty Assistant Professor Jennifer Newsom and Assistant Professor of the Practice Tom Carruthers have created an installation for 2021 Exhibit Columbus representing the 58 distinct places named "Columbus" in the world.