In the Media

Wednesday, October 13, 2021

Partisan Splits for Transportation Politics

Planetizen: Further coverage of the viral paper coauthored by Assistant Professor Nicholas J. Klein, CRP, which found left-leaning respondents were more likely to favor transportation reform and sustainable modes than conservatives. In Planetizen.


Wednesday, October 13, 2021

Gotham Bar And Grill To Get A Second Life

Forbes: Featured in Forbes, James Biber (B.Arch. '76) led the original design of the iconic NYC restaurant 36 years ago, and now its redesign. Biber is a partner in his practice, Biber Architects.


Friday, October 8, 2021

Oil, Gas, Dust: From the Sahara to Europe

e-Flux: 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.


Thursday, October 7, 2021

Amie Cunat: Biotic Barbed Impressions

Metal Magazine: A Q&A in Metal Magazine with Amie Cunat (M.F.A. '12) focuses on her solo exhibition of paintings integrating her interests, her love of sci-fi and horror media genres, and familial influences. At Dinner Gallery, on view through Oct. 23.


Wednesday, October 6, 2021

NOMA Announces 50th Anniversary Conference Schedule

Architect: Featured in Architect Magazine, Detroit-based architect Imani Day (B.Arch. '11) moderates the keynote panel reflecting on the legacy of NOMA and diversity in architecture at the conference, online and in-person Oct. 20–23 in Detroit.


Monday, October 4, 2021

A New Arts Compound in East Williamsburg That Draws You In

Curbed: Florian Idenburg, Professor of the Practice in Architecture, and his firm So-IL's Amant Arts Campus in Brooklyn, New York is described as a "pocket campus" in Curbed.


Monday, October 4, 2021

Political Partisanship in Transportation Overshadows Strong Overall Support for Reform

The Hill: 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.


Friday, October 1, 2021

Study Examines Why the Ithaca Commons Has Survived While Other Pedestrian Malls Die

The Ithaca Voice: The Ithaca Voice covers CRP Associate Professor Stephan Schmidt's study that analyzed 125 pedestrian malls built a generation ago, a study Schmidt detailed in a Bloomberg op-ed in September.


Friday, September 24, 2021

Architectural Record Celebrates the 2021 Women in Architecture Awards

Architectural Record: Amanda Williams (B.Arch. '97) is honored as the New Generation Leader in Architectural Record's 2021 Women in Architecture Design Leadership awards. The architect/artist's installation work often probes the impact of race on the urban realm.


Thursday, September 23, 2021

The 2021 Edition of Exhibit Columbus Asks "What Is the Future of the Middle City?"

The Architect's Newspaper: For his installation, Architect's Newspaper says Olalekan Jeyifous (B.Arch. '00) looked for inspiration in the archives of Columbus's Cleo Rogers Memorial Library for artifacts and ephemera from its 1970 exhibition of African American art.


Wednesday, September 22, 2021

The Greek Billionaire Championing Contemporary Art at Home and Abroad

Artsy: Artsy details a new cultural center's inaugural exhibition Portals, featuring work by art alumna Louise Lawler (B.F.A. '69) among 59 artists from 27 countries, curated by Elina Kountouri, Madeleine Grynsztejn, through December.


Wednesday, September 22, 2021

Here's What to See at the 2021 Chicago Architecture Biennial

The Architect's Newspaper: Architect's Newspaper features Sekou Cooke's (B.Arch. '99) installation, the result of a collaboration with a youth leadership organization in Chicago's North Lawndale neighborhood. The architecture biennial opened on September 13.


Wednesday, September 22, 2021

ACHP Chairman Nominee Sara Bronin Takes Step Forward in Confirmation Process

Advisory Council on Historic Preservation: 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.


Wednesday, September 22, 2021

Manchin, Senate Energy Committee Consider Interior, ACHP Nominees

Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources Hearing: Watch CRP Professor Sara Bronin in the Full Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources hearing for her pending nomination to chair the Advisory Council on Historic Preservation (ACHP), a cabinet-level appointment to the Biden administration.


Tuesday, September 21, 2021

Longer NYC Commutes, Household Crowding Linked To Higher COVID-19 Rates

Gothamist: Gothamist covers a study by Timur Dogan, assistant professor of architecture, that finds longer commute times and crowded apartments led to higher rates of COVID-19 transmission.


Tuesday, September 21, 2021

The Dwell 24: Cassius Castings

Dwell: Dwell top 24 designer Thomas Musca's (B.Arch. '19) hobby snowballed into a practice of "concrete evangelizing," and a goal to create pieces that turn an inherently clunky substance into something sleek.


Wednesday, September 15, 2021

Climate Change Is Making Natural Disasters Worse — Along With Our Mental Health

NPR: CRP graduate Katie Oran (M.R.P. '21), a wildfire planner working in Sacramento, California, talks with NPR about the phenomenon of "eco-grief" — increasing concerns for the future, having a family, and if any place is safe.


Monday, September 13, 2021

Exhibit Columbus Returns To Indiana's 'Athens Of The Prairie'

Forbes: The centerpiece of Exhibit Columbus is the J. Irwin Miller and Xenia S. Miller Prize. 2021's winner is Dream the Combine, the firm of architecture faculty Jennifer Newson and Tom Carruthers. Forbes traces the history of the exhibition.


Monday, September 13, 2021

How Memorials to 9/11 Help Us Remember and Mourn

National Geographic: In National Geographic, AAP Dean J. Meejin Yoon discusses various memorials including the Memorial to Enslaved Laborers which Yoon’s design firm collaborated on and Peter Eisenman's (B.Arch. '55) Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe.


Friday, September 10, 2021

Lessons From the Rise and Fall of the Pedestrian Mall

Bloomberg News: 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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