MARCH 24-26, 2021 | Virtual Conference
109th Annual Meeting
Expanding the View: Prospect(s) for Architectural Education Futures
Schedule
July 1, 2020
Abstract Deadline
July 1, 2020
Special Session Deadline
September 2020
Author Notification
November 18, 2020
Full Paper Deadline
January 2021
Final Presenter Notification
Schedule + Abstracts: Thursday
This year鈥檚 109th Annual Meeting will be held virtually from March 24 – 26, 2021. The virtual conference is designed for educators, practitioners, researchers, and students to explore and discuss the latest research, ideas, and practices in聽architecture, education, and allied disciplines.
Schedule with Abstracts
Below read full session descriptions and research abstracts. Plan what session you don鈥檛 want to miss.
Obtain Continuing Education Credits (CES) / Learning Units (LU), including Health, Safety and Welfare (HSW). Registered conference attendees will be able to submit session attended for Continuing Education Credits (CES). Register for the conference today to gain access to all the AIA/CES credit sessions.
10:30am-11:00pm EDT /
7:30am-8:00am PDT
Plenary
Morning Discussion
Join us for a Q&A session about peer review in the Annual Meeting and the discipline hosted by members of the Annual Meeting Committee.
11:00am-12:00pm EDT /
8:00am-9:00am PDT
Special Focus Session
1 AIA/CES LU
Encountering Architecture: The Future of Fieldwork in Architecture Education
Moderator: Eric Olsen, Woodbury University
Jeff Balmer, University of North Carolina
Mireille Roddier, University of Michigan
Paulette Singley, Woodbury University
Session Description
The three major crises of Covid-19, social injustice, and economic inequality have come to characterize the current academic year. While campuses and classrooms are adjusting to these relevant and significant pressures, unanswered questions about the future status of fieldwork in the context of architecture education remain. How may inventive new models of online learning, increased demand for understanding social equity, and economic pressures of affordability impact study away learning opportunities? This moderated panel seeks to explicate the evolving role of fieldwork in relation to these three emphases and present new modalities for engaging travel as a site for architecture education.
11:00am-12:00pm EDT /
8:00am-9:00am PDT
Special Focus Session
1 AIA/CES LU
Speculative Practice in Pedagogy
Moderator: Constance Vale, Washington University in St. Louis
Chandler Ahrens, Washington University in St. Louis
Manuel Jimenez Garcia, University College London
Ryan Tyler Martinez, Woodbury University
Zachary Tate Porter, University of Nebraska-Lincoln
M. Casey Rehm, Southern California Institute of Architecture
Kelley Van Dyck Murphy, Washington University in St. Louis
Session Description
Architects cannot merely speculate about the future; we must also speculate about our role in it. There is a pressing need for architectural education to create an expanded field of operation beyond what is typically considered the domain of architectural practice. This panel will explore pedagogical models that embrace modes of speculative practice鈥毭劽甤uration, fabrication, and visualization鈥毭劽產nd promote interdisciplinarity, entrepreneurship, and advanced research in emerging technology and media theory. While navigating through a continually changing set of parameters, tools, and media, blurring disciplinary boundaries will allow us to address the design challenges of our world and propose that world’s evolution.
11:00am-12:00pm EDT /
8:00am-9:00am PDT
Special Focus Session
1 AIA/CES LU
Federal and State Advocacy: Bringing it to the Studio
Moderator: Cindy Schwartz, American Institute of Architects
Kara Kempski, American Institute of Architects
Anne Law, American Institute of Architects
Richard Mohler, University of Washington
Emilie Taylor Welty, Tulane University
Session Description
With all that is taking place in the world, what is the forecast for legislative issues impacting our climate, economy, architects, and communities? Why is engaging in these issues important to the profession? How can you (and your students) make a positive impact on sustainability, resilience, affordable housing, student debt, infrastructure, and other issues? In this session, AIA leadership will share their legislative agenda and what is happening at the Federal level with infrastructure funding, climate legislation; as well as emerging legislative trends coming out of our nation’s statehouses. Faculty will discuss how engaging with local governments has impacted their courses, students, and career. Along with sharing hands-on advice for motivating and engaging students. Join us and learn how to bring activism into your studio as you deepen your own knowledge about public policy and the legislative issues of the day.
11:00am-12:00pm EDT /
8:00am-9:00am PDT
Special Focus Session
1 AIA/CES LU
Careers in Architectural Education: 糖心vlog Distinguished Professor
Moderator: Francisco Rodriguez, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Julio Bermudez, Catholic University of America
Renee Chow, University of California, Berkeley
Bradford Grant, Howard University
Alison Kwok, University of Oregon
Kenneth Schwartz, Tulane University
Session Description
The 糖心vlog Distinguished Professor Award recognizes individuals that have had a positive, stimulating, and nurturing influence upon students over an extended period of time and/or teaching which inspired a generation of students who themselves have contributed to the advancement of architecture.
11:00am-12:00pm EDT /
8:00am-9:00am PDT
Special Focus Session
1 AIA/CES LU
Advancing Scholarship on Equity and Justice in Built Environment
Moderator: Christine Theodoropoulos, California Polytechnic State University
Nora Wendl, University of New Mexico
Andrzej Zarzycki, New Jersey Institute of Technology
Evan Richardson, Morgan State University
Sharon Haar, University of Michigan
Gundula Proksch, University of Washington
June Williamson, City College of New York
Victor Rubin, PolicyLink
Kendall A. Nicholson, Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture
Session Description
This self-study documents the 糖心vlog鈥檚 contributions to the past decade of research and creative practice that advances scholarship on equity and justice in built environments. A panel of 糖心vlog Research & Scholarship Committee members will present findings from its review of 糖心vlog publications, activities, and a survey of 糖心vlog members, followed by dialog among participants that address the following:
- How should we communicate self-study findings to make the information useful to 糖心vlog members and partners?
- During the next three years, how might the 糖心vlog promote scholarship on equity and justice across the built environments?

