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RESEARCH
General
Arts
BUILDING
DESIGN
Architecture students
to meet in Chicago to discuss urban design issues
Melissa
Mitchell, Arts Editor
(217) 333-5491; melissa@uiuc.edu
12/1/02
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — When architecture students at the University
of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign learned they had won the bid to host
the annual national conference of the American Institute of Architecture
Students, they knew they wanted to put on a really big show. So they
decided to move the venue 140 miles north, to the city of big shoulders
and tall buildings: Chicago.
Chicago, the organizers determined, was the ideal backdrop for AIAS
FORUM 2002, scheduled to take place Dec. 29-Jan. 2 at the Sheraton Hotel
and Towers. The location, in a city rich in architectural history, seemed
custom-made for the conference’s overall theme, "City Reborn."
"The history of the city of Chicago is an illustrious one,"
said Zach Borders, a graduate student in the School
of Architecture at Illinois and FORUM 2002 chair. "The Chicago
that exists today rose out of the ashes of the devastating fire that
swept through the city in 1871. Today Chicago is a city of skyscrapers,
proud neighborhoods and a population that knows its architecture like
no other.
"Not all American cities are healthy today," Borders said.
"Many have been crippled by social, economic and design disparity.
The mistakes of the past are now affecting the future. As the next generation
of community designers, we must understand the responsibility we have
in making the world a better place than the one we grew up in."
Among the conference’s many goals, he said, is to "bring
together the youth of the design professions in order to understand
how we can contribute to the design and enhancement of the city without
harming it." Ken Crabiel, an Illinois graduate student in architecture
and publicity chair for the event, said some of the topics that will
be explored include issues central to city planning and architecture
such as the New Urbanism movement and sprawl, ecological design, and
the future of tall buildings in an era redefined by concerns that such
structures could be targets for terrorist attacks.
Crabiel expects FORUM 2002 will attract about 1,500 people, including
architecture students, educators and professionals from across the country
and abroad. Also attending will be 40 inner-city Chicago high school
students who will have the opportunity to attend one day of the conference,
thanks to the AIAS Foundation, a philanthropy project created by architecture
students at Illinois.
Keynote speakers at the conference will include Donald L. Miller, author
of the Pulitzer Prize-nominated best seller "City of the Century:
The Epic of Chicago and the Making of America"; California architect
Eric Lloyd Wright, who apprenticed with his grandfather, Frank Lloyd
Wright; architect and town planner Andres Duany, a founding member of
the Congress of New Urbanism; Sharlene Young, recipient of the AIA Chicago
Young Architect Award; and Chicago architect and Illinois alumna Carol
Ross Barney, recognized for her work on the new Federal Office Campus
in Oklahoma City, which replaced the Murrah Federal Building, severely
damaged by a bomb blast.
More information on FORUM 2002 is on the Web at www.aiasnatl.org/forum.
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