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AIA New Jersey
Micro-MBA in Architecture program designed to help prepare Architects and Construction Professionals with limited or no business training planned for Spring 2019.
The certificate programs will be five weeks in duration and provide background training to help ensure the candidates success. Classes will be taught by a combination of Temple University Professors and licensed AIA Architects at the Temple Center City Campus.
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AIA New Jersey
Save the date: June 21
Educational Sessions & Tours:
8:30 a.m. – 4:45 p.m.
Cocktail Party:
5 p.m. – 7 p.m.
Multiple CEU credits to be provided
Great Speakers and Keynotes!
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AIA New Jersey
Register for this course and learn more about the process of designing high-performing, resilient, beautiful buildings.
Climate change is the fundamental design problem of our time, and architects need the skills to help make beautiful, resilient, high-performing buildings. However, limited access to quality information that is both usable and concise is a major barrier to the universal adoption of sustainable design.
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Promoted by
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AIA New Jersey
The Architects’ Political Action Committee of New Jersey is sponsoring a golf outing to raise much-needed funds to support our efforts towards protecting the integrity and qualifications of the profession, strengthening our legislative voice in Trenton, promoting our role in the creation of the built environment and fighting for fair procurement processes and laws.
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AIA New Jersey
View the magazine online here.
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AIA New Jersey
Joseph David, AIA, co-chair of the AIA New Jersey K-12 Education Committee and Stacey Ruhle Kliesch, AIA, chair of the AIA New Jersey Equity in Architecture Committee, both participated as judges at the Tenafly High School Engineering Design Competition on March 20.
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AIA New Jersey
Suzanne K. DiGeronimo, FAIA, and Louis A. DiGeronimo, AIA, founded DiGeronimo Architects in
1970. The firm offers unparalleled, knowledge and practical wisdom that come from experience.
DiGeronimo Architects is a Certified Women-Owned, Small, Disadvantaged Business Enterprise
(WBE, SBE &DBE), headquartered in Paramus, New Jersey.
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AIA
At the Institute’s annual leadership conference, a focus on building partnerships complemented an underlying passion for design that makes a difference.
Recently, Washington, DC, welcomed AIA leaders for the annual Grassroots conference. Centered on the theme People. Purpose. Partnership., the event brought together architects and chapter leaders from across the country for engaging discussions about the value of architecture in society.
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AIA New Jersey
This event is brought to you by the AIA New Jersey Women In Architecture Committee with event Chairs Cheryl Fothergill, Associate AIA and Anna Chang, Associate AIA.
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AIA New Jersey
Hope you have been following the AIANJ Women’s In Architecture Spotlight features over the month of March. In case you missed any see them here.
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AIA New Jersey
All AIA New Jersey Members are welcome to gather on April 23, from 6 to 8 p.m. at Porcelanosa on 65 Route 17 South, Paramus, NJ. This program will help individuals and firms to define, identify and implement healthy intercultural competence into their architectural community. This program will also explore the advantages to maintaining a diverse board and steps to take to improve board diversity in our members’ practices and all instances.
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AIA New Jersey would like to welcome its newest members
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AIA New Jersey
Mr. William N. Caulin, AIA
Ms. Katherine D. Foreman, AIA
Mr. Jared McBath, Assoc. AIA
Mr. Benjamin Nicolson, AIA
Building Design + Construction
A former ACME supermarket that sits adjacent to Virtua’s Health and Wellness Center in Moorestown, New Jersey, underwent a transformation to become the new Virtua Samson Cancer Center. The new facility accommodates radiation oncology, an infusion treatment suite, a cancer administrative suite, and a third-party infusion practice.
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Fast Company
We’ve written about what we call the “parks, cafes, and a riverwalk” model of sustainability, which focuses on providing new green spaces, mainly for high-income people. This vision of shiny residential towers and waterfront parks has become a widely shared conception of what green cities should look like. But it can drive up real estate prices and displace low- and middle-income residents.
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Building Design + Construction
Business intelligence — technologies used for data analysis and reporting — has been a trending topic in our recent work. Nearly all areas of our consulting service make use of one form of BI or another and Nate’s previous blog post highlights a few of these uses. Organizations are seeking insight about what they’re good at — or not so good at — in order to make improvements to their own processes.
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Archinect
As a professional, there will inevitably come a time when you will need to search for a new job. This should be a simple enough endeavor, but as you sit there, contemplating your next steps, it begins to appear quite complicated. What firms do you apply to? Which ones will be the most fruitful? How do you know you’re not making a mistake? The questions go on, but ultimately, what you’re really searching for is some kind of guideline or “measuring stick” to help you in your first couple of steps. This article is your measuring stick.
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ArchDaily
Home. Our shelter. Our private space. In an urbanized world with dense megalopolises like Tokyo, Shanghai, and São Paulo, homes are getting smaller and more expensive than ever. If you are claustrophobic, Marie Kondo is your best ally in the quest to earn some extra space. And even though private backyards have become a luxury for most, our data shows that single-family houses are still the most popular project type on ArchDaily. Why is this? (Especially when it seems incongruous given the reality of today’s crowded cities.)
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Realtor.com
What is antebellum architecture? It's a term used to characterize a style of grand residences largely found in the Southern U.S., especially the Deep South, built in the 19th century. As grandiose as these intricately designed homes are, their magnificence has deep and controversial roots in slavery.
Here's a look at these extravagant homes, their defining features, and the ongoing debate about preserving antebellum properties.
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Forbes
Architecture is a career that captivates the minds of many people, including George Costanza of "Seinfeld," who says he's always wanted to pretend to be an architect. In terms of income, architects do fairly well. As of 2017, the average income of architects has reached $88,860, according to the latest data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ Occupational Employment Statistics. But you won't earn that salary anywhere in the U.S. just because you've got architectural credentials.
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ArchDaily
With the aim of generating an architecture that incubates the wellbeing, self-realization and fulfillment of its inhabitants to become the best version of themselves, CEBRA has launched an ambitious Research and Development Program called WISE, or Work, Innovation, Space and Education.
As explained by its creators, the purpose of WISE is "to bridge the ongoing and rapid change in the sectors of workspace and education to inform the design of buildings that stimulate learning and innovation. We are connecting ideas of the foremost thinkers of education and entrepreneurship, research and studies in sensory stimuli, cognitive psychology, and behaviorism with architecture."
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By Lucy Wallwork
Housing cooperatives essentially represent the "third way" between renting and owning a property. This model once formed part of the bedrock of affordable shelter provisions in New York, but more recently has been rapidly disappearing. Often famed more for the celebrity interest they attract than their role in combating the housing crisis, some are now turning to housing cooperatives as part of the solution to the housing affordability crisis hitting many U.S. cities. However, while cities like New York have a rich history of cooperatives, they are often both misunderstood and overlooked.
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Common Edge
Architecture is suffering one of its periodic identity crises. The last one was circa 2012. Then, the feeling was that architects were misunderstood. Research commissioned by the American Institute of Architects showed “tremendous respect for the profession of architecture, but the public isn’t always aware of what architects do or how their work affects society.” Because most people rarely interact directly with an architect, the AIA initiated a campaign to increase general awareness of the profession.
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