Event flyer for CM² November Brownbag on Friday, Nov 22, 12:30-1:30PM at WBM 6.120, featuring speakers Ziqi Liu and Shunhua Bai with their presentation topics and headshots. CM² logo in lower right.
Lecture Series
Event status
Scheduled
Friday November 22, 2019, 12:30 - 1:30pm

Each month researchers at UT Austin gather for monthly Brown Bag Lunch Discussions to present their current projects and discuss their findings with fellow researchers and students. This November Ph.D. students in Community and Regional Planning program,  Ziqi Liu and Shunhua Bai would share their ongoing research with us. Mark your calendar and join us in the event! 

A person attaches a sign reading ERDETTE to a wooden utility pole under street signs. Text advertises a lecture by Maggie Hansen titled tending: spatial practice and civic care on November 22 at 12 pm in BTL 101.
Lecture Series, CAAD
Event status
Scheduled
Friday November 22, 2019, 12:00 - 1:00pm

On Friday, November 22, the Center for American Architecture and Design will host Maggie Hansen as part of the Friday Lunch Forum series.

Roughly every other Friday during the fall and spring semesters, the Center hosts the Friday Lunch Forum Series. The aim of the series is for faculty, staff, and students to meet in an informal atmosphere to debate topics and to share ideas about history, practice, theory, and new directions for architecture. Recordings of each forum will be posted as they become available.

Flyer for a CM² and City Forum event featuring Susan L. Handy, with her photo, details of her talk on transportation planning, her credentials, research summary, and event details: Nov 15, 2019, 2:00 PM, UT Austin.
Lecture Series, City Forum
Event status
Scheduled
Friday November 15, 2019, 12:00pm
Description
Transportation planning in the U.S. has for over a century been guided by several core principles: speed, mobility, vehicle throughput, capacity expansion, traffic control, mode separation. These principles are hugely influential, yet they are largely implicit and rarely questioned, at least not officially, despite their general failure to produce an efficient transportation system. Some ideas are seemingly unshakable, persisting despite compelling alternatives; other ideas have come in and out of favor and back.
Two people view posters at an exhibition. Text reads: FALL EXHIBITION 2019, Friday, November 15, 10am–12pm, WMB 5th floor hallway. Logos of CM2, Texas, Penn, LSU, and TSU are at the bottom.
Exhibition
Event status
Scheduled
Friday November 15, 2019, 10:00am - 12:00pm

When: Friday, November 15, 10am- 12pm

Where: WMB 5th floor hallway

What: At this yearly exhibition event, researchers present their ongoing research projects for the five-year Cooperative Mobility for Competitive Megaregions (CM2) consortium.

Close-up of two contrasting textures: on the left, white, soft, and fibrous material; on the right, a rough, brown, compressed wood chipboard surface.
Exhibition, Materials Lab
Event status
Scheduled
Wednesday November 13, 2019, 12:00 - 1:00pm

GRASSES was the first of a series of curated collections at the Materials Lab showcasing diverse themes found within our 28,000+ samples. The exhibition, held in Fall 2019,  showcased a wide range of material products derived from the Graminae family of flowering plants. Grasses are defined by their hollow stems which join at alternating, sheathing leaves, and flowers arranged in spikelets. Of more than 12,000 known species, common examples of grasses grown in high volumes around the world include bamboo, corn, rice, sorghum, and wheat.

Event poster for photographic & mixed media representation, a conversation between David Heymann and Phoebe Lickwar, moderated by John Blood, on Friday, November 8 at 12 pm, btl 101. Tree branches are visible in the background.
Lecture Series, CAAD
Event status
Scheduled
Friday November 8, 2019, 12:00 - 1:00pm

On Friday, November 8, the Center for American Architecture and Design will host David Heymann and Phoebe Lickwar as part of the Friday Lunch Forum series, presenting a discussion entitled "Photographic and Mixed-Media Representation," to be moderated by John Blood.

Event flyer titled Greenway Design with a headshot of a smiling man against a green background. Details include speaker Randall Arendt, his credentials, and event information for November 7, 2019, at the UTSOA.
Lecture Series, City Forum
Event status
Scheduled
Thursday November 7, 2019, 5:00pm
Description
Randall Arendt is the author of more than 20 publications including Rural by Design: Maintaining Small Town Character, Conservation Design for Subdivisions: A Practical Guide to Creating Open Space Networks, and Growing Greener: Putting Conservation into Local Plans and Ordinances.  He will be discussing the centrality of creating greenway networks for informal recreation, exercise, and enjoyment of nature as a fundamental element of enlightened town planning in contemporary rural, suburban, and urban contexts.
A historic stone courthouse with a clock tower under a blue sky. Text reads: Architexas. Meet + Greet, Thursday, November 7th, Sutton Hall 3.128, 11:00 am.
Lecture Series, Career Services
Event status
Scheduled
Thursday November 7, 2019, 11:00am - 12:30pm

Please join Architexas for a presentation on the firm, current work, culture and hiring practices on Thursday, November 7. The event will be held in the Career Services office in Sutton Hall 3.128 at 11:00am with lunch provided. 



RSVP TO UTSOA-CAREERS@UTEXAS.EDU BY

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 4.



Learn more about Architexas here

A complex, black and white collage featuring astronauts, space suits, scientific diagrams, machinery, and a human figure with airflow pathways, surrounded by technical illustrations, charts, and symbols related to space exploration.
Lecture Series, Lecture Series
Event status
Scheduled
Wednesday November 6, 2019, 5:00pm

This lecture will explore a genealogy of contained microcosms with the ambition to replicate the earth in its totality; a series of living experiments that forge a synthetic naturalism, where the laws of nature and metabolism are displaced from the domain of wilderness to the domain of cities and buildings. Beyond technical concerns, closed worlds distill architectural concerns related to habitation: first an integrated structure where humans, their physiology of ingestion and excretion, become combustion devices, tied to the system with umbilical cords; second, closed worlds