A futuristic tower with a curved, lattice structure rises from water at sunset, illuminated by artificial lights, with city buildings in the background and the sun low on the horizon.
Lecture Series, Goldsmith Talks
Event status
Scheduled
Monday April 6, 2015, 5:00pm

Whose Chinese? Foreign Architects in China


As China has opened to the world, foreign architects have flocked to a booming building industry that shows no signs of stopping. Come hear how they have dealt with the challenges of building in this unique country, and in turn how their works have impacted the Chinese city. Ben Parker will be presenting work from his cross-disciplinary thesis in the Asian Studies and Architecture departments.

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City Forum event flyer with “Creative Planning: the Austin Innovation District” as the topic. Features details, speaker info, institutional logos, and a photo of a woman with long brown hair in a black blazer, arms crossed, smiling.
Lecture Series, City Forum
Event status
Scheduled
Friday April 3, 2015, 7:00am

Goldsmith Main Jury Room

Ground Floor, 2.110

A group of women in a room watch a young woman seated at a wooden loom, weaving fabric, while others stand nearby observing or reading. The atmosphere appears educational or workshop-like.
Materials Lab
Event status
Scheduled
Thursday April 2, 2015, 7:30 - 10:30am

Inga Marie Carmel is a former landscape architect turned weaver. She is the president of the Weavers & Spinners Society of Austin and spent an afternoon at the Materials Lab introducing students to the process of of converting raw natural fibers into cloth. Students learned about the differences between natural fibers and were able to try their hand at weaving on a Wolf Pup floor loom and two small cricket looms.

This workshop was a coordinated effort with Interior Design Construction 2, taught by Tamie Glass.

A crowd lines up outside historic white buildings with red-tiled roofs on a sunny day. Green trees frame the street. Text reads “Andrés Gaviria April 1” in orange letters at the top left. Colorful stripes are at the right edge.
Lecture Series
Event status
Scheduled
Wednesday April 1, 2015, 5:00 - 6:00pm

Andrés Gaviria graduated from Pontificia Universidad Javeriana in Bogotá, Colombia. Through a grant from the Government of Canada, he conducted studies at the Master of Applied Science (M.Sc.A) Program in Conservation of the Built Environment at the University of Montreal. He developed his master’s thesis in Conservation of Military Architecture during a nine-month internship in the fortified abbey of Mont-Saint-Michel, in France, under the supervision of the chief architect of the monument.

A black and white collage shows a mans face superimposed over industrial machinery, including spinning spools and gears, creating a surreal, futuristic effect. Light beams radiate from the man’s head, blending human and mechanical elements.
Lecture Series, Goldsmith Talks
Event status
Scheduled
Monday March 30, 2015, 5:00pm

Constructivism on Film: A discussion on Dziga Vertov’s Man With A Movie Camera as Grounded in the Theory of the Formal Method


Experimental film screening and discussion.

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A close-up of a black Nikon DSLR camera with a zoom lens attached, lying on a white surface. The camera strap with a yellow Nikon logo is partially visible on the left side.
Event status
Scheduled
Sunday March 29, 2015, 2:00 - 4:00pm

The Visual Resources Collection is excited to announce a new introductory Digital-SLR photography workshop. This one-hour session will focus on familiarizing students new to DSLRs with the cameras available for check-out in the VRC, in addition to covering basic shooting techniques. An overview of shooting modes, lens selection, aperture, shutter speed and exposure will be given, along with instruction on how to best utilize these camera settings in situations particularly relevant to students, including studio project and site condition documentation.

A U.S. map shows projected rental household growth from 2010–2030 by county, with blue indicating slower growth and orange indicating faster growth. Event details and summary about housing trends are on the right.
Lecture Series, City Forum
Event status
Scheduled
Friday March 27, 2015, 7:00am

By 2030, the U.S. will grow by nearly 50 million residents and undergo two dramatic demographic transitions: Baby Boomers moving out of the workforce while their children—the Millennials—move into housing and job markets, leading to growing demand for rental housing from the large, young, and diverse Millennial population and increasing attrition out of older owner-occupied homes. What challenges and opportunities do these transitions hold for cities?

A modern building at dusk is shown on the National Endowment for the Arts website. The page features sections for Project Showcase and Project Insights and highlights Exploring Our Town, focusing on creative placemaking.
Lecture Series, Goldsmith Talks
Event status
Scheduled
Monday March 23, 2015, 5:00pm
Designed for the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) and its diverse constituents, Exploring Our Town is a new online resource for Creative Placemaking.
Colorful buildings and a street in a historic city with mountains in the background. Text on image reads Francisco Lopez March 12 with abstract orange and gray shapes on the right.
Lecture Series
Event status
Scheduled
Thursday March 12, 2015, 5:00 - 6:00pm

Mexican Cities Inscribed on the World Heritage List, a Current Overview

The Historic City might be perceived as a complex and unpredictable phenomenon. The geographer, for example, always found virgin or rural areas but always stopped at the gates of the city; the historian meanwhile, has been concerned with restoring the livelihoods of different generations and describe the evolution of the material framework and conditions of their habitat, but in short, different specialists of urban phenomenon have never been able to fully reflect all dimensions.