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The Aluminaire House
Date: November 13, 2024
Time: 5:30 pm - 7:00 pm
Location:
16 W. 61st St., 11th-floor auditorium
New York,
NY
10023
United States
The Aluminaire House, by the architects A. Lawrence Kocher and Albert Frey, was built in New York City as an exhibition of modern materials at the Architectural League and Allied Arts and Industries biannual exhibition in 1931. This presentation is about its 93 year history and our 36 years of involvement with it, including rescuing it from demolition in 1987 and rebuilding it with New York Institute of Technology architecture students until its final rebuilding at the Palm Springs Art Museum in 2024. As in our just published book, The Aluminaire House, the talk with locate the house in relation to the polemics of modern architecture and issues of housing in particular.
Welcome and Introduction
Maria Perbellini
Dean of The School of Architecture and Design
Moderation
Farzana Gandhi
Associate Professor
School of Architecture and Design
Speakers
Frances Campani and Michael Schwarting,
Frances Campani and Michael Schwarting are a husband-and-wife architect team who have worked for 36 years to save and protect the Aluminaire House and formed the Aluminaire House Foundation for that purpose. They established Campani and Schwarting Architects in 2000. Together, they have experience with many types and scales of work and have completed numerous projects involving new construction, additions, and renovations as well as urban design. Their work is known for its aesthetic distinction, attention to context and for its innovative use of materials. Frances Campani is an Assistant Professor of Architecture and Michael Schwarting is Professor Emeritus at New York Institute of Technology where the rescue of the Aluminaire began. Frances Campani and Michael Schwarting live and practice Architecture in Port Jefferson, New York.
Design Series: WORLDS UN/DESIGNED: Unscripted, Atypical, Unnatural, and Uncontrolled
Conventions have insistently shaped the practices of design and architecture. Design norms – planning conventions, material classifications, graphic standards, or accepted ideas of spatial experiences – attest to the ways designers approach world-building. Design norms often reveal a reliance on typified and naturalized views of spaces, systems, bodies, materials, and built environments that invariably foreclose more inclusive and progressive paradigms for our collective futures.
The SoAD AY 24-25 lecture and event series, Worlds Un/Designed seeks to deconstruct conventions in design, architecture, and urbanism by challenging typical stereotypes in design practices, urban systems, technological dependencies, gender and abilities, conceptions of natural and unnatural, and the blurring of physical and digital environments.
Worlds Un/Designed aims to address the exclusions and limitations inscribed in our existing constructed environments by engaging with questions of ecology, urbanity, sustainability, accessibility, mobility, and inclusion. The lecture and event series will include lecture presentations, book discussions and exhibitions as subtopics of the Un/Designed theme including among others: Unscripted addressing experiential perspectives of spatial design, unconventional usage and affordances; Atypical, , addressing inclusive design for the atypical user; Unnatural interrogating the making of natural and unnatural biobased materials materials; and Uncontrolled, discussing on autonomous systems, unsupervised intelligence, and emergent forms. By critically reflecting on the effects of conventions this lecture series calls for stimulating our collective imagination towards healthier alternative future worlds, yet to be designed.
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