Continuing Education: Water Conservation Joann Gonchar, FAIA March 1, 2017 No Comments Forward-thinking project teams regard water as a precious resource.Read More
Continuing Education: Masonry Construction Michael Cockram February 1, 2017 One Comment Architects and engineers enlist one of the oldest building technologies to create innovative 21st-century structures.Read More
Continuing Education: School Security and Safety Katharine Logan January 1, 2017 No Comments Three new schools provide an alternative to the fortress approach to security.Read More
Continuing Education: Biophilia Katharine Logan December 1, 2016 No Comments Biophilic design and the hospitality sector are a natural fit.Read More
Continuing Education: Sustainable Campus Development Katharine Logan November 1, 2016 No Comments Colleges and universities take environmentally responsible design to new levels.Read More
Continuing Education: Kinetic Buildings Joann Gonchar, FAIA October 1, 2016 No Comments Dynamic structures with large-scale operable elements adapt and transform, responding to changing needs.Read More
Continuing Education: Pushing Prefabrication Russell Fortmeyer September 1, 2016 One Comment From entire buildings to discrete components, the use of off-site construction is expanding across multiple building types.Read More
Continuing Education: Dark-Sky Design Joann Gonchar, FAIA Linda C. Lentz August 1, 2016 One Comment Light pollution hides views of the cosmos and causes a host of environmental problems. But architectural and landscape lighting can be designed so that it is sensitive to the night sky and ecosystems yet still responds to clients’ requirements.Read More
Continuing Education: Green Walls Peter Fairley July 1, 2016 No Comments Greenery on buildings is gaining traction, but needs validation.Read More
Continuing Education: Healthy Materials Read the story below, then take the quiz "Sweating the Small Stuff" for Continuing Education credit. Katharine Logan June 1, 2016 No Comments Some molecules don’t belong in a building. Product transparency helps architects keep them out.Read More