Art & Architecture Building Auditorium, Room 2104
How do environmental issues impact, affect, and shift theoretical work on architecture, landscape and design?
If theory is what establishes the relationship between what is present and what can be imagined, allowing us to look forward and backward, then it is the task of architectural theory to consider what remains constant and what changes in the discipline as it addresses current challenges. The environmental lens on theory provides ways to encompass all elements of building activities, allowing for connections to be made across a wide range of scales, from that of a building detail to those of entire landscapes and cities. It also urges us to consider the representation of the environment in architecture, bringing into view the limits and entanglements of the discipline, drawing new affinities, producing knowledge and advancing the discipline.
Johe Architecture Lecture Series: Imaginaries
Supported by the Herbert W. and Susan Johe Lecture and Exhibition Fund
Art & Architecture Building Auditorium, Room 2104