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X-WR-CALNAME:AIA Baltimore/Baltimore Architecture Foundation
X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://www.baltimorearchitecturefoundation.org
X-WR-CALDESC:Events for AIA Baltimore/Baltimore Architecture Foundation
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DTSTART:20260308T070000
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DTSTART:20261101T060000
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260415T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260415T193000
DTSTAMP:20260507T050556
CREATED:20260316T181004Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260316T181250Z
UID:36415-1776276000-1776281400@www.baltimorearchitecturefoundation.org
SUMMARY:Materials & Methods: Glenstone and the Museum of Modern Art with Thomas Phifer
DESCRIPTION:ABOUT THIS LECTURE\nArchitect Thomas Phifer will present the Glenstone Museum in Potomac\, Maryland\, the Museum of Modern Art in Warsaw\, Poland\, and the Wagner Park Pavilion\, a key component of the South Battery Park Resiliency Project in Lower Manhattan. Located on nearly 300 acres of rolling grassland and woodlands just outside Washington\, DC\, Glenstone offers a serene\, contemplative environment for visitors to experience contemporary art. Glenstone presents post-World War II artworks in a series of indoor and outdoor rooms designed to foster meaningful encounters. The Museum of Modern Art in Warsaw\, Poland (MSN Warsaw) is the Museum’s first permanent home since its founding in 2005\, when it was established as a collecting institution focused on art created since 1989. Defined by a luminous white concrete form and open civic ground floor\, the museum brings art\, public life\, and history into calm\, enduring dialogue. Robert F. Wagner Jr. Park and Pavilion reimagine Battery Park City’s waterfront as a resilient civic landscape. An elevated park conceals flood infrastructure while preserving views\, access\, and ecology. The Pavilion\, designed by Thomas Phifer and Partners\, frames harbor vistas and delivers climate-adapted\, zero-carbon–targeted performance for year-round dining and community programming. \nABOUT THOMAS PHIFER\, FAIA\, Thomas Phifer & Partners\nSince founding his firm in 1997\, Thomas Phifer has completed the Museum of Modern Art in Warsaw\, an expansion of the Glenstone Museum in Potomac\, Maryland\, an expansion of the Corning Museum of Glass in Corning\, New York\, the United States Courthouse in Salt Lake City\, Utah\, the North Carolina Museum of Art in Raleigh\, North Carolina\, the Raymond and Susan Brochstein Pavilion at Rice University in Houston\, Texas\, the Moody Amphitheater in Austin\, Texas\, the Wagner Park Pavilion in Lower Manhattan\, two campus buildings for Indiana University\, and houses across the United States. Projects under construction include the TR Warszawa Theatre in Warsaw\, a laboratory at the Ohio State University\, an artists’ retreat in Maine\, and the Cine Colombia Headquarters in Bogotá\, Colombia. Thomas Phifer is also engaged in private residences in Texas and New York. Since 1997\, Thomas Phifer has received more than thirty honor awards from the American Institute of Architects\, the Rome Prize in Architecture from the American Academy in Rome\, the Medal of Honor and President’s Award from the New York Chapter of the AIA\, the Arts and Letters Award in Architecture from the American Academy of Arts and Letters\, the National Design Award in Architectural Design from the Cooper Hewitt Smithsonian Design Museum\, and Architectural Record’s inaugural “Architect of RECORD” award. He is a lifetime member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters\, a Fellow of the American Institute of Architects\, and serves on the boards of the Architectural League of New York and the New York Review of Architecture. \nREGISTER HERE!\nAIA 1.0 LU HSW and 1.0 LA CES HSW approved \nAIA\, ASLA and NOMA members may register at a discounted rate. \n*We are offering school students free admission! Please bring your school ID to show upon arrival \nPlease note that the venue for this event is not ADA accessible.
URL:https://www.baltimorearchitecturefoundation.org/event/materials-methods-glenstone-and-the-museum-of-modern-art-with-thomas-phifer/
LOCATION:Mount Vernon Place United Methodist Church\, 10 E Mt Vernon Pl\, Baltimore\, MD\, United States
CATEGORIES:Materials & Methods
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.baltimorearchitecturefoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/LS-Promotional-Materials-10.png
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260408T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260408T193000
DTSTAMP:20260507T050556
CREATED:20260316T180607Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260316T181418Z
UID:36411-1775671200-1775676600@www.baltimorearchitecturefoundation.org
SUMMARY:Materials & Methods: Crafting Excellence with Caren Yglesias
DESCRIPTION:ABOUT THIS LECTURE\nNational award-winning projects have something in common: not only are they designed to be sustainable and require zero-net energy once built\, but they also respect and respond to the local community’s history and culture\, as well as the Genius Loci. Further\, they are designed while thinking about form and materials in creative and innovative ways. This presentation looks at thirty projects\, large and small\, by different architects and landscape architects\, for the inspiring ways the traditional fourteen materials are employed reflecting 21st century needs and goals. \nABOUT CAREN YGLESIAS\, PhD\, AIA\, Hon.ASLA\, University of Maryland\n7 years to obtain a Ph.D. in architecture from the University of Pennsylvania after getting a B Arch from Virginia Tech\, MA in philosophy from Georgetown University\, and a MS in Architecture from Penn. \n15 years of service as a member of the American Association of University Women\, reviewing the international fellowship grants in the Arts & Humanities for graduate studies in this country. \n3 books: The Complete House and Grounds: Learning from Andrew Jackson Downing’s Domestic Architecture\, published by the Center for American Places\, Columbia College Chicago in 2011; The Innovative Use of Materials in Architecture and Landscape Architecture: History\, Theory and Performance published by McFarland in 2014; and a monograph of landscape architect Steve Martino’s work\, Desert Gardens of Steve Martino published by The Monacelli Press in 2018\, which was reviewed by the New York Times\, a lifelong dream of mine. Currently working on an expanded and revised second edition of the materials book\, to be released in 2026. \n24 years teaching architecture and landscape architecture at Virginia Tech\, UC Berkeley\, and currently at the University of Maryland\, College Park campus. Courses include history\, theory\, and construction materials and structures. \n40 years as principal of an architecture practice at many scales and primarily in historic districts in Washington\, D.C. \n1 marriage\, 3 children\, 3 grandsons\, and too many dogs to count. \nREGISTER HERE\nAIA 1.0 LU HSW and 1.0 LA CES HSW approved \nAIA\, ASLA and NOMA members may register at a discounted rate. \n*We are offering school students free admission! Please bring your school ID to show upon arrival \nPlease note that the venue for this event is not ADA accessible.
URL:https://www.baltimorearchitecturefoundation.org/event/materials-methods-crafting-excellence-with-caren-yglesias/
LOCATION:Mount Vernon Place United Methodist Church\, 10 E Mt Vernon Pl\, Baltimore\, MD\, United States
CATEGORIES:Materials & Methods
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.baltimorearchitecturefoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/LS-Promotional-Materials-9.png
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260401T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260401T193000
DTSTAMP:20260507T050556
CREATED:20260316T180012Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260316T181343Z
UID:36406-1775066400-1775071800@www.baltimorearchitecturefoundation.org
SUMMARY:Materials & Methods: Bio_Lent Machines with Daniela Atencio & Claudio Rossi
DESCRIPTION:ABOUT THIS LECTURE\nThe presentation examines the contemporary Latin American landscape as a complex\, time-based assemblage of economic\, social\, cultural\, and ecological systems\, shaped by multiple forms of violence ranging from urbanization\, extraction\, and inequality to planetary processes such as climate change. Rather than treating these conditions as static problems\, the lecture frames the collision between architecture\, infrastructure\, and landscape as a productive field for restitution and repair. Through the concept of Bio_lent Machines\, the work proposes restorative architectural devices and pedagogical methodologies that integrate time\, technology\, and nature as mediators. Emphasis is placed on the use of robotic arms as both tools and conceptual mediums within design processes to explore mechanisms capable of reverting\, recomposing\, and redefining relationships within damaged territories. The lecture unfolds an open\, transdisciplinary discussion of design strategies\, technological workflows\, and representational practices across scales\, addressing architecture and landscape as active agents in reorienting violent processes toward regenerative futures. \nABOUT THE SPEAKERS\nDaniela Atencio is an architect and Master of Design Research in Emerging Systems\, Technologies\, and Media from SCI-Arc. She is an Associate Professor and Researcher at the Universidad de Los Andes and Visiting Faculty at Florida International University (2025). Her work focuses on advanced technologies in architecture and design\, including representation\, computational design\, and computer-controlled robotics as creative and critical design instruments. Her research and practice have been widely published and exhibited internationally at venues and platforms such as the Venice Architecture Biennale\, ROB | ARCH (International Association for Robots in Architecture)\, ACADIA\, Parametric Architecture (PA)\, DigitalFUTURES\, SIGraDi\, AD Journal\, Routledge\, and Miami Art Week\, among others. She is the author of Robotic Translations: Design Processes—Latin America\, to be published by ACTAR\, and is an active member of theWomen in Robotics Association and related international research networks. \nClaudio Rossi\, PhD\, is an architect\, researcher\, and tenured professor with more than 25 years of international academic and professional experience. His work investigates the integration of emerging technologies—particularly robotics and artificial intelligence—within landscape-oriented\, socially embedded\, and territorially grounded architectural practices. Rossi’s research and practice address computational representation\, environmental infrastructures\, and territorial design\, with a sustained focus on post-colonial Latin American contexts and the redefinition of architectural agency in ecologically vulnerable regions. His scholarly and creative work has been widely exhibited\, published\, and presented across the Americas\, Europe\, and Australia\, contributing to transdisciplinary debates at the intersection of design\, technology\, and territory. He has received multiple awards and has been invited as a lecturer and visiting professor at institutions including PennDesign\, MIT\, Politecnico di Torino\, and the University of Melbourne. \nREGISTER HERE\nAIA 1.0 LU HSW and 1.0 LA CES HSW approved \nAIA\, ASLA and NOMA members may register at a discounted rate. \n*We are offering school students free admission! Please bring your school ID to show upon arrival \nPlease note that the venue for this event is not ADA accessible.
URL:https://www.baltimorearchitecturefoundation.org/event/materials-methods-bio_lent-machines-with-daniela-atencio-claudio-rossi/
LOCATION:Mount Vernon Place United Methodist Church\, 10 E Mt Vernon Pl\, Baltimore\, MD\, United States
CATEGORIES:Materials & Methods
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.baltimorearchitecturefoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/LS-Promotional-Materials-8.png
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260326T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260326T193000
DTSTAMP:20260507T050556
CREATED:20260316T175350Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260316T181323Z
UID:36398-1774548000-1774553400@www.baltimorearchitecturefoundation.org
SUMMARY:Materials & Methods: Materialism with Daniel Sundlin
DESCRIPTION:ABOUT THIS LECTURE\nWe seek to reclaim the term materialism—not as a symbol of empty consumerism\, but as a meaningful practice: shaping our future through form and matter. For most of our history\, life adapted to the material world around us. That changed the moment we discovered tools\, technology\, and architecture. With them\, we gained the power to shape the material world in service of the life we wanted to lead. Human history can be read as a story told through materials—each breakthrough marking a new chapter in our evolution. We named entire eras after the substances we learned to master: the Stone Age\, the Bronze Age\, the Iron Age\, the Silicon Age. Our ability to manipulate matter has been one of the most powerful forces driving civilization forward. In this spirit\, we invite you on an odyssey through the material world\, as seen through the works of BIG—from the permanence of solid rock to the invisible flow of electrons. \nABOUT DANIEL SUNDLIN\, BIG\nDaniel Sundlin’s approach to design is anchored in holistic thinking\, focusing on the synergies between community\, economy\, ecology\, and sustainability. His design expertise spans various scales\, from product design\, interiors\, and architecture to master planning. Daniel joined BIG Copenhagen in 2008\, and in 2010\, he opened BIG’s first office outside Denmark by establishing BIG New York. As a Partner at BIG\, he has worked on The Height Public School in Arlington\, Virginia; VIA 57 West in Manhattan; Wildflower Film Studios in New York City; and the sustainable Google Bay View campus in California. His work also extends to the urban scale\, including the East Side Coastal Resiliency project (BIG U)\, a master plan to protect 10 miles of Manhattan’s coastline. His urban design projects span the globe\, including Penang South Islands in Malaysia and OCEANIX Busan\, a sustainable floating city prototype in collaboration with the United Nations. In addition to his professional work\, Daniel is involved in academia as a guest critic at various universities and as an instructor at the New York Institute of Technology. \nREGISTER HERE!\nAIA\, ASLA and NOMA members may register at a discounted rate. \n*We are offering school students free admission! Please bring your school ID to show upon arrival \nPlease note that the venue for this event is not ADA accessible.
URL:https://www.baltimorearchitecturefoundation.org/event/materials-methods-materialism-with-daniel-sundlin-big/
LOCATION:MICA Brown Center\, 1301 W Mt Royal Ave\, Baltimore\, MD\, 21217\, United States
CATEGORIES:Materials & Methods
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.baltimorearchitecturefoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/LS-Promotional-Materials-7.png
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