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Contains 4 Component(s), Includes Credits Includes a Live Web Event on 02/05/2025 at 1:30 PM (EST)
Carbon credits are a significant untapped opportunity for landscape architects and the communities they serve. Discover how to participate in high-integrity carbon markets and make a positive climate contribution while continuing to lower your greenhouse gas emissions.
Carbon credits are a significant untapped opportunity for landscape architects and the communities they serve. In this webinar, global and national experts will explain:
- Why carbon markets are important and how they can deliver benefits for underserved communities in the U.S.
- How organizations are improving the integrity of carbon markets
- How carbon credits are being developed by Tribal communities and local governments in the U.S.
- How landscape architects can purchase credits for their projects and offices – or start their own carbon development with clients and partners
Discover how to participate in high-integrity carbon markets and make a positive climate contribution while continuing to lower your greenhouse gas emissions.
Learning Objectives:
- Gain insight into how carbon crediting programs work, their objectives, and how they deliver benefits
- Explore ways to partner with Tribal and other underserved communities, local governments, and carbon developers and make positive climate contributions
- Understand the community benefits of making positive climate contributions while reducing emissions.
Image Credit: Fond Du Lac Band Forest Carbon Project, Minnesota / © Stan Tekiela, courtesy of National Indian Carbon Coalition
Erin Kelly, ASLA, AICP, PMP, PLA
Mark Kenber
Executive Director
The Voluntary Carbon Markets Integrity Initiative (VCMI)
Mark Kenber is Executive Director of VCMI and has worked for nearly three decades on market-based instruments for environmental protection, with a particular focus on carbon markets.
His previous roles include positions at Fundación Natura in Ecuador, WWF’s International Climate Change Program, The Climate Group, Mongoose Energy Ltd, and Climate Advisers. He has also served as Climate Change Advisor to the Ecuadorian Government. Mark is a board member of ICVCM, C:C Brighton and Brighton and Hove Energy Services Cooperative.
Bryan Van Stippen
Program Director
National Indian Carbon Coalition
Bryan Van Stippen is Program Director for National Indian Carbon Coalition, an initiative of the Indian Land Tenure Foundation (ILTF) that provides education, training, and technical assistance to American Indian tribes, Alaska Native Villages & Corporations, Native Hawaiian organizations and First Nations in Canada on the development of carbon credit and renewable energy projects on tribal land. A member of the Oneida Nation of Wisconsin, Van Stippen previously served for seven years as Tribal Attorney for the Ho-Chunk Nation Department of Justice in Wisconsin where he was responsible for land acquisition and other land-related issues. He earned a Bachelors Degree in Business Administration and a Masters in Computer Information Systems from Tarleton State University in Texas. Van Stippen is a graduate of the University of North Dakota School of Law (J.D.); the University of Tulsa College of Law (LL.M. in American Indian and Indigenous Law); and the University of Arizona James E. Rogers College of Law (S.J.D in Indigenous Peoples Law & Policy). He lives with his wife and two children in Green Bay, Wisconsin. Bryan is a representative on the 1t.org US Stakeholder Council, a representative on the Voluntary Carbon Market Initiative Expert Advisory Group, a Legacy Member of the Ecosystem Service Marketplace Consortium, and a representative on the Bipartisan Policy Center Farm and Forest Carbon Solutions Task Force.
Stephen Taglieri
Marketing Director
National Indian Carbon Coalition
Stephen Taglieri is the Marketing Director at the National Indian Carbon Coalition (NICC). Working in the carbon and climate space for more than half a decade, Stephen focusses on telling stories of conservation success and creating impact through the empowerment of underrepresented voices.
Outside of NICC, Stephen is the CEO and Creative Director of Kingdom Multimedia, a creative marketing agency that specializes in the development of communications strategy. Through end-to-end content development, collaborating from the design phase to marketing implementation, Stephen has crafted unique climate messaging meeting his clients’ goals. Previously, he has produced documentaries, written articles, and been the lead photographer for organizations such as the Smithsonian Institute, the International Union for Conservation of Nature, and the American Forest Foundation.
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Contains 9 Product(s)
Join climate action leaders for a 9-part webinar series to share collaborative research and knowledge to advance the goals of decarbonization and biodiversity protection.
A free webinar series for ASLA members hosted by the ASLA Biodiversity & Climate Action Committee
The BCAC leads the implementation of the ASLA Climate Action Plan. This 9-part webinar series from 2024 shares research and knowledge to advance decarbonization and biodiversity goals.
This series is designed to expand knowledge within the profession to achieve the plan’s Vision for 2040 – All landscape architecture projects will simultaneously:
- Achieve zero embodied and operational emissions and increase carbon sequestration
- Provide significant economic benefits in the form of measurable ecosystem services, health co-benefits, sequestration, and green jobs
- Address climate injustices, empower communities, and increase equitable distribution of climate investments
- Restore ecosystems and protect, conserve, and enhance biodiversity.
This webinar series is underwritten by
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Contains 4 Component(s), Includes Credits Recorded On: 12/03/2024
Thoughtfully break down physical and social barriers to create a welcoming atmosphere and ensure parks intentionally support the developmental benefits of inclusive, intergenerational play! Research findings and new data offer unique insights to demonstrate the positive impact of designing outdoor destinations to address the diverse needs of the whole child, the whole environment, and the whole community.
Sponsored by PlayCore
Thoughtfully break down physical and social barriers to create a welcoming atmosphere and ensure parks intentionally support the developmental benefits of inclusive, intergenerational play! Research findings and new data offer unique insights to demonstrate the positive impact of designing outdoor destinations to address the diverse needs of the whole child, the whole environment, and the whole community.
Learning objectives:
- Define playground terminology to clarify the differences between accessible design, universal design, inclusion, and the 7 Principles of Inclusive Playground Design.
- List at least 3 evidence-based design best practices that thoughtfully meet the physical, social-emotional, sensory, cognitive, and communicative needs of all children, including those with disabilities in playground settings.
- Summarize the positive benefits and impact that inclusive play destinations have on community health and wellness.
- Identify key steps to successfully advocate for inclusive play and recreation destinations.
Hosted by ASLA's Children's Outdoor Environments Professional Practice Network (PPN)
Photo: McCandless Park in Milpitas, California / image: © 2024 PatrickSchneiderPhoto.com courtesy of PlayCore
Keith Christensen, Ph.D, ASLA
Department Head and Associate Professor
Utah State University
Dr. Christensen earned a master’s degree in landscape architecture and doctorate in disability studies. He is well-known for his research based on understanding disability through a social constructivist perspective as the limiting of opportunities to take part in community life because of physical and social barriers. Keith's research emphasizes inclusive design and planning practices which support participation in community through the removal of environmental barriers to social access, rather than the regulatory aspects of site-specific design.
Jennie Sumrell, M. Ed. (Moderator)
Community Outreach Director
PlayCore
Jennie worked in the field of childhood development and exceptional learning for nearly fifteen years. She received her Bachelor’s degree in Exceptional Learning from the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga, a master’s certificate in Adaptive & Assistive Technology from the University of Miami, and a Master’s degree in Special Education with a concentration in Early Childhood Education from the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga. Jennie has presented as a guest lecturer at universities and has presented at over 200 regional, state, national, and international conferences and play symposiums on a variety of topics surrounding inclusion, the developmental benefits of play, and aligning evidence-based research to creating high quality outdoor play and learning environments.
Jennie joined PlayCore in 2008, and serves as the Community Outreach Director within PlayCore’s Center for Outreach, Research and Education to support research with our scholar network, create best practice programs to support play and recreation initiatives, provide continuing education through a variety of professional development events, and assist communities in advocating for environments which support the diverse needs of society. Deeply passionate about inclusive, multigenerational play, Jennie utilizes her expertise and personal experiences as a teacher to positively impact the development of innovative play and recreation destinations that focus on community health and wellness.
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Contains 3 Component(s) Recorded On: 11/13/2024
Experts from the ASLA LARE Prep Committee provided their professional experience and insight into the exams. Please note there were technical difficulties with the sound roughly between the 9:30 - 13:30 minute mark.
Industry experts will answer questions about the exams. Benefit from their professional experience and insights as seasoned instructors to address any uncertainties you may have about the new exams. Please note there were technical difficulties with the sound roughly between the 9:30 - 13:30 minute mark.
Madeline Steigerwald, ASLA, PLA
Landscape Architect, Jr. Project Manager
Dix Hite + Partners
Madeline is a former Akronite living in Orlando, Florida. She earned a Bachelor of Science in Landscape Architecture degree with a French minor from The Ohio State University in 2010. After the recession, she found her way back to landscape architecture with a position at Nimrod Long & Associates in Birmingham, Alabama. She gained experience in both public and private work then obtained licensure in June 2017. Later that year, Madeline joined Dix.Hite + Partners where her current project focus includes campus, roadway and streetscape design, multi-family developments, residential design, community hardscape and landscape renovations, and exterior building color studies.
Jeff Holzer, PLA
Landscape Architect
Kimley-Horn
Jeff Holzer is a licensed Landscape Architect in the Commonwealth of Virginia and is a Certified Playground Safety Inspector for Kimley-Horn and Associates. Jeff has 7 years of experience with a practice in active and passive parks, playgrounds, streetscapes, school/universities, and athletic fields. As Kimley-Horn's only CPSI, Jeff has advised on over 70 playgrounds across 19 states. Jeff volunteers on the LARE Prep committee for ASLA, and the REC TALK committee for the National Recreation and Park Association. In 2020, Jeff won the ANOVA sponsored napkin sketch design competition with a sketch and essay entitled Inclusive Playgrounds for All.
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Contains 4 Component(s), Includes Credits Recorded On: 10/29/2024
Invasive species and climate change are interacting to exacerbate negative impacts on native ecosystems. This talk will discuss several research projects aimed at informing proactive invasive species management in light of climate change, focusing specifically on managing the introduction of invasive plants through horticulture.
Invasive species and climate change are interacting to exacerbate negative impacts on native ecosystems. This talk will discuss several research projects aimed at informing proactive invasive species management in light of climate change, focusing specifically on managing the introduction of invasive plants through horticulture. Our current policy framework for addressing the issue of range expansion of invasive plants is insufficient, with a clear need for better regional coordination. Strategies for addressing this will be discussed, using examples from invasive species networks in the Northeast U.S. Case studies will include the Native Plant Trust's habitat management in Concord, MA, to protect a rare violet threatened by the continued presence and spread of glossy buckthorn.
Learning objectives:
- Gain a better understanding of how invasive species and climate change are interacting to exacerbate negative impacts on native ecosystems.
- Glean insights from current research on invasive species management, specifically on managing the introduction of invasive plants through horticulture.
- Learn strategies for counteracting the range expansion of invasive plants.
Hosted by the ASLA Sustainable Design & Development Professional Practice Network (PPN)
Image credit: courtesy of Evelyn Beaury
Evelyn Beaury
Assistant Curator
New York Botanical Garden
Evelyn Beaury is a global change ecologist specializing in the biogeography of invasive plants, climate change and land-use change. She received her PhD from the University of Massachusetts Amherst and conducted Postdoctoral research at Princeton University. Evelyn recently started a permanent position as an Assistant Curator at the New York Botanical Garden.
Erik Sechler
Ecological Programs Coordinator/Ecologist
Native Plant Trust
Erik Sechler has worked as Ecological Programs Coordinator for Native Plant Trust for six years. Prior to being at Native Plant Trust, Erik has worked for the Trustees and NY and PA Natural Heritage Programs as a staff ecologist/ecological information specialist and has a MS in Conservation Biology from Antioch NE University.
CeCe Haydock, ASLA, PLA, SITES AP, LEED AP, WEDG (Moderator)
CeCe Haydock, ASLA, PLA, SITES AP, LEED AP, WEDG, is a licensed New York landscape architect WBE and has practiced in the public as well as the private sector. She is an officer for ASLA’s Sustainable Design & Development Professional Practice Network (PPN), a trustee of the Planting Fields Arboretum State Historic Park in Oyster Bay, NY, a member of the International Council of the Preservation Society of Newport County, and a visiting lecturer at the New York Botanical Garden.
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Contains 5 Component(s), Includes Credits Recorded On: 10/09/2024
The challenge of finding space for the massive amount of renewable energy needed is daunting, but landscape design can help. This panel will present case studies of cutting-edge renewable energy landscapes from Europe, as well as ongoing U.S. explorations of opportunities for landscape design within the renewable energy transition.
The challenge of finding space for the massive amount of renewable energy needed is daunting, but landscape design can help. This panel will present case studies of cutting-edge renewable energy landscapes from Europe, as well as ongoing U.S. explorations of opportunities for landscape design within the renewable energy transition.
Learning objectives:
- Identify the opportunities and challenges associated with the energy transition.
- Gain insights from European best practices on landscape architects' contributions to design for energy landscapes at multiple scales.
- Explore avenues for educational and professional collaboration with National Laboratories and the U.S. Department of Energy.
- Analyze the role of landscape architects in accelerating the energy transition through design.
Nicholas Pevzner
Assistant Professor
University of Pennsylvania
Nicholas Pevzner is an assistant professor in landscape architecture at the University of Pennsylvania Weitzman School of Design, and a Faculty Fellow at the Kleinman Center for Energy Policy at Penn. Nick’s research focuses on energy landscapes, urban ecology, and climate policy. He studies the role of design in infrastructure planning for the clean energy transition, and the impact of energy systems on culturally contested landscapes. His work investigates the impacts of climate policy on physical built environment, on cultural attitudes, and on its implications for spatial justice, while seeking opportunities for design to accelerate decarbonization across sectors.
Yekang Ko, PhD, Affil. ASLA
Associate Professor / Senior Scientist
University of Oregon / Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
Yekang Ko is an Associate Professor of Landscape Architecture at the University of Oregon and a Senior Scientist at the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory. Specializing in sustainable energy landscapes and climate action planning, she directs the Sustainable Cities and Landscapes Hub at APRU. Co-founder of the Landscape for Humanity Lab, her efforts in environmental justice through design have earned her multiple awards, including the CELA Faculty Excellence Awards in Service Learning (2024) and Research (2020). Ko earned her Ph.D. in Landscape Architecture and Environmental Planning from UC Berkeley in 2012.
Jasper Hugtenburg
Landscape Architect
H+N+S Landscape Architects
Jasper Hugtenburg is a senior landscape architect and physical geographer with over 20 years of professional experience, currently working as a project leader for H+N+S Landscape Architects in the Netherlands. His work focusses primarily on regional scale sustainable development plans and strategies. Topics include the energy transition, flood and draught protection and nature inclusive design.
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Contains 5 Component(s), Includes Credits Recorded On: 10/09/2024
Become a policy influencer! Learn to identify and collaborate with key legislators, empowering yourself to shape landscape architecture policies. Position yourself as a valuable resource with insights into protecting health, safety, welfare, and the environment. This session educates and empowers you to become an effective advocate.
Become a policy influencer! Learn to identify and collaborate with key legislators, empowering yourself to shape landscape architecture policies. Position yourself as a valuable resource with insights into protecting health, safety, welfare, and the environment. This session educates and empowers you to become an effective advocate.
Learning objectives:
- Learn effective strategies for advocating for the profession with legislators, government agencies, and the public. Find out why this is critical to protecting public health, safety, and welfare.
- Become an influential constituent by learning how to identify and work with key policy makers and legislators in order to achieve the desired policy outcome.
- Learn how to become a "resource" to policy makers by growing their knowledge of a landscape architect practitioner's ability to protect HSW and the built and natural environment.
- Understand how ASLA empowers you to be an effective advocate for our profession.
Jay Gehler, FASLA, PLA
Senior Landscape Architect
Coleman Company Inc
Jay, a landscape architect with Coleman Company, has over 20 years of advocacy experience at all levels of government and has been instrumental in advancing public recognition and understanding of the profession with policymakers. Jay will highlight the necessity of educating and advocating to policy makers to protect public health, safety, and welfare through licensure of landscape architects. Jay will share tools and resources and use examples of his own experiences in both Wisconsin and Georgia working with state legislators to defend licensure and fight for the right to practice.
Doug Boyer, ASLA, PLA
Associate Principal
EDGE
Doug Boyer, an associate principal at EDGE, has led numerous Ohio Chapter advocacy efforts to defend licensure and improve the understanding and profile of the profession within the State. Whether it be meeting with Ohio’s federal and state lawmakers, policy officials at the Ohio Department of Transportation, or regulators at the Ohio Board of Building Standards, Doug will share how he’s successfully carried the message of landscape architects, as licensed design professionals, in order to grow opportunities for landscape architects to lead projects around the state and the nation.
Janene Jackson
Partner
Holland & Knight
Janene, an attorney and partner with Holland & Knight LLP, works as a lobbyist for the Potomac Chapter of the ASLA. Janene’s wisdom and counsel was crucial to enacting a practice act in the District of Columbia in 2017 and in the Chapter’s recent efforts to eliminate the sales tax on landscape architectural services. Janene will share her insights and guidance on the importance of developing relationships with policy makers at all levels, and on navigating the legislative and regulatory aspects of local government.
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Contains 5 Component(s), Includes Credits Recorded On: 10/09/2024
Latta Place is a historic house and plantation, formerly a home to enslaved people and currently a heritage site within the Mecklenburg County, NC, park system. We will explore the community-driven process to restore the site and recenter its dominant narrative. Lessons for working on complex sites will be shared.
Latta Place is a historic house and plantation, formerly a home to enslaved people and currently a heritage site within the Mecklenburg County, NC, park system. We will explore the community-driven process to restore the site and recenter its dominant narrative. Lessons for working on complex sites will be shared.
Learning objectives:
- Understand processes for inventorying, analyzing, and assessing landmarked sites, including historical research, digital scans, and more.
- Learn about new tactics for community engagement related to complex historic sites and how feedback gathered can inform design.
- Explore representation and storytelling techniques used to present and collectively evaluate potential futures.
- Walk away with more knowledge about how sites with painful pasts can be acknowledged and addressed by landscape architects.
Gina Ford, FASLA
Principal and Co-Founder
Agency Landscape + Planning
Focused on making the public realm more equitable and just, Kounkuey Design Initiative (KDI) is a non-profit design and community development organization that works in disinvested places around the world, collaborating with communities that have been excluded, harmed, or marginalized by traditional design.
Kofi Boone, FASLA
Professor
NC State University
Kofi Boone, FASLA is a professor of landscape architecture and environmental planning at NC State University. His work is in the overlap between landscape architecture and environmental justice with specializations in democratic design and interpreting cultural landscapes. He leads the Just Communities Lab. Along with M. Elen Deming, Kofi is co-editor of Empty Pedestals: Countering Confederate Narratives Through Public Design, forthcoming from LSU Press.Darneka Waters, ASLA
Planner
Mecklenburg County Park and Recreation
Darneka Waters is a Park Planner for Mecklenburg County Park and Recreation, responsible for capital planning and development coordination, public engagement, and master plan implementation for parks, greenways, nature preserves, and more. As an emerging professional and alumna of NC State University, she is known for her participation in industry and community-based organizations. Currently, she is a Black Landscape Architects Network (BlackLAN) Board member and regularly volunteers within the American Society of Landscape Architects (ASLA). Before joining Mecklenburg County, Waters worked on numerous urban design and planning projects as a Landscape Designer at an interdisciplinary firm in Charlotte, NC.
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Contains 5 Component(s), Includes Credits Recorded On: 10/09/2024
Planting design brings the opportunity to create beautiful, inspiring spaces, but also the responsibility to consider the impact of plant selection on long-term maintenance, climate change, and ecosystem health. This session highlights strategies available to professionals facing issues of climate adaptation, shifting cultural values, and complex species interactions.
Planting design brings the opportunity to create beautiful, inspiring spaces, but also the responsibility to consider the impact of plant selection on long-term maintenance, climate change, and ecosystem health. This session highlights strategies available to professionals facing issues of climate adaptation, shifting cultural values, and complex species interactions.
Learning objectives:
- Articulate the intersectionality of health, ecosystem, and economic impacts of invasive plant species.
- Define the evolving role of the nursery trade and landscape architects in bridging the gap between regulation and good practice.
- Describe strategies for invasive species management using a native planting approach.
- Manage invasive species using lessons learned from the field.
Barbara Barnes, ASLA, LEED AP
Ecosystem Restoration Section Leader
HDR Inc
For over twenty years Barbara has worked as a landscape architect, with an emphasis on urban landscapes and ecosystem restoration. Barbara is passionate about the intersection of landscape architecture and planting design and has spoken across the country on the topic. She was HDR’s project manager for the Federal Highway Administration’s “Invasive Species Impacts on Transportation Infrastructure”. The report documented case studies from across the country, which included cost data where available, highlighting the significant impacts invasive species have on transportation infrastructure, life cycle costs, and long-term operations.
Michael Spina, ASLA, PLA
Senior Landscape Architect
HDR
Michael is a professional landscape architect with 15 years of professional experience in ecological design. He works with project teams to develop and implement design and planning strategies that enhance ecosystem structure and function. His primary focus is on coastal climate resilience adaptation, ecological restoration, and green infrastructure, paying particular attention to waterfront access, conservation of biodiversity, and habitat opportunities.
Fran Chismar
Sultan of Sales
Pinelands Nursery
Meet Fran Chismar. Fran has over 35 years of Nursery experience - 17 of which focused in the field of restoration serving as Sultan of Sales for Pinelands Nursery in Columbus, NJ. Fran is knowledgeable in the field of native plants and their use in restoration, reforestation, and mitigation. Fran has had speaking engagements for such organizations as The Native Plant Society of NJ, Xfinity Sustainability Week, Ecological Landscape Alliance, Society of Ecological Restoration, and Wild Ones.. Fran is also Co-Host of The Native Plants, Healthy Planet Podcast which is consistently ranked as a Top 20 Podcast on Apple Podcast.
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Contains 5 Component(s), Includes Credits Recorded On: 10/08/2024
How do we create landscapes that people connect to? Beginning with uncovering the character and cultural narratives of the site, this session explores material authenticity as a way of cultivating a sense of place. The speakers discuss the imaginative potential of vegetation, stone, metal, and concrete to create powerful human experiences.
How do we create landscapes that people connect to? Beginning with uncovering the character and cultural narratives of the site, this session explores material authenticity as a way of cultivating a sense of place. The speakers discuss the imaginative potential of vegetation, stone, metal, and concrete to create powerful human experiences.
Learning objectives:
- Learn from unique projects about the art of reading and uncovering the essential character of a site and interpreting ideas into material expression.
- Learn the significance of countering today's rapid replacement of unique sites with generic landscape identities by creating powerful, unique, immersive atmospheres and storytelling of place.
- Learn about the constraints and opportunities of material fabrication and installation.
- Examine the dynamics of collaborating on landscape projects with fabricators, artists, etc.
Roderick Wyllie, FASLA
Founding Partner
Surfacedesign, Inc.
Roderick Wyllie, FASLA, is a founding partner of Surfacedesign, Inc. Based in San Francisco, California, Surfacedesign was recipient of the Cooper Hewitt National Design Award in 2017. Roderick's horticultural knowledge and passion for material authenticity reinforce craftsmanship and attention to detail into each project at Surfacedesign. He has led a variety of complex, award-winning projects, including the Uber Campus, Bayfront Park, Lands End Visitor Center, and Expedia HQ. Roderick received his Masters in Landscape Architecture from Harvard Graduate School of Design. Roderick has taught studios on salient topics in Landscape Architecture at Harvard GSD and other institutions.Robin Winogrond, ASLA
Ms. Robin Winogrond
Robin Winogrond. landscape arc
Robin Winogrond is an American landscape architect and urban designer practicing in Switzerland. She is internationally recognized for award-winning projects, lectures, teaching and publishing, including Harvard GSD 2019-2021. Her interdisciplinary background in Landscape Architecture, Urban Design, Architecture and Art is reflected in projects ranging from built urban spaces and open space planning to installations. Atmosphere, imagination, identity and Social Urbanism are central themes. Under the title In Search of Geographical Re-enchantment, projects express the specific, poetic potential of residual sites, transforming their inherent identity and contradictions into powerful experiences. She is co-founder of Studio Vulkan where she was partner 2014-2020.Mark Rogero
Founder
Concreteworks
Mark Rogero was trained in architecture and began his focus and passion for making as a student at New Jersey Institute of Technology. Inspired by the work of Lois Kahn and Le Corbusier, Mark’s fascination with concrete and its design and structural possibilities led him to found Concreteworks in Emeryville, California in 1991. Mark began a life-long practice working with concrete’s versatility and cutting-edge innovative applications. Concreteworks today is a team of seventy-five designers, engineers and makers who collaborate with award-winning designers and architects around the globe in developing innovative and artful solutions in concrete.-
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