My WebLink
|
Help
|
About
|
Sign Out
Home
Browse
Search
04-04-2007 American Institute of Architects Kicks Off National Architecture Week in South Bend
sbend
>
Public
>
News Releases
>
2007
>
04-04-2007 American Institute of Architects Kicks Off National Architecture Week in South Bend
Metadata
Thumbnails
Annotations
Entry Properties
Last modified
5/3/2011 4:15:54 PM
Creation date
5/3/2011 4:15:44 PM
Metadata
There are no annotations on this page.
Document management portal powered by Laserfiche WebLink 9 © 1998-2015
Laserfiche.
All rights reserved.
/
5
PDF
Print
Pages to print
Enter page numbers and/or page ranges separated by commas. For example, 1,3,5-12.
After downloading, print the document using a PDF reader (e.g. Adobe Reader).
Show annotations
View images
View plain text
a <br /> AIA Northern Indiana UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME <br /> A Chapter of the American Institute of Architects SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE <br /> Larson was one of the most active campus architects in the 1930's-50's and literally <br /> "wrote the book" on campus planning techniques, as Kelly says. <br /> 3) Kevin Clark, an associate with Historical Concepts,Atlanta. They are planning a college <br /> town for Regency College on a nearby 30-acre greenfield site. <br /> 4) Milton Grenfell, founding principal of Grenfell Architecture and Bob Chapman, <br /> developer. They will discuss Duke. Duke's west campus was envisioned as a campus set <br /> off in a forest, rather on the monastic model. The result is a blighted no man's land <br /> between Duke and the surrounding city. Their work at Duke has been about changing <br /> this situation. Bob will share the numbers end of things and the nuts and bolts of <br /> development. <br /> 12:00 to 1:00 pm, Lunch break. Participants are on their own, although we hope to have Cafe <br /> Poche open and(or box lunches and pop available for sale. <br /> 1:00 to 4:30 pm, Bond Hall Auditorium <br /> 1) Alicia Berg, former Commissioner of Chicago Department of Planning and Development <br /> and Vice President of Campus Environment, Columbia College, Chicago. She will <br /> discuss incentives needed for businesses to get on board with supporting a mixed-use <br /> development especially as it pertains to college towns. She will describe how mixed-use <br /> developments improve the quality of life of students, faculty and local residents, as well <br /> as leasing and demographic issues. <br /> 2) Cynthia van Zelm, executive director of the Mansfield Downtown Partnership. An <br /> independent, non-profit organization charged with coordinating the enhancement and <br /> revitalization of Mansfield's commercial areas. Mansfield Downtown is a public-private <br /> partnership composed of representatives from the community, business, town, and the <br /> University of Connecticut. The group is actively involved the college town the University <br /> of Connecticut is creating. <br /> 3) Kite, the developer for a retail-residential development south of Notre Dame. Kite <br /> reached an agreement with Notre Dame in spring 2007 to develop 26 acres along Eddy <br /> Street and Edison Road. Besides shops and restaurants, the project is expected to <br /> include about 100 apartments above the retail area; about 195 townhouses and 80 <br /> condominiums along Eddy south and east of the retail corridor; a 150-room hotel; and a <br /> parking garage for 270 to 400 vehicles. <br /> 4) Round Table Discussion moderated by Prof. David Mayernik. Participants to be <br /> determined. <br /> AIA <br />
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.