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ROSE Family Bulletin
ROSE Family Bulletin Editors: Christine Rose, CG, CGL, FASG and Seymour T. Rose 761 Villa Teresa Way, San Jose, CA 95123 ©2013 website: http://RoseFamilyAssociation.com email: [email protected] MARCH 2013 Vol. XLVII Whole No. 189 Established 1966 Samuel Rose of Wilkes County, North Carolina Descendants Courtesy of Joe Smith 50th Wedding Anniversary of Bart and Arta Thompson in 1955 with all of their ten children. L. to r.: Arl, Eva, Morris, Fielder, Edwin, Bart, Arta, Raynard, Lava, Lula, Lena, and Lila (mother of Joe Smith) For more information on Joe Smith’s family see Rose Family Bulletin March 2012 XLVI No. 185 pp. 5701-5703. Joe is a descendant of Samuel1 and Lydia (Sizemore) Rose of Wilkes County, North Carolina through their son Isaiah2 Rose (m. Mary Baugus), their son Bryant3 Rose (m. Rosamond Wyatt), and their son Barton4 Rose, father of Barton Thompson. We encourage submissions from members of one to one and a half pages on your Rose family. These submissions should be on generations closer to the present day descendants - perhaps parents, grand- parents, or even remembered great-grandparents. These are not intended to be genealogical in nature but focused on the personalties, occupations, remembrances of holidays, etc. We all enjoy these personalized accounts. Rose Family Bulletin - Volume XLVII- Whole Number 189 March 2013 Samuel Rose and Lydia (Sizemore) Rose descendants with photo ...................................................................................5427 Dear Readers ..............................................................................................................................................................................5429 -
Architecture Program Report for 2012 NAAB Visit for Continuing Accreditation
Harvard Graduate School of Design Department of Architecture Architecture Program Report for 2012 NAAB Visit for Continuing Accreditation Master of Architecture Undergraduate degree outside of Architecture + 105 graduate credit hours Related pre-professional degree + 75 graduate credit hours Year of the Previous Visit: 2006 Current Term of Accreditation: At the July 2006 meeting of the National Architectural Accrediting Board (NAAB), the board reviewed the Visiting Team Report for the Harvard University Department of Architecture. As a result, the professional architecture program: Master of Architecture was formally granted a six-year term of accreditation. The accreditation term is effective January 1, 2006. The program is scheduled for its next accreditation visit in 2012. Submitted to: The National Architectural Accrediting Board Date: 14 September 2011 Harvard Graduate School of Design Architecture Program Report September 2011 Program Administrator: Jen Swartout Phone: 617.496.1234 Email: [email protected] Chief administrator for the academic unit in which the program is located (e.g., dean or department chair): Preston Scott Cohen, Chair, Department of Architecture Phone: 617.496.5826 Email: [email protected] Chief Academic Officer of the Institution: Mohsen Mostafavi, Dean Phone: 617.495.4364 Email: [email protected] President of the Institution: Drew Faust Phone: 617.495.1502 Email: [email protected] Individual submitting the Architecture Program Report: Mark Mulligan, Director, Master in Architecture Degree Program Adjunct Associate Professor of Architecture Phone: 617.496.4412 Email: [email protected] Name of individual to whom questions should be directed: Jen Swartout, Program Coordinator Phone: 617.496.1234 Email: [email protected] 2 Harvard Graduate School of Design Architecture Program Report September 2011 Table of Contents Section Page Part One. -
Newsletter No. 4, July 2016 Dear Diploma Alumna/Us Greetings from London Where the Mood Is Very Sombre Following the Result of the EU Referendum
Newsletter No. 4, July 2016 Dear Diploma Alumna/us Greetings from London where the mood is very sombre following the result of the EU referendum. It is very hard for those of us who voted to remain in the EU to see the country turning its back on our neighbours and allies and the larger European project. We will have to work harder to maintain connections and contacts. Since the last newsletter in May 2015, another group of ten students has graduated and we welcome them to the Diploma Alumni Group. This brings the number of people who have been awarded the Diploma since 1963 to over 500 (including those who have since died). But this has also been a year of losses. I am sorry to report the death in Japan on November 9, 2015, of Tetsuko Abe Am.S.Dipl ’67, at the age of 82. In addition, two professors who were involved with the Diploma program Daniel Aaron on the steps of Tyler Annex, in its early years have passed away. Smith College, Daniel Aaron died on April 30, 2016, aged 103. He taught May 1999 at Smith, where he was the Mary Augusta Jordan Professor of English, for thirty years from 1939. Having received one of the first doctorates in American Civilization from Harvard in 1943, Dan was among the group of faculty who introduced a pioneering American Studies undergraduate program at Smith, and then led the committee (of which Peter Rose was a junior member) that inaugurated the Diploma in American Studies in 1962. Members of the Diploma classes from the 1960s, such as Lien Guidon Am.S.Dipl ’65, recall with gratitude the role he played in recruiting them to the program. -
Princeton Architectural Press
PRINCETON ARCHITECTURAL PRESS Spring 2010 The luck of the draw. From Obsessive Consumption, p. 10 The ingredients for an unforgettable evening. From Lists, p. 12 Princeton Architectural Press Recycled paperboard mailing tubes are transformed into shelves for small objects. From Exploring Materials, p. 28 Unfolding Ludlow’s Concentric Chart of History. From Cartographies of Time, p. 14 Princeton Architectural Press Princeton Architectural Press Out on a limb in a woodland twilight zone. From Bird Watching, p. 16 www.papress.com | 1-800-759-0190 Imbuing the day-to-day with poetry and awe. From Natural Houses, p. 21 www.papress.com | 1-800-759-0190 PRINCETON ARCHITECTURAL PRESS perennials Spring 2010 PRINCETON ARCHITECTURAL PRESS 10 Obsessive Consumption 12 Lists 14 Cartographies of Time 1 Bird Watching 18 BEE 20 Natural Houses 22 Modern North 24 Earth Architecture 24 Tom Leader Studio 25 Marina City 2 Newtown Creek 28 Exploring Materials The Map as Art Drawing from Life Lettering and Type You Are Here 978-1-56898-762-0 / $45.00 978-1-56898-445-2 / $25.00 978-1-56898-765-1 / $24.95 978-1-56898-430-8 / $24.95 30 By Hand 30 Dot Dot Dot 19 31 Transmaterial 3 32 Above the Pavement—the Farm! 33 Street Value 34 City Building 35 Architecture From the Outside In 3 Contructing a New Agenda 3 Life on the Lower East Side 3 Peter Rose 38 Explorations 39 Kuth/Raneiri Architects 40 Fabricating Architecture 40 Solid States 41 Building Envelopes The Handy Book of Artistic Printing Lickshot A Year of Mornings The Guerilla Art Kit 41 Thermally Active Surfaces in Architecture 978-1-56898-705-7 / $40.00 978-1-56898-838-2 / $50.00 978-1-56898-688-3 / $19.95 978-1-56898-784-2 / $21.95 42 University of California, San Diego 42 Young Architects II 43 LEED Materials 44 Building (in) the Future 44 The Liberal Monument 45 The Green House 45 Fraktur Mon Amour BALCONY PRESS 4 Miami Modern Metropolis 4 Paris HYPHEN PRESS 4 At.. -
The Dissolving Corporation
THE DISSOLVING CORPORATION Contemporary Architecture and Corporate Identity in Finland Peter MacKeith www.eva.fi EVA´s homepage contains reports, articles and other material in Finnish and in English. Publisher: Taloustieto Oy Cover: Antti Eklund Printing: Yliopistopaino 2005 ISBN 951-628-424-8 PREFACE In the past few years, the Finnish Business and Policy Forum EVA has treated the issues of creativity and business-culture interaction with growing interest. This report is an extension of the June, 2004 EVA conference on “Creativity through Competitiveness” and is published in co-operation with the Creative Finland Association. Entertaining a subject quite different from past EVA report themes, this essay offers one perspective on the state of Finnish corporate architecture within the more general context of corporate management practices and ar- chitectural innovations. In this report, Professor Peter MacKeith argues that in the contempora- ry moment of global, open-market economies, Finnish architecture is at a critical juncture. This condition is reflected precisely in recent headquarters architecture produced by Finnish corporations. Whereas a hundred years ago corporate headquarters were central elements of the surrounding cultural and urban environment, expressing values of the emerging national consciousness, today’s Finnish corporate headquar- ters have adopted a style of neutrality and anonymity, and situated themselves outside of the public realm. Professor MacKeith calls for a corporate architecture that takes into account issues of sustainable de- velopment and the corporation’s relationship to the society, culture and civic realm in which it is physically situated. Along with the desired image and values communicated by a building’s form to the outside world, corporate office planning has also adopted new objectives. -
2016 AIA Fellowship Entry 134079 Nominee Peter Rose Organization Peter Rose + Partners Location Boston, Massachusetts Chapter Boston Society of Architects
This cover section is produced by the AIA Archives to show information from the online submission form. It is not part of the pdf submission upload. 2016 AIA Fellowship Entry 134079 Nominee Peter Rose Organization Peter Rose + Partners Location Boston, Massachusetts Chapter Boston Society of Architects Category of Nomination Category One - Design Summary Statement Peter Rose is a recognized leader in architectural and urban design whose superbly detailed institutional, residential, and urban design projects choreograph revelatory architectural experiences and blur the boundaries between the built environment and landscape. Education Yale University New Haven, CT 1968-1970 Master of Architecture, 1970 Yale University New Haven, CT 1962-1966 Bachelor of Arts, 1966 Licensed in: Quebec, Canada Massachusetts Connecticut New York Missouri Colorado Employment Peter Rose + Partners Boston, MA Founding Principal 2009 - present (six years) The Rose + Guggenheimer Studio Cambridge, MA; New York, NY Founding Principal 2003 - 2009 (six years) The Office of Peter Rose Cambridge, MA Founding Principal 1991 - 2003 (12 years) Peter Rose Architecte Montreal, Quebec, Canada Founding Principal 1978 - 1991 (13 years) い←Uの←一二。』く 140ctober2015 一シのヨ DianeCeorgopuIosFAIA,Chair juryofFellows TheAmericanlnstituteofArchitects 1735NewYorl<Avenue,NW 盧○二←己匡O「。 WaShington,DC2006-5292 Nomj"α"o"ofPeterRose/br屍ノノo'Mル巾ofA/ASI)o"sorLetter DearMs・GeoigopulosandMembersofthe」uryofFellows, EoU。U」○一シ④一◇芸三宝叩。@一・卜ので。(一○×。}”のマ○・卜働マ、ト{。一①←○一一卿。○戸上仁。←⑱O幻一⑪⑨』←岬宮oUC④タ心幻画 ltiswithgreatconfidence,energeticenthusiasm,andasenseofhonorandthatlwriteas -
Town Hall Meeting
Town Hall Meeting June 15th, 2010 Agenda 1. Enrolment 2. Reputation 3. The Student Experience 4. Academic Mission 5. People 6. Academic Administrative Structures 7. Governance 8. Infrastructure 9. Finances 10. Foundation 11. Priorities and planning Enrolment Reaching Enrolment Goals mid-June 2009 mid-June 2010 % increase Applications 1,766 2,123 20% Offers 1,391 1,686 21% Confirmations 660 839 21% Residence confirmations 526 651 23% Actual September 2009: 736 students Projected September 2010: 810 students Enrolment Full time undergraduate student enrolment 2500 2400 2300 2200 2206 2100 2000 1925 1900 1954 1800 1834 1700 1740 1600 1500 Enrolment How Have We Achieved This? 1) Focused Efforts i. Regions – Quebec (24% ↑ apps), Ontario (16% ↑), New England (36% ↑) ii. Particular Schools: John Abbott & Cegep de Sherbrooke (Quebec); Mount Mansfield & Lyndon Institute (Vermont); St. Marks & Trinity College (Ontario) iii. Students- interests (e.g. Skiing, mountain biking) iv. Bishop‟s English language and Acculturation Program (B.E.A.P.) - More than 20 Chinese currently enrolled 2) New Office Structure i. Differentiated roles e.g. - Quebec (Charlene Marion); - Canada (Mark Lawson); - New England (Eddie Pomykala); and - Office Coordinator (Jackie Belleau) ii. Integrated recruitment and admission team (led by Hans Rouleau). 3) Improved Communications i. New admissions website ii. Targeted communications based on applicants‟ profiles iii. Attention to follow-through, responsiveness and personalization iv. Emphasized campus visits (increase of 60% year-over-year) Enrolment How Have We Achieved This? 4) Increased Engagement of Current Students i. Enhanced personalization of campus visit experience ii. Enhanced presence at key external activities (science fairs, ski hills, receptions) iii. -
Paige Mcwhorter, 617-391-4028 Or [email protected] [Editor’S Note: High-Resolution Images Are Available Upon Request.]
Boston Society for Architecture P: 617-391-4000 290 Congress Street, Suite 200 F: 617-951-0845 Boston, MA 02210-1024 architects.org FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: January 25, 2021 Media contact: Paige McWhorter, 617-391-4028 or [email protected] [Editor’s note: High-resolution images are available upon request.] The Boston Society for Architecture (BSA) announces the winners of the 2020 BSA Design Awards and the 2020 BSA Honors and Awards at the annual BSA Awards Gala. Boston (January 25, 2021)—The Boston Society for Architecture (BSA) is pleased to announce the winners of the following 2020 BSA Design Awards: Campus Planning and Urban Design; Healthcare Facilities Design; Honor Awards for Design Excellence, juried by AIA Atlanta; Interior Architecture and Design; K-12 Education Facilities Design; Residential Design, hosted in partnership with AIA New York; Sustainable Design; Unbuilt Architecture and Design; the Harleston Parker Medal; and the People’s Choice Award, selected from the Harleston Parker Medal finalists. Other awards and honors, given to individuals by their peers, included the BSA Award of Honor, the BSA Commonwealth Award, the BSA Earl R. Flansburgh Award, and BSA Honorary Membership. The winners were revealed at the BSA Awards Gala (Gala) on January 21, during a virtual ceremony. The Gala was sponsored by: Gold Sponsor: Huber; Silver Sponsors: Copley Wolff Design Group, Crown Point Cabinetry, DGC, EPIC Metals, Hanover Architectural Products, Lam Partners, Robert Benson Photography; and Bronze Sponsors: Acentech, Best -
School of Architecture 2001–2002
School of Architecture 2001–2002 bulletin of yale university Series 97 Number 3 June 30, 2001 Bulletin of Yale University Postmaster: Send address changes to Bulletin of Yale University, PO Box 208227, New Haven ct 06520-8227 PO Box 208230, New Haven ct 06520-8230 Periodicals postage paid at New Haven, Connecticut Issued sixteen times a year: one time a year in May, October, and November; two times a year in June and September; three times a year in July; six times a year in August Managing Editor: Linda Koch Lorimer Editor: David J. Baker Editorial and Publishing Office: 175 Whitney Avenue, New Haven, Connecticut Publication number (usps 078-500) The closing date for material in this bulletin was June 20, 2001. The University reserves the right to withdraw or modify the courses of instruction or to change the instructors at any time. ©2001 by Yale University. All rights reserved. The material in this bulletin may not be repro- duced, in whole or in part, in any form, whether in print or electronic media, without written permission from Yale University. Open House All interested applicants are invited to attend the School’s Open House: Thursday, November 1, 2001. Inquiries Requests for additional information may be directed to the Registrar, Yale School of Architecture, PO Box 208242, 180 York Street, New Haven ct 06520-8242; telephone, 203.432.2296; fax, 203.432.7175. Web site: www.architecture.yale.edu/ Photo credits: John Jacobson, Sarah Lavery, Michael Marsland, Victoria Partridge, Alec Purves, Ezra Stoller Associates, Yale Office of Public Affairs School of Architecture 2001–2002 bulletin of yale university Series 97 Number 3 June 30, 2001 c yale university ce Pla Lake 102-8 Payne 90-6 Whitney — Gym south Ray York Square Place Tompkins New House Residence rkway er Pa Hall A Tow sh m u n S Central tree Whalley Avenue Ezra Power Stiles t Morse Plant north The Yale Bookstore > Elm Street Hall of Graduate Studies Mory’s Sterling St. -
School of Architecture 2012–2013
BULLETIN OF YALE UNIVERSITY BULLETIN OF YALE BULLETIN OF YALE UNIVERSITY Periodicals postage paid New Haven ct 06520-8227 New Haven, Connecticut School of Architecture 2012–2013 School of Architecture 2012–2013 BULLETIN OF YALE UNIVERSITY Series 108 Number 4 June 30, 2012 BULLETIN OF YALE UNIVERSITY Series 108 Number 4 June 30, 2012 (USPS 078-500) The University is committed to basing judgments concerning the admission, education, is published seventeen times a year (one time in May and October; three times in June and employment of individuals upon their qualifications and abilities and a∞rmatively and September; four times in July; five times in August) by Yale University, 2 Whitney seeks to attract to its faculty, sta≠, and student body qualified persons of diverse back- Avenue, New Haven CT 0651o. Periodicals postage paid at New Haven, Connecticut. grounds. In accordance with this policy and as delineated by federal and Connecticut law, Yale does not discriminate in admissions, educational programs, or employment against Postmaster: Send address changes to Bulletin of Yale University, any individual on account of that individual’s sex, race, color, religion, age, disability, or PO Box 208227, New Haven CT 06520-8227 national or ethnic origin; nor does Yale discriminate on the basis of sexual orientation or gender identity or expression. Managing Editor: Linda Koch Lorimer University policy is committed to a∞rmative action under law in employment of Editor: Lesley K. Baier women, minority group members, individuals with disabilities, and covered veterans. PO Box 208230, New Haven CT 06520-8230 Inquiries concerning these policies may be referred to the Director of the O∞ce for Equal Opportunity Programs, 221 Whitney Avenue, 203.432.0849 (voice), 203.432.9388 The closing date for material in this bulletin was June 1, 2012. -
Jeremy Ficca, AIA 412-268-6667
05.11 05.11 Jeremy Ficca, AIA 412-268-6667 (t) 2010 Public Parking, Undergraduate Research Project / Exhibition [URO] 412-268-7819 (f) Zach Cohen and Stephanie Newcomb [email protected] Carnegie Mellon University Professional Status Invited Design Juries Since 2006 Registered Architect 2011 Colgate University National Council of Architectural Registration Boards, USA 2010 University of Michigan Since 2006 Licensed Architect 2010 University of Minnesota – Graduate Thesis Juror State of North Carolina, USA 2010 University of Pennsylvania Since 2009 Licensed Architect 2009 University of Wisconsin Milwaukee State of Pennsylvania, USA 2008 Penn State University - Kossman Thesis Juror 2007 University of Florida Professional Memberships 2006 Penn State University 2007- Present American Institute of Architects 2006 Clemson University 2006 University of Cincinatti Education 2004 Syracuse University 2000 Post-Professional Master of Architecture 2003 Virginia Tech Harvard University 2002 University of Tennessee 1996 Bachelor of Architecture 2001 Northeastern University Virginia Tech Practice Academic Appointments 2007-present Ficca Architecture (Pittsburgh, PA) Principal and founding Partner Carnegie Mellon University Commissioned Projects 2010-Present Associate Professor, Coordinator of Spring Semester Second Year Design Program Quantum Theater – Mobile Entrance, Pittsburgh, PA (completed 2011) Director, Digital Fabrication Lab Gamma Sports Lobby, Pittsburgh, PA (unbuilt) 2007-2010 Assistant Professor, Coordinator of Spring Semester Second Year Design -
The Arnold Arboretum of Harvard University
THE ARNOLD ARBORETUM OF HARVARD UNIVERSITY DIRECTOR’S REPORT: 2003–2007 Robert E. Cook, Director ARNOLDIA • VOLUME 65 • NUMBER 4 Arnoldia (ISSN 004-2633; USPS 866-100) is published quarterly by the Arnold Arboretum of Harvard University. Periodicals postage paid at Boston, Massachusetts. Copyright © 2008. The President and Fellows of Harvard College. The Arnold Arboretum of Harvard University 125 Arborway, Boston, Massachusetts 02130 FRONT COVER: Weld Hill research facility, design sketch of Centre Street view (detail); KlingStubbins. BACK COVER: Model of Weld Hill research facility by GPI Models; photographs by Desroches Photography. Top main entrance and laboratory wing on the north side of the building; Bottom courtyard and greenhouses on the south side of the building. Quercus (oak) collection by Jon Hetman Introduction arly this spring, the Arnold Arboretum began construction of a new research and administration building at Weld Hill, Ea fourteen-acre parcel of land adjacent to the grounds of the Arboretum (see Figure 1). It will be the first major building added in nearly half a century. The Weld Hill facility, as we are calling it for now, will have nearly 44,000 square feet of floor area and cost approximately $42,000,000. Its greenhouses, growth chambers, and modern laborato- ries will provide state-of-the-art facilities for plant research. The construction of the building marks a major milestone in the history of the Arboretum and a reaffirmation of our mission as a research institution at Harvard University. In this Director’s Report, I will focus on a physical description of the building and its location, the decisions that led to its construction, and the implications of its Figure 1.