BEGIN:VCALENDAR VERSION:2.0 PRODID:-//School of Architecture & Urban Planning - ECPv6.15.18//NONSGML v1.0//EN CALSCALE:GREGORIAN METHOD:PUBLISH X-WR-CALNAME:School of Architecture & Urban Planning X-ORIGINAL-URL:/architecture X-WR-CALDESC:Events for School of Architecture & Urban Planning REFRESH-INTERVAL;VALUE=DURATION:PT1H X-Robots-Tag:noindex X-PUBLISHED-TTL:PT1H BEGIN:VTIMEZONE TZID:America/Chicago BEGIN:DAYLIGHT TZOFFSETFROM:-0600 TZOFFSETTO:-0500 TZNAME:CDT DTSTART:20240310T080000 END:DAYLIGHT BEGIN:STANDARD TZOFFSETFROM:-0500 TZOFFSETTO:-0600 TZNAME:CST DTSTART:20241103T070000 END:STANDARD BEGIN:DAYLIGHT TZOFFSETFROM:-0600 TZOFFSETTO:-0500 TZNAME:CDT DTSTART:20250309T080000 END:DAYLIGHT BEGIN:STANDARD TZOFFSETFROM:-0500 TZOFFSETTO:-0600 TZNAME:CST DTSTART:20251102T070000 END:STANDARD BEGIN:DAYLIGHT TZOFFSETFROM:-0600 TZOFFSETTO:-0500 TZNAME:CDT DTSTART:20260308T080000 END:DAYLIGHT BEGIN:STANDARD TZOFFSETFROM:-0500 TZOFFSETTO:-0600 TZNAME:CST DTSTART:20261101T070000 END:STANDARD BEGIN:DAYLIGHT TZOFFSETFROM:-0600 TZOFFSETTO:-0500 TZNAME:CDT DTSTART:20270314T080000 END:DAYLIGHT BEGIN:STANDARD TZOFFSETFROM:-0500 TZOFFSETTO:-0600 TZNAME:CST DTSTART:20271107T070000 END:STANDARD END:VTIMEZONE BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20250911T163000 DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250911T173000 DTSTAMP:20260419T061808 CREATED:20250730T210057Z LAST-MODIFIED:20250730T214126Z UID:10000007-1757608200-1757611800@uwm.edu SUMMARY:Storytelling and Connecting Community Through Design DESCRIPTION:Date & TimeThursday\, September 11\, 2025 (4:30–5:30 p.m.) \n\n\n\n\n\nLocationArchitecture & Urban Planning Building\, Lecture Hall (AUP 170) \n\n\n\n\n\nA creative director reflects on the power of story and public engagement to influence design when creating spaces and experiences that connect people in a designed environment. \n\n\n\nThe Art Studio at RDG Planning & Design is honored to have been selected as an exhibitor participant at the U.S. Pavilion at the 19th International Architecture Exhibition of La Biennale di Venezia. This year’s U.S. exhibition theme\, “PORCH: An Architecture of Generosity\,” developed by the commissioning design team\, sets the stage for a way of thinking about a “porch ethos” in design that creates ‘between’ moments of social space and fosters renewed connections between individuals and community. Join me as we explore the power of story\, public engagement and site-responsive design work featuring the exhibited project “Do Something GOOD for your Neighbor” in the Como community in Fort Worth\, TX and more. \n\n\n\nBiography\n\n\n\nMatt Niebuhr RDG Planning & Design\, Senior PartnerRDG Art Studio\, Artist and Creative Director \n\n\n\nMatt Niebuhr is an artist and designer and serves as the Creative Director of the Art Studio at RDG Planning & Design\, where he is also a Senior Partner. With a background in architecture and a Bachelor of Architecture with Distinction from Iowa State University\, Matt brings over two decades of experience integrating public art into the built environment. His award-winning work spans the U.S.\, from major transit hubs and airports to civic spaces and universities. Matt is known for his thoughtful approach that blends research\, community engagement and narrative exploration to shape art that enriches public spaces. His projects have been recognized for excellence in craft and design and featured in publications and exhibitions nationally and internationally. Whether guiding large-scale installations or mentoring creative teams\, Matt’s work reflects a deep commitment to collaboration and the power of art to transform experience and place. URL:/architecture/event/storytelling-and-connecting-community-through-design/ LOCATION:Lecture Hall (AUP 170)\, 2131 E Hartford Ave\, Milwaukee\, WI\, 53211\, United States CATEGORIES:Architecture,Arts and Culture,Lectures Conferences and Symposiums,51 Campus Events ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:/architecture/wp-content/uploads/sites/695/2025/07/Niebuhr_Matt-primary-Melissa-Gray_CAL.jpg X-TRIBE-STATUS: END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20250917T120000 DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250917T130000 DTSTAMP:20260419T061808 CREATED:20250730T211341Z LAST-MODIFIED:20250902T174124Z UID:10000008-1758110400-1758114000@uwm.edu SUMMARY:Mobilizing Regions: Workforce Rideshare and Regional Transit DESCRIPTION:Date & TimeWednesday\, September 17 (12-1 p.m.) \n\n\n\n\n\nLocationVirtual \n\n\n\n\n\nAn Innovative Cities Lecture\n\n\n\nColumbus and Milwaukee are illustrating how innovative transit solutions can strengthen regional connectivity\, expand access to opportunity\, and serve as models for communities nationwide.  \n\n\n\nSince 1992\, MobiliSE has championed innovative ways to connect Southeast Wisconsin through a range of transportation alternatives. Learn about their regional strategies and how these efforts led to FlexRide Milwaukee\, a groundbreaking on-demand workforce transportation service that has already helped nearly 5\,000 people reach jobs in nearby suburbs.  \n\n\n\nIn Columbus\, Ohio\, the Central Ohio Transit Authority (COTA) is reshaping regional mobility with initiatives like bus rapid transit expansion\, first/last mile connections\, and partnerships with community organizations. These efforts are improving access to employment centers\, food markets\, and essential services—demonstrating how coordinated transportation planning can drive both economic growth and equity.  \n\n\n\nBiographies\n\n\n\nDave Steele serves as the Executive Director of MobiliSE. Under Dave’s leadership\, MobiliSE has grown its impact as a convener and advocate\, spearheading the development and launch of FlexRide Milwaukee\, an on demand workforce transportation service that has helped 5\,000 Milwaukeeans access jobs since its launch in 2022.  \n\n\n\nPrior to leading MobiliSE\, Dave worked in K-12 education reform\, serving as President & CEO of PAVE\, a school support organization in Milwaukee. He holds a Masters Degree in Urban Planning from University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee and a Bachelors in Political Science from University of Wisconsin-Madison. He also holds a certificate from Harvard Business School’s Social Enterprise Insitute\, a global network of public and non profit leaders working toward systems change.   \n\n\n\nDave is a Milwaukee native\, a regular transit rider\, and resides on the West Side of Milwaukee with his wife and three kids.  \n\n\n\nDevayani Puranik is the Director Development Programs at the Central Ohio Transit Authority (COTA)\, where she leads high-impact initiatives that shape the planning\, developing\, and delivery of innovative mobility solutions- such as COTA’s on-demand service\, COTA//Plus. Her work focuses on strategic coordination and change management to improve customer experience and advance transit accessibility through major regional efforts like LinkUS.  \n\n\n\nPrior to joining COTA\, Puranik served as a Senior Planner for the City of Dublin\, where she spearheaded key efforts including the Legacy Office Revitalization Plan\, Mobility Study\, and the Dublin 2035 Framework. She was also a core member of the city’s Diversity\, Equity\, and Inclusion Task Force and led numerous cross-functional innovation and process improvement projects. Her earlier work with the City of Columbus involved directing long-range land use planning initiatives to support inclusive\, sustainable growth.  \n\n\n\nPuranik holds dual master’s degrees in City and Regional Planning and Environmental Science from The Ohio State University and is a certified Lean Six Sigma Black Belt. She brings a systems-thinking approach to her leadership\, rooted in equity\, efficiency\, and public service.  \n\n\n\nLivestream Details\n\n\n\n\n\n\nRegister + Join Lecture\n\n\n\n\n \n\n\n\n \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nAICP-CM credits will be awarded. If you have questions\, please contact Carolyn Esswein: cesswein@uwm.edu URL:/architecture/event/mobilizing-regions-workforce-rideshare-and-the-future-of-transit-in-se-wi-and-detroit/ LOCATION: CATEGORIES:Arts and Culture,Lectures Conferences and Symposiums,Public,Urban Planning,51 Campus Events ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:/architecture/wp-content/uploads/sites/695/2025/07/1.jpg X-TRIBE-STATUS: END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20250918T163000 DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250918T173000 DTSTAMP:20260419T061808 CREATED:20250730T212930Z LAST-MODIFIED:20250903T161325Z UID:10000009-1758213000-1758216600@uwm.edu SUMMARY:Canceled - Abolish Rent: How Tenants Can End the Housing Crisis DESCRIPTION:Date & TimeThursday\, September 18\, 2025 (4:30–5:30 p.m.) \n\n \n\nLocationArchitecture & Urban Planning Building\, Lecture Hall (AUP 170) \n\n\n \nFed up with permanent housing crisis and real estate greed? Join the co-founder of the LA Tenants Union and co-author of Abolish Rent: How Tenants Can End the Housing Crisis for an in-depth discussion of the housing question and the resurgent tenant movement. Why do landlords claim the majority of our wages while they work only four hours a month? What if the housing crisis was a crisis of exploitation and domination? How can we turn the shared misery of paying rent into shared power to win the housing we deserve? \n \nBiography\n \nTracy RosenthalWriter and Organizer \n \nTracy Rosenthal is a writer and an organizer. They are the author of Abolish Rent: How Tenants Can End the Housing Crisis (Haymarket\, 2024)\, a frequent contributor to The New Republic\, and a co-host of Death Panel Podcast. They co-founded the LA Tenants Union in 2015\, and are now on rent strike in New York City. URL:/architecture/event/abolish-rent-how-tenants-can-end-the-housing-crisis/ LOCATION:Lecture Hall (AUP 170)\, 2131 E Hartford Ave\, Milwaukee\, WI\, 53211\, United States CATEGORIES:Architecture,Arts and Culture,Lectures Conferences and Symposiums,51 Campus Events ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/webp:/architecture/wp-content/uploads/sites/695/2025/07/tracy-rosenthal-tracy-rosenthal_CAL.webp X-TRIBE-STATUS: END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20250925T170000 DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250925T180000 DTSTAMP:20260419T061808 CREATED:20250730T214904Z LAST-MODIFIED:20250912T153618Z UID:10000010-1758819600-1758823200@uwm.edu SUMMARY:The Reluctant Professional DESCRIPTION:Date & TimeThursday\, September 25\, 2025 (5-6 p.m.) \n\n\nLocationArchitecture & Urban Planning Building\, Marcus Commons \n\n\nPalmyra Geraki will discuss recent work through both her academic and professional practice. \nBiography\nPalmyra GerakiUniversity of Wisconsin-Milwaukee\, Assistant ProfessorPALMYRA PLLC\, Principal \nPalmyra Geraki is a designer\, educator\, writer\, and editor. A licensed architect in the US and Greece\, she is the founding principal of PALMYRA\, an award-winning multidisciplinary practice based in Chicago. Before founding her own practice\, Palmyra worked in Thessaloniki (Greece)\, New York\, and San Francisco on a wide range of project types. \nAn Assistant Professor at 51 since 2023\, Palmyra previously taught at the University of Illinois Chicago and at California College of the Arts in San Francisco. She was a member of the organizing committee of the 2021 and 2022 Architecture Beyond Capitalism (A-B-C) Summer School and she has been an invited juror at universities across North America. \nPalmyra served as a Skyline Editor for the New York Review of Architecture in 2022 and 2023 and her writing has appeared in several publications. She is a coauthor of the book The Organizer’s Guide to Architecture Education (Routledge 2024). \nIn 2022 Palmyra was elected Board Trustee of the AIA Chicago Foundation and in 2024 she joined the Board of Directors of The Architecture Lobby (T-A-L)\, an international labor advocacy organization for the AEC industry. \nPalmyra received her B.A. in ‘Architecture’ and ‘Ethics\, Politics & Economics’ from Yale University and her M.Arch. from the Yale School of Architecture. URL:/architecture/event/after-hours/ LOCATION:Marcus Commons\, 2131 East Hartford Ave\, Milwaukee\, WI\, 53211\, United States CATEGORIES:Architecture ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/webp:/architecture/wp-content/uploads/sites/695/2025/07/CCHS_V1.webp X-TRIBE-STATUS: END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20251008T120000 DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20251008T130000 DTSTAMP:20260419T061808 CREATED:20250730T215915Z LAST-MODIFIED:20250902T173515Z UID:10000011-1759924800-1759928400@uwm.edu SUMMARY:Placemaking in Action: Building Vibrant Communities DESCRIPTION:Date & TimeWednesday\, October 8 (12-1 p.m.) \n\n\nLocationVirtual \n\n\nAn Innovative Cities Lecture\nCreating vibrant and engaging communities helps communities recruit and retain residents\, supports public gathering places in the heart of our communities\, and fosters community connections. Learn about the WEDC Vibrant Communities grant and how projects create accessible locations for programming and amenities desired by local residents\, with the additional benefit of boosting foot traffic for nearby businesses. \nIn Waupaca\, planning efforts led to a series of public and private initiatives designed to foster revitalization of the historic downtown area. Strategic investments by the community resulted in public and private investments that attracted new businesses\, increased opportunities for community engagement and generated additional foot traffic throughout the district. In Waupun\, targeted efforts to revitalize an underutilized anchor property and adjacent vacant lot spurred additional activity\, led to additional community events and supported new entrepreneurial activity in the community.  \nBiographies\nErrin Welty is the Senior Director of Downtown Development at WEDC\, managing the Main Street and Connect Communities programs. She previously worked as a market analyst at Vierbicher\, working with public and private sector clients to create market-based solutions to solve economic and planning issues\, and as Vice President of Client Services for Grubb & Ellis\, managing marketing and research for the firm’s Denver office. Errin has significant planning and real estate experience\, having been on staff with downtown organizations in both St. Cloud\, MN and Denver\, CO\, and a founding member of Wheat Ridge 2020\, an economic development organization focused on revitalizing one of Denver’s original inner-ring suburbs. \nGreg Grohman connects nonprofit\, governmental\, and educational partners to the critical resources they need to better serve their communities. As a grant writer for the City of Waupaca\, he has generated over $11 million for organizations\, securing funding from the U.S. Economic Development Administration\, the U.S. Department of Justice\, the WI Economic Development Corporation\, the WI Department of Transportation\, the WI Department of Public Instruction\, the WI Department of Natural Resources\, Bader Philanthropies Inc.\, and the Community Foundation for the Fox Valley Region. \nKatharine Schlieve is the City Administrator and Director of Economic Development for the City of Waupun. She is responsible for providing strategic leadership and working with a diverse set of stakeholders to establish long-range goals\, strategies\, plans and policies that advance the city’s mission. She developed and implemented a comprehensive economic development strategy for the city including business retention & expansion\, business recruitment\, redevelopment\, planning\, and general administration. \nLivestream Details\n\n\n\nRegister + Join Lecture\n\n \n\n\n\n\n\n\n \n\nAICP-CM credits will be awarded. \nIf you have questions\, please contact Carolyn Esswein: cesswein@uwm.edu URL:/architecture/event/placemaking-in-action-building-vibrant-communities/ LOCATION: CATEGORIES:Arts and Culture,Lectures Conferences and Symposiums,Public,Urban Planning,51 Campus Events ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:/architecture/wp-content/uploads/sites/695/2025/07/2.jpg X-TRIBE-STATUS: END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20251009T170000 DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20251009T180000 DTSTAMP:20260419T061808 CREATED:20250905T144804Z LAST-MODIFIED:20250912T153653Z UID:10000019-1760029200-1760032800@uwm.edu SUMMARY:Almost Nothing: A Reading & Conversation w/ Adrienne Economos-Miller and Sam Schuermann DESCRIPTION:Date & TimeThursday\, October 9\, 2025 (5-6 p.m.) \n\n\nLocationJim Shields Gallery of Architecture & Urbanism \n\n\nThis event will include three parts: a contextualizing introduction to Nora Wendl’s book “Almost Nothing: Reclaiming Edith Farnsworth” (University of Illinois Press\, 2025) by Professor Adrienne Economos-Miller; an illustrated reading of excerpts of this book by Wendl; and a conversation between Professors Wendl\, Economos-Miller\, and Sam Schuermann on the themes and topics of the book. Almost Nothing is a critical history of the Edith Farnsworth House (Mies van der Rohe\, Plano\, Illinois\, 1951) written in the form of an auto-theoretical memoir. As such\, it engages in  topics and questions related to architectural historiography\, feminism\, preservation\, memory\, and authorship. \nBiography\nNora WendlAssociate Professor of ArchitectureUniversity of New Mexico\, \nNora Wendl is an essayist\, artist\, editor\, and associate professor of architecture at the University of New Mexico\, where she teaches studio and theory. \nWendl’s work\, across scales and media\, subverts the received narratives that underpin architectural historiography\, engaging feminist archival practices to create essays\, books\, installations\, photographs and films that offer new forms and frameworks for historicizing built and unbuilt environments. These works have been supported by the Graham Foundation\, Santa Fe Art Institute\, and the National Trust for Historic Preservation\, among other institutions. She has exhibited and published widely\, and her most recent book\, Almost Nothing: Reclaiming Edith Farnsworth (University of Illinois Press\, 2025)\, was shortlisted for the Graywolf Press Nonfiction Prize. From 2021-24\, she was the Executive Editor of the Journal of Architectural Education. URL:/architecture/event/almost-nothing/ LOCATION:Jim Shields Gallery of Architecture & Urbanism sponsored by HGA (AUP 146)\, 2131 E Hartford Ave\, Milwaukee\, WI\, 53211\, United States CATEGORIES:Architecture,Arts and Culture,Lectures Conferences and Symposiums,51 Campus Events ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:/architecture/wp-content/uploads/sites/695/2025/09/WENDL-NORA_Headshot_CAL.jpg X-TRIBE-STATUS: END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20251016T170000 DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20251016T180000 DTSTAMP:20260419T061808 CREATED:20250730T220507Z LAST-MODIFIED:20250912T153729Z UID:10000012-1760634000-1760637600@uwm.edu SUMMARY:Forming Life in Common DESCRIPTION:Date & TimeThursday\, October 16\, 2025 (5-6 p.m.) \n\n\nLocationArchitecture & Urban Planning Building\, Lecture Hall (AUP 170) \n\n\nCommoning is the act of sharing and managing resources—cultural and natural—with minimal reliance on the market or state\, and where each stakeholder has an equal interest. User-managed governance of the environments we inhabit—from land ownership\, to buildings\, to domestic spaces—enables residents to be key agents in how resources are distributed\, valued\, and maintained. This lecture will focus on a series of design experiments by THE OPEN WORKSHOP that explore a range of commons—both in type and scale—that use architecture to catalyze and frame the mechanisms for commoning. \nBiography\nNeeraj BhatiaCalifornia College of the Arts\, ProfessorTHE OPEN WORKSHOP\, Founder \nNeeraj Bhatia is a licensed architect and urban designer whose work resides at the intersection of politics\, housing\, infrastructure\, and urbanism. He is a Full Professor at the California College of the Arts where he also directs the urbanism research lab\, The Urban Works Agency. Bhatia has also held teaching positions at Columbia GSAPP\, Harvard GSD\, UC Berkeley\, Cornell University\, and Rice University. \nNeeraj is principal of THE OPEN WORKSHOP\, a transcalar design-research office examining the negotiation between architecture and its territorial environment. Select distinctions include the Emerging Voices Award (2024)\, Canadian Professional Prix de Rome (2019)\, the Architectural League Young Architects Prize (2016)\, and the Emerging Leaders Award from Design Intelligence (2016). THE OPEN WORKSHOP’s design-research has been commissioned by the Seoul Biennale\, Venice Biennale\, Chicago Architecture Biennial\, and the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts\, among other venues. \nBhatia is co-editor of books Architecture Beyond Extraction (JAE 79:1)\, Bracket [Takes Action]\, The Petropolis of Tomorrow\, Bracket [Goes Soft]\, Arium: Weather + Architecture\, and author of New Investigations in Collective Form and Pamphlet Architecture 30: Coupling — Strategies for Infrastructural Opportunism. URL:/architecture/event/forming-life-in-common/ LOCATION:Lecture Hall (AUP 170)\, 2131 E Hartford Ave\, Milwaukee\, WI\, 53211\, United States CATEGORIES:Architecture,Arts and Culture,Lectures Conferences and Symposiums,51 Campus Events ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:/architecture/wp-content/uploads/sites/695/2025/07/Headshot_NB-Neeraj-Bhatia.jpg X-TRIBE-STATUS: END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20251022T000000 DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20251024T235959 DTSTAMP:20260419T061808 CREATED:20250730T231233Z LAST-MODIFIED:20251021T220347Z UID:10000015-1761091200-1761350399@uwm.edu SUMMARY:Urban Edge Symposium: On Housing\, the single-family Lot and the American City DESCRIPTION:Date & Time*Wednesday October 22-Friday\, October 25\, 2025 \n\n\nLocationJim Shields Gallery of Architecture & Urbanism \n\n\n\nThe 2025-26 Urban Edge Symposium On Housing asks how we might re-consider the single-family typology for our contemporary housing needs and domestic desires. Participants are asked to respond to the image\, aesthetics\, values\, materials\, constituencies\, legalities\, and/or histories of the single-family lot and home in the American context to critically examine how we live today. The three-day event will act as a condensed lecture series\, with eight lectures in total responding to the symposium’s theme\, interspersed with roundtable discussions and workshops. There will be a small exhibit of the participants’ work that will act as a visual accompaniment to the lectures and discussions. \nOn Housing is led by Assistant Professor Sam Schuermann. \n\n\n\nRow one: Ashley Bigham and Erik Herrmann\, Jennifer Bonner\, Mitch McEwen\, Laura Salazar-Altobelli and Pablo Sequero; Row two: Paul Andersen\, Adrienne Brown\, Jonathan Tate\, Jesus Vassallo.\n\n\n\nSchedule\nAll events are free and open to the public. \nWednesday\, October 22\n\n\n\n\nTime\nDescription\nLocation\n\n\n\n\n3:30 p.m.\nWelcome + Opening Round Table\nMarcus Commons\n\n\n4:00-5:00 p.m.\nExhibit Talk\, Mellowes Research \nSam Schuermann\nJim Shields Gallery\n\n\n5:00 p.m.\nOpening Reception\nMarcus Commons\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nThursday\, October 23\n\n\n\n\nTime\nDescription\nLocation\n\n\n\n\n9:30\nCoffee and Conversation\nSARUP Student Lounge\n\n\n10 a.m.\nPresentation Session 1 \nAshley Bigham & Erik Herrmann \nLaura Salazar & Pablo Sequero\nMarcus Commons \nJoin via Zoom\n\n\n12 p.m.\nQ+A\, Moderated Discussion\n\n\n\n12:30 p.m.\nLunch\n\n\n\n1:30 p.m.\nFaculty Round Table\, Housing Pedagodgies \nPalmyra Geraki\, Lindsey Krug\, Brian Schermer\, Sam Schuermann\, Kyle Talbott\, Alex Timmer\nJim Shields Gallery\n\n\n3 p.m.\nPresentation Session 2 \nJesús Vassallo \nPaul Anderson\nMarcus Commons \nJoin via Zoom\n\n\n5 p.m.\nQ+A\, Moderated Discussion\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nFriday\, October 24\n\n\n\n\nTime\nDescription\nLocation\n\n\n\n\n9:30-10 a.m.\nCoffee with Students\nSARUP Student Lounge\n\n\n10 a.m.\nPresentation Session 3 \nMitch McEwen \nAdrienne Brown\nMarcus Commons \nJoin via Zoom\n\n\n12 p.m.\nQ+A\, Moderated Discussion\n\n\n\n12:30 p.m.\nLunch\n\n\n\n1:30 p.m.\nCommunity Partners Round Table and Student Workshop \nTanya Fonseca\, DCD City Planning Director\nJim Shields Gallery\n\n\n3 p.m.\nPresentation Session 3 \nJennifer Bonner \nJonathan Tate\nAUP 170 \nJoin via Zoom\n\n\n5 p.m.\nQ+A\, Round-table Discussion\n\n\n\n6 p.m.\nClosing Discussion\, Social Hour\n Jim Shields Gallery\n\n\n\n\n\n\nBiographies\n\n\n\nPaul Andersen\nIndependent Architecture\, DirectorUniversity of Illinois Chicago\, Clinical Associate Professor \nBiography\n\n\n\nAshley Bigham\, Erik Herrmann\nThe Ohio State University\, Associate ProfessorOutpost Office\, Co-Director \nThe Ohio State University\, Associate ProfessorOutpost Office\, Co-Director\nBiography\n\n\n\nJennifer Bonner\nMALL\, Founding Principal\nBiography\n\n\n\nAdrienne Brown\nUniversity of Chicago\, Departments of English and Race\, Diaspora and IndigeneityArts + Public Life\, Faculty Director\nBiography\n\n\n\nV. Mitch McEwen\nPrinceton School of Architecture\, Assistant ProfessorAtelier Office\, Principal\nBiography\n\n\n\nLaura Salazar\, Pablo Sequero\nPratt Institute\, Assistant Professorsalazarsequeromedina\, Co-Director \nSyracuse University\, Visiting Criticsalazarsequeromedina\, Co-Director\nBiography\n\n\n\nSam Schuermann\nUniversity of Wisconsin-Milwaukee\, Assistant Professor\nBiography\n\n\n\nJonathan Tate\nPrincipal\, OJTProfessor of Practice of Architecture\, Tulane School of Architecture and Built Environment\nBiography\n\n\n\nJesús Vassallo\nRice UniversityAssociate Professor of Architecture\nBiography\n\n\n\nPaul Andersen is the founder and director of Independent Architecture. He shapes the office’s agenda and practice\, working on design projects in professional and academic contexts. He teaches at the University of Illinois Chicago and has previously been on the architecture faculties of the Harvard Graduate School of Design\, Universidad Torcuato Di Tella\, and Cornell University. He was appointed a Fulbright Specialist in Architecture and has exhibited and curated work at the Venice Biennale\, the MCA Denver\, The Great Poor Farm\, and the Chicago Architecture Biennial. He has written and edited several books\, including Bricks (Extra Credit Books)\, The Same Something for Everyone (Park Books) and The Architecture of Patterns (W.W. Norton). \n\n\nAshley Bigham is an Associate Professor at the Knowlton School of Architecture and co-director of Outpost Office. She has been a Fulbright Fellow in Ukraine\, a MacDowell Fellow\, and a Walter B. Sanders Fellow at the University of Michigan’s Taubman College of Architecture and Urban Planning. At The Ohio State University\, she is an affiliate faculty member of the Center for Slavic\, East European and Eurasian Studies. In addition\, she is a collaborative partner and visiting faculty at the Kharkiv School of Architecture in Ukraine. \nAshley’s creative work and writing engage architecture through a study of consumption and domesticity\, focusing on architecture’s entanglement with the production and fulfillment of consumer desire. She is the editor of Fulfilled: Architecture\, Excess\, and Desire (Applied Research + Design\, 2022). Her writing and work has appeared in publications such as MAS Context\, Dialectic\, The Architect’s Newspaper\, Metropolis\, Mark\, CLOG\, and Surface. \nErik Herrmann is an Associate Professor of Architecture at the Knowlton School and co-director of Outpost Office. He was previously the Walter B. Sanders Fellow in Architecture at the University of Michigan and a German Chancellor’s Fellow of the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation. He holds a Master of Architecture from Yale University and a Bachelor of Architecture from the University of Tennessee where he was awarded the faculty thesis prize. Erik’s work and research interrogate how the biases and tendencies of digital technologies alter the design process\, with a focus on the shifting role of the architect. His work has been published in Log\, Perspecta\, and PLAT\, and has been exhibited at venues including the Chicago Architecture Biennial\, the Milwaukee Art Museum\, and the Tallinn Architecture Biennale. Before co-founding Outpost Office\, Herrmann practiced with Trahan Architects in Louisiana and Gray Organschi Architecture in New Haven\, CT. \n\n\nJennifer Bonner\, born in Alabama\, is a recipient of the 2021 United States Artist Fellowship\, Architectural League Prize for Young Architects + Designers\, Emerging Voices Award (AIA/ Young Architects Forum)\, Progressive Architecture (P/A) Award and Next Progressives (Architect Magazine). Her creative work has been published in architectural trade publications including Architectural Review\, Metropolis\, Gray\, Azure and Wallpaper*\, as well as\, more experimental journals including a+t \, DAMN\, PLAT\, Offramp\, Room One Thousand\, Flat Out and MAS Context. She is editor of Blank: Speculations on CLT (with Hanif Kara)\, author of A Guide to the Dirty South: Atlanta\, faculty editor of Platform: Still Life\, and guest editor for ART PAPERS special issue on architecture and design of Los Angeles. Bonner has exhibited work at the Royal Institute of British Architects\, National Building Museum\, WUHO gallery\, HistoryMIAMI\, Yve YANG gallery\, pinkcomma gallery\, Armstrong Gallery at Kent State\, Yale Architecture Gallery\, Istanbul Modern Museum\, Boston’s Rose Kennedy Greenway\, and the Chicago Architecture Biennial. \n\n\nAdrienne Brown is Associate Professor in the Departments of English and Race\, Diaspora\, and Indigeneity at the University of Chicago and the Director of Arts + Public Life\, a hub for artistic exploration\, expression\, and exchange that fosters neighborhood vibrancy on Chicago’s South Side. She is co-editor with Valerie Smith of the volume Race and Real Estate (2015) and the author of The Black Skyscraper: Architecture and the Perception of Race\, winner of the 2018 First Book Prize from the Modernist Studies Association\, and The Residential is Racial: A Perceptual History of Mass Homeownership\, published by Stanford University Press in 2024. \n\n\nV. Mitch McEwen is principal of Atelier Office in Harlem and one of ten co-founders of the Black Reconstruction Collective. McEwen teaches at Princeton School of Architecture\, where she directs the research group Black Box\, exploring automated processes with organic building materials and soft stuff. Her work has been exhibited at the Venice Biennale of Architecture\, Museum of Contemporary Art Detroit\, Istanbul Design Biennial\, Storefront for Art and Architecture\, and the Museum of Modern Art. \n\n\nAshley Bigham is an Associate Professor at the Knowlton School of Architecture and co-director of Outpost Office. She has been a Fulbright Fellow in Ukraine\, a MacDowell Fellow\, and a Walter B. Sanders Fellow at the University of Michigan’s Taubman College of Architecture and Urban Planning. At The Ohio State University\, she is an affiliate faculty member of the Center for Slavic\, East European and Eurasian Studies. In addition\, she is a collaborative partner and visiting faculty at the Kharkiv School of Architecture in Ukraine. \nAshley’s creative work and writing engage architecture through a study of consumption and domesticity\, focusing on architecture’s entanglement with the production and fulfillment of consumer desire. She is the editor of Fulfilled: Architecture\, Excess\, and Desire (Applied Research + Design\, 2022). Her writing and work has appeared in publications such as MAS Context\, Dialectic\, The Architect’s Newspaper\, Metropolis\, Mark\, CLOG\, and Surface. \nErik Herrmann is an Associate Professor of Architecture at the Knowlton School and co-director of Outpost Office. He was previously the Walter B. Sanders Fellow in Architecture at the University of Michigan and a German Chancellor’s Fellow of the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation. He holds a Master of Architecture from Yale University and a Bachelor of Architecture from the University of Tennessee where he was awarded the faculty thesis prize. Erik’s work and research interrogate how the biases and tendencies of digital technologies alter the design process\, with a focus on the shifting role of the architect. His work has been published in Log\, Perspecta\, and PLAT\, and has been exhibited at venues including the Chicago Architecture Biennial\, the Milwaukee Art Museum\, and the Tallinn Architecture Biennale. Before co-founding Outpost Office\, Herrmann practiced with Trahan Architects in Louisiana and Gray Organschi Architecture in New Haven\, CT. \n\n\nLaura Salazar-Altobelli is an Assistant Professor at Pratt Institute and serves as Intermediate Design Coordinator in the Undergraduate Architecture program. A Peruvian architect and cofounder of the collaborative practice salazarsequeromedina\, her work spans civic projects engaging diverse communities to publicly-funded affordable housing. Having completed built work in Peru\, Spain\, South Korea\, and the US\, Salazar has earned international recognition. Her practice was awarded the Architectural League Prize 2025 and achieved Outstanding Project recognition for the Mies Crown Hall Americas Prize for Emerging Practice 2024. Through practice and teaching\, her research addresses the environmental impact of building and aims to establish a dialogue with the as-found. \nSalazar has previously taught as a Visiting Critic at Syracuse University and as a Visiting Scholar at Montana State University. She is a graduate of Princeton University\, where she received a Master of Architecture in 2017. \nPablo Sequero is an architect and cofounder of salazarsequeromedina\, a collaborative architecture practice founded in 2020 with work in Peru\, Spain\, Korea and the US. He is a Visiting Critic at Syracuse University School of Architecture\, and a Visiting Professor at Arquitectura PUCP – Pontificia Universidad Catolica del Peru. His work has been recognized with awards in several design competitions\, specializing in cooperative housing and public infrastructure projects. Most recently\, together with Salazar and Medina\, he has been the recipient of the Architectural League Prize 2025 and achieved Outstanding Project recognition for the MCHAP Emerging Practice award 2024. \nPreviously\, Sequero has been a Visiting Critic at Cornell AAP (2021-2022) and a Visiting Scholar at Montana State University (2023). Sequero holds a Master of Architecture degree from the ETSAM\, Technical University of Madrid\, where he graduated in 2015. He is a licensed architect in Spain. \n\n\nSam Schuermann is an Assistant Professor at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee School of Architecture and Urban Planning where she coordinates Design III\, teaches in the core sequence\, and delivers option level studios. Prior to her position as Assistant Professor\, she served as the 2022-23 SARUP Architecture Fellow. Her teaching has been recognized via the ACSA 2024-25 New Faculty Teaching Award. Schuermann is a designer\, maker\, and researcher whose work explores the objects\, conventions\, and material implications of domestic labor. By leveraging the aesthetics of domesticity\, and working within the lineage of home economics education\, Schuermann’s work questions and subverts a variety of socio-political and socio-economic constructs associated with the typical single-family home and lot. Her scholarship has been disseminated through a variety of venues including ACSA\, STOA\, MONU\, Wisconsin Architect Magazine\, and a residency at Art Omi\, among others. \n\n\nJonathan Tate is principal of OJT (Office of Jonathan Tate)\, an architecture and urban design practice in New Orleans. Along with their conventional architectural practice\, the office engages in numerous design-related activities\, including applied research\, opportunistic planning\, and strategic development. Their work has received numerous awards\, including National AIA Housing Awards and the National AIA Honor Award in Architecture. The office has been recognized as an Emerging Voices by the Architectural League of New York\, a Next Progressive by Architect Magazine\, and a finalist for the international Architecture Review Emerging Architect Award. Tate is the recipient of the Award in Architecture from the American Academy of Arts and Letters. \nTate is a graduate of Auburn University\, where he was a participant at the Rural Studio\, and Harvard University Graduate School of Design. In addition to his role at OJT\, he is a Professor of Practice of Architecture at Tulane University School of Architecture and Built Environment in New Orleans\, Louisiana USA. \n\n\nJesús Vassallo is a registered architect and a professor of architecture at Rice University. Based in Houston and Madrid\, his work for private clients and institutions ranges from buildings to urban design\, with a consistent emphasis on construction and design excellence. Areas of expertise include affordable housing\, low-carbon construction\, and adaptive reuse. His projects have been published and exhibited internationally\, including in the Venice and Chicago Biennials. \nVassallo studied architecture at Harvard University Graduate School of Design (MArch II) and Escuela Técnica Superior de Arquitectura de Madrid (Diploma and PhD). In 2004 Vassallo became a licensed architect in Spain\, where he worked in the office of Mansilla + Tuñón Arquitectos as a project architect from 2006 to 2012. He is currently a licensed architect in the State of Texas\, and has active projects across Spain\, the United States\, and Mexico. \n\nAbout Urban Edge\nThe Urban Edge Award was created in 2006. Modeled after the successful Marcus Prize and supported by the Wisconsin Preservation Fund and the law firm of Reinhart Boerner Van Deuren\, the Urban Edge Award recognizes excellence in urban design and the ability of individuals to create major\, positive change within the public realm. Funding for the Urban Edge Award totals $50\,000. Since its inception\, the Urban Edge Award has welcomed designers from around the world to Milwaukee\, inspiring student designers through immersive learning opportunities and hands-on experiences. \n\nLearn More URL:/architecture/event/urban-edge-symposium-on-housing-the-single-family-lot-and-the-american-city/ LOCATION:Jim Shields Gallery of Architecture & Urbanism sponsored by HGA (AUP 146)\, 2131 E Hartford Ave\, Milwaukee\, WI\, 53211\, United States CATEGORIES:Architecture,Lectures Conferences and Symposiums,51 Campus Events ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/webp:/architecture/wp-content/uploads/sites/695/2025/07/202508_UE-Symposium_Web_1400x788A-scaled-1.webp X-TRIBE-STATUS: END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20251106T153000 DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20251106T170000 DTSTAMP:20260419T061808 CREATED:20250902T180140Z LAST-MODIFIED:20251027T213519Z UID:10000018-1762443000-1762448400@uwm.edu SUMMARY:SARUP Graduate Info Session DESCRIPTION:Date & TimeNov 6\, 2025 (3:30–5 p.m.) \n\n\nLocationArchitecture & Urban Planning Building\, Marcus Commons \n\n\nThe University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee School of Architecture & Urban Planning (SARUP) will be hosting a SARUP Graduate Info session in conjunction with the 51 Graduate School Open House on Thursday\, November 6\, 2025. The SARUP Graduate Info Session is a wonderful opportunity to learn about the possibilities and potential of a graduate degree with us\, tour our facilities and student studio spaces firsthand\, as well as meet with faculty\, staff\, and current students.  \nThe SARUP Graduate Info Session is an add-on experience for those who are also registered for the 51 Graduate School Open House. \nRegistration\nJoin us for both events! Please be sure to register for both events by November 4.  \n\nSARUP Graduate Info Session \n51 Graduate School Open House URL:/architecture/event/sarup-graduate-info-session/ LOCATION:Marcus Commons\, 2131 East Hartford Ave\, Milwaukee\, WI\, 53211\, United States CATEGORIES:Architecture,Prospective Students,Urban Planning,51 Campus Events ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/webp:/architecture/wp-content/uploads/sites/695/2025/09/20220921_TCF_IMC_7570.webp X-TRIBE-STATUS: END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20251112T120000 DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20251112T130000 DTSTAMP:20260419T061808 CREATED:20250730T221745Z LAST-MODIFIED:20251114T190732Z UID:10000013-1762948800-1762952400@uwm.edu SUMMARY:Marketplaces: Where Food Access\, Health\, and Economic Impacts Grow DESCRIPTION:Date & TimeWednesday\, November 12 (12-1 p.m.) \n\n\nLocationVirtual \n\n\nAn Innovative Cities Lecture\nExplore how public marketplaces—from farmers markets to food halls\, and many more in between\, provide social\, economic\, and health benefits; they are so much more than just a market.  Learn about the evolving ecosystem of market typologies and their implications for zoning and planning. Dive into a case study of a Milwaukee marketplace as an entrepreneurial incubator and hub for mental and physical wellness for both business owners and customers. Discover how municipal planning and zoning currently considers\, and can better support\, thriving marketplaces of all shapes and sizes.  \nBiographies\nAmanda Maria Edmonds is a sustainable food systems consultant and researcher. She is a systems-change\, big-vision thinker who translates ideas and values into pragmatic\, on-the-ground strategies and policies. Edmonds founded and directed Michigan-based nonprofit Growing Hope for 15 years\, improving healthy food access through farmers markets\, urban agriculture\, youth programs\, economic development\, and good food policy. Between 2014-2018 she served as the Mayor of Ypsilanti\, Michigan. She served under Governor Granholm on the Michigan Food Policy Council\, was a founding member of the Washtenaw Food Policy Council\, and has been part of the Michigan Good Food Charter leadership group for 15 years. After living in London\, UK from 2019-2024\, she returned to Ypsilanti\, Michigan and continues consulting\, focusing on policy\, evaluation\, & strategy\, particularly as related to markets. She is also completing a doctorate in spatial planning at Wageningen University in the Netherlands\, researching municipal policy and planning related to farmers markets. She has BS and MS degrees from U-Michigan’s School of Natural Resources & Environment.  \nKelly Verel oversees the Market Cities Program as the Co-Executive Director of Project for Public Spaces\, an urban planning and design nonprofit based in New York. She has been with the organization since 2006\, managing all projects related to planning\, designing\, and developing public markets. Kelly and her team have produced feasibility and business plans for the Boston Public Market and NewBo City Market in Cedar Rapids\, IA. They have worked with the Granville Island Public Market in Vancouver\, BC\, and the ByWard Market District in Ottawa\, ON\, to develop revitalization strategies and plans for these historic markets. Kelly directs the organization’s annual How to Create Successful Markets training and the International Public Markets Conference (2009\, 2012\, 2015\, 2019\, 2023\, and 2025). Before Project for Public Spaces\, she was on the administrative team at GrowNYC Greenmarket\, New York’s largest farmers market network\, and has a seat on their Farmer Community Advisory Committee.  \nLivestream Details\n\n\n\nRegister + Join Lecture\n\n \n\n\n\n\n\n\n \n\nAICP-CM credits will be awarded. \nIf you have questions\, please contact Carolyn Esswein: cesswein@uwm.edu URL:/architecture/event/farmers-markets-to-food-hubs-food-systems-planning-and-community-health-benefits/ LOCATION: CATEGORIES:Arts and Culture,Lectures Conferences and Symposiums,Public,Urban Planning,51 Campus Events ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:/architecture/wp-content/uploads/sites/695/2025/07/ICL-Nov-12-_-CAL.jpg X-TRIBE-STATUS: END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20251114T103000 DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20251114T130000 DTSTAMP:20260419T061808 CREATED:20250902T175314Z LAST-MODIFIED:20251023T194419Z UID:10000017-1763116200-1763125200@uwm.edu SUMMARY:51 Architecture and Urban Planning Career + Networking Event DESCRIPTION:Date & Time*Nov 14\, 2025 (10:30 a.m.–1 p.m.) \n\n\nLocationArchitecture & Urban Planning Building\, Marcus Commons \n\n\nExplore career opportunities within the architecture and urban planning disciplines at our annual Career & Networking event. Engage with professionals from multiple firms from the Midwest and beyond to discuss internship possibilities and postgraduate positions. Students from both undergraduate and graduate levels are invited to join us to make connections with peers\, faculty\, alumni\, and industry professionals! URL:/architecture/event/career-networking-event/ LOCATION:Marcus Commons\, 2131 East Hartford Ave\, Milwaukee\, WI\, 53211\, United States CATEGORIES:Architecture,Urban Planning ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:/architecture/wp-content/uploads/sites/695/2025/09/2023.XFA_.SARUP-Career-Fair-10-Photo-by-Andrew-Tillman.jpg X-TRIBE-STATUS: END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20251120T170000 DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20251120T180000 DTSTAMP:20260419T061808 CREATED:20250730T222352Z LAST-MODIFIED:20250912T153828Z UID:10000014-1763658000-1763661600@uwm.edu SUMMARY:Productive Frictions DESCRIPTION:Date & TimeThursday\, November 20\, 2025 (5-6 p.m.) \n\n\nLocationArchitecture & Urban Planning Building\, Marcus Commons \n\n\nFrench 2D will lecture about seeing and making together\, negotiating authorship through collaborative processes that challenge traditional architectural narratives and approaching practice\, research\, and teaching through a situated frame. They will discuss housing\, civic installations and textiles\, all understood as both a process and a product of collective work\, policy change\, formal legibility and playfulness. \nAs the work shifts back and forth between a series of entangled themes and often contradictory forces close to home\, the lecture will explore excerpts of French 2D’s work through the framing of productive frictions – or as Mckenzie Wark writes about Anna Tsing’s conception of friction “thinking about these antimonies through a study of various competing universals as they get mixed up in local situations.” \nBiography\nAnda FrenchPrinceton University SoA\, Visiting LecturerFrench 2D\, Partner \nJenny FrenchHarvard GSD\, Assistant Professor in Practice of ArchitectureFrench 2D\, Partner \nFrench 2D is a Boston studio founded by Jenny French and Anda French\, AIA. French 2D’s work focuses on uncommon housing types\, found in their cohousing\, compact living\, and adaptive reuse projects. The practice also works on civic installations and exhibitions that call upon the domestic to bring people together for familiar rituals in unfamiliar spaces\, found in furniture\, textiles\, and environments. French 2D has been recognized by numerous awards and publications\, including a P/A Award\, and a Design Vanguard award from Architectural Record. In 2024 French 2D was nominated for the Mies Crown Hall Americas Prize and in 2023 was a Finalist for the Architectural Review’s Emerging Award. Their work has been featured in Domus\, AZURE\, PLOT\, Metropolis\, Monocle\, and The Architect’s Newspaper\, and exhibited widely\, including at MoMA\, the Venice Architecture Biennale\, and in the solo show “House Clothes” at UMASS Amherst. Jenny is an Assistant Professor in Practice at the Harvard GSD and Anda is a Visiting Lecturer at the Princeton SoA. URL:/architecture/event/productive-frictions/ LOCATION:Marcus Commons\, 2131 East Hartford Ave\, Milwaukee\, WI\, 53211\, United States CATEGORIES:Architecture,Arts and Culture,Lectures Conferences and Symposiums,51 Campus Events ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/webp:/architecture/wp-content/uploads/sites/695/2025/07/SL_FRENCH2D2024_1306-Anda-French_CAL.webp X-TRIBE-STATUS: END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20251203T120000 DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20251203T130000 DTSTAMP:20260419T061808 CREATED:20250827T221024Z LAST-MODIFIED:20251201T160415Z UID:10000016-1764763200-1764766800@uwm.edu SUMMARY:Transit Priority: Improving Public Transit Through Collaboration DESCRIPTION:Date & TimeWednesday\, December 3 (12-1 p.m.) \n\n\nLocationVirtual \n\n\nAn Innovative Cities Lecture\nThe Milwaukee Priority One Transportation Initiative is a bold\, collaborative effort to improve regional mobility\, connect workers to jobs\, and ensure equitable access to opportunity across Milwaukee. This initiative prioritizes innovative transit solutions—such as on-demand workforce services\, improved public transit connections\, and first/last mile strategies—to address the region’s most pressing transportation challenges.  \nIn this session\, you’ll hear how Priority One is bringing together business leaders\, transit agencies\, local governments\, and community partners to create a coordinated approach that strengthens the economy while reducing barriers for residents. Case studies and early outcomes will demonstrate how Milwaukee is redefining transportation as a driver of workforce participation\, economic development\, and community well-being.  \nBiographies\nKevin  Muhs serves as the City Engineer for the City of Milwaukee. As City Engineer\, Kevin leads the Infrastructure Services Division of the Milwaukee Department of Public Works (DPW) and is responsible for the design\, operation\, and maintenance of City-owned streets\, lighting and underground conduit\, sewers\, green infrastructure\, bridges\, and buildings. At the direction of Mayor Cavalier Johnson and the Milwaukee Common Council\, Kevin and his colleagues at Milwaukee DPW are working to transform City streets to provide high-quality public space for residents and serve all users. Kevin is both a planner and engineer\, and strongly believes that a robust multimodal transportation system is needed for the Milwaukee area to be economically competitive\, resilient\, and equitable.  \nDan Adams has been a Transit Specialist with the Milwaukee County Transit System for 2 years. In this role Dan manages MCTS’s 3\,700 bus stops\, 630 bus shelters\, and serves as a liaison to street construction projects. Prior to MCTS\, Dan worked for 10 years with two different community development nonprofits in Milwaukee and 3 years with a private real estate and construction company. Dan is a native Milwaukeean with a Masters in Urban Planning from UW-Milwaukee\, a proud Milwaukee Public Schools graduate\, and lives on the Near West Side with his wife and two daughters.  \nLivestream Details\n\n\n\nRegister + Join Lecture\n\n \n\n\n\n\n\n\n \n\nAICP-CM credits will be awarded. \nIf you have questions\, please contact Carolyn Esswein: cesswein@uwm.edu URL:/architecture/event/transit-priority-improving-public-transit-through-collaboration/ LOCATION: CATEGORIES:Arts and Culture,Lectures Conferences and Symposiums,Public,Urban Planning,51 Campus Events ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:/architecture/wp-content/uploads/sites/695/2025/08/4.jpg X-TRIBE-STATUS: END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20260126T000000 DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20260417T235959 DTSTAMP:20260419T061808 CREATED:20260120T193046Z LAST-MODIFIED:20260120T194005Z UID:10000035-1769385600-1776470399@uwm.edu SUMMARY:Gallery Take-Over: Earth Material Resource Center DESCRIPTION:Date & TimeJanuary 26-April 17\, 2026Gallery hours: Mon-Fri (9 a.m.–5 p.m.) \n\n\nLocationArchitecture & Urban Planning Building\, Jim Shields Gallery of Architecture & Urbanism (AUP 146) \n\n\nThe 2024-2026 Fitzhugh Scott Faculty Fellow\, Iris Xiaoxue Ma\, will be taking over and transforming part of the Jim Shields Gallery into a ceramic studio/workshop space during the Spring 2026 semester. Iris will use the gallery as a production space for her Fellowship show and a material resource center for all School of Architecture & Urban Planning students. \nIf you are interested in the process\, techniques\, tools\, and applications of ceramic material\, or simply looking for project inspirations\, visit her in her ceramics space. Monthly walk-in and workshop hours will be posted on the gallery door. URL:/architecture/event/gallery-take-over-earth-material-resource-center/ LOCATION:Jim Shields Gallery of Architecture & Urbanism sponsored by HGA (AUP 146)\, 2131 E Hartford Ave\, Milwaukee\, WI\, 53211\, United States CATEGORIES:Architecture,Arts and Culture,Exhibition,51 Campus Events ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/webp:/architecture/wp-content/uploads/sites/695/2026/01/Iris-Ma-ceramics.webp X-TRIBE-STATUS: END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20260204T120000 DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20260204T130000 DTSTAMP:20260419T061808 CREATED:20260120T171016Z LAST-MODIFIED:20260120T182944Z UID:10000031-1770206400-1770210000@uwm.edu SUMMARY:Economic Impact of Eco Tourism: Year-round Destinations DESCRIPTION:Date & TimeWednesday\, February 4 (12-1 p.m.) \n\n\nLocationVirtual \n\n\nAn Innovative Cities Lecture\nLocal events play a powerful role in strengthening city economies\, generating activity from day trips to overnight stays. This session highlights how two Wisconsin communities attract visitors\, host more than 80 events annually\, and measure both economic and community impact. \nVisit Eau Claire drives economic growth by expanding travel and tourism through destination marketing\, strategic development\, and strong community partnerships. Serving a wide range of markets—from convention delegates to sports groups and family leisure travelers—they operate year-round to support downtown businesses through targeted grants and marketing initiatives. \nAs a Wisconsin Main Street Community\, the Downtown Racine Corporation produces more than 80 events each year. Each event is intentionally designed—free or ticketed—to draw visitors in every season with distinctive programming. Using attendance data\, staff prepare detailed impact reports that document economic benefits and show where visitors come from. \nBiographies\nKenzi Havlicek serves as the Executive Director of Visit Eau Claire\, where she leads efforts to showcase and promote the incredible community she calls home. With a passion for highlighting Eau Claire’s vibrant arts\, culture\, music\, and outstanding outdoor recreation opportunities\, she works closely with community partners and alongside the talented Visit Eau Claire team to share the story of the Chippewa Valley. \nHer marketing journey began at Iowa State University\, where an internship promoting hospitality and tourism ignited her lifelong passion for business and marketing. After graduating\, she joined Visit Eau Claire as a Social Media Specialist and\, over the past 15 years\, has steadily advanced within the organization to her current role as Executive Director. \nKenzi values collaboration and teamwork\, believing that the strongest results come from working together to make the community the best it can be. She is actively involved in both the community and the tourism industry\, serving on the Pablo Center at the Confluence Council and the Eau Claire Area Chamber of Commerce Leadership Eau Claire Committee. At the state level\, she serves on the Destinations Wisconsin Marketing Committee and the Travel Wisconsin Marketing Committee. She also contributes nationally through Destination International’s 30 Under 30 Alumni Committee. Kenzi takes great pride in promoting Eau Claire every day\, a place she considers a true gem of arts\, culture\, and outdoor adventure. \nKelly Kruse is an accomplished creative professional and community leader with an MFA in Graphic Design and a strong passion for urban revitalization and visual storytelling. She serves as the Executive Director of the Downtown Racine Corporation\, where she leads transformative programming\, public art initiatives\, and over 80 annual events that enrich the cultural and economic vitality of the district. In her role\, she also manages Business Improvement Districts (BIDs) for both Downtown Racine and Douglas Avenue\, helping local businesses thrive and shaping vibrant public spaces. \nIn addition to her leadership in community development\, Kelly is an Assistant Professor at Carthage College\, where she inspires the next generation of graphic designers by bridging professional practice with academic insight. Her multidisciplinary background allows her to blend strategic vision with creative innovation\, making a lasting impact both in the classroom and throughout the Racine community. \nLivestream Details\n\n\n\nRegister + Join Lecture\n\n \n\n\n\n\n\n\n \n\nAICP-CM credits will be awarded. \nIf you have questions\, please contact Carolyn Esswein: cesswein@uwm.edu URL:/architecture/event/eco-tourism-impact/ LOCATION: CATEGORIES:Arts and Culture,Lectures Conferences and Symposiums,Public,Urban Planning,51 Campus Events ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:/architecture/wp-content/uploads/sites/695/2026/01/Feb-4-Header.jpg X-TRIBE-STATUS: END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20260219T170000 DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20260219T180000 DTSTAMP:20260419T061808 CREATED:20251124T180633Z LAST-MODIFIED:20251124T181416Z UID:10000030-1771520400-1771524000@uwm.edu SUMMARY:Nocturnal Medicine: Tricks of the Trade DESCRIPTION:Date & TimeFebruary 19\, 2026 (5:00-6:00 p.m.) \n\n\nLocationArchitecture & Urban Planning Building\, Jim Shields Gallery of Architecture & Urbanism (AUP 146) \n\n\nNocturnal Medicine operates on the cultural soul. Founded in 2021 by Larissa Belcic and Michelle Farang Shofet\, the trans-disciplinary collective has roots in landscape architecture\, visual art\, performance\, and nightlife. \nThe name “Nocturnal Medicine” speaks to the power of night. There is a potency in the dark hours that opens us up to shadowy ways of being\, seeing\, and feeling. Their work seduces through the senses and draws people into the heart of our wounded world. From that place\, the medicine occurs—the balm that moves us towards transformation. \nAmongst their body of work\, Nocturnal Medicine has created sanctuaries for ecological grief\, climate-aware seasonal rites\, chapels for extinction\, and raves for public healing. They have designed immersive social experiences across diverse platforms\, including in nightlife (Nowadays\, Honcho\, Dripping)\, cultural institutions (Lincoln Center\, Performance Space NY)\, and universities across the country (Yale\, UVA\, MIT\, Syracuse). Their work has been celebrated in The New York Times and CityLab as bringing a cutting-edge\, soul-centered approach to addressing the psycho-emotional impacts of climate crisis. URL:/architecture/event/nocturnal-medicine-tricks-of-the-trade/ LOCATION:Jim Shields Gallery of Architecture & Urbanism sponsored by HGA (AUP 146)\, 2131 E Hartford Ave\, Milwaukee\, WI\, 53211\, United States CATEGORIES:Architecture,Arts and Culture,Lectures Conferences and Symposiums,51 Campus Events ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/webp:/architecture/wp-content/uploads/sites/695/2025/11/NOCTURNAL-MEDICINE_Project-Image_03-WEB_1400x788.webp X-TRIBE-STATUS: END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20260304T120000 DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20260304T131500 DTSTAMP:20260419T061808 CREATED:20260120T171715Z LAST-MODIFIED:20260202T182023Z UID:10000032-1772625600-1772630100@uwm.edu SUMMARY:Preparing Communities for Data Center Development DESCRIPTION:Date & TimeWednesday\, March 4 (12-1:15 p.m.) \n\n\nLocationVirtual \n\n\nAn Innovative Cities Lecture\nAs data center development expands across Wisconsin and the Midwest\, communities are increasingly being approached by developers seeking land\, electricity\, and water. While these projects can bring significant investment\, they also raise complex questions related to zoning\, infrastructure capacity\, public finance\, and environmental impacts. \nThis session equips planners and local officials with the foundational knowledge needed before a data center proposal arrives—and the critical questions to ask when it does. Speakers will address the wide range of data center types\, Wisconsin’s 2023 data center tax exemption\, local zoning and policy tools\, and lessons from communities across the region. Case examples from Wisconsin\, the Midwest\, and the country will highlight strategies for managing\, attracting\, or limiting data center development in alignment with community goals. \nBiographies\nAllison Carlson is the Executive Director for the Wisconsin Local Government Climate Coalition. She is an energy and sustainability professional\, working over 15 years across a variety of roles in market research and evaluation\, government regulation and oversight\, program planning\, and administration. She has a keen eye toward the concerns of commissions\, utilities\, and local governments\, allowing for more informed and actionable solutions. Professional objectives are to foster a just and clean energy economy through supporting equitable policy and effective organizational systems and processes. Allison holds a Master of Public Affairs from the University of Wisconsin-Madison and a BS in Finance\, Economics\, and International Business from UW-La Crosse. \nBridget Williams is a policy coordinator at the Great Plains Institute and facilitates the MISO Cities and Communities Coalition\, a group of local governments advocating for an electric grid that supports their goals to lower emissions\, strengthen resilience\, promote equity\, and foster economic opportunity. \nIn this role\, Bridget conducts research\, tracks regional and federal energy issues\, and develops educational materials to assist local governments with engaging grid decision-makers and developing high-impact local energy policies and programs. Bridget recently organized a webinar series to discuss the water and energy impacts of data centers and levers local governments can use to align data centers with local goals. Bridget has a BS in community and regional planning from Iowa State University and lives in Milwaukee\, WI. \nKevin Lahner is the City Manager for Janesville\, WI\, managing strategic planning and employee engagement efforts.  Recent projects include coordinating the planning for a data center and updated City zoning code. Previously he was the City Administrator for the Waukesha\, WI\, where he managed the daily operations and administered the City’s Five-Year Capital Improvement Plan\, and Operating Budget. Kevin holds a Master of Public Administration from the University of North Texas and a BS in Communications-Journalism from the University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point. \nLivestream Details\n\n\n\nRegister + Join Lecture\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n \n\nAICP-CM credits will be awarded. \nIf you have questions\, please contact Carolyn Esswein: cesswein@uwm.edu URL:/architecture/event/preparing-for-data-centers/ LOCATION: CATEGORIES:Arts and Culture,Lectures Conferences and Symposiums,Public,Urban Planning,51 Campus Events ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:/architecture/wp-content/uploads/sites/695/2026/01/Mar-4-Header.jpg X-TRIBE-STATUS: END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20260305T123000 DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20260305T133000 DTSTAMP:20260419T061808 CREATED:20251124T174550Z LAST-MODIFIED:20251124T181458Z UID:10000028-1772713800-1772717400@uwm.edu SUMMARY:Mixing Realities\, A Consciousness of Mud DESCRIPTION:Date & TimeMarch 5\, 2026 (12:30-1:30 p.m.) \n\n\nLocationArchitecture & Urban Planning Building\, Jim Shields Gallery of Architecture & Urbanism (AUP 146) \n\n\nWestern literature\, architecture and game forms tend to focus on the story of a person against the backdrop of the world—the Rückenfigur\, the third-person perspective\, first-person shooter\, the hero\, the ego\, the genius\, the master\, the architect\, the individual. In this figure-ground relation\, the nonhuman world is also banished to the background. As a reparative and realist (but non-redemptive) form\, Multiplayer Mixed Reality\, ‘Mixed Presence’ Game Simulations and Interactions create nonnormative timeframes and interconnected systems without a singular protagonist and moral. \nThe work of Leah Wulfman develops nonnormative uses and playful misuses of technology through embodied physicality. Much of this work is centered around play and performativity\, and pairs game engine interactions and digital twins with their most physical\, material and ludic counterparts–dirt\, weeds\, trash\, plastic and foam. These mixed reality ecologies and interactions find their foundations in disability\, trans and queer embodied practice and politics\, and operate as lenses to reconfigure and recontextualize space and time orientations in architectural discourse beyond the normative. \nAbout Leah Wulfman\nLeah Wulfman is a Carrier Bag architect\, educator\, game designer\, digital puppeteer\, and occasional writer. Trained as an architect\, Wulfman assembles hybrid virtual and physical spaces in order to prototype new relationships to technology and nature\, as well as challenge normative ideologies so often reinforced by technology and architecture. In addition to mixed reality installations that play with and emphasize the physical\, material basis of everything digital\, their research focuses on gamified environments\, interactions and materials. \nWulfman holds a Bachelors of Architecture degree from Carnegie Mellon University and a Masters of Arts in Fiction and Entertainment from SCI-Arc. They have taught at numerous institutions in the United States\, including ArtCenter’s Media Design Practices Graduate Program\, IDEAS Program at UCLA Architecture and Urban Design\, SCI-Arc\, The School of Architecture at Taliesin\, and most recently University of Michigan’s Taubman College of Architecture and Urban Planning\, where they have developed youth programming and mixed reality coursework. Their research and design work has been supported by numerous residencies and publications\, and has been shown as part of various exhibitions and festivals\, including the Buenos Aires Architecture Biennale\, After School\, The FiDi Arsenale\, Space Saloon Design and Build Festival\, Open Engagement\, VIA Festival for Electronic Art and Music\, A Queer Query\, /imagine: A Journey into the New Virtual\, and The Wrong Biennale for New Digital Art. They currently teach at the University of Utah as a Visiting Assistant Professor in the Division of Multi-Disciplinary Design (MDD). Wulfman is a recipient of the 2024 Architectural League Prize for Young Architects + Designers\, and the 2025 United States Artists (USA) Fellowship. URL:/architecture/event/mixing-realities-a-consciousness-of-mud/ LOCATION:Jim Shields Gallery of Architecture & Urbanism sponsored by HGA (AUP 146)\, 2131 E Hartford Ave\, Milwaukee\, WI\, 53211\, United States CATEGORIES:Architecture,Arts and Culture,Exhibition,51 Campus Events ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/webp:/architecture/wp-content/uploads/sites/695/2025/11/WULFMAN-LEAH_Free-Dirt_02-WEB_1400x788.webp X-TRIBE-STATUS: END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20260319T123000 DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20260319T133000 DTSTAMP:20260419T061808 CREATED:20260129T165358Z LAST-MODIFIED:20260314T200537Z UID:10000037-1773923400-1773927000@uwm.edu SUMMARY:Counter-Stories of Architectural Education and Racial Capitalism—A Conversation Between Maura Lucking and Jodi Melamed DESCRIPTION:Date & TimeMarch 19\, 2026 (12:30-1:30 p.m.) \n\n\nLocationJim Shields Gallery of Architecture & Urbanism \n\n\n\nMaura Lucking is a historian of architectural modernism and the nineteenth century U.S. Her research studies design as the intersection of connected histories of race\, craft\, land\, and labor. \nHer forthcoming book\, Settler Campus: Design\, Free Labor\, and Land Reform in American Education\, provides an architectural history of the Land Grant college movement. In it\, she studies the relationship between government policy\, land use\, campus planning\, and design pedagogy at schools founded after the U.S. Civil War\, considering the role of design practices in Black and Native dispossession as well as the construction of new racial identities and settler colonial hierarchies. \nAnother interest is in sociotechnical and media histories of architectural representation\, including mechanical drawing & blueprinting\, architectural photography\, and mortgage and loan documents. New research considers state\, missionary\, and philanthropic approaches to housing and homebuilding projects in Indian country. \nThis scholarly work has been supported by the Winterthur Museum\, Huntington Library\, Graham Foundation\, Society for Architectural Historians\, and the Getty Research Institute and has appeared in Architectural Theory Review\, Faktur\, Grey Room\, the Getty Research Journal\, the Journal of Architectural Education\, and Thresholds. She was the recipient of the 2024 Brownlee Dissertation Award\, given by the Society of Architectural Historians to celebrate the most outstanding dissertation for that year in architectural history. \nJodi Melamed is professor of English and Race\, Ethnic\, and Indigenous Studies at Marquette University. For spring semester 2024 she served as the Norman Freehling Professor at the Institute for the Humanities at the University of Michigan. \nShe is the author of Represent and Destroy: Rationalizing Violence in the New Racial Capitalism (Minnesota UP\, 2011)\, co-editor of Economies of Dispossession: Indigeneity\, Race\, Capitalism (with Jodi A. Byrd\, Alyosha Goldstein\, and Chandan Reddy)\, a special issue of the journal Social Text. Her influential essay\, “Racial Capitalism\,” is among the most cited articles in the journal Critical Ethnic Studies. She has published widely on relational approaches to critical race and ethnic studies and gendered racial capitalism in widely cited essays including “Predatory Value: Economies of Dispossession and Disturbed Relationalities” (with Jodi A. Byrd\, Alyosha Goldstein\, and Chandan Reddy)\, “The Spirit of Neoliberalism: From Racial liberalism to neoliberal multiculturalism\,” “Using Liberal Rights to Enforce Racial Capitalism” (with Chandan Reddy) and “ Don’t Arrest Me\, Arrest the Police: Policing as the Street Administration of Colonial Racial Capitalism” (with Lisa Cacho). \nHer current book project\, Operationalizing Racial Capitalism: From its Command Powers to its Undoing (with Chandan Reddy) is under contract with Verso Books. For today’s liberatory movements\, it seeks to provide an understanding of how liberalism writ large functions as racial capitalist world-making praxis. Melamed and Reddy examine liberalism writ large not as a philosophy of freedom or just order\, but as theory and practice of command. They examine liberalism’s key praxis-concepts – nation-state\, (capitalist) law\, property\, security\, citizenship and more – as nodal points for command apparatuses that are key to colonial racial capitalist operability. The intention of their operational account is not to make racial capitalism seem implacable\, but to show that its doings are always threatened by protocols for making\, continuing\, and defending specific\, grounded living (Black\, Indigenous\, migrant and more). By refusing killability and authorizing mutual survival\, such “other doings” evade and break state-capital violence circuits. Though pushed below or outside of ‘politics’ \, as conventionally understood\, such doings together are powerful\, transformative forces. URL:/architecture/event/counter-stories-of-architectural-education-and-racial-capitalism-a-conversation-between-maura-lucking-and-jodi-melamed/ LOCATION:Jim Shields Gallery of Architecture & Urbanism sponsored by HGA (AUP 146)\, 2131 E Hartford Ave\, Milwaukee\, WI\, 53211\, United States CATEGORIES:Architecture,Arts and Culture,Lectures Conferences and Symposiums,51 Campus Events ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/webp:/architecture/wp-content/uploads/sites/695/2026/01/LUCKING-MAURA_The-Indian-Homebuilding-Course-Hampton-Institute-Virginia-c.-1890-Hampton-University-Archives1400x788.webp X-TRIBE-STATUS: END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20260401T120000 DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20260401T130000 DTSTAMP:20260419T061808 CREATED:20260120T174036Z LAST-MODIFIED:20260120T182844Z UID:10000033-1775044800-1775048400@uwm.edu SUMMARY:Bridging the Housing Gap: Stories from Two Midwest Communities DESCRIPTION:Date & TimeWednesday\, April 1 (12-1 p.m.) \n\n\nLocationVirtual \n\n\nAn Innovative Cities Lecture\nCommunities of every size are facing mounting housing shortages—from overall supply constraints to the lack of affordable options. This session explores practical strategies for expanding housing availability through the experiences of a mid-sized Wisconsin city (La Crosse) and a small Minnesota community (Wabasha). Learn how each community gathers and uses data to demonstrate need\, applies a range of financing tools to make projects feasible\, and implements planning approaches designed to attract investors\, encourage development\, and deliver more housing where it’s needed most. \nBiographies\nCaroline Gregerson has been City Administrator for the City of Wabasha for 5 years. In her role\, she manages 37 full-time and part-time employees\, staffs the Wabasha Port Authority\, oversees all major projects for the City including housing\, transportation\, child care. Prior to that role\, she worked for the City of La Crosse as their Community Development Administrator for 8 years. She holds a Master’s in Public Administration from Syracuse University Maxwell School.   \nMara Keyes is the Community Development Manager for the City of La Crosse\, Wisconsin. She manages federal dollars that support essential services for low-income residents – through nonprofit organizations and by building and preserving affordable housing. Her work bridges the gap between policy\, programming and people to make meaningful impact in the community. Prior to her role in La Crosse Mara provided grants and loans to entrepreneurs as part of the Wisconsin Women’s Business Initiative Corporation.  She serves on the YWCA board\, is a founding board member of the La Crosse Film Academy and the Rivoli Arts District\, and represents the City of La Crosse on the La Crosse Promise Board and the School District’s Early Childhood Steering Committee. \nLivestream Details\n\n\n\nRegister + Join Lecture\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n \n\nAICP-CM credits will be awarded. \nIf you have questions\, please contact Carolyn Esswein: cesswein@uwm.edu URL:/architecture/event/bridging-the-housing-gap/ LOCATION: CATEGORIES:Arts and Culture,Lectures Conferences and Symposiums,Public,Urban Planning,51 Campus Events ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:/architecture/wp-content/uploads/sites/695/2026/01/Apr-1-Header.jpg X-TRIBE-STATUS: END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20260402T123000 DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20260402T133000 DTSTAMP:20260419T061808 CREATED:20251124T175702Z LAST-MODIFIED:20251124T181517Z UID:10000029-1775133000-1775136600@uwm.edu SUMMARY:ULTRAMODERNE DESCRIPTION:Date & TimeApril 2\, 2026 (12:30-1:30 p.m.) \n\n\nLocationArchitecture & Urban Planning Building\, Jim Shields Gallery of Architecture & Urbanism (AUP 146) \n\n\nYasmin Vobis is a registered architect and co-founding Principal of ULTRAMODERNE. She studied architecture at the University of California\, Berkeley and Princeton University. She was awarded the Founders—Arnold W. Brunner—Katherine Edwards Gordon Rome Prize in Architecture in 2016 and she is currently Assistant Professor in Architecture at UC Berkeley. ULTRAMODERNE is an award-winning architecture and design firm located in Berkeley\, CA. Led by co-principals Aaron Forrest and Yasmin Vobis\, the office creates buildings and public spaces that are at once modern\, playful\, and generous. The principals believe that design is not a luxury\, but rather fundamental to the construction of all aspects of the built environment. URL:/architecture/event/ultramoderne/ LOCATION:Jim Shields Gallery of Architecture & Urbanism sponsored by HGA (AUP 146)\, 2131 E Hartford Ave\, Milwaukee\, WI\, 53211\, United States CATEGORIES:Architecture,Arts and Culture,Lectures Conferences and Symposiums,51 Campus Events ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/webp:/architecture/wp-content/uploads/sites/695/2025/11/ULTRAMODERNE_Southlight_01-Photo-by-Naho-KubotaWEB_1400x788.webp X-TRIBE-STATUS: END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20260408T113000 DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20260408T140000 DTSTAMP:20260419T061808 CREATED:20260316T212010Z LAST-MODIFIED:20260330T202150Z UID:10000038-1775647800-1775656800@uwm.edu SUMMARY:Center for Equity Practice & Planning Justice Open House and Symposium DESCRIPTION:Date & TimeWednesday\, April 8\, 2026 (11:30 a.m.-2:00 p.m.) \n\n\nLocationArchitecture & Urban Planning Building\, Marcus Commons \n\n\n\nIn recognition of National Fair Housing Month — commemorating the landmark Fair Housing Act of April 11\, 1968 — we invite you to be part of the solution. The Center for Equity Practice and Planning Justice (CEPPJ) within 51’s School of Architecture & Urban Planning\, in partnership with the Milwaukee Community Land Trust\, is hosting a transformative Open House and Symposium dedicated to shaping Milwaukee’s future as a justice-oriented city. \nMilwaukee stands at a pivotal crossroads. As one of the most segregated cities in the United States\, Milwaukee faces a deepening affordable housing crisis that threatens the stability of thousands of families\, particularly in communities of color. The affordable housing crisis is not simply a housing problem. It is a justice problem. \nHousing Justice for Milwaukee: Community Land Trusts\, Equity Strategies\, and the Path to a Justice-Oriented City is not merely a conversation about housing. It is a conversation about power\, community self-determination\, and who gets to call Milwaukee home. Join scholars\, practitioners\, city leaders\, community advocates\, and neighbors as we explore proven\, scalable\, and durable strategies to make affordable housing a lasting reality for Milwaukee’s most vulnerable residents. \n\nRegister by March 31\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nSchedule\nWednesday\, April 8\n\n\n\n\nTime\nDescription\nLocation\n\n\n\n\n11:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.\nLunch & Networking\nAUP 126\n\n\n11:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.\nCEPPJ Open House\nAUP 225\n\n\n12:30-12:45 p.m.\nWelcome & Opening Remarks\nMarcus Commons\n\n\n12:45-1:30 p.m.\nPanel Discussion\nMarcus Commons\n\n\n1:30-1:45 p.m.\nQ & A\nMarcus Commons\n\n\n1:45 pm.-2:00 p.m.\nClosing Remarks\nMarcus Commons\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nPanel Discussion\n\n \n\nDr. Kirk Harris\nModerator\nFounding DirectorCenter for Equity Practice and Planning Justice\nBiography\n\n \n\nIan Bautista\nSenior Director of Civic EngagementGreater Milwaukee Foundation \nBiography\n\n \n\nLamont Davis\nExecutive DirectorMilwaukee Community Land Trust \nBiography\n\n \n\nLatasha Henley\nHomeowner of Land Trust property\nBiography\n\n \n\nSam Leichtling\nDeputy CommissionerDepartment of City Development\nBiography\n\n \n\nErika Sanders\nPresident and CEOMetropolitan Milwaukee Fair Housing Council\nBiography\n\n \n\nBeth Van Gorp\nDirector of Advocacy and Government RelationsMilwaukee Habitat for Humanity\nBiography\n\n \n\nTeig Whalen-Smith\nExecutive DirectorCommunity Development Alliance\nBiography\n\n\n\nIan Bautista\nSenior Director of Civic EngagementGreater Milwaukee Foundation \nIan B. Bautista is Senior Director of Civic Engagement at the Greater Milwaukee Foundation\, where he leads initiatives that advance community change\, public policy engagement\, and racial equity across the Milwaukee region. A seasoned nonprofit and community development leader\, Bautista brings more than two decades of experience working at the local and national levels to strengthen communities and expand opportunity. \nPrior to joining the Foundation in 2020\, Bautista served as Executive Director of the Clarke Square Neighborhood Initiative\, a collaborative effort on Milwaukee’s South Side focused on implementing a neighborhood Quality of Life Plan. Earlier in his career\, he served as President of the United Neighborhood Centers of America\, a national network of community-based organizations that later merged into what is now Social Current\, and he also served as President & CEO of El Centro\, Inc. in Kansas City\, Kansas. \nA native of Kansas City\, Kansas\, Bautista holds an MBA from Rockhurst University and a Master of Regional and Community Planning\, along with bachelor’s degrees in Political Science and Spanish\, from Kansas State University. He lives in Whitefish Bay\, Wisconsin with his family and remains active in civic leadership and community service. \n\n\nErika Sanders\nPresident and CEOMetropolitan Milwaukee Fair Housing Council \nErika Sanders is President and CEO of the Metropolitan Milwaukee Fair Housing Council (MMFHC)\, Wisconsin’s only full-service private fair housing enforcement agency. She has been with MMFHC since 1998\, and has played multiple roles within the organization. Over the last 28 years\, she has provided direct services to victims of illegal housing discrimination\, created and implemented education and outreach campaigns on numerous specialized fair housing topics\, and conducted training for owners and managers of rental housing. Ms. Sanders holds degrees from Oberlin College and the University of Wisconsin – Madison. \n\n\nLamont Davis\nExecutive DirectorMilwaukee Community Land Trust  \nLamont Davis is Executive Director of the Milwaukee Community Land Trust (MCLT)\, where he leads efforts to expand permanently affordable homeownership and advance community-driven solutions to the housing affordability crisis. His work focuses on creating pathways to homeownership for families historically excluded from traditional housing markets\, while ensuring affordability is preserved for future generations. \nLamont has helped grow MCLT into a trusted community-based housing organization\, working in partnership with local governments\, financial institutions\, philanthropic organizations\, and neighborhood stakeholders. He has led initiatives to acquire\, rehabilitate\, and steward homes in historically disinvested neighborhoods\, with a focus on stabilizing communities\, preventing displacement\, and building long-term community wealth. \nHis leadership is informed by practical experience in residential construction and housing development\, allowing him to connect policy\, development\, and stewardship into a cohesive strategy for sustainable impact. Lamont is a recognized advocate for the Community Land Trust model and frequently speaks on topics including closing the racial homeownership gap\, permanently affordable housing\, community wealth building\, and equitable neighborhood development. \nHe is committed to advancing housing as a foundation for economic stability\, dignity\, and opportunity\, and brings both technical expertise and lived community perspective to his work and public speaking. \n\n\nSam Leichtling\nDeputy CommissionerDepartment of City Development \nSam Leichtling is the Deputy Commissioner for the City of Milwaukee’s Department of City Development. Sam has worked for the City of Milwaukee since 2008 and has held leadership roles in DCD’s Housing and Planning Divisions including formerly serving as City Planning Director. He holds master’s degrees in Urban Planning and Public Administration from the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee and a bachelor’s degree from Carleton College.  Sam is a member of the American Institute of Certified Planners (AICP) and a certified Housing Development Finance Professional (HDFP).  \n\n\nTeig Whalen-Smith\nExecutive DirectorCommunity Development Alliance \nTeig’s passion is building and leading collaborative teams to make Milwaukee the best place on planet earth. He believes that for Milwaukee to achieve its full potential\, there needs to be a focus on the people and neighborhoods that have been left out of the larger social\, political\, and economic systems. Teig was raised and continues to live in the Sherman Park neighborhood and is a proud Milwaukee Public Schools alumni and parent. \nIn 2022\, Teig was named the Chief Alliance Executive for the Community Development Alliance (CDA). CDA is an affiliation of community development funders and practitioner in the Milwaukee Area that led Milwaukee’s first Collective Affordable Housing Plan\, with the goal of advancing racial equity by providing a quality affordable home for every Milwaukeean. Since the plan has been implemented\, CDA has supported over 300 new and rehabbed homes\, 3\,000 new homeowners\, and raised more than $40 million to support Black & Latino homeownership.  \nPrior to joining CDA\, Teig served as the chief operating officer of Milwaukee County where he managed a $1.2 billion annual budget\, serving one million residents.  Teig supported the expansion of mental health services\, the elimination of chronic homelessness\, and was a core member of the leadership team that was the first municipality in the country to declare racism as a public health crisis and develop a strategic plan to combat racism. Teig also served as the Economic Development Director of Milwaukee County and led the efforts to develop more than $1 billion in the former Park East corridor\, including Fiserv Forum. In his private sector career\, Teig led a community economic development firm that developed $60 million of affordable housing and main street development.  \n\n\nLatasha Henley\nHomeowner of Land Trust property \nLatasha Henley’s journey to homeownership is a story of resilience\, determination\, and hope. A college graduate in the medical field and a dedicated Patient Health Advocate in the nephrology department\, Latasha has always been committed to helping others live healthier lives. Outside of work\, she enjoys caring for her family\, assisting seniors in her community\, and spending time with her beloved grandchildren. \nLatasha began pursuing homeownership in 2010\, but her path was unexpectedly challenged in 2014 when she suffered a stroke that left her disabled. Rather than giving up on her dream\, she found the strength to start again. She worked tirelessly to rebuild her finances\, improve her credit\, and strengthen her financial knowledge. \nIn 2025\, with the support of the Community Land Trust\, Latasha’s years of perseverance paid off when she officially became a homeowner. Today\, her three-bedroom home and spacious backyard provide a safe\, joyful place where she can create memories with her grandchildren and continue building a brighter future for her family. \nLatasha’s story is a powerful reminder that with determination\, support\, and opportunity\, dreams of homeownership can become reality.  \n\n\nBeth Van Gorp\nDirector of Advocacy and Government RelationsMilwaukee Habitat for Humanity \nSince 2015\, Beth Van Gorp has been part of the Milwaukee Habitat for Humanity team and is currently the Director of Advocacy and Government Relations\, which is a new position for the organization. Milwaukee Habitat for Humanity is in the midst of plans to successfully double production of new homes for homeownership and critical home repairs by 2028. Beth’s professional experience includes over 20 years with Habitat for Humanity of Charlotte\, NC. Her roles with Habitat have included volunteer coordination\, accounting\, safety\, AmeriCorps\, and grants management. A native of Iowa\, she is a graduate of the University of Tulsa. \n\n\nSymposium Focus Areas\n\nAffordable Housing Development: Innovative approaches to expanding the supply of permanently affordable homes in Milwaukee neighborhoods.\nCommunity Land Trust Strategies: How the CLT model legally separates land from housing to achieve generational affordability\, with CLT foreclosure rates 6x lower than the national average.\nCommunity Stability & Anti-Displacement: Tools and policies that protect legacy residents from the pressures of gentrification and speculative market forces.\nCommunity Self-Determination: Governance models that keep decision-making power about land and housing in the hands of residents and communities — not absentee investors.\nScalability & Policy Innovation: Pathways to grow and replicate successful affordable housing models city-wide and regionally.\nMilwaukee’s Justice-Oriented City Framework: How affordable housing strategies align with Milwaukee’s broader equity\, inclusion\, and social justice agenda.\n\n\nRegistration\nJoin Us in Shaping Milwaukee’s Future \nThis event is free and open to the public. All are welcome: students\, educators\, practitioners\, policy makers\, residents\, advocates\, and community members committed to housing justice in Milwaukee. Space is limited. Please register by Tuesday\, March 31\, 2026. \n\nRegister Now\n\n Questions? Contact Maria Holman: holmanmw@uwm.edu \n\n\n\n\nAbout the Center for Equity Practice & Planning Justice\n\nThe Center for Equity Practice and Planning Justice (CEPPJ) at the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee School of Architecture and Urban Planning is dedicated to expanding opportunities for historically marginalized communities by addressing deep-rooted patterns of racial segregation in urban and regional planning. Through innovative research\, collaboration\, and community engagement\, CEPPJ focuses on disparities in housing\, transportation\, economic development\, public health\, and education — developing actionable strategies to transform segregated regions into thriving\, equitable communities.\nLearn more about CEPPJ\n\n\n\nAbout the Milwaukee Community Land Trust\n\nThe Milwaukee Community Land Trust (MCLT) is a nonprofit organization that creates permanently affordable homeownership opportunities for low- to moderate-income families in Milwaukee. Founded in 2017\, MCLT employs the Community Land Trust model — legally separating land ownership from home ownership to keep homes affordable for generations — while providing robust homebuyer support\, financial education\, and stewardship services. MCLT is a cornerstone of Milwaukee’s affordable housing strategy and a national model for community-driven housing justice.\nLearn more about MCLT URL:/architecture/event/center-for-equity-practice-planning-justice-open-house-and-symposium/ LOCATION:Marcus Commons\, 2131 East Hartford Ave\, Milwaukee\, WI\, 53211\, United States CATEGORIES:Lectures Conferences and Symposiums,Urban Planning,51 Campus Events ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/webp:/architecture/wp-content/uploads/sites/695/2026/03/Milwaukee_neighborhood.webp X-TRIBE-STATUS: END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20260420T000000 DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20260520T235959 DTSTAMP:20260419T061808 CREATED:20251124T173039Z LAST-MODIFIED:20260406T155443Z UID:10000023-1776643200-1779321599@uwm.edu SUMMARY:Faculty Exhibition Opening Reception & Presentation: Iris Xiaoxue Ma DESCRIPTION:Date & TimeApril 20-May 20\, 2026Gallery hours: Mon-Fri (9 a.m.–5 p.m.)Reception: May 1\, 2026 (4:30-6:30 p.m.) \n\n\nLocationArchitecture & Urban Planning Building\, Jim Shields Gallery of Architecture & Urbanism (AUP 146) \n\n\nIris Xiaoxue Ma works with foraged local clay in combination with recycled organic aggregates to produce composite ceramic materials. Through the mis-use of analog and digital ceramic tools\, Ma’s practice focuses on the production of ambiguous objects that question assumptions of materiality\, process\, and craft. This exhibition showcases Iris’s teaching and research work from 2025-2026 supported by 51 SARUP’s Fitzhugh Scott Faculty Fellowship. URL:/architecture/event/faculty-exhibition-iris-xiaoxue-ma/ LOCATION:Jim Shields Gallery of Architecture & Urbanism sponsored by HGA (AUP 146)\, 2131 E Hartford Ave\, Milwaukee\, WI\, 53211\, United States CATEGORIES:Architecture,Arts and Culture,Exhibition,51 Campus Events ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/webp:/architecture/wp-content/uploads/sites/695/2025/11/MA-IRIS-XIAOXUE_Fellowship_Teaser-Photo_02-WEB_1400x788.webp X-TRIBE-STATUS: END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20260423T123000 DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20260423T133000 DTSTAMP:20260419T061808 CREATED:20260129T164154Z LAST-MODIFIED:20260129T164156Z UID:10000036-1776947400-1776951000@uwm.edu SUMMARY:Bounding Box Architecture: A Comics Workshop DESCRIPTION:Date & TimeThursday\, April 23\, 2026 (12:30-1:30 p.m.) \n\n\nLocationArchitecture & Urban Planning Building\, Marcus Commons \n\n\nThis workshop is a hands-on introduction to sequential narrative and story-making with students. At a time where bounding boxes are being drawn around faces\, bodies\, and buildings to extract data for AI training\, how might the meta-structure of framing in comics and the graphic arts help us (literally) reframe the built environment around us? What can the format of sequential narrative lend us in troubling times? \nThis event invites you to attend to the bounding box\, the frame\, and the panel as an actor in architectual representation\, instigating alternate ways of seeing and representing the world. This event will begin with a mini-lecture and introduction to a series of comic works\, followed by an hour of hands-on drawing and conversation. BYO pens and pencils of varying colors and weights. \nBiography\nAmelyn Ng is an architect\, cartoonist\, and Assistant Professor of Architecture at Columbia GSAPP. She has previously taught at the Rhode Island School of Design and Rice University\, and is a registered architect in the State of Victoria\, Australia. Her work contends with relationships between matter and representation\, and seeks alternate narratives to the status quo of building. While her creative practice engages themes of waste\, material economy\, and planetary extraction\, her research examines the socio-technical relations of architectural representation with a focus on entanglements between labor\, technology\, and material conditions. URL:/architecture/event/bounding-box-architecture-a-comics-workshop/ LOCATION:Marcus Commons\, 2131 East Hartford Ave\, Milwaukee\, WI\, 53211\, United States CATEGORIES:Architecture,Arts and Culture,Lectures Conferences and Symposiums,51 Campus Events ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/webp:/architecture/wp-content/uploads/sites/695/2026/01/NG-AMELYN_Pigdin_One-Day-Home-Depot-1400x788-1-copy.webp X-TRIBE-STATUS: END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20260506T120000 DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20260506T130000 DTSTAMP:20260419T061808 CREATED:20260120T174558Z LAST-MODIFIED:20260416T200940Z UID:10000034-1778068800-1778072400@uwm.edu SUMMARY:Overland Flow Paths: Managing Big Rain Without Big Tunnels DESCRIPTION:Date & TimeWednesday\, May 6 (12-1 p.m.) \n\n\nLocationVirtual \n\n\nAn Innovative Cities Lecture\nOverland Flow Paths: Managing Big Rain Without Big Tunnels \nAs extreme rain events become more frequent\, communities are rethinking how stormwater moves across urban landscapes. This session explores the use of overland flow paths—subtle\, landscape-based features within neighborhoods and public rights-of-way that temporarily store\, slow\, and convey stormwater without relying on expensive tunnels or lift stations. \nDrawing on work by the US firm CIS\, international firm Ramboll\, Milwaukee Metropolitan Sewerage District (MMSD) and examples from Milwaukee\, New York City\, and Copenhagen\, speakers will show how connected networks of parks\, streets\, and open spaces can reduce flood risk\, support climate adaptation provide co-benefits for the community and quietly perform during big storms while remaining largely invisible the rest of the time. \nThis landscape-based strategy represents a durable\, multi-generational investment in climate adaptation and resilience. When designed well\, overland flow systems can be largely invisible during dry conditions while significantly reducing flood risk during storms. Learn about policy decisions\, phasing\, construction aspects and how parks and public spaces can function as stormwater collection and conveyance areas\, demonstrating how cities of all sizes can reimagine urban topography to better respond to weather that is increasingly outside of our control. \nBiographies\nSimon Kates\, AICP\, WEDG is a senior project manager and climate adaptation planner at Ramboll\, with nearly 20 years of experience in climate adaptation\, land use\, economic development\, and sustainability. Simon’s expertise includes creating climate resilience strategies and vulnerability assessments that address coastal flooding\, inland precipitation\, and urban heat. Throughout his career\, Simon has focused on a community-based approach to planning for complex urban challenges and climate resilience. In his current practice\, he works closely with project partners\, community stakeholders\, and technical experts to find multi-functional solutions that mitigate climate impacts while providing community co-benefits. Simon has served as a Visiting Assistant Professor at Pratt Institute and is currently teaching a Capstone course on Integrated Watershed Planning at Brooklyn College. \nKaren Sands\, AICP\, is the Program Director for CIS\, a national leader in the development and implementation of public infrastructure solutions. Recognized as one of the top 10 Influential Women of Water by Mazars in 2020\, Karen’s sustainability career has focused on planning for green infrastructure\, water resources\, energy conservation and renewables\, environmental compliance\, and climate change adaptation / mitigation. She integrates forward-looking research and contextual opportunities that enhance the quality of life for people living\, working\, and playing in cities. Karen uses data analysis and policy analysis to advance innovative environmental solutions. She has worked with and for the Milwaukee Metropolitan Sewerage District to advance the practice areas of regional stormwater management. \n \nLivestream Details\n\n\n\nRegister + Join Lecture\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n \n\nAICP-CM credits will be awarded. \nIf you have questions\, please contact Carolyn Esswein: cesswein@uwm.edu URL:/architecture/event/overland-flow/ LOCATION: CATEGORIES:Arts and Culture,Lectures Conferences and Symposiums,Public,Urban Planning,51 Campus Events ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/webp:/architecture/wp-content/uploads/sites/695/2026/03/May-6-Header-1.webp X-TRIBE-STATUS: END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20260514T000000 DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20260514T235959 DTSTAMP:20260419T061808 CREATED:20250730T201719Z LAST-MODIFIED:20250730T232017Z UID:10000006-1778716800-1778803199@uwm.edu SUMMARY:SUPERjury DESCRIPTION:Date & Time*Thursday\, May 14\, 2026 \n*Dates and times are subject to change. \n\n\nLocationJim Shields Gallery of Architecture & Urbanism \n\n\nSUPERjury is a day-long review and celebration of the most provocative undergraduate and graduate projects in the school. With projects nominated for consideration by both students and faculty\, the goal of SUPERjury is to foster self-reflection and stimulate a conversation about the state of architecture within the school and how our work relates to contemporary issues in practice and the world. \nStudents selected to participate in the review are recognized with honors and cash prizes. It’s a very significant event for the School of Architecture & Urban Planning. URL:/architecture/event/superjury/ LOCATION:Jim Shields Gallery of Architecture & Urbanism sponsored by HGA (AUP 146)\, 2131 E Hartford Ave\, Milwaukee\, WI\, 53211\, United States CATEGORIES:Architecture ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:/architecture/wp-content/uploads/sites/695/2025/07/250729_SARUP_SUPERjury_02.jpg X-TRIBE-STATUS: END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20260726T000000 DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20260801T235959 DTSTAMP:20260419T061808 CREATED:20250730T181904Z LAST-MODIFIED:20260313T162015Z UID:10000005-1785024000-1785628799@uwm.edu SUMMARY:Architecture Summer Camp Academy DESCRIPTION:Date & Time*July 26\, 2026 (7:30–8:30 p.m.)July 27-31\, 2026 (9 a.m.–12:15 p.m.)Aug 1\, 2026* (9 a.m.-1:00 p.m.) \n*Optional in-person Milwaukee day \n\n\nAges14–18 \n\n\nLocationVirtual\, plus one optional in-person day in Milwaukee \n\n\nContactttaylor@uwm.edu \n\n\nThe UW-Milwaukee School of Architecture and Urban Planning offers an opportunity for high school students to experience architecture education through our architecture summer camp\, which we have proudly offered for over two decades.  \nOur Virtual Architecture Summer Camp is ideal for students interested in architecture\, design\, and 3D design technologies. Students in grades 9-12\, including new high school graduates\, will learn the basics of architectural design guided by SARUP faculty member Alex Timmer\, supported by SARUP graduate students\, faculty\, and staff. \nStudents will be presented with situations for which they will design an architectural solution. They’ll learn how to communicate their design ideas through models\, drawings\, text and verbal presentation. Workshops will teach students how to use digital modeling tools\, read architectural drawings\, and document their work through 2D representation. \nIn-Person Visit (Optional)On the final day of camp\, students and families will have an opportunity (this is optional) to visit Milwaukee in person\, take in a few architecture tours\, and have lunch at the School of Architecture & Urban Planning. We’d love to show you around if you can join us in Milwaukee! \nRegistration\nA limited number of seats are available until capacity is reached. Our registration system now features a parent/youth portal\, and all families need to create an account while enrolling in our summer programming. \n\n\n\n\nRegistration\nDeadline\nCost\n\n\n\n\nStandard\nMonday\, June 15\, 2026\n$625\n\n\n\n\n\n\nRegister URL:/architecture/event/architecture-summer-camp-academy/ LOCATION: CATEGORIES:Architecture ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:/architecture/wp-content/uploads/sites/695/2025/07/2025.SARUP_Website_Events-Community_Pre-College-Programs_Highlight-Slider_CAL.jpg X-TRIBE-STATUS: END:VEVENT END:VCALENDAR