51ÁÔÆæ

Rehbein appointed director of Community Design Solutions at 51ÁÔÆæ

Krisann Rehbein

Krisann Rehbein has been appointed the new director of Community Design Solutions (CDS), a design outreach arm of the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee’s School of Architecture & Urban Planning.

CDS provides preliminary design and planning services to underserved communities, nonprofit agencies and municipalities in Milwaukee and the surrounding areas. Architecture and urban planning students work with clients and faculty to develop concepts that promote positive change, stimulate funding opportunities and serve as a catalyst for continued investment.

Rehbein is a Milwaukee-based artist, design educator and nonprofit leader who specializes in youth and community engagement. She also is executive director of ACE Mentor Chicago, an organization that introduces teens to career opportunities in architecture, construction and engineering.

Rehbein spent more than a decade at the Chicago Architecture Foundation (now Center), where she implemented citywide programming for teens, created community outreach initiatives and developed a suite of new adult programs to expand the conversation about the built environment.

She teaches at the 51ÁÔÆæ School of Architecture & Urban Planning and is frequently invited to speak on issues about access, equity and engagement in design. Rehbein is the recipient of multiple industry awards, including the AIA Chicago Distinguished Service Award in 2017 and the AIA Illinois Richard Nickel Award in 2021.

“We are thrilled to welcome Krisann as the new director of CDS,†said Mo Zell, interim dean of 51ÁÔÆæâ€™s College of the Arts and Architecture. “Her vision for the future of the organization, which includes expanding the role that faculty will play in projects, and her expertise in design and community engagement will help advance the work of CDS and uphold its reputation as a leader in community design.â€

Rehbein succeeds Carolyn Esswein, who has served as CDS director for more than 10 years.

Under Esswein’s leadership, CDS has been involved in over 230 projects that have had a significant impact on the region. Among them is the Green Schoolyards project, a partnership among CDS, the nonprofit Reflo and Milwaukee Public Schools to transform asphalt schoolyards into outdoor classrooms, green infrastructure and safe play areas.

CDS also played a vital role in the Home Gr/Own Initiative, where residents were part of the planning process to add 20 parks and orchards in one of Milwaukee’s most under-resourced neighborhoods. The work has been recognized nationally as a SXSW Eco Urban Strategy Award recipient and a semifinalist for Harvard’s Innovation in Government Award.

During Esswein’s tenure, CDS conducted its hallmark Community Design + Development Charettes in a dozen neighborhood development projects throughout Milwaukee. The process brings diverse opinions together early in the planning process to achieve consensus on investment opportunities.

SARUP Announces Jury for 2023 Marcus Prize

Jurors headshots

Internationally acclaimed architects and practitioners comprise the jury for the coveted 2023 Marcus Prize, awarded by the 51ÁÔÆæ School of Architecture and Urban Planning (SARUP) in partnership with the Marcus Corporation Foundation.

Kai-Uwe Bergmann, Lee Bey and Débora Mesa will join David Marcus, Mo Zell, and Sam Schuermann on this year’s jury, which will meet this fall and announce the 2023 Marcus Prize recipient in September.
 
Kyle Reynolds, Head of School for SARUP, is excited about what Bergmann, Bey, and Mesa bring to the jury. “These jurors are incredibly talented, and their diverse roles and perspectives in the field of architecture will undoubtedly enrich the selection process and contribute to recognizing visionaries in our industry,†he said.

“Not only does this jury represent an inspiring wealth of experience and expertise, but they also represent the caliber of this prestigious award,†Reynolds added.

Meet the Jury 

Kai-Uwe Bergmann, FAIA, is a Partner at BIG, a Copenhagen, New York, London, Barcelona and Shenzen based group of architects, designers, urbanists, landscape professionals, interior and product designers, researchers and inventors. Bergmann brings his architectural expertise to proposals around the globe, including work in North America, Europe, Asia and the Middle East. Kai-Uwe heads up BIG’s business development–which currently has the office working in over 40 different countries. He also oversees BIG’s Urban scales projects and supports BIG’s Landscape projects. He is registered as an architect in the USA (15 states) and Canada. Bergmann most recently contributed to the resiliency plan BIG U to protect 10 miles of Manhattan’s coastline. First envisioned through the Rebuild by Design competition to develop proactive responses to Superstorm Sandy, it is now being constructed with a completion date in 2026. Additional projects include Reimagining Brooklyn Bridge, Brooklyn Queens Park, Smithsonian Master Plan, Pittsburgh Master Plan and Miami Beach Square. He complements his professional work through previous teaching assignments at Georgia Tech, University of Pennsylvania, IE University in Madrid, and his alma mater the University of Virginia. Bergmann formerly was on the Board of the Van Alen Institute, participates on numerous international juries and lectures globally on the works of BIG.

Lee Bey is architecture critic for the Chicago Sun-Times. He is also a member of the Sun-Times editorial board, where he writes editorials on city governance, neighborhood development, politics and urban planning. Bey is the author of the much-praised book Southern Exposure: The Overlooked Architecture of Chicago’s South Side (Northwestern University Press, 2019), which showcases his architectural photography and social commentary. He was also the host of the public television special, Building Blocks: The Architecture of Chicago’s South Side, which aired on WTTW in 2023.

David Marcus is the chairman of the Marcus Corporation Foundation. He has chaired the foundation for the last five years and has helped steward the foundation since 2005. Marcus is a board member of Goodwill Industries of Southeast Wisconsin, Marcus Center for the Performing Arts and Sculpture Milwaukee. He is the past chair of the Froedtert Foundation and Betty Brinn Children’s Museum. He also leads Marcus Investments, the Marcus family’s private investment arm. Marcus Investments holdings includes Berengaria Real Estate Development, Hospitality Democracy restaurants, Verlo Mattress and a minority interest in the Milwaukee Brewers Baseball Club. 

Débora Mesa is a European Licensed Architect, principal of Ensamble Studio and co-founder of WoHo. She is the 2021 Marcus Prize recipient along with her partner Antón García-Abril. She learned the profession by combining design with hands-on experiences in quarries, factories and construction sites, where she arrived to translate innovative ideas into built reality, alongside her partners Antón García-Abril and Javier Cuesta. Mesa has been key to the expansion of the firm in the United States and the implementation of an interdisciplinary approach to architecture. Their contributions to the theory and practice of architecture have received numerous international recognitions, including the 2022 American Academy of Arts and Letters Award and the 2019 RIBA Charles Jencks Award. She is Design Critic in Architecture at Harvard GSD and previously served as Critic at Large at Pratt GAUD in 2021/22, Ventulett Chair in Architectural Design at Georgia Tech in 2018/22 and Research Scientist at MIT in 2013/18, where she co-founded the POPlab –Prototypes of Prefabrication– in 2012. Mesa holds a master’s degree from the Polytechnic University of Madrid, where she also completed her doctorate studies.

Sam Schuermann is an Assistant Professor at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee School of Architecture and Urban Planning. She holds a Master of Architecture from Rice University and a Bachelor of Science in Architecture from the University of Cincinnati, where she has taught studios in the School of Architecture and Interior Design. Prior to joining 51ÁÔÆæ, Schuermann practiced at LEVER Architecture in Portland, Oregon with a focus on affordable housing, cultural institutions, and mass timber material research. Schuermann is a designer, maker, and researcher whose work explores the aesthetics, objects, conventions, and material implications of domesticity. She served as the 2022-23 Architectural Activism Fellow at 51ÁÔÆæ, researching the intersection of domestic labor, gender, and architecture. Her work has been published in Wisconsin Architect Magazine, NCBDS, PLAT 7.5, exhibited at the Oslo Architecture Triennale and through Sculpture Milwaukee, and she has served on numerous juries.

Mo Zell is Interim Dean of the College of the Arts and Architecture, an accomplished architect and author. She is principal of the award-winning design and research practice, bauenstudio, with partner Marc Roehrle. Zell co-founded Women in Design Milwaukee and is president of the Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture (ACSA). In 2021, she was recognized as a Milwaukee Business Journal Woman of Influence in the mentor category. Her book, The Architectural Drawing Course, is a popular resource providing tools and techniques for architectural drawings to students and design professionals. Zell received her B.S. in Architecture from the University of Virginia and her M.Arch from Yale University. Before working at 51ÁÔÆæ, Zell taught at Clemson University, North Carolina State University, and Northeastern University.
 

About the Marcus Prize

The Marcus Prize was established in 2005 as a biennial, international architecture award recognizing the talent and achievements of emerging architects in the early stages of their careers. The award recognizes both the past accomplishments of emerging architects, as well as their promise of future contributions to the field of architecture. Past recipients include Winy Maas, Jacob van Rijs and Nathalie de Vries, MVRDV, Frank Barkow and Regine Leibinger, Barkow Leibinger, Alejandro Aravena, Diébédo Francis Kéré, Sou Fujimoto, Joshua Ramus, Jeanne Gang, Tatiana Bilbao, and Antón García-Abril and Débora Mesa, Ensamble Studio. 
 
Thanks to the generous support of the , the $100,000 prize includes $50,000 to the winner and $50,000 to lead a design studio in collaboration with SARUP faculty. 

Milwaukee Independent: Digital Preservation with Terracotta & Photogrammetry

William Krueger

Milwaukee Independent features 51ÁÔÆæ SARUP’s Historic Preservation Institute as a leading center for using advanced photogrammetry and laser scanning to digitally preserve architectural terra cotta—especially from the Pabst Mansion pavilion. Under HPI’s direction, faculty and students document and reconstruct historic elements and build digital archives to support restoration. This work underscores the institute’s mission to bridge education and preservation through cutting‑edge technology.

Read the full story on

Lindsey Krug joins Wisconsin Architects Foundation Board of Directors

Lindsey Krug

Assistant Professor Lindsey Krug has been elected to the Board of Directors of the Wisconsin Architects Foundation (WAF) for a term extending through June 2025.

WAF, the philanthropic arm of AIA Wisconsin, supports architectural education and public engagement across the state. Since its founding in 1953, the foundation has awarded more than $500,000 in scholarships to Wisconsin architecture students and has funded educational and professional initiatives.

As the only school of architecture in Wisconsin, SARUP maintains a close connection to WAF’s mission. Krug’s appointment will further strengthen ties between the foundation and the school’s students, faculty, and alumni.

Professor Schneider helps bridge transit gaps through FlexRide Milwaukee partnership

Community leaders gather for a ribbon cutting ceremony with a city bus in the background

A how Urban Planning faculty helped launch and evaluate FlexRide Milwaukee, an innovative microtransit service connecting Milwaukee residents to suburban jobs.

Originally funded by the National Science Foundation’s Civic Innovation Challenge, the pilot ran from February to September 2022 and has since been sustained and expanded through additional grants.

Professor Robert Schneider, a national leader in active transportation research, played a key role in advancing the project through 51ÁÔÆæâ€™s collaboration with the Southeastern Wisconsin Regional Planning Commission (SEWRPC) and community partners. Together, they helped build partnerships, define performance metrics, and center equity in service design.

In 2023, FlexRide Milwaukee transitioned to management under MobiliSE, becoming a model for transit innovation focused on access, workforce mobility, and regional cooperation.

Rethinking Passenger Rail Options: 19th Century Freight Lines or the Townless Highway?

Headshot of Barry Gore outdoors.

“Rethinking Passenger Rail Options: 19th Century Freight Lines or the Townless Highway?†presentation by Barry Gore, Transportation Planning Advocate.

Lecture Summary

New federal funding for intercity passenger rail brings planning to a crossroads: should investments focus on incremental ‘baby steps’ to expand service on old freight corridors or should new models be considered that utilize publicly-owned right-of-way along interstate highways? What are the safety and speed benefits of avoiding small towns on historic rail lines, and how might station locations along the ‘Townless Highway’ (Benton MacKaye 1931) be planned and accessed? Learn about innovative solutions for implementing high-speed rail around the country and ongoing discussions in Wisconsin.

Biography

Barry Gore is an urban planner and designer specializing in public transit and land use. He has a master’s degree from the University of Wisconsin Department of Landscape Architecture and has served in public sector and consulting positions. Work on transit corridors in the Twin Cities included: Hiawatha Light Rail Transit, Central Corridor LRT, Northstar commuter rail, and Riverview bus rapid transit. He also managed the Humboldt Greenway redevelopment project, worked on the Midtown Greenway rail to trails, and wrote the award winning Above The Falls riverfront plan.

His “Isthmus Ridge†concept, published in 2002, provided a new vision for the East Washington corridor in Madison. He created the Yahara Station concept in 2009 for locating Madison’s intercity passenger rail station and founded the Campaign for Yahara Station with an active group of real estate, architecture, and transit activists.

In Chicagoland, he was project manager for the Village of Niles on the region’s first suburban bus rapid transit. Metra station area plans were created for the villages of River Grove and Buffalo Grove. Mr. Gore managed plans for four stations on the Washington D.C. Metrorail system in Prince George’s County, Maryland. He created a station redesign and redevelopment concept for Rockville Station in Maryland, and led an upzoning of the Veirs Mill Road BRT corridor.

His current work is focused on BRT transit oriented development planning and regional rail planning in southeastern Wisconsin and pro bono advocacy for high speed rail in the Twin Cities to Madison to Chicago corridor


AICP-CM credits will be awarded. AICP CM Credit 

Livable Cities for All Ages: AARP National and Local Projects

Side by side headshots of Darrin Wasniewski and Suleyman Bahceci.

The Innovative Cities Lecture Series

“Livable Cities for All Ages: AARP National and Local Projects†presentation by Darrin Wasniewski, Associate State Director of Community Outreach for AARP Wisconsin, and Suleyman Bahceci, Senior Methods Advisor at the AARP Public Policy Institute.

Lecture Summary

Housing needs change as we age, but it’s possible for our homes and communities to be livable for people of all ages and life stages. Learn how the AARP Livability Index can assist you and your community in planning a more accessible city and using placemaking for all generations to enjoy. National and local Wisconsin projects and partnerships will be shared.

Biographies

 is the Associate State Director of Community Outreach for AARP Wisconsin, where he co-leads the effort to create Livable Communities throughout the state. Darrin is also a Founding Partner of the consulting firm Grow Collaborative. He is passionate about fostering social connection, creating places for all ages and all abilities, and unleashing the power of locals as experts in their future. As a volunteer, Darrin is a Global Walkability Correspondent for Pedestrianspace.org, a collaborative focused on advancing walkable communities around the world, where he leads international workgroups focused on Architecture & Urbanism and the Walkable Economy. In the state, his passion finds an outlet as a steering committee member of 1000 Friends of Wisconsin’s Active Wisconsin Network. Locally, in his home of Madison, he serves on the steering and transportation committees for Madison is for People, is a member of Downtown Madison Inc. participating on the organization’s transportation and economic development committees, and as a transportation commissioner for the City of Madison. Additionally, he maintains membership in Wisconsin Downtown Action Council, Congress for New Urbanism, American Planning Association and YIMBY Action. He is a trained facilitator in Strategic Doing, Community Heart & Soul and Ice House Entrepreneurship Mindset. Darrin earned an MBA in Marketing from Kent State University and a Bachelor of Arts in History from Ohio State University.

 is a Senior Methods Advisor at the AARP Public Policy Institute, where he has been a member of the Family, Home, and Community team since 2020. His work focuses on livable communities initiatives such as the AARP Livability Index, reviewing data, quantitative analytics, and overall project management support to empower individuals and families to prosper in their homes and communities. Prior to joining AARP, Suleyman played an administrative role in higher education and K-12 education settings. He was responsible for services that contribute to enhancing student success, recruitment, retention, and graduation. He also prepared and managed continuing education courses. Previously, Suleyman worked for nine years as a Research Scientist at Exelixis Inc., a biotechnology company in San Francisco.
He has served as vice chair of diversity and inclusion with the University Professional and Continuing Education Association (UPCEA). He is currently a senior member of the Civil Air Patrol and has been an Aerospace Education Officer and Character Education Instructor since 2017. He holds Project Manager Professionals (PMP) and CompTIA Security+ certifications.
Bahceci received his master’s and doctoral degrees in computational chemistry from the University of Texas, Austin and his bachelor’s degree in science education and Master of Science in Chemistry and Biochemistry from the Middle East Technical University in Ankara, Turkey.

AICP-CM credits will be awarded.

SARUP awards 2021 Marcus Prize to innovative architectural duo

Ensamble Studio

Ensamble Studio, with offices in Madrid and Boston, is the winner of the 2021 Marcus Prize, a renowned achievement in international architecture that includes a $100,000 award and a supported design studio for students in the School of Architecture and Urban Planning at UW-Milwaukee. Architects Antón García-Abril and Débora Mesa lead Ensamble Studio, which was founded in 2000 and focuses on embedding research and experimentation in every project.

Through the vision and support of the Marcus Corporation Foundation, the School of Architecture and Urban Planning accepts biennial nominations for the Marcus Prize. Ensamble Studio was selected from a pool of accomplished nominees from 19 countries and five continents.

“Ensamble’s name, processes and practice reflect the extraordinary times we’re living in,†said Lesley Lokko, 2021 Marcus Prize juror. “The combination of an outstanding firm and an outstanding prize bodes well for the future of all our built environment professions, not just architecture.â€

García-Abril and Mesa will lead a sponsored studio for students at the School of Architecture and Urban Planning in fall 2022. “Our vision of architectural practice is one where enthusiasm meets perseverance, imagination meets rigor and leadership meets teamwork,†said García-Abril and Mesa. “This is what we offer to our collaborators, clients and students through our own example.â€

About the Marcus Prize

The Marcus Prize was established in 2005 as a biennial, international architecture award that honors emerging architects for their outstanding work to date, as well as recognizing the promise of their future contributions to the field of architecture.

The $100,000 prize provides $50,000 to the winner and a further $50,000 to lead a design studio in collaboration with faculty in the School of Architecture & Urban Planning. In addition to the award itself, the Marcus Corporation Foundation provides financial support to host the selection jury and to bring the awardees to Milwaukee for the studio.

“We at the Marcus Corporation Foundation are proud to support the important work of University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee School of Architecture & Urban Planning through the Marcus Prize,†said David Marcus, chairman of the Marcus Corporation Foundation. “The opportunity to identify and bring in so many talented architects over the years to work with the students has been truly unique. The impact of the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee School of Architecture & Urban Planning’s students on the architectural landscape in our city and region has been remarkable.â€

The esteemed 2021 Marcus Prize jury included 2019 Marcus Prize recipient Tatiana Bilbao, founder of Mexico City-based Tatiana Bilbao Estudio. Bilbao was joined by David Brown, artistic director of the 2021 Chicago Architecture Biennial, and Lesley Lokko, founder and director of the African Futures Institute. David Marcus, chairman of the Marcus Corporation Foundation, and Robert Greenstreet, dean emeritus of the School of Architecture and Urban Planning at UW-Milwaukee, also served as jurors.

About Ensamble Studio

Ensamble Studio is a cross-functional team founded in 2000 and led by architects Antón García-Abril and Débora Mesa. Balancing imagination and reality, art and science, their work innovates typologies, technologies and methodologies to address issues as diverse as the construction of the landscape or the prefabrication of the house. From their early works – SGAE Headquarters, Hemeroscopium House or The Truffle in Spain – to their most recent – Ensamble Fabrica in Madrid and Ca’n Terra in Menorca, Spain – every project makes space for experimentation aiming to advance their field.

Currently, through their startup WoHo, the duo is invested in increasing the quality of architecture while making it more affordable by integrating offsite technologies. Their new research and fabrication facility in Madrid, Ensamble Fabrica, has been built to support this endeavor. García-Abril and Mesa are committed to sharing ideas and cultivating synergies between professional and academic worlds through teaching, lecturing and researching. Mesa is the Ventulett Chair in Architectural Design at Georgia Tech, and García-Abril is a professor at MIT, where in 2012 they co-founded the POPlab – Prototypes of Prefabrication Laboratory.

SARUP announces esteemed international jury for 2021 Marcus Prize 

Juror headshots

Internationally acclaimed architects and practitioners comprise the jury for the coveted 2021 Marcus Prize, awarded by the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee School of Architecture and Urban Planning in partnership with the . Tatiana Bilbao, David Brown and Lesley Lokko will join David Marcus and Robert Greenstreet on this year’s jury, which will meet later this summer and announce the 2021 Marcus Prize in September.

Mo Zell, professor and chair of the architecture department, said she was thrilled to have Bilbao, Brown and Lokko as jurors this year. “They bring a wealth of experience, expertise and leadership, but most importantly inspiration,†she said.

“Bilbao, Brown and Lokko are encouraging the next generation of architects by leading important conversations about how architecture is a collaborative act that engages neighborhoods, cities and people,†Zell added. 

Meet the Jury

Tatiana Bilbao, recipient of the 2019 Marcus Prize, founded Mexico City-based Tatiana Bilbao Estudio in 2004 with the aim of integrating social values, collaboration and sensitive design approaches to architectural work. Bilbao holds a recurring teaching position at Yale University’s School of Architecture and has taught at the Harvard Graduate School of Design, Architectural Association School of Architecture in London and many more. Her work has been featured in publications including the New York Times, A+U and Domus. 
 
David Brown is a designer, researcher, and educator based at the School of Architecture at the University of Illinois at Chicago and is the artistic director of the 2021 Chicago Architecture Biennial. Brown investigates non-hierarchical, flexible and variable approaches to urban design. Brown’s work has been exhibited in the Venice Architecture Biennale (2012), the Chicago Cultural Center’s Expo 72 (2013), and the Chicago Architecture Biennial (2015). Brown has taught at Florida A&M University and Rice University. 
 
Lesley Lokko, Ph.D., is the founder and director of the African Futures Institute, a postgraduate school of architecture and public platform of built environment disciplines located in Accra, Ghana. She has lectured and published widely on the subject of race, identity and architecture. Lokko was the founder and director of the Graduate School of Architecture at the University of Johannesburg, and she has also served as the Dean of Architecture at the Spitzer School of Architecture at The City College of New York. Lokko is a visiting professor at her alma matter, the Bartlett School of Architecture, University College London, and sits on the boards of the Architecture Foundation in London and the U.N. Council on Urban Initiatives. Lokko also is a bestselling novelist.  
 
David Marcus is the chairman of the Marcus Corporation Foundation. He has chaired the foundation for the last five years and has helped steward the foundation since 2005. Marcus is a board member of Goodwill Industries of Southeast Wisconsin, Marcus Center for the Performing Arts and Sculpture Milwaukee. He is the past chair of the Froedtert Foundation and Betty Brinn Children’s Museum. He also leads Marcus Investments, the Marcus family’s private investment arm. Marcus Investments holdings includes Berengaria Real Estate Development, Hospitality Democracy restaurants, Verlo Mattress and a minority interest in the Milwaukee Brewers Baseball Club. 
 
Robert Greenstreet, Ph.D., is dean emeritus of 51ÁÔÆæâ€™s School of Architecture and Urban Planning. He specializes in the legal aspects of construction and has authored or co-authored seven books and published over 180 working papers and articles. In addition to being a registered architect in the United Kingdom, he is a practicing arbitrator, mediator and expert witness recognized in both the United States and Europe. In 2013, Greenstreet received the AIA/ACSA Topaz Medallion for Excellence in Architectural Education, and in 2016, he was named Fellow of the Royal Institute of British Architects, one of only 30 elected worldwide. 

About the Marcus Prize

The Marcus Prize was established in 2005 as a biennial, international architecture award recognizing the talent and achievements of emerging architects in the early stages of their careers. The award recognizes both the past accomplishments of emerging architects, as well as their promise of future contributions to the field of architecture. Past recipients include Winy Maas, Frank Barkow, Alejandro Aravena, Diébédo Francis Kéré, Sou Fujimoto, Joshua Ramus, Jeanne Gang and Tatiana Bilbao. 
 
Thanks to the generous support of the , the $100,000 prize includes $50,000 to the winner and $50,000 to lead a design studio in collaboration with SARUP faculty.