Presenter(s): Default Type: On Demand Air Date: 4/30/2008 Air Time: 9:43 AM Duration: 1 Hour 26 Minutes 9 Seconds
Presenter: Jon Foley
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Presenter(s): Multiple Presenters Type: On Demand Air Date: 5/1/2008 Air Time: 9:28 AM Duration: 1 Hour 25 Minutes 10 Seconds
Presenters: Jay Rohkohl, Randy Olson, Dale Holland
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Presenter(s): Default Type: On Demand Air Date: 5/1/2008 Air Time: 2:00 PM Duration: 1 Hour 35 Minutes 32 Seconds
Presenter: Eric Owen Moss, FAIA
Our apologies for the poor audio quality of this presentation.
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Presenter(s): Default Type: On Demand Air Date: 5/1/2008 Air Time: 3:54 PM Duration: 43 Minutes 23 Seconds
Presenters: Flad Architects
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Presenter(s): Default Type: On Demand Air Date: 5/27/2009 Air Time: 10:32 AM Duration: 1 Hour 4 Minutes 24 Seconds
Presenter: James Wasley, AIA, University of Wisconsin – Milwaukee School of Architecture & Urban Planning
The American Institute of Architects is helping to coordinate and support the Carbon Neutral Design (CND) Project to produce educational and resource materials for carbon-neutral design. This is a collaborative project involving the AIA Sustainability Discussion Group (SDiG), AIA Committee on the Environment (COTE), AIA Educator/Practitioner Network (EPN) and the Society of Building Science Educators (SBSE). Capitalizing on the expertise of building science educators and practitioners, the CND project will produce peer reviewed web-ready content.
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Presenter(s): Default Type: On Demand Air Date: 5/27/2009 Air Time: 10:38 AM Duration: 57 Minutes 39 Seconds
Presenter: Ron Radzinger, FAIA, design principal of Marmol Radziner and Associates
Join Ron Radziner as he provides a behind-the-scenes look at his firm’s design-build history. Through a sampling of projects, including Mid-Century restorations, new residences, commercial buildings and prefab homes, the lecture will offer attendees an insider’s perspective on the give-and-take between the ideals of design and the reality of building. Radzinger's 100-person firm, established in Los Angeles in 1989, has grown to offer a range of design services, including landscape design, interior design and prefabricated housing. The firm’s commitment to design excellence and to preserving architectural history has translated into an award-winning approach to projects. Radziner develops design solutions that create strong connections between interior and exterior spaces and provide unique architectural identities. This keynote address is made possible by the underwriting support of The Boldt Company.
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Presenter(s): Default Type: On Demand Air Date: 5/27/2009 Air Time: 10:39 AM Duration: 1 Hour 14 Minutes 16 Seconds
Keynote: Jeanne Gang, FAIA. principal of Studio Gang Architects
Celebrate excellence in architecture by participating in the presentation of the 2009 AIA Wisconsin Design Awards. This year's award presentation includes a special keynote address by Jeanne Gang. Gang leads an architectural practice whose work has been noted for its innovation and design leadership. Through exploration and research early in the design process, Gang’s work has staked out new creative territory in materials, technology and sustainability. Following Gang's keynote address, Design Award Committee co-chars Katherine Schnuck, AIA, and Mark Kruser, AIA, will present the 2009 AIA Wisconsin Honor and Merit Awards to the architects, owners and contractors responsible for the award-winning projects.
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Presenter(s): Default Type: On Demand Air Date: 5/27/2009 Air Time: 10:39 AM Duration: 53 Minutes 47 Seconds
Presenter: Daniel Stephans, Division of State Facilities
This seminar presentation will answer the question:"What are the Wisconsin Department of Administration, Division of State Facilities (DSF) Sustainable Facilities Policy and Guidelines and Standards and how are they to be used?" The guidelines and standards are designed to promote and ensure that state facilities are constructed and renovated in a sustainable manner, starting with initial project planning and continuing through occupancy and operation. They address all aspects of the planning, design and construction process as well as support Conserve Wisconsin and Governor Doyle’s Executive Order 145 by demonstrating green building leadership for state buildings.
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Presenter(s): Default Type: On Demand Air Date: 5/27/2009 Air Time: 10:40 AM Duration: 48 Minutes 1 Second
Here’s your chance to learn about recent construction trends, how the ARRA funding has impacted the industry and the McGraw-Hill Construction outlook for the next 1 to 2 years. Presenter Dan Palmer, senior director of editorial operations for McGraw-Hill Construction, is a 23 year veteran of McGraw-Hill. He began his career as a reporter and has held various management positions throughout his career. Headquartered in Pittsburgh, Palmer currently is responsible for the newsgathering operation in the Midwest and Eastern portions of the country as well as the national permit gathering operation, U.S. Census relationship, and the Canadian news operational relationship. He has a degree in journalism/ communications and a Master's in organizational management.
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Presenter(s): Default Type: On Demand Air Date: 5/27/2009 Air Time: 10:40 AM Duration: 56 Minutes 53 Seconds
Presenters: Aldo Leopold Legacy Center team members, architect Thomas Kubala, AIA, owner Buddy Huffaker, consultant Michael Utzinger, and architect Joel Krueger
The Aldo Leopold Legacy Center outside of Baraboo was selected as one of the Top Ten projects in 2008 by the AIA Committee on the Environment (COTE). When it received a Platinum certificate from the USGBC, it was recognized as the greenest building in the world. This seminar continues the tradition of asking the architect, owner and other consultants for projects selected to receive a Wisconsin Sustainability and Energy Efficiency (SE2) Leadership Award to present a case study.
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Presenter(s): Rebecca T. Ellis, PE, LEED AP, CCP, CPMP, CxA, Questions & Solutions Engineering Type: On Demand Air Date: 4/28/2010 Air Time: 11:16 AM Duration: 1 Hour 24 Minutes 37 Seconds
With the need to maintain safe, comfortable, flexible and energy conservative environments in increasingly complex and integrated buildings, facility owners are turning to commissioning as a process to help ensure that building systems work. Although the traditional design and construction process can result in all of the parts and pieces of a system being installed, there are no comprehensive checks and balances to verify that all of these components work together dynamically as systems. Building systems commissioning is a process developed to fill this void. New construction commissioning is a systematic process of assuring by verification and documentation that all building systems perform interactively in accordance with the design intent. It also helps to facilitate and confirm appropriate training of facility owners/operators in order to maintain optimal performance throughout the life of the building. Retro-commissioning is a similar process applied to existing building systems which were not commissioned when originally installed and started up. Join Rebecca Ellis, PE, LEED AP, to examine the process of new construction commissioning and understand the costs and benefits. In addition, you will be able to identify appropriate projects and systems to be commissioned. Leave the seminar understanding how the commissioning process can be applied to existing buildings. Ellis is a nationally recognized leader in the building commissioning industry and holds commissioning certifications from the Building Commissioning Association, the American Society of Heating, Refrigeration and Air Conditioning Engineer, and the AABC Commissioning Group. She has Master’s and Bachelor’s Degrees in Mechanical Engineering from MIT and the University of Minnesota, respectively. Ellis is a specialist in the design, analysis and commissioning of intricate temperature and humidity control systems with a particular strength in direct digital controls. She has extensive experience in the design and analysis of HVAC systems and energy conservation proposals. This seminar is sponsored by MasterGraphics Inc.
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Presenter(s): Leith Sharp, Visiting Scholar, Harvard School of Public Health Type: On Demand Air Date: 4/29/2010 Air Time: 12:08 PM Duration: 1 Hour 25 Minutes 16 Seconds
Join Leith Sharp, an international expert in greening higher education, as she helps us explore what the green building experience can teach us about changing organizations. This seminar will identify the demands of organizational change management for sustainability, that is, the art of catalyzing successful and wide scale change in the behaviors and practices of large organizations to reduce impacts on the earth’s life support systems. The lessons learned through the green building experience of Harvard University will form the primary case study basis of the concepts discussed. The seminar will provide an overall framework for understanding the journey ahead towards sustainability and assist you in navigating the complexity of the issues involved in becoming an active sustainability change agent . . . a catalyst for change. You will acquire a new appreciation of what it takes to provide the right context for successful integrated design processes and to navigate common institutional barriers. Sharp will explain the ways in which organizational finance and accounting structures currently work to impede green building innovation and how to better prepare to participate in reforming them. Life cycle costing also will be discussed as one technique for transcending these institutional barriers so that you will be in a better position to ask related questions when engaging with future clients. Sharp began her career in 1993 as the first paid environment officer of any student union in Australia. In 1999, she was recruited by Harvard University to be the funding director of its Green Campus Initiative, which recently renamed the office for sustainability. A consultant for many groups, Sharp sits on the governing boards of numerous organizations dedicated to greening higher education. This seminar is sponsored by the Wisconsin Architects Foundation.
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Presenter(s): David Miller, FAIA, Miller|Hull Partnership Type: On Demand Air Date: 4/29/2010 Air Time: 12:09 PM Duration: 59 Minutes 39 Seconds
In this featured keynote address, award-winning architect David Miller, FAIA, will examine past and present public projects with a focus on the broad idea of sustainability. In addition to recognizing the process for incorporating sustainable design into projects, you also will be able to assess the importance of community advocacy and systems and infrastructure integration.
Miller is a founding partner of the Miller|Hull Partnership, a 55-person firm in Seattle. Design oriented and emphasizing a natural design approach based on the culture, climate and building traditions of a place, the firm’s work has been recognized with over 200 awards. In 2003, the firm received the national AIA Architecture Firm Award. The firm’s projects have been the subject of three monographs. The work of Miller|Hull is composed of a diverse assortment of project types. Since the majority of its projects involve public funding, the firm encourages public input and values working with advisory committees and citizen groups as this process enriches design.
An inspirational designer, Miller has been recognized as an architect who supports, uses and designs sustainable high performance commercial buildings. He currently is the chair for the department of Architecture at the University of Washington, where he is a tenured professor of architecture. He also is an author of Toward a new Regionalism, which promotes environmental architecture and showcases the work of Northwest architects from Portland to British Columbia. In addition, for 2010, he is serving as the co-chair of the AIA Committee on the Environment (COTE) Advisory Group.
The Keynote address is sponsored by CalStar Products.
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