December 7, 2024
Avery Hall
1172 Amsterdam Avenue
New York, New York 10027
United States
T +1 212 854 3414
The 2024 Fitch Colloquium, “Repairing Architecture Schools” will be held on December 7, 2024 at Columbia University’s Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation (GSAPP). It is co-organized by Jorge Otero-Pailos, Professor and Director of the Historic Preservation Program at GSAPP, and Nancy Levinson and Frances Richard of Places Journal.
Architecture, preservation and the professions of the built environment are undergoing a profound sea change in their collective ethos and practices the likes of which haven’t been seen since the Industrial Revolution. Yet most schools have not adjusted to the new reality. Professions once centered on new construction are now focusing on the care and repair of existing buildings. In the United States, 49.3 percent of all income earned by architects now comes from renovations, restorations, additions, and preservation work—a higher percentage than the global average of 37 percent. The US construction industry estimates that these percentages will continue to increase, as 40 percent of the country’s building stock is 50 years or older and built with poor materials. Climate change is also driving the industry to pay more attention to existing buildings, which constitute 40 percent of all carbon emissions. New laws and regulations are requiring the mass-scale renovation of existing buildings to meet new climate standards. Taken together these facts suggest that there is growing demand for professionals with the knowledge and skills to creatively reimagine the existing building stock.
Yet, architecture schools in the US are either unwilling or unable to acknowledge the changing professional marketplace, and equally importantly, the new reality of our human condition. The majority continue to teach students as if their future professional activity will mainly be new construction. How can we accelerate academia’s adaptation to the new exigencies of society—and the planet? What would architecture schools look like if many more courses focused on existing buildings? What ideal of the professional architect would schools present to aspiring students? How can change in architecture schools be spurred by journals and other institutions that recognize and celebrate professional excellence?
Inspired by the eponymous article on Places, this year’s colloquium will explore the pedagogical imagination, and consider what it would take to rebalance the relative importance of preserving existing buildings in the pedagogy of architecture schools. While focusing on architecture and preservation, the symposium will also explore the impact of such pedagogical innovations in all the professions of the built environment, including urban planning, real estate development, urban design, engineering and others.
Participants include: Deborah Berke, Dean and J.M. Hoppin Professor of Architecture at Yale School of Architecture; Mario Gooden, Professor of Professional Practice, Director of the MArch Program at GSAPP; Nick Axel, Deputy Editor at e-flux Architecture; Daniel Barber, Chair of Architecture History and Theory at TU Eindhoven; Shumi Bose, Associate Lecturer and Contextual Studies Coordinator, BA Architecture at Central Saint Martins; Olaf Grawert, Partner B+, Founder of HouseEurope! and Professor at ETH; Josephine Minutillo, Editor in Chief at Architectural Record; Andrea Roberts, Director, The Texas Freedom Colonies Project and Associate Professor, Urban + Environmental Planning at UVA School of Architecture; Mireille Roddier, Associate Professor of Architecture Taubman College Architecture & Urban Planning at University of Michigan, Erica Avrami, James Marston Fitch Associate Professor of Preservation at GSAPP, Nancy Levinson, Editor and Executive Director of Places Journal, and Jorge Otero-Pailos, Professor and Director of the Historic Preservation Program at GSAPP.
This event is free and open to the public. Registration is required for all attendees at least two business days in advance of the event. Columbia University campus access is restricted to Columbia affiliates (with a valid CUID) and to pre-approved guests, please bring your ID.