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11th Annual UIUC NOMAS Symposium

The 11th annual NOMAS Symposium will take place on Friday and Saturday, April 20th and 21st on the campus of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.  Entitled "the new DESIGN REALITY", the event is FREE OF CHARGE and open to all.

Keynote addresses will be given by the following persons: ADRIAN SMITH (designer of the Burj Dubai, the Pearl River Tower, and the Jin Mao), Nadja Krylov from the OFFICE OF AL GORE (giving a live presentation of "An Inconvenient Truth" and how it relates to architecture), Vop Osili of A2S04 (a firm specializing in the construction of sustainable residential high-rises), and Matthew Malten & Jean Ascoli from the US GREEN BUILDING COUNCIL (speaking on how universities can help solve global climate problems).

Flyer front / back

To register and for hotel information, contact the President:
Matt Piker mpiker2@uiuc.edu

4/11/07

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KNTM Architects, LLC Purchases Building for New Headquarters

The Partners of KNTM Architects, LLC are proud to announce that their real-estate development company, KNTM Properties, LLC has purchased a commercial office building located in East Orange, New Jersey.  The colonial-revival architectural-style building is rich in historic character and its renovation will be a design-build project by KNTM.   With completion scheduled for the Fall of 2007, the building will be the new headquarter office for the KNTM companies and will also feature an additional 2,500 sf of leaseable office space for prospective tenants.  To learn more about the leasing opportunity or to be included in the mailing list for the building dedication, please email info@KNTM.com.  

More about KNTM Architects, LLC

03/28/07top

African-American Women Building a Presence in Architecture

The number of African-American women practicing as licensed architects has quadrupled in the last 15 years.   Read complete University of Cincinnati article...

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NOMA Receives Whitney Young Jr. Award
Organization honored for promoting profession and increasing diversity

by Heather Livingston
Contributing Editor, AIArchitect

Summary: The AIA Board of Directors on December 7 selected the National Organization of Minority Architects (NOMA) as the recipient of the 2007 Whitney M. Young Jr. Award, given to an architect or organization that exemplifies the profession’s responsibility to society. The award honors the contributions of Whitney Young Jr., outspoken civil rights activist and head of the Urban League from 1961 until his death in 1971. At the 1968 AIA national conference, Young shamed the audience of architects for their social reticence and challenged them to become a positive force for social change, saying, “You are not a profession that has distinguished itself by your social and civic contributions to the cause of civil rights. You are most distinguished by your thunderous silence and your complete irrelevance.”

NOMA’s nomination was submitted by the Boston Society of Architects and supported by six previous Whitney M. Young Jr. Award recipients. In her letter of nomination, Jane Weinzapfel, FAIA, partner of the 2007 AIA Firm Award recipient Leers Weinzapfel, writes, “Although we have repeatedly acknowledged the relative homogeneity of our profession and our commitment to diversify it, we have failed to [increase significantly the number of African-American architects].” Thirty-eight years after Young’s call for action and 35 years after its creation, NOMA was selected for its unfailing dedication to promoting the architecture profession with the goal of increasing diversity among practitioners.

Preeminent voice for minority architects
NOMA was formed to address the existence and impact of racism during the late 1960s and ’70s and acknowledge how socio-economic conditions negatively influence the built environment of poor and oppressed Americans. In 1971, at the AIA national convention, 12 African-American architects formed NOMA to voice dissatisfaction with the status quo and begin the task of equalizing the opportunities and design practices of black architects. Thirty-five years later, NOMA remains the preeminent voice for minority architects.

“NOMA has given greater visibility to African-American architects, provided ‘role-models’ for students, and informed the general public,” says J. Max Bond, FAIA, in his letter of support for NOMA. “Through the establishment of student chapters and by inviting students to attend its meetings, NOMA has helped young people learn about and become members of the profession.” Indeed, NOMA’s commitment to students of color interested in pursuing careers in architecture may prove to be the organization’s greatest legacy.

NOMA’s commitment to students of color interested in pursuing careers in architecture may prove to be the organization’s greatest legacy

The annual National Organization of Minority Architects Students (NOMAS) Student Design Competition has become the coveted award among minority architecture students across the country. The unique program highlights a cultural aspect, historic figure, or significant location that likely won’t be found in other design competitions, but the camaraderie and interaction among other architecture students and professionals is the compelling factor. The NOMA Conference provides students the opportunity to interact with professional architects for portfolio review, advice, internships, and career guidance. Conference seminars offer interns insight on the Architecture Registration Exam, Intern Development Program, portfolio development, interview skills, and resume writing. NOMA also has held a regional ARE preparation program for interns.

Career choice awareness
Additionally, NOMA has begun to make inroads in primary education to make minority youth, and their parents, aware of architecture as a career choice. NOMA has financially supported organizations like Chicago-based ADventure Program, which introduces minority disadvantaged students to architecture and the built environment. NOMA also partnered with the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) to support their National Afro-Academic Cultural Technological and Scientific Olympics (ACT-SO) Competition for high school students interested in architecture.

Today we are present and accountable in the AIA

“Architectural students of color gravitate to NOMA because of its sensitivity to their needs,” says Leon Bridges, FAIA, FNOMA, in his letter of support. “NOMA’s membership is small, but its striving for excellence for minority architects continues to increase in its intensity. NOMA’s mere presence provides hope to hundreds of graduating minority architects for their inclusion in an otherwise, still, white-dominated profession.”

Adds NOMA cofounder Van B. Bruner Jr., FAIA: “Over 30 years have [passed] now and NOMA has and is realizing those goals created by the group in the ’70s. Today we are present and accountable in the AIA. Our dream has taken flight. We have contributed to the AIA and America a segment of our society that would have been lost were it not for NOMA.”

(1/2/2007)

Reprinted from AIArchitect 12/15/06 with permission

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MOODY•NOLAN CAPTURES AIA GOLD MEDAL FIRM OF THE YEAR

 

(Columbus, Ohio)MoodyNolan, Inc. received the 2006 Gold Medal Firm of the Year Award from the Ohio Chapter of the American Institute of Architects (AIA) at its annual conference in Youngstown, Ohio, in September.

Comments from the jury included, “The quality of design stood out and was evident across a variety of building types. The firm has demonstrated responsibility to the profession. They are viewed as a role model for all firms and not only for minority firms.”

The Gold Medal Firm of the Year Award is the highest honor that AIA Ohio bestows on an architectural firm. This award is given annually to a practice the AIA deems to have consistently produced distinguished architecture for at least 10 years. Firms have been recognized with this achievement since 1984.

“It is the coming together of this outstanding group of people, and especially their ability to engage in productive collaborations with exceptional clients and consultants, that have afforded us this unprecedented opportunity. We are honored to be the recipient of this truly prestigious award,” exclaimed Curtis J. Moody, founder, president and CEO of Moody•Nolan.

Moody•Nolan was founded in 1982 by Moody, FAIA, and Howard E. Nolan, PE. The firm has grown steadily and today is the largest African American owned and operated architecture/engineering firm in the country. In its 24 years, Moody•Nolan has received over 110 citations for design excellence from local, state and national organizations.

Headquartered in Columbus, Ohio, Moody•Nolan is a 136-person firm with offices in Cincinnati, Cleveland, Indianapolis, Nashville and Kansas City, Missouri. The professional services provided by the firm include architecture, civil engineering and interior design. Select recent projects for the firm include the AIA award winning University of Illinois Chicago West Campus Sports and Fitness Facility, Fisk University Cravath Hall, Ithaca College New Athletics and Events Center and The Ohio State University Recreation and Physical Activity Center.

(12/20/2006)

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Kliment article on African-American Architects

AIArchitect published the second in the monthly series by Steve Kliment on a history of African American architects. This month’s installment is The Trailblazers.

"Summary: From the time Africans first came to America in 1619, there is evidence of their significant contributions to the built environment of the New World, notes Stephen Kliment in this second installment to his series on diversity in American architecture. He traces that trajectory to the current era, including specific tribute to six noted architects of the 20th century."

The summary

The narrative PDF

The profiles PDF

Please send comments or opinions about the article to Doug Gordon at dgordon@aia.org

(11/13/2006)top



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