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AIA Selects 7 Communities for Community Assistance Program to Promote Long-term Sustainability

      Contact: Scott Frank
      202-626-7467
      sfrank@aia.org

      For immediate release:
      Washington, D.C. – January 26, 2010 –
      The American Institute of Architects (AIA) Center for Communities by Design has selected Allegheny County, Pa., Allentown, Pa., Bridgeport, Conn., Coos Bay, Ore., Ithaca, N.Y., Oxford, Miss. and Portland, Maine as seven communities to receive technical assistance under the Sustainable Design Assessment Team (SDAT) program in 2010. The collaborative SDAT brings together architects and other professionals assembled from across the country to provide a roadmap for communities seeking to improve their sustainability – as defined by a community’s ability to meet the environmental, economic, and social equity needs of today without reducing the ability of future generations to meet their needs.

      “As the SDAT program has evolved, communities all over the country have embraced and implemented the detailed solutions for neighborhood revitalization, transportation infrastructure challenges and economic development that our volunteer teams have provided after conducting background research and an intensive design and planning charette,” said Erin Simmons, director , AIA Center for Communities by Design.

      An architect-led team of professionals including planners, hydrologists, economic development specialists, and others will be selected based on their credentials and the specific needs of each community. The SDAT will work in conjunction with local stakeholders to help shape the community’s strategy to increase sustainability. To provide the most objective assessment, team members volunteer their time and expertise and are selected from areas outside the project communities.

      SDAT program elements


      The communities were selected after submitting an application to the 2009 SDAT review panel outlining the economic, environmental, and social equity challenges facing their region. The SDAT community assistance program provides the selected communities with these components:

    • Preliminary/scoping visit
    • Three-day visit from a multidisciplinary team
    • A report highlighting the strengths and weaknesses of the community with regards to sustainability, along with the opportunities and obstacles to change
    • Consultations after the three-day visit (typically by phone or email)

      To learn more about the AIA Center for Communities by Design or the SDAT program visit:

      http://www.aia.org/about/initiatives/AIAS075425.

      About the AIA Center for Communities by Design
      The Center for Communities by Design is the clearinghouse for the American Institute of Architects' many activities—from promoting sustainable design to leading design based technical assistance projects in communities—that influence the quality of life in our nation's communities. The center is a nonpartisan forum that provides information, develops policy, creates partnerships, and assists in advocacy efforts to facilitate discussions of community design and inform choices for neighborhoods, cities, regions, and the nation.

      About The American Institute of Architects
      For over 150 years, members of The American Institute of Architects have worked with each other and their communities to create more valuable, healthy, secure, and sustainable buildings and cityscapes. AIA members have access to the right people, knowledge, and tools to create better design, and through such resources and access, they help clients and communities make their visions real. www.aia.org

 

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