The AIA Regional and Urban Design Committee (RUDC) along with
the Center for Communities by Design, Committee on the Environment,
Housing and Residential Architecture Committee, Young Architects
Forum, and AIA Seattle are joining together September 1417,
2006, to organize a conference titled Livable Communities:
Connecting Urban and Environmental Issues with Design
Opportunities. The conference will be held at the Seattle
Marriott Waterfront/Bell Harbor Conference Center.
The Livable Communities conference will engage design
professionals, public officials, and others in an exploration of
the intersecting spheres of community and environment through
design. The focus will be on creating sustainable places that
connect opportunities related to walking, working, and water:
- Walking: discuss design at a human scale and issues related to
the social equity aspects
of sustainability
- Working: explore issues concerning a sound economic base,
transportation, and workforce housing
- Water: connect the built environment to natural systems,
including water, as well as waterfront opportunities
Using the past, present, and potential future of Seattle and the
greater Puget Sound region as a point of departure, the conference
will focus on issues of national concern as well as the way those
issues are experienced in the host community. The conference will
also focus on issues ranging from regional to community to
neighborhood scales.
Enjoy Seattle, a crossroads of culture, architecture, ideas and
places. It's a city that includes the new Central Library
designed by Rem Koolhaas, the internationally recognized Space
Needle, Frank Gehry's Experience Music Project, Robert Venturi's
Seattle Art Museum, and the Washington Mutual Tower. Seattle is
defined by water. To the west lies Puget Sound; to the east, in the
middle, is Lake Union. Everywhere, the focus is water, from its
heritage to its future.
To discuss sponsorship opportunities and availability, please
contact Doug Paul, director of professional practice at the AIA, dpaul@aia.org or
202-626-7386.