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Green New Deal Landscapes is a series hosted by Jose Alfredo Ramírez and Clara Olóriz Sanjuán, both co-directors of AA Groundlab. Each session discusses the relationship between policy making and our environment and explores how we can tackle climate change through landscape design.
Alfredo is joined by Danika Cooper and Manuel Shvartzberg Carrió to talk about indigenous practices in landscape design and how they can be crucial in tackling not only the climate emergency but also social injustice.
The conversation is a follow-up on the article The Red Deal: Decolonising Climate Action published in AD: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/ad.2776Learn more about Danika Cooper’s work:
http://www.danikacooper.com/
https://ced.berkeley.edu/people/danika-cooperLearn more about Manuel Shvartzberg Carrió’s work:
https://usp.ucsd.edu/people/faculty/profiles/Shvartzberg_Manuel.html
https://www.sternberg-press.com/product/productive-universals-specific-situations/This space has been sponsored by Actar Publishers and urbanNext.net.
For the most engaging publications on architecture, urbanism, and landscape architecture visit:
http://actar.com/
For access to exclusive digital content subscribe to:
https://urbannext.net/The urbanNext_exchanges series is curated by Ricardo Devesa and Marta Bugés. Feel free to contact us via email at [email protected] if you want to comment on the podcast or share your work with us.
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Green New Deal Landscapes is a series hosted by Jose Alfredo Ramírez and Clara Olóriz Sanjuán, both co-directors of AA Groundlab. Each session discusses the relationship between policy making and our environment and explores how we can tackle climate change through landscape design.
Alfredo and Clara are joined by Billy Fleming and Douglas Spencer to discuss the role of the architecture profession in tackling climate change and social justice.
The conversation is a follow-up on the article Crises and Contestations: The Promise and Peril of Designing a Green New Deal published in AD: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/ad.2769Learn more about Billy Fleming’s work:
https://mcharg.upenn.edu/
https://islandpress.org/books/blueprint-coastal-adaptation
https://www.lincolninst.edu/publications/books/design-nature-nowLearn more about Douglas Spencer’s work:
https://spatialregister.wordpress.com/
https://birkhauser.com/books/9783035621648
https://www.bloomsbury.com/uk/architecture-of-neoliberalism-9781472581532/This space has been sponsored by Actar Publishers and urbanNext.net.
For the most engaging publications on architecture, urbanism, and landscape architecture visit:
http://actar.com/
For access to exclusive digital content subscribe to:
https://urbannext.net/The urbanNext_exchanges series is curated by Ricardo Devesa and Marta Bugés. Feel free to contact us via email at [email protected] if you want to comment on the podcast or share your work with us.
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Green New Deal Landscapes is a series hosted by Jose Alfredo Ramírez and Clara Olóriz Sanjuán, both co-directors of AA Groundlab. Each session discusses the relationship between policy making and our environment and explores how we can tackle climate change through landscape design.
Alfredo is joined by Neil Brenner and Kai Heron to discuss global environmental politics and inherited approaches to urbanization.
The conversation is a follow-up on the article Towards the Abolition of the Hinterlands published in AD: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/ad.2781Learn more about Neil Brenner’s work:
https://sociology.uchicago.edu/directory/neil-brenner
https://chicago.academia.edu/NeilBrenner
https://urbantheorylab.net/Learn more about Kai Heron’s work:
https://www.bbk.ac.uk/our-staff/profile/9330067/kai-heronThis space has been sponsored by Actar Publishers and urbanNext.net.
For the most engaging publications on architecture, urbanism, and landscape architecture visit:
http://actar.com/
For access to exclusive digital content subscribe to:
https://urbannext.net/The urbanNext_exchanges series is curated by Ricardo Devesa and Marta Bugés. Feel free to contact us via email at [email protected] if you want to comment on the podcast or share your work with us.
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Green New Deal Landscapes is a series hosted by Jose Alfredo Ramírez and Clara Olóriz Sanjuán, both co-directors of AA Groundlab. Each session discusses the relationship between policy making and our environment and explores how we can tackle climate change through landscape design.
Alfredo is joined by Alex Breedon, Liam Mouritz and Kaylie Salvatori to talk about how a decolonial cultural shift in land management can contribute to the mitigation of the climate crisis and the need to learn from design practices and knowledges from indigenous cultures in the Australian context.
The conversation is a follow-up on the article Country-Led Approaches in Land Management and Design published in AD: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002/ad.2778Learn more about Alex Breedon’s work:
https://www.aspect-studios.com/people/alex-breedonLearn more about Liam Mouritz’s work:
https://aaschool.academia.edu/LiamMouritz
https://www.hassellstudio.com/conversation/open-source-city
https://landscapeaustralia.com/articles/an-issue-on-time/
https://issuu.com/aalandscapeurbanism/docs/littoral_negotiationsLearn more about Kaylie Salvatori’s work:
https://www.colastudio.com.au/cola-studiobr>This space has been sponsored by Actar Publishers and urbanNext.net.
For the most engaging publications on architecture, urbanism, and landscape architecture visit:
http://actar.com/
For access to exclusive digital content subscribe to:
https://urbannext.net/The urbanNext_exchanges series is curated by Ricardo Devesa and Marta Bugés. Feel free to contact us via email at [email protected] if you want to comment on the podcast or share your work with us.
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Green New Deal Landscapes is a series hosted by Jose Alfredo Ramírez and Clara Olóriz Sanjuán, both co-directors of AA Groundlab. Each session discusses the relationship between policy making and our environment and explores how we can tackle climate change through landscape design.
Alfredo is joined by Amelia Horgan, Julian Siravo and Kate Soper to talk about the role of working models shape the landscape and its contribution to climate change.
The conversation is a follow-up on the article Making Space for Green Work published in AD: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/ad.2774Learn more about Amelia Horgan’s work:
https://www.plutobooks.com/9780745347790/lost-in-work/Learn more about Julian Siravo’s work:
https://autonomy.work/portfolio/ltccs/
https://autonomy.work/portfolio/workingnights/
https://autonomy.work/portfolio/blueprintforremotework/Learn more about Kate Soper’s work:
https://www.versobooks.com/books/3693-post-growth-living
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2020/sep/08/pandemic-covid-19-work-society
https://www.newstatesman.com/politics/2021/05/what-kind-post-covid-recovery-do-we-wantThis space has been sponsored by Actar Publishers and urbanNext.net.
For the most engaging publications on architecture, urbanism, and landscape architecture visit:
http://actar.com/
For access to exclusive digital content subscribe to:
https://urbannext.net/The urbanNext_exchanges series is curated by Ricardo Devesa and Marta Bugés. Feel free to contact us via email at [email protected] if you want to comment on the podcast or share your work with us.
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Green New Deal Landscapes is a series hosted by Jose Alfredo Ramírez and Clara Olóriz Sanjuán, both co-directors of AA Groundlab. Each session discusses the relationship between policy making and our environment and explores how we can tackle climate change through landscape design.
Alfredo and Clara are joined by Elena Luciano, Yasmina Yehia and Daniel Kiss, graduates from Landscape Urbanism at the Architectural Association. The students researched on landscape management in Wales and Antartica, and got involved with local communities and organizations, to understand the many layers operating in these territories.
The conversation is a follow-up on the articles the students wrote for the AD issue edited by Jose Alfredo Ramírez titled Green New Deal Landscapes: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/toc/15542769/2022/92/1
Elena Luciano and Yasmina Yehia, together with Rafael Martinez Caldera worked on the project Just Transition: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/ad.2771
https://issuu.com/aalandscapeurbanism/docs/190920_aa_landscape_urbanism_just_transition_desigDaniel Kiss, together with Swadheet Chaturvedi worked on the project Dynamic Domains of Antartica: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/ad.2772
https://issuu.com/aalandscapeurbanism/docs/dd_dynamic_domains_aalandscapeurbanism2020bThis space has been sponsored by Actar Publishers and urbanNext.net.
For the most engaging publications on architecture, urbanism, and landscape architecture visit:
http://actar.com/
For access to exclusive digital content subscribe to:
https://urbannext.net/The urbanNext_exchanges series is curated by Ricardo Devesa and Marta Bugés. Feel free to contact us via email at [email protected] if you want to comment on the podcast or share your work with us.
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Green New Deal Landscapes is a series hosted by Jose Alfredo Ramírez and Clara Olóriz Sanjuán, both co-directors of AA Groundlab. Each session discusses the relationship between policy making and our environment and explores how we can tackle climate change through landscape design.
Alfredo is joined by Lindsay Bremner to talk about new methodological procedures and narrative strategies in mapping the landscape to understand complex relationships within the Earth.
The conversation is a follow-up on the article Monsoonal Solidarity: A Global Approach to Climate Justice published in AD: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002/ad.2779Learn more about Lindsay Bremner’s work:
https://www.westminster.ac.uk/about-us/our-people/directory/bremner-lindsay
https://actar.com/product/monsoon-as-method/
https://urbannext.net/drawing-the-monsoon/
http://westminster.academia.edu/LindsayBremner
http://monass.org/
http://exhibition.monass.org/
https://geoarchitecture.wordpress.com/This space has been sponsored by Actar Publishers and urbanNext.net.
For the most engaging publications on architecture, urbanism, and landscape architecture visit:
http://actar.com/
For access to exclusive digital content subscribe to:
https://urbannext.net/The urbanNext_exchanges series is curated by Ricardo Devesa and Marta Bugés. Feel free to contact us via email at [email protected] if you want to comment on the podcast or share your work with us.
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Green New Deal Landscapes is a series hosted by Jose Alfredo Ramírez and Clara Olóriz Sanjuán, both co-directors of AA Groundlab. Each session discusses the relationship between policy making and our environment and explores how we can tackle climate change through landscape design.
Alfredo and Clara are joined by Jane Hutton and Alison Creba to discuss building and construction practices aligned with the Green New Deal movement to tackle the environmental breakdown.
The conversation is a follow-up on their article Taking Apart Buildings and Systems published in AD: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002/ad.2775Learn more about Alison Creba’s work:
https://localtechnique.ca/Learn more about Jane Hutton's work:
https://www.routledge.com/Reciprocal-Landscapes-Stories-of-Material-Movements/Hutton/p/book/9781138830684
https://actar.com/product/wood-urbanism/This space has been sponsored by Actar Publishers and urbanNext.net.
For the most engaging publications on architecture, urbanism, and landscape architecture visit:
http://actar.com/
For access to exclusive digital content subscribe to:
https://urbannext.net/The urbanNext_exchanges series is curated by Ricardo Devesa and Marta Bugés. Feel free to contact us via email at [email protected] if you want to comment on the podcast or share your work with us.
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Feeding its citizens has been one of the main challenges of cities since its earliest history. Although industrialization has overcome many issues, it has also created new ones that need to be urgently addressed.
Carolyn Steel is a leading thinker on food and cities and the author of the books Hungry City: How Food Shapes Our Lives and Sitopia: How Food Can Save the World. Thanks to her concept sitopia, which means food-place, Carolyn has raised awareness on what it takes to feed urban settlements and improve their food system.
Learn more about Carolyn's work:
https://www.carolynsteel.com/hungrycitybook
https://www.carolynsteel.com/sitopiabook
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Klaudio Muca holds a degree in Architecture from Politecnico di Milano and is an R&D architect at CEBRA a Danish architectural office. CEBRA investigates the impact of the built environment on people through two initiatives the tech startup Common Sense and the research unit WISE, which recently launched the WISE Journal a publication on the relationship between architecture, humans and human activities. In this session, Klaudio talks about how his work in the R&D team informs design proposals and why studying working and learning behaviors is key to improve our physical environment.
Related content:
https://urbannext.net/cognitive-control/
https://www.wise-journal.com/
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Firas Safieddine is an architect, designer artist and neurotech enthusiasts. In this session we talk with him about neuroscience in the field of architecture and how these two disciplines are contributing to each other.
Related content:
https://urbannext.net/afterlives-orbital-infrastructure/
https://urbannext.net/electrical-ecologies/
https://urbannext.net/electrical-ecologies-ii/
https://urbannext.net/emergent-topographies/
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Firas Safieddine is an architect, designer artist and neurotech enthusiasts. In this session we talk with him on working on different ecologies at different scales by addressing the electrical layer.
Related content:
https://urbannext.net/afterlives-orbital-infrastructure/
https://urbannext.net/electrical-ecologies/
https://urbannext.net/electrical-ecologies-ii/
https://urbannext.net/emergent-topographies/
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Intertwined Environments is the series hosted by Martha Thorne, Dean of IE School of Architecture and Design, which discusses the natural, the physical and the digital realms in constructing environments that respond to current and future challenges.
We have to rethink the way we understand the city and the role of architecture. Ben van Berkel and Manuel Pérez Romero talk about the city and health and how putting technological tools at the service of sustainable development can aid build our cities.
Learn more about Ben’s work:
https://www.unstudio.com/
https://urbannext.net/brainport-smart-district/
https://urbannext.net/increasing-affordable-housing/
Learn more about Manuel’s work:
https://www.ie.edu/school-architecture-design/people/faculty/manuel-perez-romero/
https://nodo17.com/
This space was produced by IE School of Architecture and Design, its Center for Sustainable Cities and urbanNext.net. Visit the IE School of Architecture and Design website to learn more about their commitment to building sustainable cities, and subscribe to urbanNext.net for access to exclusive digital content.
The urbanNext_exchanges series is curated by Ricardo Devesa and Marta Bugés. Feel free to contact us via email at [email protected] if you want to comment on the podcast or share your work with us.
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Intertwined Environments is the series hosted by Martha Thorne, Dean of IE School of Architecture and Design, which discusses the natural, the physical and the digital realms in constructing environments that respond to current and future challenges.
Architecture can be seen as a catalyst to move communities forward. Stefano Boeri and Flavio Tejada have explored the power of architecture and urban planning not only to improve the context but also to contribute to the collective memory of the city.
Learn more about Stefano’s work:
https://www.stefanoboeriarchitetti.net/
https://urbannext.net/vertical-forest/
https://www.stefanoboeriarchitetti.net/pubblicazioni/mutations-2/
Learn more about Flavio’s work:
https://www.ie.edu/school-architecture-design/people/faculty/flavio-tejada/
https://www.arup.com/es-es/our-firm/flavio-tejada
This space was produced by IE School of Architecture and Design, its Center for Sustainable Cities and urbanNext.net. Visit the IE School of Architecture and Design website to learn more about their commitment to building sustainable cities, and subscribe to urbanNext.net for access to exclusive digital content.
The urbanNext_exchanges series is curated by Ricardo Devesa and Marta Bugés. Feel free to contact us via email at [email protected] if you want to comment on the podcast or share your work with us.
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Intertwined Environments is the series hosted by Martha Thorne, Dean of IE School of Architecture and Design, which discusses the natural, the physical and the digital realms in constructing environments that respond to current and future challenges.
Creating resilient communities is key for any city to thrive, but also for a university campus, a business and other realms. In this session, Michael Green and Jerónimo van Schendel talk about leadership and taking risks in architecture.
Learn more about Michael’s work:
http://mg-architecture.ca/
https://www.ted.com/talks/michael_green_why_we_should_build_wooden_skyscrapers
Learn more about Jerónimo’s work:
https://www.ie.edu/school-architecture-design/people/faculty/jeronimo-van-schendel-erice/
https://bildia.com/
This space was produced by IE School of Architecture and Design, its Center for Sustainable Cities and urbanNext.net. Visit the IE School of Architecture and Design website to learn more about their commitment to building sustainable cities, and subscribe to urbanNext.net for access to exclusive digital content.
The urbanNext_exchanges series is curated by Ricardo Devesa and Marta Bugés. Feel free to contact us via email at [email protected] if you want to comment on the podcast or share your work with us.
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Intertwined Environments is the series hosted by Martha Thorne, Dean of IE School of Architecture and Design, which discusses the natural, the physical and the digital realms in constructing environments that respond to current and future challenges.
Creating resilient communities is key for any city to thrive, but also for a university campus, a business and other realms. In this session, Jeanne Gang and Cristina Mateo talk about how to boost community building in an increasingly digitalized world.
Learn more about Jeanne’s work:
https://studiogang.com/
https://www.gsd.harvard.edu/person/jeanne-gang/
https://studiogang.com/project/solstice-on-the-park
https://studiogang.com/project/nature-boardwalk-at-lincoln-park-zoo
https://studiogang.com/project/kresge
https://urbannext.net/university-chicago-campus-north-residential-commons/
https://urbannext.net/beloit-college-powerhouse/
Learn more about Cristina’s work:
https://www.ie.edu/school-architecture-design/people/faculty/cristina-mateo/
https://urbannext.net/the-extracurricular-as-an-institutional/
This space was produced by IE School of Architecture and Design, its Center for Sustainable Cities and urbanNext.net. Visit the IE School of Architecture and Design website to learn more about their commitment to building sustainable cities, and subscribe to urbanNext.net for access to exclusive digital content.
The urbanNext_exchanges series is curated by Ricardo Devesa and Marta Bugés. Feel free to contact us via email at [email protected] if you want to comment on the podcast or share your work with us.
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Intertwined Environments is the series hosted by Martha Thorne, Dean of IE School of Architecture and Design, which discusses the natural, the physical and the digital realms in constructing environments that respond to current and future challenges.
We are often unaware of the power of design and its effect on human behavior. Michael Leube and Elvira Muñoz consider the cultural impact of any project or intervention in our environment in order to ensure sustainable development.
This space was produced by IE School of Architecture and Design, its Center for Sustainable Cities and urbanNext.net. Visit the IE School of Architecture and Design website to learn more about their commitment to building sustainable cities, and subscribe to urbanNext.net for access to exclusive digital content.
The urbanNext_exchanges series is curated by Ricardo Devesa and Marta Bugés. Feel free to contact us via email at [email protected] if you want to comment on the podcast or share your work with us.
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Intertwined Environments is the series hosted by Martha Thorne, Dean of IE School of Architecture and Design, which discusses the natural, the physical and the digital realms in constructing environments that respond to current and future challenges.
Addressing the social component in the urban milieu is key, as we look to goals of sustainable development. Deborah Berke and David Goodman talk about the role of architects in crisis times, everyday architecture and how to be an engaged professional.
Learn more about Deborah's work:
https://www.dberke.com/
https://www.architecture.yale.edu/faculty/419-deborah-berke
https://www.dberke.com/writing-lectures/architecture-of-the-everyday/
https://www.dberke.com/project/the-womens-building/
Learn more about David's work:
https://www.ie.edu/school-architecture-design/people/faculty/david-goodman/
https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=d53GQbQAAAAJ&hl=en
This space was produced by IE School of Architecture and Design, its Center for Sustainable Cities and urbanNext.net. Visit the IE School of Architecture and Design website to learn more about their commitment to building sustainable cities, and subscribe to urbanNext.net for access to exclusive digital content.
The urbanNext_exchanges series is curated by Ricardo Devesa and Marta Bugés. Feel free to contact us via email at [email protected] if you want to comment on the podcast or share your work with us.
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For centuries, architecture and gender has been a silent debate but in the last decades there has been a very fruitful conversation about how design can have biased implications. This has awaken the need to find which strategies can lead to the building of more gender inclusive cities.
Today we are going to talk with Inés Sánchez de Madariaga, director of the UNESCO Chair on Gender and professor of urban planning at Technical University of Madrid.
Learn more about her work:
https://urbannext.net/gender-sensitive-city/
This space has been sponsored by Actar Publishers and urbanNext.net.
For the most engaging publications on architecture, urbanism, and landscape architecture visit:
http://actar.com/
For access to exclusive digital content subscribe to:
https://urbannext.net/
The urbanNext_exchanges series is curated by Ricardo Devesa and Marta Bugés. Feel free to contact us via email at [email protected] if you want to comment on the podcast or share your work with us.
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<a href="https://urbannext.net/contributors/jeffrey-s-nesbit/" rel="ugc noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">Jeffrey S. Nesbit</a> is joined by Mishuana Goeman, Julia Smachylo and Joshua Nason to reflect on territory, as a mode of power embedded in colonialism that maintains and consistently strives for boundaries of legibility within the Nature of Enclosure.
Learn more about Mishuana Goeman’s work:
https://amindian.ucla.edu/person/mishuana-goeman-tonawanda-band-of-seneca/
https://www.upress.umn.edu/book-division/books/mark-my-words
Learn more about Julia Smachylo's work:
http://www.urbantheorylab.net/people/julia-smachylo/
https://actar.com/product/new-geographies-10-fallow/
https://actar.com/product/wood-urbanism/
Learn more about Joshua Nason’s work:
https://www.uta.edu/cappa/about/faculty-staff/profiles/joshua-nason.php
https://www.routledge.com/Chasing-the-City-Models-for-Extra-Urban-Investigations/Nason-Nesbit/p/book/9780815384892
This space has been sponsored by Actar Publishers and urbanNext.net.
For the most engaging publications on architecture, urbanism, and landscape architecture visit:
http://actar.com/
For access to exclusive digital content subscribe to:
https://urbannext.net/
The urbanNext_exchanges series is curated by Ricardo Devesa and Marta Bugés. Feel free to contact us via email at [email protected] if you want to comment on the podcast or share your work with us.
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