TOPIC SESSIONS + CHAIRS

RESILIENT CITY: Physical, Social, and Economic Perspectives
March 2-5, 2022   I   MIAMI   I   Hosted by Florida International University

Conference Co-Chairs: Marilys Nepomechie and Shahin Vassigh


Miami, Florida (photo: Florida International University)

TOPIC SESSIONS
The ARCC-EAAE 2022 International Conference invites paper and poster submissions that addresses the multiplicity of ways in which new design pedagogies, research, and innovation, carried out across our disciplines and professions, empower us to educate a new generation of built environment designers, and to meet the strategic imperatives of this historical moment.

CLIMATE
Global Sustainability: Mitigation and Adaptation > CHAIR: Jason Chandler 
Identified as the key challenge of our times, global sustainability is the core of the 17 United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDG). Focusing on the design disciplines and professions, this thematic area invites paper/poster contributions that propose new pedagogies, research and innovation in energy efficient design and construction, sustainable design processes that reduce the carbon footprint of the built environment, educational research on pedagogies for sustainable and resilient architecture, vernacular architecture, green design, adaptive, remedial and retrofit design strategies, as well as processes for evaluating resilience and sustainability.

Coastal Cities: Design Frameworks for Interconnectivity > CHAIR: Roberto Rovira 
By the year 2050, over 66% of the world’s population will reside in cities. Today, nearly 40% of global urbanization is coastal, with approximately 10% of urban areas worldwide lying fewer than 10 meters above sea level (UN.org). The vulnerabilities associated with these conditions invite paper/poster contributions that propose new pedagogies, research, and innovation in adaptive design for coastal hazards and sea level rise, sustainable urban patterns and smart growth, infrastructure planning and design strategies, designing for extreme events in the coastal tropics, and dynamic planning, zoning and building regulations that incorporate a narrative of change over time.

TECHNOLOGY
Materials and Advanced Digital Fabrication  > CHAIR: Eric Peterson 
The demand for increased building production and sustainable practices is driving technological integration into architectural curriculum and design practices. To keep up with this demand innovation in materials and methods as well as digital fabrication techniques have become ubiquitous in design and practice. Advances in performative materials, additive/subtractive manufacturing, and construction robotics have expanded our capabilities and created new fields of study.  This thematic area encourages paper/poster contributions that propose new pedagogies, research and innovation in material design and robotics processes for design and construction/ fabrication.

Digital Design and Practices > CHAIR: Biayna Bogosian  
Computational design practices have become a vital part of architectural production. However, emerging technologies Artificial Intelligence (AI), data acquisition via sensors, and Extended Reality (XR) are changing the landscape of research, innovation, design, and production. Integration of these advances with architectural practice is becoming increasingly critical for developing innovative and better performing built environments.  Papers/posters in this theme address pedagogies and research in advanced digital processes for planning and design, including but not limited to advanced computational design, Internet of Things (IoT), environmental data collection and processing, Artificial Intelligence (AI) and new definitions of “craftsmanship” through digital practices.

EQUITY 
Inclusive Urban Landscapes > CHAIR: Elisa Silva
Landscapes of resilience and inclusion are the product of myriad elements, incorporating solutions to urban challenges that are both natural and created by human hands. Among them are the social and cultural integration of diverse populations, and responses to the barriers created by limited access to the critical elements of a safe, healthy, dignified life. This thematic area invites paper/poster contributions that propose new pedagogies and research that advance equity in the built environment; strategies that incorporate community engagement; and efforts that support the creation of affordable, accessible, equitable housing and public space for diverse communities.

Cities and (Im)migration > CHAIR: Gray Read
In its first two decades, the twenty-first century has produced substantial and growing number of global migrations, often provoked by environmental, socio-cultural, economic and political upheavals. These resettlements have stressed already-burdened environmental and urban systems, exacerbating a broad range of inequities. They foreground opportunities for the design disciplines to address and mitigate their impact, bringing new life to areas of tension and disinvestment; engaging strategies of integrative urban planning, and holistic, inclusive problem-solving. This thematic area encourages paper/poster contributions in new pedagogies, design innovation and research that address the urban challenges, at and beyond national borders, of global (im)migration(s) to urban centers.

PUBLIC HEALTH
Public Health and Public Space > CHAIR: Madga Mostafa
Foregrounded by the COVID pandemic, the urban penalties associated with infectious diseases have often placed public health experts at the center of urban planning practice. To reduce disease transmission, zoning regulations were historically introduced to ease crowding and increase sanitation in cities.  Such regulations have had implications for equity of access to public space.  In turn, accessibility to open spacehas consequences for emotional and mental health, chronic disease, toxicity and violence.  This thematic area encourages paper/poster contributions that address new pedagogies, research and innovationin urban and environmental design, including data-driven, trans-disciplinary and community engaged research that addresses inclusivity and public well-being.

Public Health and Human-Centered Design > CHAIR: Newton D’souza
Defined as innovative problem solving with the user(s) at its core, human centered design thinking can be effective, impactful, and scalable, by providing solutions to problems that range from discrete to systemic in scope. Collaborative, transdisciplinary approaches to questions of public health can result in solutions that address social and environmental vulnerability with unique effectiveness. This thematic area encourages paper/poster contributions that assess transformative, multi-disciplinary models of collaboration around public health; that actively engage communities; that incorporate human-centered, data-driven design thinking and that propose new pedagogical models for addressing these topics in the expanded studio and classroom.

DOCTORAL EDUCATION
Artistic Research, Design Doctorates and the Built Environment > CHAIR: Neil Leach
This session aims to unveil new positions dealing with the issues of uncertainty, potentiality and creativeness in terms of responsible experimental gesturing, with reference to the Erasmus+ Strategic Partnership CA2RE+ (Collective Evaluation of Design Driven Doctoral Training) – an initiative exploring and developing immersive experiential research evaluation environments, where it explicates the integrative nature of architectural design research, able to face the contemporary knowledge fragmentation from humanities, social sciences and technology. The initiative and hence this session focuses on the interdisciplinary relevance of convergent thinking, mastering wicked problems, open-ended processes, resilience and risk, as well as orientation to future, all featured in Design Driven Research. Another aim is to unfold the didactic relevance of Design Driven Research for training creative professionals on how to use the integrative power of design thinking to master open-ended processes while solving contemporary spatial challenges through responsible experimental gesturing. We welcome project proposals especially design doctorates, aiming to enhance the built environment by means of artistic and design research.

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ARCC-EAAE 2022 International Conference
Wednesday-Saturday, March 2-5, 2022

Contact
Direct Inquires to:
Adil Sharag-Eldin
asharage@kent.edu