Robert Ivy, FAIA Peter Exley, FAIA Message to membership

Do you know where you were on Mar 12, 2020?  A year ago, we all had to figure out how to live, work, and learn while coping with a once-in-a-century pandemic. A year later we have learned more than we ever expected.

Certainly, these past 12 months have hurt. The difficulties we have experienced have been both personal and professional.  However, together, we addressed the challenges.  A year ago, as the devastating toll of the COVID-19 health crisis was being felt globally, AIA’s Board, component leaders, and countless members sprang into action to create resources that continue to help members make a positive difference in their communities. A year later the role of the architect to help society meet daunting challenges is clearer than ever before.

The fact is, the COVID-19 public health crisis presented all of us with a choice: To be consumed and overwhelmed by events, or to confront them and offer solutions. This profession chose the latter and our leadership over the past year made clear the power of design to help meet the challenges ahead. Today, far more people better understand the unique abilities of architects to deliver innovative and effective real-world solutions. As we look to the future, we will use that better understanding to advance our shared values of a more sustainable and fairer world through the power of design.

During these past twelve months, faced with daunting trials, we asked, and most members agreed:  We must address the longer-term climate crisis and we must fight to end systemic racial, gender, and class inequities.  They are connected and we have a role to play.  

As architects, we may not have every answer to every crisis, but through this pandemic, we’ve become more resilient, and we can share in the determination and hope for making a better year ahead and a better world.

News From National

Call for jurors: 2022 Fellowship jury

The call for jurors for the 2022 Fellowship Jury is now open. We need individuals whose fellowship experience includes Design, Practice, and Education, Research, and Literature. Candidates from Florida, the Gulf States, Michigan, New England, New Jersey, and Texas are of particular interest. Applications are due March 31 at 5pm Eastern. Learn more >

Firm billings for January 2021

AIA's Architecture Billings Index is a recognized leading indicator for nonresidential construction and is available to AIA members for free. While January’s index showed a continued decline in billings, fewer firms reported declines, and inquiries into new work reached the highest level since February 2020. Read more >

Become an Academy of Architecture for Health fellow

AAH stipends, ranging from $2,000 to-20,000, support students and emerging professionals pursuing their interest in health care design. Submit your applicaiton by April 23 at 5pm ET. Learn more >

Webinars

Embodied Carbon Analysis: Edith Green Wendell Wyatt Federal Office Building

Learn about the deep retrofit that transformed this 1970s concrete high-rise, resulting in dramatically improved performance and occupant experience. The session will also include analysis methods and strategies to reduce embodied carbon in adaptive reuse and other architectural projects. Earn 1 LU/HSW Learn more >

Carbon drawdown now! Achieving climate crisis healing with low-rise buildings

Making "drawdown buildings" is much less complicated than you think! This session will explore tools for calculating embodied carbon emissions and carbon storage in materials, including environmental product declarations, LCA software, carbon emission databases, and biogenic carbon databases. Earn 1 LU/HSW Register today >

Creating healthy communities: People own what they help create

Attendees will learn the processes used to engage a vulnerable, underserved population in Tempe, Arizona. The project team will also discuss how this process facilitated a health care facility responsive to the community’s needs and aspirations. Earn 1 LU HSW.
Register today >

Understanding Contract Terminology

Whether you are drafting a contract or reviewing one, becoming familiar with common terminology will help you better understand the contract. Geared towards construction contract novices, this webinar will walk you through basic terminology that you may recognize but not fully understand. Register today >

Saving the International Energy Conservation Code

Proposed Changes by the ICC Board Will Delay Higher Energy Code Standards

This message was provided by Sarah Dodge, Senior Vice President, Advocacy and Relationships, AIA.

Dear AIA Component Executives:

In early January, AIA wrote to you about our opposition to a proposal from the International Code Council (ICC) Board of Directors that would significantly impact the future of our national model energy code and the full participation of public officials in its development. AIA also urged you to consider taking action and express opposition to the ICC Board. Thank you to the many of you that wrote to the ICC. Today, I want to provide an update on the situation and where AIA stands.