AIA applauds President Biden signing Infrastructure

AIA encourages Congress to continue to make meaningful investments in Build Back Better.

WASHINGTON – Nov. 15, 2021 – The American Institute of Architects (AIA) applauds enactment of the bipartisan infrastructure bill that will allow the U.S. to make meaningful advancements towards building a more resilient and sustainable built environment.  

"This bipartisan legislation affirms AIA’s long-held contention that buildings are infrastructure,” said AIA 2021 President Peter Exley, FAIA. “It is encouraging to see Congress make meaningful investment in building sector energy efficiency and resilience. While the infrastructure deal is an important step forward for our nation, more needs to be done if we are going win in this race against time for our planet. We continue to urge Congress to support the significant climate investments contained in the Build Back Better bill, as well as aggressive emissions reduction commitments at COP26 that will combat climate change.”

AIA advocated for several provisions included in the “Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act,” (H.R. 3684), which will improve safety, resilience and sustainability in the built environment. Key provisions that would improve the built environment, include:

  • Providing $3.5 billion in funding for the Department of Energy’s (DOE) Weatherization Assistance Program, which increases energy efficiency and reduces costs for low-income households.

  • Authorizing $500 million in competitive grants to support energy-efficient and renewable energy in schools.

  • Allocating $1 billion for the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s (FEMA) Building Resilient Infrastructure and Communities (BRIC) program.

  • Allocating $500 million for grants established from the Safeguarding Tomorrow through Ongoing Risk Mitigation Act (STORM Act), which mitigates hazards to reduce risks from disasters.

  • Providing $250 million in funding to establish the Energy Efficiency Revolving Loan Fund Capitalization Grant Program, which states could use to improve the energy efficiency of residential and commercial buildings.

  • Establishing a $225 million competitive grant program within the DOE's Building Technologies Office to support cost-effective building code implementation.

  • Establishing a $40 million grant program to train individuals to conduct energy audits and surveys of commercial and residential buildings.

  • Developing building, training, and assessment centers through institutions of higher education and Tribal colleges to train architects, engineers, and other professionals about energy-efficient design and technologies, along with fostering additional research.

  • Allowing the Metropolitan Transportation Planning authorities to use federal funding to promote more walkable and multi-modal communities.

Since February, the AIA and its members have been advocating for members of Congress to include federal funding for buildings in the infrastructure package. So far, AIA members have sent more than five thousand letters to their respective members of Congress. On July 23, an op-ed authored by Exley, “U.S. building infrastructure needs 21st century upgrades,” appeared in The Hill outlining why buildings are a critical part of America’s infrastructure.

Visit AIA’s website to learn more about its advocacy efforts.

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AIA announces film challenge winners

Four short documentary films have been chosen as the winners of the AIA Film Challenge 2021.

WASHINGTON – Oct. 22, 2021 – The American Institute of Architects (AIA) announced today winners of the AIA Film Challenge 2021.

Judges selected POP Courts!—by filmmaker Brodie Kerst and Lamar Johnson Collaborative—as this year’s Grand Prize winner. POP Courts!  provides much-needed outdoor amenity space in the heart of Chicago’s Austin neighborhood. The film will receive a $5,000 cash award as well as other prizes.

This year’s runner up is Listen. by filmmaker Francisco Lopez de Arenosa. The film presents the restorative efforts made to Chicago’s Big Marsh Park aimed at setting the park on a new course, where industry, nature, and culture can safely coexist, including the Ford Calumet Environmental Center – designed by Valerio Dewalt Train - at the park’s entrance. The film will receive a $3,000 prize.

Two Pieces of Plywood, by filmmaker Kevin Moravec, is the third-place winner. This film shares the story of one campaign: Curbside Notary in Kansas City, Missouri. Designed and built by Hufft Architects, two simple pieces of plywood were used to create portable notary stations for voting locations during the 2020 general election. The film will receive a $2,000 prize.

The People’s Choice Award—A Jewel in Appalachia—by filmmaker Alex Michl—shows us the renovated Lawrence County Public Library in Louisa, Kentucky, designed by OPN Architects. The library is now a jewel in the community – a place where a love for learning is on display, showing residents that they deserve to aspire for better. The film received nearly 10,000 votes from the public during the voting period, which closed Oct. 3, and will receive a $2,000 prize.

Grand prize, runner up, and third place recipients were selected by a panel of judges, while the People’s Choice Award was selected through votes cast online by the public. Judges for the AIA Film Challenge 2021 were AIA 2021 First Vice President/2022 President Dan Hart, FAIA; filmmaker and 2020 Grand Prize Winner John Gordon; Midland Architecture Principal Greg Dutton, Assoc. AIA; and Perkins&Will Principal and Director of Global Diversity Gabrielle Bullock, FAIA.

The AIA Film Challenge, which is celebrating its seventh anniversary in 2021, is an annual crowdsourced creative competition sponsored by AIA. The challenge brings architects, filmmakers, and storytellers together to produce short films that showcase architects making a positive impact in communities around the globe

Visit AIAFilmChallenge.org to learn more about this year’s winners, and to watch dozens of short films produced in 2021, which creatively feature architecture and the built environment.

Follow @AIANational and use #AIAFilmChallenge to join the conversation on social media.