Frankowski. Rumiko Handa. ARCH 210 Abingo Wu. Gallery West Mark Hoistad. Antje S. Brian Kelly. Wednesday, Dec 6th. (Afte
Date/Time Friday, Dec. 1st 1:30pm-5:00pm
Course
Instructor
Location
IDES 350
Stacy Spale
IDES 350
Miyoung Hong
Faculty Critics
Guest Critics
Studio Description
Gallery
Lena Kitson Joy DeWitt
Gallery
Lena Kitson
Students explored how they could position the interior built environment to have positive impacts on health and wellness in an urban community. Their project was a holistic outpatient health clinic located in Seattle, Washington.
Joy DeWitt Wednesday, Dec 6th (Morning) 8:10am-12:00pm
Wednesday, Dec 6th (Afternoon) 1:30pm-5:30pm
Course
Location
Faculty Critics
Guest Critics
Studio Description
ARCH 210 Peter Olshavsky
Corral
Sara Dean
ARCH 210
Zoe Cope
South Barn
Tim Hemsath David Karle David Newton Jason Griffiths
Arch210_ Architectural Design Studio: Representation Introduction to architectural design through reflective and projective techniques. Divergent and convergent approaches focus on fundamental ways in which user(s), matter, and environment inform architecture.
ARCH 210
Marc Maxey
Gallery East
ARCH 210
Abingo Wu
Rumiko Handa Gallery West Mark Hoistad Brian Kelly
Antje S.
Course
Instructor
Location
Guest Critics
David Newton
Great Planes Art Museum: Tim Hemsath 1155 Q St
ARCH 310
Instructor
Steve Hardy
Faculty Critics
Cruz Garcia Nathalie Frankowski
Project 3_ Bath House (Woods Park, Lincoln, Nebraska) Explores the social performances of bathing relative to modes of representation and the fundamentals of design.
Studio Description The studio explores the organizational constraints that shape architectural proposals as it considers the problem of museum design and the role of the museum in contemporary culture.
Rumiko Handa
ARCH 310
Nathalie Frankowski - WAI
Gallery East
Brian Kelly
Sara Dean
The Campus of the Easy Parts: Challenging Robert Venturi’s concept of the ‘difficult whole’ and its architecture of contradictory and complex elements , “The Campus of Easy Parts” reconsiders the question of the campus as an idealized territory of strategically organized buildings addressing a common, greater program. Each one of the buildings in the campus explores the potential of the theory of Hardcorism or architecture as pure geometric form.
Peter Olshavsky
ARCH 310
Marc Maxey
Corral
The Dis-urban Studio explores the increasingly blurred distinction between city and suburb resulting from ubiquitous access to images, videos, news, and shopping through digital devices. This studio will exploit, deny, accelerate, and organize narratives and performances to produce dis-urban space.
Jason Griffiths
Steve Hardy
Thursday, Dec 7th (Morning) 8:30am-12:30pm
ARCH 500
David Karle
Gallery West
IDES 350
Stacy Spale
Link
Poster Display
IDES 350
Miyoung Hong
Link
Poster Display
Course
Instructor
Location
Faculty Critics
DSGN 110 Sarah Karle
DSGN 110 Kim Wilson
ARCH 510/610
Jason Griffiths
Antje S.
Introduction to architectural design through spatial and formal projects. A series of projects introduce fundamental aspects of design that relate architecture to the human subject. An urban pool is the focus of our fourth and final project.
Guest Critics
Studio Description
Corral
Design Thinking is the confidence that everyone can be part of creating a more desirable future and a process to take action when faced with a difficult challenge. This section of DSGN 110 reconsiders the future of on-campus living by questioning what needs are not being represented, capitalized on, or imagined for the future of dormitories?
South Barn
8:30 – 10:00am - Design Challenge: Redesign the experience at the Outdoor Adventure Center to be a more inclusive environment. 10:00 – 11:20am - Design Challenge: Redesign the biking experience in Nebraska to be a more inclusive environment.
Gallery East
Sara Dean / Antje S.
This studio focuses on design-build and the use of CLT. The studio is currently completing construction of two projects that began with the design Research Studio of 2016/17 and ran through the summer design-build elective. These projects are the South Sioux Orchard Facility ($60,000) with City of South Sioux, Nebraska, and the Baxa Cabin (Cedar Point Bio-station) Ogallala, Nebraska ($70,000) with the Baxa Family Foundation. Both projects are based on the advancement of design build pedagogy and the practice of “learning by doing” as graduate architectural education.
Jennifer Akerman
Projective Configurations DRS: The studio continues its exploration into various building types. This semester’s projects engaged fire departments in Crete, Nebraska, for an addition to their main fire station - from programming to concept study; and Lincoln, Nebraska, for a future station prototype – from realistic implementations for 2025 to conjectural projections for 2060.
Wei Ruoyo
In response to the growing urbanization of the planet and failed strategies of urbanization since the dawn of the Industrial Revolution, this studio is exploring ways to develop future cities in a more ‘sustainable’ way. The studio scenario calls for the integration of nature and human settlement in the design of a dense, mixed-use, urban development in Chongqing, China.
Guest Critics
Studio Description
Jennifer Akerman / Antje S.
Little is more quintessentially American than the once vibrant small town, incubators and exemplars of the classic American virtues of community, family, hard-work, selfreliance. The (re)FORM studio examines the decline in small town America and postulates solutions for its revitalization.
Tim Hemsath
Brian Kelly
ARCH 510/610
Steve Hardy
Gallery West Rumiko Handa
David Newton
ARCH 510/610
Mark Hoistad
Link
David Karle
Peter Olshavsky Thursday, Dec 7th (Afternoon) 1:30pm-5:30pm
Friday, Dec 8th (Morning) 8:30am -12:30pm
Course
Instructor
ARCH 510/610
Nathan Miller / Kevin Augustyn + HDR (re)FORM
Gallery West David Newton / Cruz Garcia - WAI & Room Mark Hoistad 233
Sara Dean / Wei Ruoyo
Course
Instructor
Guest Critics
Studio Description
Sarah Karle
12:45 to 1:30 PM
Friday, Dec 8th (Afternoon) 1:30pm -5:30pm
Location
Faculty Critics
New Crit Space
The final project for LARC 210 will connect our work to the design competition constructs set forth by the International Garden Festival Les Jardins de Métis. The Festival is continuing its exploration of play with Playsages II – Go Outside and Play! and invites designers to imagine magical spaces where families will congregate and play together.
South Barn
This studio examines atmospheric intervention through the thoughtful manipulation of circulation & movement, transition & threshold, volume & scale, aperture for views & light, and programming in order to create a condition for college-aged students to reflect, be mindful, or have a spiritual connection.
IDES 210
Lindsey Bahe
ARCH 613
Design Thesis Reviews
Kevin Baitey Gallery West
Julie Reynolds
Gallery East
Darin Hanigan
Gallery West
Alex Moore
Gallery East
Tyler Louis
Gallery West
Carlos ServanAlvarez
Gallery East
Jon Magruder
Gallery West
Evan Wermers
Gallery East
Anne McManis
Gallery West
Adam Wiese Gallery East
10:10:00 AM
11:50:00 AM
Brian Kelly / Sharon Kuska
ARCH 510/610
8:30:00 AM
11:00:00 AM
Gallery East
Faculty Critics
Narrative Architecture is a form of architecture that through a mixture of narrative texts and a vast repertoire of images (collages, photomontages, drawings, storyboards, film), creates allegorical stories to explore the potential of architecture, urbanism, and their effect in the environment. Landscapes without Qualities explores the transformation of the architecture of the great American landscapes after the utopian dream of complete automation has freed humanity from the constraints of work.
LARC 210
9:20:00 AM
Location
Dean’s Conference Room
Lunch Break Course
DSGN 410
Instructor
Location
Brian Kelly Gallery (+Proving Ground) Center
Jennifer Akerman / Wei Ruoyo Jennifer Akerman / Wei Ruoyo Jennifer Akerman / Wei Ruoyo Jennifer Akerman / Wei Ruoyo Jennifer Akerman / Wei Ruoyo Visiting Critics and Design Thesis Students
Faculty Critics
Jason Griffiths
Guest Critics
Studio Description
Wei Ruoyo
Co-Lab projects explore various scales of dwelling through the approaches of open design, prefabrication, and mass customization. Student design teams engaged contemporary discourse and design research to identify and support the selection of a context, user group, and construction system.
Jennifer Akerman
Camps are living systems that can be rapidly deployed, altered, and dismantled and their logics – the fast, temporary, and flexible - require us to reconsider the built environment. This studio’s Incubator City proposals move between the domestic and urban scales to speculate on new urban futures.
Cruz Garcia
The Learning Spaces Studio is working with the rapidly growing community of Elkhorn, Nebraska, to design prototype elementary schools through a kit of parts approach. The studio has developed modular environments that support innovative educational functions, while responding to issues of site and scale.
Nathalie Frankowski
The 2030 Innovate studio investigates, develops, and proposes zero-net, energy-ready housing designs and community strategies to foster a purposeful, sustainable community in partnership with the Omaha Housing Authority. This studio focuses on how energy efficient multi-family mixed-use urban infill might catalyze existing urban communities.
Sharon Kuska
DSGN 410
Ellen Donnelly + Matthew Knutson
Gallery East
David Karle
Rumiko Handa
DSGN 410
Nate Bicak / Vanessa Schutte
South Barn
Steve Hardy
DSGN 410 Tim Hemsath
Gallery West David Newton
Mark Hoistad
LARC 310
Catherine De Almeida
Corral
In partnership with the City of Gering, students explored the reclamation of the B&T Metals brownfield site using landscape performance as a framework. Each student developed unique proposals that reconceptualize conventional parks and meets the community’s needs.