May 2025 Ι Landscape Architecture Magazine The facilities at Green Hill School Recreation and Wellness Center in Chehalis, Washington, were designed with the principles of bioilic and trauma-informed design, which included a recreation center with a pool, gymnasiums, a yoga studio, a teaching kitchen, and a multi-purpose event space. Seattle-based HBB Landscape Architecture designed the… Continue reading Hard Reckonings
Month: July 2025
Lakisha Woods Exits Role as AIA EVP/CEO
February 7, 2025 Ι Architectural Record This past weekend, Lakisha Woods quietly left her position as EVP/CEO of the American Institute of Architects (AIA), just three years after taking on the role. Woods announced her resignation in December at an in-person all staff meeting, moments before a champagne toast and annual holiday party. “There was an… Continue reading Lakisha Woods Exits Role as AIA EVP/CEO
We Will Tell Our Story brings decolonial critique to the Chicago architecture canon
March 21, 2025 Ι Architect’s Newspaper From the top of the Ferris Wheel at the 1893 Chicago World Columbian Exposition, Simon Pokagon, an Indigenous rights activist born in 1830, addressed the burgeoning city, and saw an apocalyptic tide of change. “How unlike the Chi-Kag-Ong of the red man!” he wrote in the New York Times… Continue reading We Will Tell Our Story brings decolonial critique to the Chicago architecture canon
At the National Public Housing Museum, an Embattled Idea Finds a Home
April 25, 2025 Ι Bloomberg CityLab The items on display at the new National Public Housing Museum in Chicago are almost defiant in their ordinariness. There’s a hammer once used by a resident of the city’s Stateway Gardens development; an iron skillet from a family living in Houston’s Cuney Homes; a hose that once watered… Continue reading At the National Public Housing Museum, an Embattled Idea Finds a Home