Friday, October 26

NOMA 2012 Conference Photos

Host Chapter Discussion Panel, from left: Toni Griffin, Detroit 
Works Project; Faye Nelson, Detroit Riverfront Conservancy; 
Sue Mosey, Midtown Detroit, Inc.; George Jackson, Detroit 
Economic Growth Corp.


History Flashback Panel, from left: Jeh Johnson, NOMA founder;
June Campbell, wife of NOMA's first president, Wendell Campbell;
Harold Williams, NOMA founder; Betty Williams; and
Marshall Purnell, former president of both NOMA and the
American Institute of Architects (AIA)

From left: Tiffany Brown, NOMA2012 Co-Chairperson;
Saundra Little, NOMA Detroit Co-Chairperson;
and Rainy Hamilton, NOMA-Detroit president


Friday, October 12

NOMA 2012 Conference Seminars on Sustainability



USGBC: Green & Sustainable Practices and ASHRAE Standards

The SEED of Change: Sponsored by HGA


USGBC: Green Schools: A Great Place to Learn

Finding a Voice: Healthcare Advocacy through Evidence‐ Based Design

Environmental Justice & Architecture

Sustainable Practices: A Case Study on Anacostia Library


Thursday, October 11

NOMA2012 Conference Seminars on Detroit Development

photo via the 
Southwest Detroit Business
Association
Broderick Tower/ David Whitney Building: Adaptive Reuse for Hotels

WestinBook Cadillac: Signature Hotel as an Urban Redevelopment Catalyst

The Redevelopment of Southwest Detroit

Host Chapter Panel ‐ Detroit Urban Planning Discussion with representatives of the Detroit Works Project, the Detroit Riverfront Conservancy, Detroit Economic Growth Corp., and Midtown Detroit, Inc.)


Detroit Works Project: The City's Long Term Strategic Plan


Public Art panel discussion (with Hubert Massey, George N'namdi and Oliver Ragddale, Jr.)

For Immediate Release: National Organization of Minority Architects 2012 Conference Returns to Detroit for 40th Annual Conference October 18 – 20, 2012




CONTACTS:
Karen A. Davis                                                          
Detroit Chapter, National Organization of Minority Architects                                             
PHONE: (248) 629-0441                                            
info@nomadetroit.org
http://www.nomadetroit.org/ 

National Organization of Minority Architects
PHONE:  (202) 686-2780
programs@noma.net
http://noma.net

For Immediate Release

National Organization of Minority Architects 2012 Conference Returns to Detroit for 40TH Annual Conference October 18 – 20, 2012

WHAT: The National Organization of Minority Architects (NOMA) returns to the city where it was founded – Detroit, Michigan – for its 40th annual conference October 18 – 20. With the theme “40 Years in the Making: A Legacy Driven by Design,” the conference will feature professional development and continuing education seminars, exhibitors, tours of Detroit's architecture, a community service project, and a student design competition focused on the city's Corktown neighborhood.

WHO: More than 500 NOMA members, affiliates and students are expected, including architects, interior designers, planners, and construction and real estate professionals. NOMA membership boasts 22 chapters nationwide and numerous outstanding professionals and firms.

WHERE: The Westin Book Cadillac Hotel, 1114 Washington Boulevard, Detroit, Michigan 48226

WHEN: 8:00 a.m. to 10:00 p.m. daily, Thursday, October 18 through Saturday, October 20, 2012

COMMUNITY SERVICE LEGACY PROJECT: NOMA has designed and will build modular display units that WARM Training Center will use to share their educational programs with Detroiters. WARM Training Center is an organization that promotes the development of resource efficient, affordable, healthy homes and communities through education, training and technical assistance. Volunteers and partners are welcome to participate Wednesday, October 17, 2012. See more on http://pinterest.com/noma2012/community-service-legacy-project/

KEYNOTE SPEAKERS: Monica Ponce de Leon, dean of the Taubman College of Architecture + Urban Planning at the University of Michigan will present "Minority Opinion" as the Luncheon keynote speaker on Friday, October 19th.

At the Saturday, October 20th Awards Banquet, keynote speaker Karen Hudson, will present her grandfather's work, "The Life & Works of Paul R. Williams." Born in 1894, Mr. Williams was a Los Angeles-based African American architect who designed homes for numerous celebrities, including Frank Sinatra, Lucille Ball, and Lon Chaney.

SPECIAL EVENTS: Thursday evening, October 18th at Lawrence Technological University in Southfield, MI, the Detroit Chapter of NOMA hosts a panel discussion on Detroit Urban Planning. Scheduled panelist are: Sue Mosey, president of Midtown Detroit, Inc.; Toni Griffin, consultant to the Detroit Works Project; Faye Nelson, President & CEO of the Detroit Riverfront Conservancy; and George W. Jackson, Jr., President & CEO of the Detroit Economic Growth Corp.

The perennial Bros Arts Ball, which will take place in the beautiful rotunda of the Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History in Detroit on Friday, October 19th, promises an evening of fun, networking and museum exploration. NOMA founders will open the event with a discussion of the organization’s origins and importance to architects and others who are concerned with the built environment.

The closing Banquet and Awards ceremony on Saturday at the host hotel will introduce newly elected leadership and present Professional Design Awards, Chapter and Member of the Year Awards, and the Founder’s Award.

SEMINARS: The Conference features over 60 workshops and seminars with continuing education system learning units (CES) available from the American Institute of Architects.  Presentation topics include: diversity; the city of Detroit; students and emerging professionals; design; sustainability; real estate development; technology; and professional practice. A complete schedule is available at http://noma.net

STUDENT DESIGN COMPETITION: “Urban [space] US12... Idea Center” seeks ideas for the invigoration and infusion of community-led design and economic development in Southwest Detroit. Design teams from NOMA Student chapters across the U.S. studied historical site conditions and the current social, cultural, economic, and physical space conditions found in this unique community, as well as the entrepreneurial spirit of the community's citizens. Teams will present their designs and models Saturday, October 20th, 9:00 am – 3:00 pm at the host hotel with successful planning and design solutions addressing how the city and neighborhood can optimally leverage Michigan Avenue’s Corktown District. The Competition brief can be downloaded at http://noma.net/EventsPrograms/events_2012conference.aspx.

DETROIT TOURS: Available as seminar options or as separate walking and bus adventures, attendees can explore metro Detroit’s stunning architecture: Cranbrook in Bloomfield Hills; homes designed by architect Frank Lloyd Wright; downtown Detroit theaters; Lafayette Park, and more.

SPONSORS AND EXHIBITORS: Lawrence Technological University, Gensler, Taubman
College of Architecture + Urban Planning at the University of Michigan, The American Institute  of Architects, Bedrock Real Estate Services, Wayne County Community College District, and many other local and national companies and organizations are sponsors of this year’s Conference.



SOCIAL MEDIA: Connect with the NOMA Conference conversation on Facebook, Twitter and Pinterest at /NOMA2012 and follow conversation using the hashtag #NOMA2012.




ABOUT NOMA NATIONAL - The National Organization of Minority Architects’ (NOMA) mission is to champion diversity within the design professions by promoting the excellence, community engagement, and professional development of its members.

ABOUT NOMA DETROIT - The National Organization of Minority Architects was founded in 1971 as a means to foster communications among minority architects and to fight discriminatory practices used by public sector and private clients. Founded in 2006, the Detroit chapter hosts activities that highlight the architecture profession, the needs of the community, and provides solutions that will insure a healthy living and working environment.


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Karen A. Davis | Building Industry Resources
TechTown 440 Burroughs No. 66 | Detroit, MI 48202 | 248.210.3750 www.buildingsource.net 


Tuesday, October 9

NOMA2012 Conference Seminars on Diversity

Below are seminars on diversity in architecture, design and construction being presented at the NOMA2012 Conference, October 18-20, 2012 in Detroit:



Keynote Speaker: Monica Ponce de Leon, Dean of the Taubman College of Architecture + Urban Planning at the University of Michigan – “Minority Opinion”

Karen Hudson: "The Life & Works of Paul R. Williams"

AIA + NOMA: Collaborating for the Future


Riding the Vortex XI: African American Women Architects in Practice

Asian American Architects: Invisible Minorities

NOMA Past Presidents Panel

NOMA Founders' ‐ History Flashback Panel

The Jack & Steve Show: Cultural Identity through Architecture and Design

Black vs. Architecture

Introducing Youth to Architecture

NOMA Louisiana Project Pipeline Camp

Hiring Small Businesses for Large Scale Projects

Cross Cultural Training in Construction Projects

Minority Certification and Resources


The Story of Black Architects in New York

Master Builders: A Documentary featuring African American Architects in the Nation's Capital

Carnegie Colored Libraries: Public & Academic ‐ Their Cultural Legacies



Thursday, October 4

NOMA at USGBC Green Apple Day

Rob Saxon represented NOMA-Detroit and NOMA National at the U.S. Green Building Council's Green Apple Day of Service, a day dedicated to helping make schools healthier, more sustainable place to learn. NOMA's 2012 Legacy Design Charrette & Student Project Pipeline project - mobile display units for W.A.R.M. Training Center - was displayed at East English Village College Preparatory Academy in Detroit.

Get ready, NOMA, to participate in the Community Service Legacy Project. See the mobile display units below (at Green Apple Day and a part of the Detroit Design Festival), and more on the WARM Training Center and the Legacy Project on our previous blog post here.



NOMA with USGBC at the Green Apple Day of Service


NOMA at the Detroit Design Festival - September 2012


Thursday, September 20

NOMA 2012 Legacy Design Charrette & Student Project Pipeline

NOMA's national conference is coming to Detroit October 18-20, 2012. Traditionally, the day before the conference, NOMA members complete a construction project to be left as a legacy in the host city.This year, the legacy project will be new mobile demonstration units for W.A.R.M. Training Center, a non-profit organization that promotes the development of healthy homes and communities.

High school and college design students were invited to join in a charrette with NOMA Detroit members, design professionals, and W.A.R.M. Training employees and volunteers to design flexible, mobile units that will display building products and materials, tools, photos, brochures and other educational materials for W.A.R.M. 

Currently, the items are displayed at W.A.R.M., one of eight energy demonstration centers in the state of Michigan. During the charrette, teams designed 10' x 10' and 3' x 6'  flexible mobile units that can be transported for education in communities or at conferences and trade shows.

Prototypes of the designs will be constructed for displayed at the Detroit Design Festival September 22 and 23, 2012 at the Michigan State University Detroit Center and during the U.S. Green Building Council's Green Apple Day of Service. The final units will be built by NOMA members on Wednesday, October 17, 2012.

Below are photos of the charrette participants,  existing display space, and designs for the new mobile units:






































Monday, July 9

2012 Student Project Pipeline| One-Day Design Charrette | Students working with Architects

In preparation for the NOMA 2012 Conference in October, we are organizing a design charrette to be held on Saturday, July 14 (NOMA-Detroit's first Student Pipeline Project event). The goal is to redesign WARM Training's Energy Demonstration Center. The winning design will be fabricated and built the week of the Conference by NONA volunteers in October. Please refer to the brochure below for more information. All are welcome to attend!

Definition of "Charrette":
The word charrette may refer to any collaborative session in which a group of designers drafts a solution to a design problem. Charrettes serve as a way of quickly generating a design solution while integrating the aptitudes and interests of a diverse group of people. Compare this term with workshop.

Thought to originate from the Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Paris in the 19th century, the word charrette is from the French for cart or chariot.


Sponsorships are still available - contact Rob Saxon, AIA, LEED AP, NOMA - rsaxon@hamilton-anderson.com

Spread the word!

NOMA 2012 Planning Committee

NOMA Legacy Project 2011 - from last year's Conference


(via Saundra Little)

Friday, June 15

Deadline Extended: NOMA 2012 Conference Call for Presentations


Detroit – June 2012 – The National Organization of Minority Architects (NOMA) will hold its 40th annual conference in Detroit, Michigan, October 18 – 20 at the Westin Book Cadillac Hotel. With the theme “40 Years in the Making: A Legacy Driven by Design,” the conference will feature professional development and continuing education seminars, exhibitors, tours of Detroit's architecture, a community service project, and a student design competition focused on the city's Corktown neighborhood.

NOMA invites forward thinking speakers to submit proposals for unique seminars and workshops that will prepare conference attendees for innovative, creative and successful practice. Conference speakers and workshop presenters should consider topics in the following categories that support and illuminate the conference theme and industry trends: 1) Youth; 2) Community/Advocacy; 3) Interdisciplinary Collaboration; 3) Sustainability/Globalism; 4) Technology in Practice; 5) Marketing and Growing the Firm.

The NOMA 2012 Conference will continue the tradition of fostering collaboration among 
partnering organizations, businesses and educational institutions concerned with the quality of the built environment in general and with particular concern for under-served communities.

The deadline for submissions of presentation and seminar proposals has been extended to Friday, June 29, 2012, and the proposal form can be downloaded at http://noma.net/EventsPrograms/events_2012conference.aspx
  
More information about the NOMA 2012 Conference can be found at www.nomadetroit.org, including registration and hotel information, an Exhibitor and Sponsor Prospectus, and details of the Student Design Competition.


Friday, May 11

NATIONAL ORGANIZATION OF MINORITY ARCHITECTS 2012 CONFERENCE ACCEPTING SEMINAR PROPOSALS AND STUDENT DESIGN COMPETITION ENTRIES


For Immediate Release
  
Detroit – May 2012 – The National Organization of Minority Architects (NOMA) returns to the city where it was founded – Detroit, Michigan – for its 40th annual conference October 18 – 20 at the Westin Book Cadillac Hotel. With the theme “40 Years in the Making: A Legacy Driven by Design,” the conference will feature professional development and continuing education seminars, exhibitors, tours of Detroit's architecture, a community service project, and a student design competition focused on the city's Corktown neighborhood.

ATTENDEES AND REGISTRATION:
Over 500 NOMA members, affiliates and students are expected to attend the NOMA 2012 Conference, including architects, interior designers, planners, and construction and real estate professionals. NOMA membership includes 22 chapters nationwide and numerous outstanding professionals and firms. Registration information and a promotional video can be found at http://noma.net/EventsPrograms/events_2012conference.aspx

CALL FOR PRESENTATIONS AND SEMINAR PROPOSALS:
NOMA invites forward thinking speakers to submit proposals for unique seminars and workshops that will prepare conference attendees for innovative, creative and successful practice. Conference speakers and workshop presenters should consider topics in the following categories that support and illuminate the conference theme and industry trends: 1) Youth; 2) Community/Advocacy; 3) Interdisciplinary Collaboration; 3) Sustainability/Globalism; 4) Technology in Practice; 5) Marketing and Growing the Firm.


The NOMA 2012 Conference will continue the tradition of fostering collaboration among 
partnering organizations, businesses and educational institutions concerned with the quality of the built environment in general and with particular concern for under-served communities.


The deadline for submitting proposals is June 1, 2012. The Seminar/Workshop Proposal form can be downloaded at http://noma.net/EventsPrograms/events_2012conference.aspx


STUDENT DESIGN COMPETITION:
Through the design competition entitled, “Urban [space] US12... Idea Center,” NOMA is seeking ideas for the invigoration and infusion of community-led design and economic development for urban spaces in Southwest Detroit. The design problem requires in-depth research of historical site conditions as well as an understanding of the current social, cultural, economic, and physical space conditions found in this unique community. Designers must also consider the entrepreneurial spirit of the community's citizens and envision solutions that will support sustained and enhanced economic development in the area. Successful planning and architectural design solutions will address how the identity and physical spaces of the city/neighborhood may be reinvented to optimally leverage Michigan Avenue’s Corktown District.  


The Competition brief, site drawings and diagrams, and Corktown's neighborhood profile and Master Plan can be download at http://noma.net/EventsPrograms/events_2012conference.aspx. Friday, October 12, 2012 is the deadline for submissions.


OPPORTUNITIES TO EXHIBIT AND SPONSOR:
Companies and organizations that exhibit or sponsor at the 2012 Annual NOMA Conference enjoy numerous benefits and opportunities, including exposure to a diverse group of practitioners, educators, and students in architecture and related professions; opportunities to present products and services to potential customers; access to cutting edge design professionals and technologies; and an opportunity to be recognized as a major supporter of our organization's mission and values. 


Sponsorship levels and exhibitor booth rates are listed in the Exhibitor & Sponsor Prospectus which can be downloaded from http://noma.net/EventsPrograms/events_2012conference.aspx. Deadline for payment is July 31, 2012. 



ABOUT NOMA NATIONAL - The National Organization of Minority Architects’ (NOMA) mission is to champion diversity within the design professions by promoting the excellence, community engagement, and professional development of its members.


ABOUT NOMA DETROIT - The National Organization of Minority Architects was founded in 1971 as a means to foster communications among minority architects and to fight discriminatory practices used by public sector and private clients. Founded in 2006, the Detroit chapter hosts activities that highlight the architecture profession, the needs of the community, and provides solutions that will insure a healthy living and working environment.

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Friday, January 20

Job Openings at Herman Miller

Herman Miller Aeron Chair
Kimberly Coffman, Senior Manager of Supplier Diversity, Inclusiveness and Corporate Diversity at Herman Miller, has informed NOMA-Detroit that there are several important positions open at the company, including two design/hospitality-related positions. See the job listings on the Herman Miller job listings page.

Wednesday, January 4

Would You Move to Detroit?

WDET, a public radio station broadcasting from Wayne State University in Detroit, created and fielded a non-scientific survey , "What would it take to get you to move to the city of Detroit?" Expecting about 1,000 people to respond, they got more than they anticipated: 2,200 people completed a portion of the survey; 1,700 completed the entire questionnaire.

Photo from en.wikipedia.org

"The majority of respondents said the following factors, if addressed, might influence them in considering a move to Detroit: lowered crime, better city services, better neighborhoods, better schools, less government corruption, better shopping, better public transportation, and increased walkability."

See the survey questions and results on the WDET site.

Tuesday, January 3

Be an Ambassador for the Detroit Works Project


Detroit Works Project


NOMA Detroit members, affiliates and friends are welcome to volunteer with the "rebooted" Detroit Works Project. As an Ambassador, you will be a champion of Detroit Works Project Long Term Planning, and will be on the front line engaging community members through one-on-one conversations, neighborhood meetings and events. 

Get more information, and sign up to be an Ambassador here: http://detroitworksproject.com/engagement/how-to-engage/

Also, the Detroit Works Project to have a physical home - office space across from the Eastern Market. The new space is part of the overall strategy to reach out to the community and answer residents' questions. Read more here.