Host: Community Housing Resource Center of Atlanta
Year: 2004
Theme: “Choosing Relevancy”
Panelists: Stephen Goldsmith, Bryan Bell, Aaron Koch, Andrew Wagner, Jim Devlin and the Mad Housers, Jamie Blosser, Teddy Cruz, Samina Quareshi, Christopher Robertson and Chris Krager, Scott Ball, David Baker
Opening: Walter Hood
Screening: “Rebuilding Bayview” video and discussion with Maurice Cox and Alice Coles
Opening Remarks
By Liz Hoogheem
This weekend will offer a challenge to us all. We will be called to question the relevancy of the architectural profession and the value of design in today’s society. Our relevancy is directly related to the choices we make as designers–particularly regarding those we choose to serve. Currently, design is a service that is out of reach for 98% of the population. At this conference we will be exploring the ways in which design is being made accessible to a more diverse clientele and pertinent to a larger audience. By creating dialogue, cultivating collaboration, and challenging the existing stigma of exclusivity, we may expand our scope of work and increase the positive impact of our efforts.
The significance of our role, however, also depends on our ability to adapt, to be flexible in addressing the needs and circumstances of our clientele and to be sensitive to our changing environmental, political, and cultural landscape. We must recognize that architecture, or the making of place, is not static and fixed but in a constant state of flux and transition. SFI4 will present innovative examples of design processes and products that are breaking away from the rigid limitations of existing architectural definitions. We will hear from those who are forging a path that celebrates the value and the potential of design as a tool for improving our communities and the built environment.
We hope that the presentations given at this conference will provide proof for the potential of design to affect positive change. But more than that, we hope they will spur discussion and critique that will draw upon the opinions and ideas of everyone in attendance: students, interns, practitioners, and panelists. I encourage you to introduce yourself to those around you and to share your experiences; taking advantage of this opportunity to learn, to teach, and to inspire.