Aug. 7-8, 2025 in Charlotte, NC | Sep. 11-12, 2025 Virtual

2025 Summer Conference

Navigating

Schedule

May 2025

Registration Opens

July 16, 2025

Registration Deadline

August 7-8, 2025

In-Person (Charlotte, NC)

September 11-12, 2025

Virtual (Zoom)

Virtual Schedule

Virtual Sessions | Sept. 11-12, 2025

Below is the schedule for the ACSA Summer Conference, Virtual Sessions on September 11-12, 2025. All Time are in Eastern Time. You can read the research abstracts by clicking HERE. The conference schedule is subject to change.

Continuing Education Credits
Obtain Continuing Education Credits (CES) / Learning Units (LU), including Health, Safety and Welfare (HSW) when applicable. Registered conference attendees will be able to submit session attended for Continuing Education Credits (CES).

Thursday, September 11, 2025

12:00pm-1:30pm ET
Research Session

Designing Across Divides

1.5 AIA/CES HSW

This session explores how architecture and urban design intersect with critical social issues such as safety, identity, justice, and environmental responsibility in complex urban and post-conflict contexts. This session highlights the multifaceted ways design can foster community resilience, promote social equity, and improve public welfare. Participants will illustrate how architectural interventions can create safer, more vibrant urban environments through collaborative community partnerships and sustainable design.

Moderator: Mara Marcu, University of Cincinnati

Energy Conflicts: Toward An Architectural Resolution
Ralph Nelson, Lawrence Technological University

The Urban Engage Project: Improving the Perceived Sense of Safety and Vibrancy in Downtown Areas through Interactive Public Infrastructure
Guy Gardner, Jonathan Monfries, Mauricio Soto Rubio & Shelby Christensen, University of Calgary

Street Art in Beirut, Belfast, and Sarajevo as an Ephemeral Expression of a Wounded Past and Divided Present
Joumana Ibrahim, University of the Arts London

Space, Memory, and Identity: Architecture’s Role in Post-Conflict Reconciliation
Dijana Handanovic, University of Houston

2:00pm-3:30pm ET
Research Session

Redesigning the Future

1.5 AIA/CES HSW

This session explores critical contemporary challenges in architectural education through innovative frameworks and technologies. Discuss how adaptable curricula support social equity and prepare students for varied roles that promote community well-being. Focusing on the ethical dilemmas architects face when designing controversial building types, we will explore engaged ethics through the lens of “unbuilding” and social justice advocacy. Focusing on architect’s responsibility in navigating political and societal values to protect and promote community health, safety, and welfare.

Moderator: Wesley Hiatt, Lehigh University

Global Challenges, Global Campus: A Transdisciplinary Cross-University Program as a Model for Enhancing Climate Resilience in Architectural Education
Oswald Jenewein, Mehdi Farahbakhsh & Michelle Hummel, University of Texas at Arlington
Ian Gillis, Mohsen Hajibabaei , Daniel Klausner, Robert Sitzenfrei  & Yannick Back, University of Innsbruck

Virtual Visualization as Techne: Reflections on Adaptation, Entanglement, and Impact in the Architecture Studio
Masataka Yoshikawa & Julia Kiernan, Lawrence Technological University

Parallel Paths, Expanded Options: The Case for Flexibility in Architectural Education
Jacklynn Niemiec & Ulrike Altenmueller-Lewis, Drexel University

Un-Building as a Framework for Applied Ethics Pedagogy
Camille Sherrod, Kean University

4:00pm-5:30pm ET
Research Session

Designing Spaces

1.5 AIA/CES HSW

This session explores innovative architectural and design strategies addressing urgent social challenges in urban environments, including equitable housing, community engagement, and the reimagining of contested public spaces. Presenters will highlight how design can foster social justice, community empowerment, and cultural resonance.

Moderator: Camille Sherrod, Kean University

Architectural Pedagogy in Contested Spaces: Racially Charged Landscapes of Collective Memory
Awilda Rodriguez, Oklahoma State University

Designing for Playful Learning: Co-Designing Urban Spaces through Community Engagement
Ulrike Altenmueller-Lewis & Debra H. Ruben, Drexel University

Housing as Home vs Housing as a Commodity
Karen Kubey, University of Toronto

Friday, September 12, 2025

10:00am-11:30am ET
Research Session

Navigating Community, Climate, and Conflict

1.5 AIA/CES HSW

This session showcases innovative, small-scale interventions that address climate resilience, cultural heritage, and material realities in architecture.  From climate-adaptive process, to flexible systems that enhance accessibility, sustainable practice, and carbon-visualization tools that promote building reuse. Panelists will show how architecture can safeguard people and the planet through thoughtful, context-driven innovation.

Moderator: Dahlia Nduom, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign

Acupuncture Architecture:A Design Methodology as Conflict Resolution
Na Wei, Temple University

Gathering – Reimaging the Porch to mitigate Climate Change in Under-Resourced Black Communities
Sheryl Tucker de Vazquez, University of Houston

Challenging Sidewalk Standardization: A Flexible Approach for Tree-Root Conflicts in Uptown New Orleans
Charles Jones, American University of Sharjah

Helping Students Visualize Embodied Carbon Using Digital Models of Existing Buildings: An Anti-demolition
Iana Jaslowski, Malini Srivastava & Mike Christenson, University of Minnesota
Malini Foobalan, North Dakota State University

12:00pm-1:30pm ET
Research Session

Architecture and Environmental Redesign

1.5 AIA/CES HSW

This session examines contested terrains of land and resource use, emphasizing the health, safety, and welfare impacts of the environment. Participants will explore strategies for designing with energy justice principles and developing innovative approaches to environmental remediation that restore ecological function, protect public health, and promote long-term resilience across multiple scales.

Moderator: Andrew Gipe-Lazarou, Virginia Tech

Architecture Education 4.0 Redefines Energy Pedagogy
Zahida Khan, Ball State University

Fictional Frontiers: Reconstructing with Memory
Amanda Aman, University of Texas at Arlington

Frictional Visualizations: Forcing Awareness of Harmful Externalities in Embodied Carbon Assessments
Mike Christenson, Malini Srivastava & Heather Willy, University of Minnesota

Contested Surfaces, Contested Grounds: Buildings As Culpable Sites For Environmental Justice Protest
Malini Srivastava, University of Minnesota

2:00pm-3:30pm ET
Research Session

Redesigning Conflict

1.5 AIA/CES HSW

This session explores how transforming conflict into a constructive force promotes safer, and more equitable design environments. By shifting perspectives to view conflict as an opportunity for innovation and growth, participants will learn strategies to identify root causes, foster open communication, and collaboratively develop solutions that address the welfare concerns of all stakeholders. This approach supports improved relationships, inclusive decision-making, and design outcomes that prioritize community well-being and resilience.

Moderator: Jacklynn Niemiec, Drexel University

Mutually-inclusive Design Pedagogy: A Five-step “How To”
Andrew Gipe-Lazarou, Virginia Tech

Adaptive Feedback Mechanisms in Architecture: A Gamified Approach to User-Centered Design and Education
Altaf Engineer, Asif Zeshan & Sandra Bernal, University of Arizona

Decolonizing Art and Architecture Curricula: Yinka Shonibare’s site specific Installations as Pedagogical Case Studies for Conflict and Resolution
Charlott Greub, North Dakota State University

4:00pm-5:30pm ET
Research Session

Designing Through Complexity

1.5 AIA/CES HSW

This session explores how architecture and education can promote health, safety, and welfare through collaboration and socially engaged design. Topics include improving teamwork skills in design studios, addressing the dehumanizing conditions of immigration detention centers through architectural analysis, and tackling housing displacement in small cities with community-driven land-use reforms. Additionally, we examine post-conflict urban design’s role in healing divided communities.

Moderator: Joshua A. Foster, East Los Angeles College

Dangling the Carrot: Would Extrinsic Factors Instil Authentic Collaborative Mindsets and Behaviours in Group Projects?
Zhengping Liow & Yiat Yam Leong, Singapore Polytechnic

Understanding Stories of Trauma and Hope through Architecture: Visualizing First-Hand Testimonies of Immigration Detention and Reentry
Serena Langdon-Dimidjian, University of Colorado Boulder

Migration and Displacement in a Small American City: Envisioning Urban Change through Public History, Spatial Storytelling, and Coalition Building
Wesley Hiatt, Lehigh University

Conference Partners

Michelle Sturges
Conferences Manager
202-785-2324
msturges@acsa-arch.org

Eric W. Ellis
Sr. Director of Operations and Programs
202-785-2324
eellis@acsa-arch.org