2024 Hines Student Team Receives Honorable Mention
In its 22nd year, the ULI Hines Student Competition offers graduate students a unique opportunity to tackle real-world land use challenges in North American cities. Founded by Gerald D. Hines, the competition fosters innovation and collaboration among students, highlighting the importance of multidisciplinary solutions in urban development. With over 11,000 participants worldwide since 2003, it has become a cornerstone in shaping the future of urban planning and design.
For Architecture and Urban Design students at Kent State University and Planning students at Cleveland State University, this competition is an exciting challenge. It provides students with invaluable hands-on experience, bridging academic learning with practical insights into urban development complexities. Our partnership with the Urban Land Institute further enhances our commitment to excellence in urban design and planning education, offering students access to industry expertise, mentorship, and a vast professional network.
This year's challenge focuses on revitalizing a designated site in downtown Seattle, addressing real-world conditions with innovative and sustainable proposals for a vibrant, mixed-use, mixed-income neighborhood. Congratulations to Drew Thompson, Christopher Rini, Jyae McWilson, Edgardo Mcgorty, and Raz Rasmussen from Cleveland State University and Kent State University, alongside ULI Members Ken Kalynchuk and Alex Long, CSU advisor Roby Simons, and and CUDC advisors Maira Faria, Elizabeth Ellis and Terry Schwarz, for their exceptional contributions to this year's competition.
For more information: ULI CLEVELAND - 2024 Hines Student Team Receives Honorable Mention
The Great Lakes Architectural Expedition
CUDC Gallery | College of Architecture and Environmental Design, Kent State University | 1309 Euclid Avenue, Suite 200, Cleveland, Ohio
Virtual Lecture and Opening Galen Pardee, Drawing Agency: The Great Lakes Architectural Expedition in Northern Ohio, January 20, 2020 at 6 pm.
Exhibition Galen Pardee, The Great Lakes Architectural Expedition, January 20 - February 26, 2021
Free and open to the public on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays from 9am - noon or by appointment. Viewing hours are subject to change. Please call 216.357.3434 or email cudc@kent.edu to confirm.
Virtual Visit Tour the exhibition here
Photo credit: Stephen Takacs
The Great Lakes Architectural Expedition, created by Galen Pardee, explores early work of the titular Expedition, a public architecture office with Lake Erie as a client. Focusing on attempts to establish their roles as public advocates and draft the contours of non-human architect-client relationships, works on display include furniture at the Parliament for a Material World, prototypes for the Maumee Basin Phosphorous Co-Op, and models of the Last Impervious Surface in Portage County Ohio.
On December 8th, 2008, the States and Territories of Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Montreal, and Quebec, signed into law the Great Lakes-St. Lawrence River Basin Water Resources Compact [The Great Lakes Compact], prohibiting water removal outside the Lakes’ drainage basins and creating a sealed eco-political zone within the United States and Canada. On April 25th 2018, Wisconsin approved Foxconn’s request to withdraw seven million gallons of Lake Michigan water per day for a private LCD panel factory outside Racine: Foxconn claimed its factory’s water consumption a “public use” to skirt full Compact review. This feat of semantics exposed the Compact’s lack of actionable public water definitions, and created a leak in the Compact’s closed loop.
Finally, on February 26th, 2019, the citizens of Toledo, Ohio approved the Lake Erie Bill of Rights, granting the city legal guardianship of the Lake and its’ watershed. Unchecked agricultural runoff in 2014 had rendered Lake Erie’s water undrinkable for half a million people for days at a time: algal blooms would return regardless in July 2019. These three events inspired the foundation of the Great Lakes Architectural Expedition, an experimental public architecture office entrusted with protecting the spirit of the Great Lakes Compact, researching and designing the Watershed’s public realm, and advocating for the Compact’s human, non-human, and material subjects.
The Expedition’s mission has prompted a fundamental re-thinking of architecture’s role in the Great Lakes Megalopolis—engaging legal and physical terrains with equal dexterity, expanding architectural practice with non-human client structures, and transforming architects into agents for public materials in a world of increasing scarcity. Using archival models, drawings, documents, and studies, this rare glimpse into the office’s archives explores the organizational structure of the Great Lakes Architectural Expedition itself, as well as early attempts by the Expedition’s Lake Erie Board to establish their roles as public advocates and draft the contours of non-human architect-client relationships.
Galen Pardee LeFevre Emerging Practitioner Fellow at The Ohio State University.
Galen Pardee is a designer, educator, and researcher; currently the LeFevre Emerging Practitioner Fellow at The Ohio State University. He received his BA from Brandeis University and an MArch from Columbia University Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation (GSAPP). Galen has taught at Columbia University and Ohio State, and designed projects in New York City and California. His studio Drawing Agency explores dimensions of architectural advocacy, material economy, and expanded practice. His research projects have been funded by The Ohio State University, Columbia University GSAPP, and the Graham Foundation; and published in the Avery Review and FAKTUR, among others.
Welcome to the new CUDC Website!
We begin the celebration of our 20th anniversary with a new website.
This will be our new home to share our work, events and thoughts with you. We hope that this is not always a one-way conversation and to have you join us in our events, for you to submit work for our future publications or to work with you as we take on new initiatives.
Thanks for your support and we look forward to the next 20 years.