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Victoria Beach, AIA In 1995, Victoria Beach
was an essential component to what is now the Harvard Graduate
School of Design’s first ethics course, which is now required for
all architecture students. In 1998, Beach began her affiliation with
the Center for Ethics and the Professions at Harvard, where she
became a member of the International Ethics Forum. In 1999, Beach
became the first and only architect ever admitted into Fellowship at
the Center for Ethics and the Professions. Beach published a 30-page
exposé on the treatment of interns as well as having established her
own nonprofit organization, Design Foundations, to restore the
dignity and productivity of the internship experience through
community service. Design Foundations has since donated more than a
quarter-million dollars worth of design services to underserved
communities and was chosen as an example of ethical practice in the
upcoming AIA 150th anniversary book: Celebrating the Past,
Designing the Future.
David Gamble, AIA, LEED-AP
David Gamble holds a BArch from Kent State University and a MArch
in urban design. Gramble has done extensive work abroad as well as
having served as a full-time assistant professor at Syracuse
University, where he taught design and drawing from 1997 to 2001. At
Syracuse, Gamble founded the interdisciplinary Community Design
Center. In 2003, he was awarded the Western European Architecture
Foundation’s Gabriel Prize, a grant for the study of architecture
and urbanism in Paris. Now a senior associate at Chan Krieger
Sieniewicz in Cambridge, Massachusetts, Gamble has led urban design
projects throughout the United States. He served as project
architect for the award winning General Aviation Facility, recently
completed at Boston’s Logan International Airport. In addition,
Gamble is currently a part-time design instructor at Northeastern
University’s School of Architecture in Boston. He also serves as a
member of the board of directors of the newly established Community
Design Resource Center-Boston and is an active member of the Boston
Society of Architects Urban Design Committee.
Emily A. Grandstaff-Rice, AIA
Emily Grandstaff-Rice, an architect with Cambridge Seven
Associates, has shown exceptional leadership in her commitment to
design and construction through projects such as the Boston
Children’s Museum and Liberty Hotel. Her commitment to education is
demonstrated through her volunteer work with children and activities
with the AIA Young Architects Forum (YAF), Continuing Education
Quality Assurance Panel, and her firm’s AIA/CES program. She is
involved in two unique projects within the AIA: the YAF 150 at 150
Project, featuring podcasts of Fellows discussing mentoring and
their career choices, and the CEQAP Knowledge Communities Subject
Matter Planning project to integrate AIA knowledge within a
curriculum format to allow members to choose better paths for
continuing education. She also teaches at the Boston Architectural
College. During 2003 and 2004, she participated in the BSA Young
Designers Professional Development Institute, which was awarded,
through Grandstaff- Rice’s successful nomination, the 2004 YAF/NAC
Emerging Professionals Program of the Year.
Kelly Hayes-McAlonie, AIA, MRAIC, LEED-AP
Kelly Hayes McAlonie, an associate vice president with Cannon
Design, has dedicated her career to design for education and
improving learning environments. Upon graduation from the Technical
University of Nova Scotia—now Dalhousie University—Hayes-McAlonie
joined Leathers & Associates, where she planned and designed
more than 100 learning gardens for clients throughout the United
States and abroad and co-authored a multidisciplinary architecture
curriculum for grade-school children. Hayes-McAlonie joined Cannon
Design’s Education practice in 1998 as a planner for pre-K-12 and
higher education clients. One of her projects, the Montante Cultural
Center, received an AIA Honor Award for Interior Architecture.
Hayes-McAlonie also was instrumental in the development of Cannon
Design Academy, a professional development program. Hayes-McAlonie
has become a champion of the legacy of Louise Bethune, FAIA, the
nation’s first woman registered architect, and through
Hayes-McAlonie’s efforts, Bethune was inducted into the Western New
York Women’s Hall of Fame. She was named as one of Business First of
Buffalo, Forty Under 40, and is a member of Leadership Buffalo Class
of 2007.
Grace H. Kim, AIA
Grace Kim is a co-founding principal of Schemata Workshop, an
architectural collaborative in Seattle where she authored the book
The Survival Guide to Architectural Internship and Career
Development. During her early career, she was an active
participant in AIA Chicago’s Young Architects Committee and has
since been involved nationally on issues related to internship and
mentorship. Her participation in the 1999 Summit on Architectural
Internship resulted in her appointment to the Collateral Internship
Task Force as a representative for Emerging Professionals. In 2006,
Kim was appointed as a member-at-large on the inaugural national
Board Community Committee, through which she spearheaded an
initiative called “Welcome to the Profession”—a program to welcome
graduates into the architecture profession. Kim also serves on the
AIA Mentorship Task Group, through which she developed unique
methods of fostering mentorships. For the past seven years, Kim also
has served as a session presenter at Expanding Your Horizons, a
conference for junior high and high school girls to foster an
interest for professions in the math and science field.
Samuel Lasky, AIA
Samuel Lasky, a senior associate with William Rawn Associates
Architects (WRA), Boston, graduated from the Harvard Graduate School
of Design in 1997. He started work at WRA in January of 1998 and was
assigned to help refine and detail the facades of the first building
being built as part of Northeastern University’s new West Campus
residential precinct. After detailing three of the project’s glass
towers, the largest expanse of curtain wall WRA had ever designed,
he became the office’s de facto curtain wall expert and had the
right experience to serve as project architect for the largest
building designed by WRA to date: the 400,000-square-foot W Hotel
and Residences, under construction in the heart of Boston’s Theater
District, where he leads a team of 20 people. He also is working on
the College of Computer and Information Science & Residence Hall
at Northeastern University, a mixed-use residential and academic
building. This project was awarded the Boston Society of Architect’s
Harleston Parker Medal for the “most beautiful building in Boston.”
Before starting with WRA, Lasky had taught in Harvard’s Career
Discovery program and at the Boston Architectural Center, and
subsequently taught at the GSD.
Michael J. Meehan, AIA
Michael Meehan, the 2007 chair of the Young Architects Forum
(YAF) Advisory Committee, has focused on validating and redefining
the mission of the committee. In practice, he is the professional
development manager at BWBR Architects in Saint Paul. In 1997,
Meehan became co-chair of the AIA Minnesota Intern Development
Program Committee. While working with the IDP Committee, Meehan
began teaching ARE review seminars for AIA Minnesota. In 2006,
Meehan served as co-chair of the YAF and also began his rotation as
a member of the AIA/AGC Joint Committee. As YAF chair, Meehan
focused on activities that included the YAF 15 Summit—in recognition
of the committee’s 15th anniversary—and creation of a 10-year
strategic plan. Meehan recently worked with the Hazelden Foundation
as project architect and project manager on their new Women’s
Recovery Center in Center City, Minnesota. Architecturally, Meehan’s
projects reflect his passion for buildings and clients that
contribute to society and the built environment. Meehan sits on the
board of directors of a civic group formed in 2006 within his
historic neighborhood of Northfield and is also a member of the
Northfield Zoning Code Advisory Group.
David Montalba, AIA
David Montalba’s work, often executed in tandem with local
builders and artisans, has garnered numerous design awards from AIA
Los Angeles and AIA Treasure Coast in Florida. Born in Florence,
Italy, and raised in both Switzerland and California, Montalba
earned his BArch at SciARC and an MArch at the University of
California, Los Angeles. He then worked for a number of architects
in the Los Angeles area, including Frank Gehry and Pugh + Scarpa,
before creating Montalba Architects in 2004. Montalba has been
actively involved in local, regional, and international architecture
communities as a member of the boards of AIA Los Angeles, Swiss
Institute for Architects, Swiss Society of Engineers and Architects,
and AIA Europe, and also as a board member of the Architecture &
Design Museum Los Angeles. He serves as co-chair of the LA/AIA
Academic Outreach Committee, and has also been largely responsible
for raising nearly $100,000 for student scholarships on behalf of
the AIA. For the last several years, David has also organized the
highly visible LA/AIA annual 2x8 exhibit, bringing together the
schools in an annual exhibit of work.
Robert Pasersky, AIA
In February 2006, after closely following news reports of how 10
churches in rural Alabama were destroyed by arson, Robert Pasersky,
a native of Atlanta, felt an ineffable need to volunteer his
services, pro bono, to help the victims get their places of worship
rebuilt. Two took him up on his offer, and, as a framework through
which to offer pro-bono design services to both churches, as well as
other projects, he established Open House Works. To define its
commitment better, his company joined The 1%, a program of Public
Architecture through which design professionals pledge a percentage
of their time to working pro bono for their community. Pasersky
earned his BArch from Tulane University, where he received the F.W.
Lawrence Memorial Medal for design excellence upon graduation. He
earned his MArch from the Harvard Graduate School of Design.
Pasersky joined Payette in 1999 and was named an associate of the
firm in 2002. Pasersky also has taught advanced studio and has
served as a thesis advisor at Boston Architectural College since
1998. In 2000, Pasersky earned a certificate of achievement from the
Boston Society of Architects Young Designers Professional
Development Institute.
Tim Schroeder, AIA Graduating cum
laude from Iowa State University in 1994, Tim Schoeder received
the Kocimski Award, the highest award available to graduating
architecture students. Schroeder, in 2000 at age 30, became a vice
president of Neumann Monson Architects and has led many of the
firm's design and sustainability endeavors. An outstanding designer,
his work has been honored by the AIA and other organizations and
environmental groups at the local, state, and regional level. He
created Iowa’s first green roof project, the first LEED-certified
school, the first LEED-certified public building and was the
recipient of AIA Iowa’s first Sustainability Award. Schroeder also
served on the Iowa Architectural Foundation Board and the editorial
board for the award-winning Iowa Architect magazine, of
which he recently became editor-in-chief. He also serves as a guest
lecturer for his alma mater and leads building tours on behalf of
the Cedar Rapids-Iowa City Architects Council. His recent
community-oriented service activities include the Hickory Hill Park
prairie restoration, the City of Coralville’s Iowa River Landing
wetland restoration and planting, and the Iowa City tornado
clean-up. |