Feb 20 2007 - 9:00am
Feb 20 2007 - 12:30pm
Location:
Lawrence 206
2010 Global Imperative Teach In
Are You Being Trained for the World You Will Inherit?
The interactive web-cast broadcast live from New York City on February 20th, 2007 to over 500,000 students, faculty, administrators, design professionals and government officials!http://www.2010imperative.org/webcast.html
SPEAKERS:
Dr. James E. HansenDr. James Hansen is arguably the world's leading scientist on global warming. He is the head of NASA's Goddard Institute for Space Studies in New York City.
Ralph Cicerone, president of the National Academy of Sciences said of Dr. Hansen’s climate science work, "I can't think of anybody who I would say is better than Hansen. You might argue that there's two or three others as good, but nobody better.”
Edward Mazria AIA
Edward Mazria, founder of Architecture 2030, is an internationally recognized architect, author and educator. His architecture and planning projects span a thirty-year period, each employing a cutting-edge environmental approach to its design.
After the AIA, USGBC and ASHRAE recently adopted the 2030 Challenge to address the Building Sector’s role in the global warming crisis, Mazria wrote "The task we face is daunting. Working separately, we could accomplish something significant in each of our respective spheres. But by working together, we actually have a chance to influence the course of history."
Chris Luebkeman AIA
Chris Luebkeman is a Director and leader of Arup’s global Foresight and Innovation initiative. He is tasked with exploring and synthesizing the trends affecting society’s development.
Luebkeman is a senior fellow of the Design Futures Council and in a recent article wrote, “There is no doubt that, as our built environment has transformed from a local phenomenon to a global one, we are now confronted with more pressing social, technological, economic, environmental and political change forcing us to a local mindset - on a global scale.”
Susan Szenasy
Susan Szenasy is editor-in-chief of Metropolis, and has led the award-winning New York City-based magazine of architecture, culture and design through twenty years of landmark design journalism.
In a recent university lecture, Szenasy summed up her role at Metropolis, “As an editor, my job is to ask questions. So the question I ask of you now is this: how will you prepare yourself to make hard choices? And as a follow-up, what can you contribute to making a new pattern, one that reflects the 21st century ethos of environmental sustainability and social equity? Are you willing to take part in redefining the edge?”







