Panel V
“Starting & Maintaining an Inclusive Practice” Panelists David Baker, Principal, David Baker + Partners (San Francisco, CA) Casius Pealer, Associate, Reno & Cavanaugh, PLLC (Washington, DC) David Perkes, Director, Gulf Coast Community Design Studio Katie Swenson, Executive Director, Charlottesville CDC
Moderator Bryan Bell, Executive Director, Design Corps (Raleigh, NC)
Formed in 1982, David Baker + Partners is a mid-sized firm with three
partners. Our staff is well-versed in the personal, political, and
commercial dynamics of bringing new architecture into diverse, urban
environments. Our work combines social concern with a signature design
character, resulting in distinctive, high-quality buildings that
provide residents with a strong sense of community. In this way, our
work acts as an advocate for improved urban planning, where looking
good only counts if it does good, too.
David Baker
has been practicing architecture for 28 years. Over the course of his
career, he has received numerous awards, and in 1996 became a Fellow of
the AIA. David founded San Francisco-based David Baker + Partners in
1982, and now leads the firm with Peter MacKenzie and Kevin Wilcock.
DB+P is known for combining social concern with a signature design
character. David has also been teaching at the California College of
the Arts since 1999, and lectures across the west coast. From 1977 to
1982, David was principal of Sol-Arc, a firm dedicated to
energy-efficient architecture. He earned his Bachelor of Philosophy
from Thomas Jefferson College and Master of Architecture from the
University of California, Berkeley. Before becoming an architect, he
was a union carpenter.
This session provided an overview of the major legal and tax issues
regarding incorporation, including the advantages and disadvantages of
the various types of entities, legal requirements for creation, and
what to do to maintain the relevant status. Additionally, since
incorporation is often done primarily to limit personal liability in
the event of an accident or bankruptcy, the session highlighted
considerations for individuals serving on boards of directors,
including the duties of volunteer directors and questions to ask when
reviewing Articles of Incorporation and Bylaws.
Casius Pealer
is an attorney with Reno & Cavanaugh, PLLC, based in Washington,
DC. His practice focuses on mixed finance transactions as well as real
estate and administrative law. While in law school, Casius also worked
for the District of Columbia Housing Authority and served as a student
member of the University of Michigan’s Legal Assistance to Urban
Communities (LAUC) Clinic. Prior to attending law school, he taught
small business skills to artists and craftspeople in the West Indies as
a volunteer with the U.S. Peace Corps from 1999 to 2001. Casius is also
a co-founder of ArchVoices, and a leading advocate around issues of
architectural internship and licensure nationally. He currently serves
on the advisory councils for both the University of Texas at Arlington
and Tulane University Schools of Architecture. Casius earned his
Bachelor of Architecture and Master of Architecture from Tulane
University and his Juris Doctorate, cum laude, from the
University of Michigan Law School. He is a member of the New York State
Bar and his admission to the District of Columbia is pending.
Following Hurricane Katrina, David Perkes has been leading the effort
to establish the Gulf Coast Community Design Studio, a design service
arm of Mississippi State University College of Architecture, Art, &
Design. David has been directing the Jackson Community Design Center
for seven years, therefore, the technical tools, beginning staff, and
contractual and administrative support from the university was already
in place to redirect attention to the Gulf Coast. The ingredient that
was needed was the creation of partners and the building of trust in
the local community. The HUD Universities Rebuilding America
Partnership grant announcement formalized an early partnership between
MSU, the Enterprise Foundation, Architecture for Humanity, and a local
community organization--the East Biloxi Relief and Coordination Center.
However, because of the urgency of the work and also as part of the
commitment to work in the community, the work needed to be done and
could not wait for the funding. When the grant announcement was
eventually made we were already well into the work. The establishment
of the Gulf Coast Community Design Studio is a case study in creating
partners and building trust by demonstrating commitment and delivering
useful work to the community. We are in the middle of a community
planning process, a lot-by-lot property assessment, and detailed GIS
mapping of East Biloxi. At the same time, we are provide immediate
assistance to many of the volunteer building organization to help with
house design and specific professional assistance. This presentation
will explain the work in progress as a way to describe the unique
situation brought about by the hurricane of starting up the Gulf Coast
Community Design Studio as we are already doing the work.
David Perkes
is an architect and Associate Professor for Mississippi State
University School of Architecture. For the past seven years, David has
been the director of the Jackson Community Design Center, and since
Hurricane Katrina, has been leading the establishment of the Gulf Coast
Community Design Studio. As director of the Design Center, David has
overseen projects that range from neighborhood planning to feasibility
studies to affordable and sustainable housing. His work now focuses on
rebuilding Mississippi Gulf Coast communities devastated by Hurricane
Katrina. The work that initiated in the Gulf Coast Community Design
Studio includes housing and community planning in Biloxi, Miss., and
other communities, working with Architecture for Humanity and with
other local and national partners. David earned his Bachelor of Science
in civil and environmental engineering from Utah State University,
Master of Architecture from the University of Utah, and Master of
Environmental Design from Yale University. During the 2003-2004
academic year, he was a Loeb Fellow at the Harvard Graduate School of
Design. He is also a registered architect and member of the AIA. Born
in Utah, David now lives in Mississippi with his wife, Linda, and their
five children.
The Charlottesville Community Design Center brings together citizens
and design resources toward the creation of equitable, sustainable and
beautiful communities. CCDC provides technical assistance to
communities, groups and individuals seeking to implement best practices
in participatory design. As a flagship project for CCDC in its first
year, Habitat for Humanity of Greater Charlottesville and the
Charlottesville Community Design Center created the URBAN HABITATS
Design Competition in search of realistic, innovative, universal models
for multifamily housing that prevent gentrification and displacement.
Habitat is transforming Sunrise Trailer Court into a renewed community
called Sunrise Park that will incorporate sustainable building methods,
community green space, and commercial space for service providers of
children, youth, elderly, and health needs. For Habitat and local
Sunrise residents, the competition served to create transparency,
dialogue and trust in the redevelopment process. With over 160 entries
from the international design community, the local community was able
to engage in a conversation regarding the best possibilities for
equitable design and development in our region while designers
confronted the pressing issues of density, sustainable site development
and affordability.
Katie Swenson
is Executive Director and Founding Partner of the Charlottesville
Community Design Center (CCDC). Started in the fall of 2004, CCDC is an
educational and advocacy initiative that brings together university,
city government, the professional architectural community, the
development and building community, and the residents of
Charlottesville in a dialogue establishing best practices for design
and development. Monthly gallery exhibitions, lectures, design
competitions, design services, youth education programs, and design
assistance workshops in the corner storefront on Main Street combine to
create a vital center of art and architecture in Charlottesville. Katie
recently completed a Frederick P. Rose Architectural Fellowship from
the Enterprise Foundation, working with Piedmont Housing Alliance on
affordable housing and architecture. She earned her Bachelor of Art
from the University of California, Berkeley, and Master of Architecture
from the University of Virginia. Katie lives in Charlottesville with
her husband and their three daughters.
Bryan Bell
is the founder and executive director of Design Corps, based in
Raleigh, NC. Established in 1991, Design Corps as a nonprofit agency
whose mission is “to provide the benefits of architecture to those
traditionally unserved by the profession.” Bryan has also started an
internship program with the AmeriCorps national service program for
young designers interested in the social application of architecture.
His effort to share ideas with the newest generation of architects led
to the establishment of the Structures for Inclusion conference series
which is a forum for students and recent graduates to learn about
grassroots efforts making architecture more accessible. The results of
these, thirty essays by twenty-eight authors, Good Deeds, Good Design,
is to be published by Princeton Architectural Press in the summer of
2003. Work by Design Corps was included in 2003 in the Smithsonian’s
Cooper-Hewitt Design Triennial exhibit. Bryan has also held a chaired
position in ‘Activist Practice’ at University of Chicago, Illinois in
2002, and taught a design/build studio at North Carolina State
University in 2001. From 1998 to 2000, Bryan taught at the Auburn Rural
Studio teaching twenty-two thesis students for twelve design/build
projects. Bryan earned his undergraduate degree from Princeton
University and Master of Architecture from Yale University. He lives in
Raleigh with his wife, Victoria Ballard Bell, currently a Rose
Architectural Fellow with Design Corps, and their daughter, Sky.
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SFI6 PAGE LINKS
Overview
Schedule
Keynote
Panel I
Panel II
Panel III
Panel IV
Panel V
Sponsors
SFI ARCHIVE LINKS
SFI1 (2000)
SFI2 (2002)
SFI3 (2003)
SFI4 (2004)
SFI5 (2005)
SFI6 (2006)
SFI7 (2007)
SFI8 (2008)
SFI9 (2009)

Initial SFI6 press release
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