Events
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9/3–12/17 Graduate Admissions Fall 2025 Events
Join Cornell AAP Admissions this fall for a series of virtual information sessions designed to introduce prospective students to graduate programs offered at AAP.
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9/12–11/11 Undergraduate Admissions Fall 2025 Events
Join Cornell AAP Admissions for their undergraduate admissions fall 2025 events, which include in-person and virtual information sessions, informal drop-in chats, and off-campus opportunities to learn more about the college and application process.
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9/17–11/12 Less for More: Collective Visions for a Climate Conscious Future
Held alongside Associate Professor Pamela Karimi's course Designing Deserts: Architecture, Ecology, and Imagination in Arid Lands, this lecture series explores experimental design in drylands and beyond.
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10/20–11/7 Seeing + Sketching: A Post-Rome Exhibition
View selected student drawings from the fall 2024 and spring 2025 semesters by the B.Arch. '26 class, organized by Leo Li and Jasper Owen.
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10/21–12/2 Island Editions Conversation Series at the Gensler Family AAP NYC Center
Attend a remarkable series of conversations with some of architecture's leading practitioners, hosted by architect Peter Eisenman (B.Arch. '55) and critic Cynthia Davidson.
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11/6 Xavier Ros: The Nature of Building
Attend a lecture with Xavier Ros Majó of HARQUITECTES as part of the Lawrence S. Ng Cornell in Rome Lecture Series, where he will discuss the studio's collaborative, material, and context-driven approach to architecture and urban design.
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11/10 Architecture Fall 2025 Graduate Open House for Prospective Students
Join us for the Architecture Fall 2025 Graduate Open House for program overviews, expertise highlights, and Q&A sessions with program directors and current students.
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11/17–12/3 Structural Systems Class Models, Fall 2025
View an exhibition of student models from Architecture Professor Mark Cruvellier's Structural Systems course.
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3/26–3/27 Unearthing the Earth: Architectural Histories of Extractivism
Submit an abstract to this HAUS-hosted symposium asking: how do we historicize extractivism's long dureé from the perspective of architectural history?