In the Media

Monday, April 12, 2021

Curtis HS and Columbia University Alumna to Pursue Master's at Cornell: "I Have an Obligation as a Burmese-American to Fight For Their Basic Human Rights"

siLive.com: Newly admitted Kaythari Maw will pursue a master's degree in regional science. "I was immediately drawn to Cornell because I would have the ability to learn two things that I am passionate about, regional science, and Burmese language."


Monday, April 12, 2021

Keynote Jenny Sabin Discusses Biosynthetic Architecture Ahead of Tech+ 2021

Architect's Newspaper: Hear keynote speaker Jenny Sabin, the Arthur L. and Isabel B. Wiesenberger Professor in Architecture and principal of Jenny Sabin Studio, talk about her research and work with conference presenter Architect's Newspaper.


Monday, April 5, 2021

What the U.S. Can Learn From China's Infatuation With Infrastructure

Wall Street Journal: Associate professor and historian of city planning Thomas J. Campanella lends his perspective to a Wall Street Journal article on Beijing's building boom and the U.S.'s "China envy."


Friday, April 2, 2021

Cecilia Lu '22's Ghost Stories Explores Identity, Inheritances and Generational Migration

Cornell Daily Sun: Reviewed in The Cornell Daily Sun, Cecilia Lu's (B.F.A. '22) exhibition at the Johnson Museum includes a multimedia work of pottery, projections, and leaflets: vases, cups, a missing father, a sitting figure, an advertisement for a spa.


Thursday, April 1, 2021

Take a look at Exhibit Columbus' 2020–21 Miller Prize Installations

Archinect: In Archinect, architecture alum Olalekan Jeyifous's interactive installation for the Cleo Rogers Memorial Library revisits the library's inaugural and transformative exhibitions in sculpture with AR elements viewed via smartphone.


Tuesday, March 30, 2021

Donald Greenberg's "Cornell Box" Inspires Mike Shinoda and Collaborator Esteban Diacono

Mike Shinoda on Instagram: For the NFT launch of their project "Platonic Love," Linkin Park cofounder Mike Shinoda and Argentinian digital artist Esteban Diacono give props to architecture professor Donald Greenberg and the Cornell team who created the first computer graphics.


Friday, March 26, 2021

Ban on U.S. Water Shutoffs Could Have Prevented Thousands of COVID Deaths – Study

The Guardian: In The Guardian, research from Food & Water Watch and CRP's Professor Mildred Warner shows how states which suspended shut-offs significantly reduced their growth rates of Covid infections and deaths, compared to states without restrictions.


Friday, March 26, 2021

White House Faces New Pleas to Avert 'Tidal Wave' of Water Shut-Offs as State Bans Continue to Lapse

The Washington Post: Based on new research by Professor Mildred Warner, CRP, and Xue Zhang (Ph.D. RS '19) produced by Food & Water Watch, The Washington Post reports a national moratorium on water shut-offs might have saved lives and prevented COVID cases.


Thursday, March 25, 2021

Pandemic Intimacy: Sapar Contemporary's Home Body

Arte Fuse: Arte Fuse reviews a recent group exhibition in NYC that featured work by Baseera Khan (M.F.A. '12). During a time when loneliness and touch-starvation are the norms, Khan's Seats series suggests the intimacy of the internal body.


Thursday, March 25, 2021

Village of Waterloo Believes Future Art Center Can Help Revitalize Downtown

Spectrum News: A Spectrum News segment features Grace Cheng (B.Arch. ‘21), a member of the multidisciplinary, student-run Design Connect Cornell program that is working with community partners to renew and repurpose a downtown landmark in Upstate New York.


Tuesday, March 23, 2021

Victoria Beard on Water Equity: Interview on CGTN TV News

CGTN News World Today: On World Water Day, CGTN News interviewed Professor Victoria Beard, CRP, who said her research shows a massive amount of political will and investment are needed to address the inequities of water infrastructure and access at a global scale.


Tuesday, March 23, 2021

Between the Devil and the Deep Blue Sea: On Colonialism and Neoliberalism in Philippine Architecture

Manila Bulletin: The Philippine Pavilion at the 2018 Venice Biennale of Architecture, "The City Who Had Two Navels," curated by Edson Cabalfin (Ph.D. HAUD '11), reflected a rich if, convoluted history of the Philippines, in the Manila Bulletin.


Tuesday, March 23, 2021

IIM-Ahmedabad Demolition Controversy: Thoughts on Ecology, Empathy, and Re-Membering

In Scroll.in: In Scroll.in, Sarosh Anklesaria (M.Arch. '10) and co-authors say the college buildings embody a collective memory and ethos of worldmaking encompassing the IIMA community and architects, academics, historians, and cultural critics.


Monday, March 22, 2021

Trailblazing Artists: Some Late, All Great

Financial Times: Professor Emerita Kay WalkingStick, art, is among artists featured in Financial Times. Reflecting the challenges facing Native American artists, the art establishment is only now catching up with WalkingStick's ambitious and beautiful work."


Friday, March 19, 2021

Hot Housing Market: Are Tampa Bay Homebuyers Competing with Public and Private Corporations on Bids?

WFLA.com: "As you're out on the market looking for a house, you may very well be competing with an institutional investor," says Suzanne Lanyi Charles, assistant professor in CRP and the Cornell Baker Program in Real Estate, in a WFLA 8 On Your Side story.


Friday, March 19, 2021

Unexpected and Intense. INES Innovation Center by Pezo von Ellrichshausen

Metalocus: Metalocus features the crimson-tinted concrete INES Innovation Center designed by associate professors of the practice in architecture, Mauricio Pezo and Sofía von Ellrichshausen, in Concepción, Chile.


Thursday, March 18, 2021

Johnson Museum Gives MFA Exhibitions a New Home

Cornell Daily Sun: From industrial representations of sea and nightlife to reflections on language in art, Cornell's M.F.A. student galleries present diverse artistic musings at the Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art this spring, in The Cornell Daily Sun.


Wednesday, March 17, 2021

5 Women at the Forefront of Shifts in Architecture Education

Interior Design: Interior Design speaks with AAP Dean Meejin Yoon and four other women who are leading shifts in architecture education in the northeast about the future of built environments, increasing inclusivity, and mentoring the next generation.


Wednesday, March 17, 2021

Amanda Williams: Embodied Sensations, Apr 10–Jun 20 at MoMA

Museum of Modern Art: "Who has the freedom to move, and why?" In her participatory exhibition, artist Amanda Williams (B.Arch. '97) considers this question and invites audiences to consider four keywords—care, knowledge, access, and power. Opens April 10 at MoMA.


Tuesday, March 16, 2021

SO – IL and Jennifer Bonner Among Architects Designing ADUs for LA's Standard Plan Program

DesignBoom: In DesignBoom, work by alumnus Sekou Cooke (B.Arch. '99) is among recently approved designs for the City of Los Angeles to develop plans for more accessible housing.


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