The document announces a public review and discussion on May 20, 2011 from 1-5:30 PM at the UWM Architecture and Urban Planning Building Commons to showcase student work from 13 classes related to reimagining Milwaukee's Inner Harbor and surrounding areas. Students will present and discuss their semester's work, and the public is invited to engage in discussion of the project and its future directions. The event is organized by the Milwaukee Inner Harbor Project and features diverse ideas from architecture, urban planning, landscape architecture, and civil engineering students, united in their commitment to reenvisioning Milwaukee's Inner Harbor.
The document announces a public review and discussion on May 20, 2011 from 1-5:30 PM at the UWM Architecture and Urban Planning Building Commons to showcase student work from 13 classes related to reimagining Milwaukee's Inner Harbor and surrounding areas. Students will present and discuss their semester's work, and the public is invited to engage in discussion of the project and its future directions. The event is organized by the Milwaukee Inner Harbor Project and features diverse ideas from architecture, urban planning, landscape architecture, and civil engineering students, united in their commitment to reenvisioning Milwaukee's Inner Harbor.
The document announces a public review and discussion on May 20, 2011 from 1-5:30 PM at the UWM Architecture and Urban Planning Building Commons to showcase student work from 13 classes related to reimagining Milwaukee's Inner Harbor and surrounding areas. Students will present and discuss their semester's work, and the public is invited to engage in discussion of the project and its future directions. The event is organized by the Milwaukee Inner Harbor Project and features diverse ideas from architecture, urban planning, landscape architecture, and civil engineering students, united in their commitment to reenvisioning Milwaukee's Inner Harbor.
UWM Architecture and Urban Planning Building Commons Please join the students and faculty of the Milwaukee Inner Harbor Project for a review of their semesters work, followed by a public discussion of the project and its future. The work of 13 classes in architecture, urban planning, landscape architecture and civil engineering will be on display, with students on hand to explain and defend their ideas. The work is as rich and diverse as the UWM School of Architecture and Urban Planning itself- all bound together by a commitment to seeing Milwaukees Inner Harbor and surrounds imagined anew. For more information contact Christine Scott Thomson scottce@uwm.edu.
The Cooperation of Well-Known Architects, Architecture Students and Local Communities in The Process of Architectural Creation in Different Cultural Environments. Examples From Asia