Message from the AIA Bend Section Director-Elect

 

Ian Schmidt, AIA
Section Director-Elect, AIA Bend

I am excited to be joining the AIA Bend chapter leadership group as the 2022 Director-Elect. I am looking forward to meeting more colleagues and providing design opportunities to colleagues at all levels of experience. The majority of my volunteering in the last 5 years has been with community organizations focused on housing; so, while this is my first official role with the AIA I’ve had many opportunities to be a voice for architects within our business community. I believe that architects and designers have an important role to play in shaping our communities through activism as well as our professional work.

I see myself as a pretty average resident of Bend Oregon, which is another way of saying “I like being outside, and I didn’t start out here.” I grew up in a mid-sized city in the northern Andes mountains of Peru and then a few miles away from the Pacific Ocean in the southern border city of Peru and Chile. My parents moved back to central Kansas in the mid-90s, and I lived there until going to the college of architecture at Kansas State University. While in architecture school I was heavily influenced by the social housing models of pioneered in Scandinavia in the 1970s and was fortunate to study for parts of my last two years of undergrad in Denmark and Norway. The centrality of modern design and support for community-based approaches to caring for our neighbors made a deep impression on me, and I’ve been pursuing those two things ever since.

My first foray into community involvement as an architect came in 2015 with a healthy push from the director of Bend 2030 who -fortuitously for me- shared a space with the architectural office I worked at. I loved being part of the Middle Market Housing Workgroup and helping shape the community dialogue around housing. I am proud to have served for 4 years on the Affordable Housing Advisory Council in Bend and love the opportunity to bring an AEC perspective to local policy deliberations. There are more organizations that have shaped me than I can name here, but I will say that my appreciation for our Central Oregon community easily doubled during my time in Leadership Bend.

My current role in the industry is as a Partner and Architect at COLE Architects, and I love getting to work a wide range of projects across central & eastern Oregon and Idaho. Easily the most fun part of my position is getting to indulge my joint passions for mentoring and writing good contracts.

In my year as Director-Elect I am going to try to meet all our local members, reach out to every firm in Bend to understand what each of you are passionate about, and ask how I can open doors for the opportunities each of you dream about. Our local AIA chapter is a collaborative democracy – and my role in that democracy is to provide opportunities for growth, self-expression, and supporting the current and future leaders in our profession.

I believe that our local community and region will be its best when a diverse range of buildings are available to meet our diverse population. Historically Central Oregon has had a high percentage of single-family homes, but as housing continues to soar in price and our state land use laws both require further densification and constrain the buildable land supply, other approaches can help address those challenges. As more people move the American West each year, a critical mass is growing to consider options including but not limited to the traditional model of single-family detached homes, walk-up apartments, and car-centric business areas. I am excited to find local opportunities for advocacy in the built environment and even more excited to do it with colleagues and friends.

Message From the AIA Portland Section Director

 

Ben Arico, AIA
AIA Portland Section Director

Dear Members,

 In Portland in 1972, the leadership community in charge of shaping the future of the built environment banded together to produce the 1972 Downtown Plan.  This leadership community was comprised of civic leaders, elected officials, city employees, architects, private sector participants, and public participants.  The plan was aspirational and laid the groundwork for some of the most beloved characteristics of Downtown Portland and its active downtown core, including light rail, a strong urban university, Pioneer Courthouse Square, pedestrian and traffic improvements, and urban residential infill - among many others.

For many, Portland thrived with the guidance of the 1972 Downtown Plan.  Flash forward 50 years.  Welcome to 2022.  The pandemic has highlighted problems that perhaps have always been – to a far lesser extent – plaguing Portland.  Now the Downtown core shows physical symptoms of its social ailments and is far removed from its previous role as the vibrant and active center of the city.  So much has changed over 50 years.  The timing appears right for visioning a new and better future for Portland’s Downtown Core.

I believe that the values expressed at the heart of the city are the spatial messages broadcasted with the loudest volume.  In 2022, what are our values?  What would make the Downtown Core an inclusive, safe space that both takes advantage of the benefits of downtown location while realizing the real issues of displacement, houselessness, and truly attainable – not just affordable - housing?  What must be different about the physical form so that it reflects these more inclusive and welcoming values for people?  How can the downtown core link us together and help communities thrive?

My hope is that architects and planners will participate in a community outreach effort.  As the profession of architecture acknowledges its role in systemic injustices built into our cultural fabric, our process must include measures to ensure all voices are able to be heard and amplify voices that are often pushed to the margins.  Prioritizing an equitable process would help to create a more equitable result.  To that end, the AIA Portland section would like to revisit the 1972 Downtown Plan with an active lens for equity, justice, inclusivity, and belonging.  We believe this reflective effort will help us consider new opportunities to design a more just built environment.

Revisiting the 1972 Downtown Plan does not mean creating a zoning map with regulations or compiling a list of projects & requirements.  The purpose of this exercise would be to imagine what the future Downtown Portland could be, and how design can play a part in it.  This will help us be prepared for local discussions about elements of current city plans, which will help us extend theories and topics for discussion and education to the broader AEC community.

If you are interested in contributing to this discussion, or would like more information, I welcome you to join us at our next Portland Section Steering Committee Meeting on March 3rd from 12:00-1:00PM.  We will be discussing this item along with other exciting and interesting agenda items.  If you have never been to a Portland Section Steering Committee Meeting, please don’t be intimidated.  The past few meetings have had 5 or 6 people in them.  As your Director, I would love to see more Portland members at our monthly meetings, and it would be a nice way for you all to get to know each other better.  You can also email me if you are interested in the Portland plan revisit.  We will want people to have the opportunity for robust conversation.

Sincerely, 

Ben Arico

Portland Section Director

Message from the AIA Eugene Section Director

 

Rex Prater, AIA
AIA Eugene Section Director

Volunteers Build a Better Us

Thanks for Volunteering, Everyone! Now that I am solidly one month into 2022, as Section Director for the Eugene area, I find myself saying this every chance I have a moment with membership. Having participated in this organization for awhile, always a volunteer, I’ve found it a very rewarding experience. I know we pay dues, which in part affords us a professional staff that assist us and manage this professional organization, but so much of what we want to do requires volunteer support. It takes a team and I’ve found it a true privilege to be a part of and participate in this organization - this includes a big show of appreciation to Colin Dean for all his service having just concluded his Directorship for the Eugene Section.

If you are searching for the most important take-away in this message, it would be in recognizing and celebrating all the volunteers within our AIA Oregon community. You all are awesome! Sometimes it feels to me that we don’t celebrate you enough. That’s probably why I was inspired to make it my topic today. So how about this idea… let’s celebrate our volunteers more like we celebrate our design awards. I think we do really well at this because there are sure a lot of design awards out there! Volunteers? - not so much.

So, as I wrap up this message and rush off to fulfill another task which I’ve just delayed in order to try and craft this crafty message, please recognize and celebrate volunteering. Thank you for volunteering. There are only so many tomorrows and if you have talent to give, or have an interest you think is worth supporting, please do it! Again, thank you everyone for volunteering!