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    What is BIM and How Is It Changing the World of CRE? – Motley Fool

    - April 11, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Often, the architects and developers are the first people who are involved in the beginning stages of modeling the building and creating the model. But while they often start the model, it's the collaboration of all interested parties that makes BIM truly useful. The various construction managers, including electricians, plumbers, and contractors, can bring in their data and estimates to allow the developer to more clearly understand all of the components.

    One of the core advantages of BIM is that it essentially acts as a living document for the building. A building is a complex ecosystem; one small change, such as a change in the supplier of lighting fixtures, can have ripple effects throughout the whole project. One of the more costly components of construction is having to go back and adjust the original plan based on changes. Using a collaborative system keeps everyone on the same page, both literally and figuratively.

    Once the project is completed, the BIM model also lets building managers and other end users see all of the details of the building. This can be helpful for renovations and improvements as well as for determining ways to implement energy efficiency and smarter ways of managing the building. As technology continues to evolve, managers can look at the building model to determine how to make changes to keep the building up to date.

    "Architects and developers use BIM to generate and visualize designs and models for construction projects from start to finish based on all project information within the BIM model," notes Ramadan. "This enables the ultimate client to visualize the built asset pre-construction, input on design, and make any changes before work commences, leading to a better-quality end product and cost-saving efficiencies."

    One of the biggest challenges that BIM faces is adoption. There are a variety of different programs, and although there are a few leaders in the field such as Autodesk (NASDAQ: ADSK), not everyone always uses the same system. There is also a significant cost involved, in terms of both the software itself and the training.

    Another concern is keeping data safe. "With any data sets, there is always a cybersecurity risk, and BIM models are no exception," adds Ramadan. "BIM models may contain rich data/information about the operation and performance of a building, which in the case of public buildings (i.e., airports, hospitals) will include highly sensitive data, so it is likely BIM models will be targets for attack, and therefore appropriate security measures and protections will need to evolve."

    The potential of BIM may extend beyond usage in a single building. As more governments integrate BIM into public infrastructure, there is greater potential to create smart cities that use BIM to model not just a building but a whole neighborhood.

    "The biggest opportunity with BIM technology is the potential for convergence with the internet of things, the information sharing economy, and smart city initiatives to pave the way for a truly digital economy for buildings and infrastructure," says Ramadan.

    An example of this is the work being done by Alphabet (NASDAQ: GOOGL), Google's parent company, in Toronto. Sidewalk Labs, an Alphabet subsidiary, is working on Quayside, a project to create an entirely new neighborhood in Toronto. In January, Sidewalk published plans for a tall-timber building visualized in BIM 360.

    Like all aspects of technology, BIM has benefitted from increases in computing power and the ability to integrate large data sets easily. The COVID-19 outbreak has shown how valuable virtual models are in all industries where a site visit isn't advisable. This situation could help spur greater interest and more widespread adoption of building information modeling.

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    What is BIM and How Is It Changing the World of CRE? - Motley Fool

    We Need More ICU Beds To Fight COVID-19. These Medical Architects Say That Requires Hospitals To Rethink Individualized Care – Forbes

    - April 11, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Getty

    Coronavirus Frontlines is a special series where we are sharing the perspective of experts at the forefront of combating the COVID-19 pandemic.

    For years, Americas healthcare industry has operated from an abundance mentality, with hospitals assuming access to virtually unlimited resources. But we are just a month into the United States COVID-19 crisis and hospitals across every corner of America are finding themselves in the midst of a threefold lack of resources of appropriate space, of healthcare workers needed to address the crisis, and the necessary level of personal protective equipment (PPE) to keep frontline staff and patients safe.

    A recent study from Harvard University shows that even in a moderate outbreak of coronavirus, 40% of markets around the country will lack necessary beds to adequately treat patients. In cities like New York and New Orleans, healthcare providers are already experiencing these challenges. Governor Andrew Cuomo is currently pushing for hospitals to develop a plan to increase bed inventory by 50 to 100 percent before the virus peaks in mid-April. But time is running out for healthcare organizations that are already finding themselves in the eye of the storm.

    Though the outlook feels bleak, the current pandemic is a chance for the healthcare industry to reevaluate deeply held beliefs around patient care and comfort. Most notably, the primacy of private patient rooms and specialized nursing units as across the board solutions. Both healthcare professionals and the general public need to forego the ideal patient experience as a primary focus for the American healthcare system. Instead, it is imperative that they move to an emphasis on patient safety and survival.

    It sounds like a paradox in the midst of an infectious outbreak, but augmenting single-patient rooms with prefabricated, open ward-style treatment spaces ensures we can rapidly scale the number of beds in our country. While some hospitals at the forefront of the crisis are beginning to adopt versions of this model, the scale of this crisis requires solutions that are more integrated, faster to build, and easier to deploy across geographies.

    One solution is pre-fabricated ICU units: a process that builds the components offsite to allow easy assembly onsite, saving time and money. Developed recently for use in future hospitals on the East Coast, these ICU units can be integrated into unorthodox and temporary treatment areas inside hospitals like cafeterias, clinics, conference centers, and parking structures. It can also be used beyond the hospital in civic spaces like arenas, schools and community centers.

    A temporary hospital is under construction in the Argentine Football Club in Lanus, Argentina.

    Hospitals can arrange these temporary units in modules of 12 to 18 beds that come pre-fitted with essential ICU functions like regulated gasses, air and data. Grouping beds into larger modules maximizes caregiver sight-lines and allows nurses to oversee a greater number of infected patients in a smaller area, minimizing the staff required to care for patients. These groupings also have the potential to extend the average length of use for some PPE by reducing the need for staff to don and doff protective equipment repeatedly, as they do in typical nursing units each time they enter and exit private patient rooms.

    Specialized medical equipment manufacturers have been developing and producing key elements found within the plug and play solution for years as a part of the nations hospital building boom. By marrying the two together the plug and play ICU unit and redirecting existing units intended for construction projects we may be able to help quickly offset some of the stress on todays hospital systems.

    Now we must shift that energy to respond to the crisis today. Doing so means that, at least temporarily, we must focus less on the individualized and specialized care model that has been a hallmark of American healthcare, and more on the infrastructure and solutions that will save the most lives.

    Full coverage and live updates on the Coronavirus

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    We Need More ICU Beds To Fight COVID-19. These Medical Architects Say That Requires Hospitals To Rethink Individualized Care - Forbes

    Acela Architects and Engineers to move into former Girl Scouts property – Lehigh Valley Business

    - April 11, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Acela Architects and Engineers will move into an Allentown property long occupied by the Girl Scouts of Eastern Pennsylvania. PHOTO/SUBMITTED)

    A local architect and engineering firm will move into an Allentown property long occupied by the Girl Scouts of Eastern Pennsylvania.

    Acela Architects and Engineers, which has a location at 4969 Hamilton St. in Lower Macungie Township, will occupy the building.

    Feinberg Real Estate Advisors LLC represented the Girl Scouts in the $610,000 sale of 2619 Moravian Ave., a 7,500-square-foot property in Allentown.

    Cindy McDonnell Feinberg, principal of Feinberg Real Estate Advisors in South Whitehall Township, who represented the seller, said the transaction was completed last week.

    James Balliet of KW Commercial of South Whitehall Township represented the buyer, HIWT LLC, an investment group that plans to redevelop the property for Acela Architects and Engineers, she said.

    The firm plans to move into the new building within the next four weeks and use it for its new corporate headquarters in the Lehigh Valley, said Daniel Witczak, president of Acela Architects and Engineers.

    Its a beautiful facility, it gives us a lot of room to grow, Witczak said. Its an easy access on and off highway, its convenient for our clients.

    The property on Moravian Avenue was originally developed in 1977 as the headquarters for the Great Valley Girl Scouts and later became a service center with the merger of county-based programs, which led to the creation of Girl Scouts of Eastern Pennsylvania with headquarters in Miquon, Montgomery County, Feinberg said.

    For now, Girls Scout employees are working remotely in different Girl Scouts locations, Feinberg said.

    Acela has 18 employees and plans to add three more people at the new location once the pandemic ends, Witczak said.

    Weve been set up to work from home from the beginning, he said. Everybody has a laptop and docking station. Thats the way we started our company.

    Employees have the ability to work from home and take laptops home as needed.

    Acela has been at its Lower Macungie office for three years and has three other locations in Ohio, New York and New Jersey.

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    Acela Architects and Engineers to move into former Girl Scouts property - Lehigh Valley Business

    Five ways architects and designers are helping fight coronavirus – Dezeen

    - April 11, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    From designingface shields and flat-pack intensive care units to 3D-printinghands-free door leversand converting buildings to hospitals, architects and designers are tackling the coronaviruspandemic. Here are five ways they are helping.

    Converting buildings to hospitals

    The unprecedented number of coronavirus cases is forcing countries around the world to rapidly increase their capacity to treat patients.

    To do this, buildings across the world are being converted into intensive care units. In Tehran, Iran Mall, the world's largest shopping centre, is being transformed into a coronavirus hospital, while in New York theCathedral of St. John the Divine is also set to be converted.

    With large open spaces, conference centres are an obvious choice for conversion and architecture studio BDP has converted the ExCel Centre in London into a 4,000-bed hospital called NHS Nightingale.

    Two giant wards have been created in the exhibition halls, which are divide from a central corridor by areas to put on and take off protective clothing. A staff canteen, diagnosis room and mortuary complete the hospital.

    "When the scale of the shortfall in beds across London became clear, the ExCel centre was the obvious choice," BDP's James Hepburn told Dezeen.

    "It has huge flat floor hall spaces with flexible MEP infrastructure that can be easily adapted to meet the needs of the temporary hospital."

    Designing temporary intensive care units

    Architects have also recognised the need to create temporary intensive care units that can be rapidly deployed, following China's rapid construction of a temporary hospitalto treat patients at the start of the pandemic.

    In response to the outbreak in the USA, flat-pack startup Jupe has created a range of medical care facilities that are designed to be quickly installed at hospitals to increase bed capacity, or that could be used as stand-alone field hospitals.

    "Hospitals can't tackle it all rapidly enough, even once the federal government's aid package kicks in," explained Jupechief medical advisorEsther Choo.

    In Italy, architects Carlo Rattiand Italo Rota designed an intensive-care pod within ashipping container.The first prototype is currently under construction at a hospital in Milan.

    Designing face shields

    In some countries, the pandemic has led to a shortage of personal protective equipment (PPE) to protect health workers. In response, architects and designers have begun designing and manufacturing it themselves.

    In the USA, studios including BIG, KPF and Handel Architects have joined an open-source project to print face shields, while in Spain3D-printing brand Nagami Design has switched its machines frommaking furniture to shields.

    British architecture studioFoster + Partnersdecided to design an alternative face shield that can be laser cut. The open-source device can be disassembled and sanitised for reuse.

    Researchers at theMassachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), the University of Cambridge and the University of Queensland, and graduates from Rhode Island School of Designhave all also designed face shields.

    MIT has developeda disposable face shield that is made from a single piece of plastic, which can be mass-produced and shipped flat. Pieces of plastic and be folded into a three-dimensional structure when needed.

    The RISD graduatescreated a simple shield that combines a curved piece of plastic with a headstrap, while the University of Cambridge and the University of Queensland's design can be created with no specialist materials or tools.

    Making face masks

    Face masks are another item of PPE that have seen a massive increase in demand during the pandemic. In response to shortages, numerous designs and fashion brands have converted their factories to mask production.

    Prada, COS and Louis Vuitton are among the leadingbrands that have retooled to manufacture surgical face masks, while Yves Saint Laurent and Balenciaga have begun production of cotton face masks.

    Hacking equipment

    Architects and designers have been using their 3D-printers to quickly create items that alter equipment to solve problems raised by the pandemic.

    To make wearing face masks less painful formedical staff treating patients, Chinese 3D-printer manufacturer Creality is printing a device that holds the strings away from the wearer's ears.

    Architectural designers Ivo Tedbury and Freddie Hong have created a3D-printeddoor-handle extension that users can loop their arm through so they can open doors without using their hands.

    In Italy, additive manufacturing start-up Isinnova reverse engineeredand 3D-printed a crucial valve for a oxygen mask, which is used as part of a ventilator machine, following a shortage.

    "The valve has very thin holes and tubes, smaller than 0.8 millimetres it's not easy to print the pieces," said Isinnova CEO Cristian Fracass."Plus you have to respect not [contaminating] the product really it should be produced in a clinical way."

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    Five ways architects and designers are helping fight coronavirus - Dezeen

    Marin Architects Reveals Residential Building at 140 West Fordham Road in University Heights, The Bronx – New York YIMBY

    - April 11, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    By: Sebastian Morris 7:00 am on April 5, 2020

    New renderings offer a look at a seven-story residential building in the University Heights section of The Bronx. The development is located at the corner of West Fordham Road and Loring Place North, and is expected to debut as 140 West Fordham Road, with 2332 Loring Place listed as the secondary address.

    Designed by Marin Architects, the structure features an understated masonry faade comprised of gray, brown, and red brick. Within, the building will support 54 rental units averaging approximately 776 square feet apiece.The project team has not released any updates regarding amenity spaces. Additional confirmed components will include a rear yard and enclosed parking area for 27 vehicles.

    In total, the building will span 52,465 square feet and will replace a single-story bar and an associated parking lot.

    Rendering of 140 West Fordham Road Marin Architects / Stagg Group

    Rendering of 140 West Fordham Road Marin Architects / Stagg Group

    Jay Martino of the Stagg Group is listed as owner on associated applications for the development. Demolition permits have not been filed with the citys Department of Buildings and it is uncertain when the project will be completed.

    Subscribeto YIMBYs daily e-mailFollowthe YIMBYgram for real-time photo updatesLikeYIMBY on FacebookFollowYIMBYs Twitter for the latest in YIMBYnews

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    Marin Architects Reveals Residential Building at 140 West Fordham Road in University Heights, The Bronx - New York YIMBY

    LA Mayor calls on architects to expand 3D-printed PPE efforts – Archinect

    - April 11, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    anchor

    LA Mayor Eric Garcetti is helping to expand the nascent #OperationPPE effort. Photo courtesy of USC Architecture Operation PPE.

    The American Institute of Architects Los Angeles (AIA |LA) chapter has been asked by Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti to aid the city in its efforts to expand the growing #OperationPPE initiative that has taken root in the city.

    Initiated by a team led by University of Southern California (USC) Associate Professor Alvin Huang, #OperationPPE brings together resources and expertise from throughout the USC ecosystem (including its medical and engineering schools) with the productive capabilities of local architecture firms, universities, and other 3D-printing facilities. The effort, which includes contributions from University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), Southern California Institute of Architecture (SCI-Arc), and Cal Poly LA Metro architecture programs, has been working around the clock over the last week to manufacture makeshift Personal Protective Equipment for area hospital workers who are on the frontlines of the coronavirus pandemic.

    In a daily press briefing last week, Mayor Garcetti expressed his support for #OperationPPE, stating that the city was working with local universities, design schools, and architecture firms to utilize their materials and expertise in the race to produce much-needed protective equipment.

    An email sent out by AIA|LA staff over the weekend reads, Mayor Eric Garcettis Officeis ramping up production of pseudo N95 masks and safety shields for area hospitals. The message adds that AIA|LA has been asked by Mayor Garcetti to have potential contributors fill out a survey describing their printing capabilities. See here for the survey.

    The message continues: The Mayors program will begin once production for Keck has completed and it will use the same designs as approved by Keck and NIH. But time is critical.PPEs are urgently needed by area hospitals to take care of the people of Los Angeles.

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    LA Mayor calls on architects to expand 3D-printed PPE efforts - Archinect

    Share Your Work From Home Experience and Join the Remote Architects Club – ArchDaily

    - April 11, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Share Your Work From Home Experience and Join the Remote Architects Club

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    With the COVID-19 pandemic forcing many architecture firms to quickly transition into a work from home, designers are having to discover new ways to work without everyone being in the same room. The casual conversations, overheard ideas, and site visits that were once an integral part of our jobs have been put on pause, and have left some architects wondering how everyone else is continuing project work.

    Launched just last week, the Remote Architects Club is bringing designers from around the world together and sparking a conversation about how to work from home. This crowd-sourced site provides architects with a singular source of information and tools for support. Not only can architects see how other offices are handling work from home mandates, but also explore a variety of available software and read personal stories from others who have found ways to stay connected in this uncharted territory. Even beyond the end of this pandemic, this platform hopes to continue to serve the greater design community as a means of sharing ideas so that working remotely can become a regular part of architecture practice.

    To find more information on how to join the Remote Architects Club, or to share information about your best practices, click here.

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    Share Your Work From Home Experience and Join the Remote Architects Club - ArchDaily

    #OperationPPE puts architects to work 3d-printing protective equipment for frontline medical workers – Archinect

    - April 11, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Across the country, design communities have mobilized to assist in the effort to fill supply gaps in Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) for healthcare workers operating on the front lines of the coronavirus pandemic.

    Last week, Archinect reported on efforts at Princeton, Cornell, and Columbia that are coming together to 3D-print visors and face shield harnesses, fabricate hospital gowns, and manufacture other PPE to serve the regions hospitals.

    On the west coast, a project inspired by a call to arms from Cornell University Professor Jenny Sabin has sprung up around the University of Southern California (USC). There, multiple campus entities, including the USC School of Architecture, the USC Viterbi School of Engineering, the USC Iovine Young Academy, and theUSC Keck School of Medicine are working to create PPE face masks that come close to meeting N95 standards.

    Using a regional network of 3D-printers scattered at participating architecture firms and universities, including University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), Southern California Institute of Architecture (SCI-Arc), and Cal Polys LA Metro program, the #OperationPPE effort is fabricating protective gear that could prove pivotal to fighting the virus if existing stocks are depleted and medical workers have to resort to improvised means of protection.

    USC Professor Alvin Huang explains: This is what Keck [School of Medicine] has identified as wartime medicine, so we are working on the back-ups to the back-ups.

    Working from home offices, school print shops, and firm fabrication facilities, the group has coordinated file sharing and manufacturing initiatives to optimize and perfect the 3D printing files for a N95-like mask meant for last-resort use. The 3D-printed components are designed to snap together and require the addition of a HEPA filter insert and perimeter sealant to properly function. The masks are are a step above using handmade masks and bandanas, Huang writes.

    The effort was recently endorsed by Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti, who in a recent COVID-19 related televised update announced the Citys support for the #OperationPPE initiative.

    In the talk, Garcetti said, Im proud to announce were mobilizing our architecture, design, and manufacturing communities to utilize 3D-printing technologies to aid in the response. Garcetti added that the city was working with local universities, design schools, and architecture firms to utilize their materials and expertise.

    Huang tells Archinect that the USC team has support from Gruen Associates, AIA California, and AIALA, which are now providing USCs printing teams with material, including 60 additional spools of PLA, the plastic filament being used to fabricate the masks. Huang adds: We are, however, having difficulty finding sheets of .02"-thick PETG for the face shields, but are trying to source that now.

    In addition to Gruen, the effort has received support from a variety of local architecture firms, including:KAA Associates, ARUP, CO Architects, Michael Maltzan Architecture, Brooks + Scarpa, ECM Interactive, HNTB, IBI Group, HGA, KoningEizenberg, Lorcan OHerlihy Architects, Tighe Architecture, and Huangs own firm, Synthesis Design+ Architecture.

    Huang writes, Our group is now up to 130+ people with 105+ printers, 3 lasercutters, and 215+ spools of filament. Huang explains that over 80 students are involved in the project.

    The designers have published a sign-up sheet for those interested in contributing to the effort. The link includes access to the Keck School of Medicine-approved .stl files that can be used to print the mask components.

    The rest is here:
    #OperationPPE puts architects to work 3d-printing protective equipment for frontline medical workers - Archinect

    The Architect’s Newspaper announces its sixth annual Best of Products Awards – The Architect’s Newspaper

    - April 11, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    With a whopping 33 categories, The Architects Newspapers sixth annual Best of Products Awards is slated to be our best yet. This years new and revamped program offers manufacturers, designers, and brand representation more opportunities to enter.

    With a reputation for a smart, informed perspective on architecture and design, The Architects Newspaper applies the same high standards to our awards. This year, our robust jury is composed of 12 leading architects, engineers, construction, design professionals, andAN editors.Entries will be evaluated for innovation, aesthetics, performance, and value.

    The Architects Newspapers Best of Products Awards is a much-anticipated event in the AEC and design communitiesyou wont want to miss out.

    Independent designers, manufacturers, and brand representatives are invited to submit new products for review by July 23. This year, weve introduced a tiered entry fee structure.Early bird submissions are open until April 30 and regular submissions through July 2.

    Winners will be announced online on August 31 and on our social media platforms. Winners will also be featured in our end-of-the-year Best of Design Awards special issue that is circulated to all subscribers. In addition, they will receive a specially designed trophy. One additional Product of the Year award will be announced at our annual AN Design Gala in early 2021. Further details can be found on our awards website.

    More here:
    The Architect's Newspaper announces its sixth annual Best of Products Awards - The Architect's Newspaper

    Architects and engineers are turning old shipping containers into mobile intensive care units – CBC.ca

    - April 11, 2020 by Mr HomeBuilder

    A group of architects and engineers is working to convert shipping containers into intensive care units to help hospitals that are running low on space for COVID-19 patients.

    The open-source project, dubbed Connected Units for Respiratory Ailments (CURA, or Latin for "cure") is harnessing the skills of experts from around the world to develop self-contained, mobile ICUs that can be plugged into hospitals or installed in parking lots.

    "At the beginning we had around 100 people working on the design. But since making it public, over 2,000 people actually got interested in the project," Carlo Ratti, CURA co-founder and director of MIT's Senseable City Lab, told Day 6 host Brent Bambury.

    Ratti said the first prototype unit, currently under construction in Italy, is nearly complete and is scheduled to be deployed in a hospital in Milan, one of the country's epicentres for the COVID-19 pandemic.

    CURA units are designed to be far more than a giant metal box with a couple of beds inside. Each is set up with negative air pressure, creating a "bio-confinement" environment that can restrict the virus from leaving the chamber, Ratti explained.

    It's one major advantage over the tent city-like triage centres that hospitals have been setting up to cope with the influx of patients, which Ratti said couldputdoctors and other health-care workers at risk of infection.

    "By using containers, we are trying to combine the best of both worlds: having something as quick to deploy as a tent, but also safe to operate as a proper hospital with negative pressure in bio-confinement," he said.

    Since the approximately six-metre-long shipping container design is more or less standard around the world, said Ratti, the CURA design should be more or less adaptable around the world.

    "I think the most complicated thing is all the mechanical components inside in order to create negative pressure, to do heating and cooling. But once you sorted that out then it's quite easy to produce it," he said.

    The medical equipment for two beds in each pod adds up to about $150,000 US ($210,000 Cdn) per container. Ratti said teams in Asia, Europe and the Americas are working on prototypes, and hope the price tag can be reduced if production begins to ramp up.

    Federal health officials in Canada said Thursdaythere could bebetween 23,000 and 46,000 ICU admissions over the course of the pandemic, if 2.5 to five per cent of the country's population became infected with COVID-19.

    In Ontario one of the provinces hardest hit bythe pandemic modelling releasedApril 3 showedit would need to add an extra 900 intensive care beds to cope with a projected steep rise in COVID-19 patients over the following two weeks.

    Ratti hopes that his project will help shift a popular view both among outsiders and some in the profession that architecture is concerned first and foremost with aesthetics and beauty over form and function.

    "If, as designers and architects, we keep on looking at you know, just beautifying useless objects, then it's going to be oblivion," he said, channelling a quote from American architect and theorist Buckminster Fuller.

    "But if [we] are going to tackle the main challenges that we have today think about climate change; think about, in this case ... the response to the pandemic, but many, many others then architecture and design can really play a central role in our society."

    Written by Jonathan Ore. Interview produced by Yamri Taddese.

    To hear more,download our podcastor click Listen above.

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    Architects and engineers are turning old shipping containers into mobile intensive care units - CBC.ca

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