Archives
Kwartler to present Clarkson Lecture
By PATRICIA DONOVAN
Contributing Editor
Exciting and productive new tools in the field of land-use development and rehabilitation include computer-simulated models that inform public debates provoked by such projects and help to resolve them.
Michael Kwartler is an innovative architect, planner, urban designer and educator with extensive experience in the development and use of digital visualization tools to present a range of potential land-use solutions and settle planning-related citizen disputes.
He is the 2004 Will and Nan Clarkson Visiting Scholar in Urban and Regional Planning in the School of Architecture and Planning. In connection with this role, Kwartler will present the Clarkson Lecture on Urban and Regional Planning, "Managing Complexity and Uncertainty: Just-in-Time Planning," at 5:30 p.m. March 24 in 301 Crosby Hall, South Campus.
He also will participate in an interdisciplinary symposium and open forum, "Perspectives on Visualization," from 9:30-11:30 a.m. March 25 in 280 Park Hall, North Campus.
Both events will be free and open to the public.
Faculty members and graduate students are encouraged to attend the symposium, which will feature participants from a number of UB departments and offer an opportunity for cross-disciplinary exchange about how digital-visualization techniques and technologies are used across academic fields.
Kwartler is founder and president of the Environmental Simulation Center, a non-profit research laboratory that develops new applications of digital technology that can inform complex public land-use issues and debates.
The center uses computer simulation, policy simulation and computerized impact analysiscombining tools like 3-D modeling and geographic information systems (GIS), for instanceto present to a community layers of visual information pertinent to specific land-use projects. It allows them to experiment with urban designs and actually "see" quantified environmental and fiscal impacts of different possibilities.
Kwartler's work is of great interest to the UB School of Architecture and Planning, many of whose faculty and students work extensively in areas related to his research. These include all aspects of urban and regional planning, the application of digital technologies like visualization tool to architectural design and planning problems, the development of information resources like the Institute for Governance and Regional Growth and planning professor Robert Shibley's work to improve community decision-making processes in urban/regional planning.
The March 25 event is expected to offer greater insight into the uses of research and applications produced by Kwartler and other digital-technology specialists by academic fields from geography, engineering and classical archaeology to education, art, psychology and the natural sciences.
In addition to Kwartler, symposium participants will include Shahin Vassigh, associate professor, Department of Architecture; Christopher Crawford, visiting assistant professor, Department of Urban and Regional Planning; Kenneth English, associate director, New York State Center for Engineering Design and Industrial Innovation (NYSCEDII); Thomas Furlani, associate director, Center for Computational Research; Charles Hixon, Bergmann Associates of Rochester, pioneers in the use of visualization in the architecture and engineering fields, and one of the few firms in the world using urban simulation; Thenkurussi Kesavadas, associate professor, Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering and director, Virtual Reality Laboratory, and Narushige Shiode, assistant professor, Department of Geography.