CDL.TO
Moderator
Come join AFH Toronto at the Design Exchange for our first lecture of the year. Andrew Levitt will be speaking about where architecture begins, from concept to design to design process.
Andrew Levitt teaches in the design studio at the University of Waterloo School of Architecture and works as a Jungian-orientated psychotherapist in Toronto, where he lives with his wife. He has lectured on the role of the unconscious in architecture and design at universities and conferences in Canada, the United States, and Europe.
AFH 2010 Lecture Series: THE BLUEPRINT SERIES
Sponsored by AUDI, Supported by archiTEXT and Design Exchange
PLAN: March 8, 2010
SECTION: June 8, 1010
ELEVATION: August 30, 2010
PERSPECTIVE: November 15, 2010
Join us for our annual lecture series exploring where architecture begins. The series will bring in practitioners and critics to discuss concept to design, and the different processes used to create the various types of architecture we see around the city. The 2010 lecture series will examine the impact of these processes on the urban fabric.
This is a pay-what-you-can event. Suggested donation is $10.
http://www.architectureforhumanity.ca/event/277
Andrew Levitt teaches in the design studio at the University of Waterloo School of Architecture and works as a Jungian-orientated psychotherapist in Toronto, where he lives with his wife. He has lectured on the role of the unconscious in architecture and design at universities and conferences in Canada, the United States, and Europe.
AFH 2010 Lecture Series: THE BLUEPRINT SERIES
Sponsored by AUDI, Supported by archiTEXT and Design Exchange
PLAN: March 8, 2010
SECTION: June 8, 1010
ELEVATION: August 30, 2010
PERSPECTIVE: November 15, 2010
Join us for our annual lecture series exploring where architecture begins. The series will bring in practitioners and critics to discuss concept to design, and the different processes used to create the various types of architecture we see around the city. The 2010 lecture series will examine the impact of these processes on the urban fabric.
This is a pay-what-you-can event. Suggested donation is $10.
http://www.architectureforhumanity.ca/event/277