PodParley PodParley

Susanne Eliasson

An episode of the Constructing Practice podcast, hosted by Columbia Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation, titled "Susanne Eliasson" was published on February 19, 2018 and runs 12 minutes.

February 19, 2018 ·12m · Constructing Practice

0:00 / 0:00

Susanne Eliasson, of GRAU (Good Reasons to Afford Urbanism) talks about how urbanism is present in the studio's architecture projects and its focus on housing. Constructing Practice traces the narratives of young firms from around the globe, featuring the participants of a Columbia GSAPP symposium that took place on November 17, 2017, and expands the conversation to include many others, to tell us how they do what they do. Hosted by GSAPP Professor Juan Herreros, principal of Estudio Herreros in Madrid. GRAU is a creative studio based in Paris and led by partners Susanne Eliasson and Anthony Jammes. Since the founding of the studio in 2010, its architects have been working on the transformation of the Bordeaux Metropolis, exploring how different housing developments can produce urbanity. The studio has developed a strong expertise on issues related to housing through numerous urban renewal projects, strategic studies on densification, masterplanning of new districts and ongoing research on horizontal urbanism. In 2016, GRAU received the Young Planners Award from the French Ministry of Housing and Sustainable Habitat. "Our main concern in every project that we tackle is how to create better conditions for good housing. And it relates to spatial issues of housing, to the urban forms that it generates, and also to the economic aspects." – Susanne Eliasson Watch the full conference online: https://www.arch.columbia.edu/events/747-constructing-practice GRAU: http://www.grau-net.com

Susanne Eliasson, of GRAU (Good Reasons to Afford Urbanism) talks about how urbanism is present in the studio's architecture projects and its focus on housing. Constructing Practice traces the narratives of young firms from around the globe, featuring the participants of a Columbia GSAPP symposium that took place on November 17, 2017, and expands the conversation to include many others, to tell us how they do what they do. Hosted by GSAPP Professor Juan Herreros, principal of Estudio Herreros in Madrid. GRAU is a creative studio based in Paris and led by partners Susanne Eliasson and Anthony Jammes. Since the founding of the studio in 2010, its architects have been working on the transformation of the Bordeaux Metropolis, exploring how different housing developments can produce urbanity. The studio has developed a strong expertise on issues related to housing through numerous urban renewal projects, strategic studies on densification, masterplanning of new districts and ongoing research on horizontal urbanism. In 2016, GRAU received the Young Planners Award from the French Ministry of Housing and Sustainable Habitat. "Our main concern in every project that we tackle is how to create better conditions for good housing. And it relates to spatial issues of housing, to the urban forms that it generates, and also to the economic aspects." – Susanne Eliasson Watch the full conference online: https://www.arch.columbia.edu/events/747-constructing-practice GRAU: http://www.grau-net.com
Bilingual Education Ideological Turns Chris DeLandin A review of bilingual education, the turns that BE has experienced with the support for the research-based practice, to no support, that has resulted in restrictive bilingual language policies. Also, constructing effective instructional practices by integrating metacognitive skills development with current monolingual teaching models. The POGIL Podcast The POGIL Podcast “The POGIL Podcast” is a new conversation from The POGIL Project that celebrates innovative educators, both in and out of the classroom. You will hear about what inspired them to become teachers, and how the practice of student-centered education transformed their classrooms and improved outcomes for their students. Learn how they’re innovating outside of the classroom as well! Join us as we “think out loud” with POGIL educators, researchers, and others working to transform teaching and learning for the 21st century. POGIL stands for Process Oriented Guided Inquiry Learning, a student-centered approach that guides students in constructing their own understanding of content and helps them develop important skills such as teamwork, communication, critical thinking, and problem solving.Thanks for joining us and we look forward to bringing you great conversations from The POGIL Podcast! Oral History Class Andrea Pető Interviewing as a technique of gaining information is as old as humankind. Talking to people as a form of scientific inquiry about their experiences is fun but also a methodological and theoretical challenge. In the past decades, oral history has become a widely used research method in different disciplines. Given that oral history is a technique and a way of constructing histories this series of podcasts tries to offer an overview of different ways of how to construct the information and how to analyze it in a wider methodological context.  This podcast on oral history is designed for those who want to use interviewing as a method collecting empirical material. It consists of eight sections: oral history development historiography politics of oral history, connecting social and personal, ethical and legal dimension, practicalities, questions and questioning, narrativity, interpretationThe sections are around 20 minutes each.Information on the course and the instructor is available her Connected to the Land with 4Rivers Equipment 4Rivers Equipment This podcast gets down in the dirt on topics like ranching, farming, and construction practices out here in the West. Learn from 4Rivers' best resources on the latest John Deere equipment and technology alongside our host, Fred Eichler. Fred is a farmer, rancher and most notably hunter. 4Rivers is dedicated to you, those Connected to the Land.
URL copied to clipboard!