WE ARE LIVE IN
Boston
October 26
The Westin Copley Place
6 AIA HSW CEUs
We are back in person!
The long-awaited Facades+ Boston conference, hosted by the Architect’s Newspaper and co-chaired by Payette, will finally take place in-person on October 26. Join us for a full day led by the best and brightest in the regional AEC community. Three panels will convene to discuss high-performing institutional facades, the largest passive house office project, and the implementation of unique materials in mid-sized mixed-use projects. Considering the demanding thermal needs that the northern seasons require, the program will go beyond architectural design and explore the many variables that are relevant to improved performance standards, even beyond the region. Earn up to 6 AIA HSW CEUs after a morning of robust dialogue and an afternoon of tailor-made presentations from AN’s CE|Strong Live program. We look forward to seeing you there!
CO-CHAIR
SPEAKERS
Bradford J. Prestbo, FAIA
AGENDA
SYMPOSIUM
These projects share the uncommon use of common materials such as terra cotta, corugated metal, precast concrete, that present a new and engaging face to the city.
Handel Architects shares what they've learned in using Passive House standards in progressively larger and more complex projects, from New York's Cornell campus and Sendero Verde, to Boston's Winthrop Center. We'll also hear the developer and facade engineer's point of view.
Boston universities provide a proving ground for high-tech and high performance building envelope design, integral to reaching net zero through better performance. Case studies include Amherst's new Science Center, MIT's Site 4 Kendall Square, Harvard University Science And Engineering Complex (SEC).
Complimentary lunch will take place in the Expo Hall with our sponsors
WORKSHOPS
3 AIA HSW CEUs
Pick 1 of 3 Afternoon Workshops
WORKSHOP A: Methods + Materials
Credit type: 1 HSW AIA
Provider: STI Firestop
This presentation will focus on the need for security glazing to protect people and property from human attacks and severe weather. Laminated glass can provide intrusion resistance, as well as protection from flying glass that occurs after a bomb blast. Bullet resistant laminates are designed specifically to stop bullet penetration and fragmentation. Industry standards for testing and specifying security glazing will be reviewed, including standards for physical attack, bomb blast, ballistics and wind-borne debris protection.
Learning Objectives
- Understand what coil and extrusion coatings are and why they matter.
- Review coil and extrusion coating methods and end-use applications.
- Explore how color and metal coatings can be used to design visually impactful building facades.
- Discuss coating performance and how to specify the right coating for your next project.
Credit type: 1 HSW AIA
Provider: Cosentino
Modern construction has come to understand that a façade, as part of an overall building envelope, is not only a visual statement, but also an important influencer in the protection of a wall’s structural components, the energy efficiency of the building, and the health of its occupants. This course explores a unique surfacing material known as ultracompact surfacing (UCS) and evaluates its mechanical properties, technical characteristics, and aesthetics to illustrate its endless design potential in exterior cladding, facade, and rainscreen applications.
Learning Objectives
- Define ultracompact surfacing and discuss the innovative production process that creates stone-like properties which contribute to project longevity and lower maintenance
- Discuss designing with ultracompact surfaces in terms of color, texture, format, general design flexibility, and various applications for both interior and exterior
- Identify the traits and advantages of ultracompact surfaces in terms of strength, durability, UV resistance, absorption rates, abrasion resistance, and ASTM testing, and
- Discuss proper rainscreen design and installation using ultracompact surfacing material.
Credit type: 1 HSW AIA
Provider: Sherwin-Williams Coil Coatings
This presentation will focus on the need for security glazing to protect people and property from human attacks and severe weather. Laminated glass can provide intrusion resistance, as well as protection from flying glass that occurs after a bomb blast. Bullet resistant laminates are designed specifically to stop bullet penetration and fragmentation. Industry standards for testing and specifying security glazing will be reviewed, including standards for physical attack, bomb blast, ballistics and wind-borne debris protection.
Learning Objectives
- Understand what coil and extrusion coatings are and why they matter.
- Review coil and extrusion coating methods and end-use applications.
- Explore how color and metal coatings can be used to design visually impactful building facades.
- Discuss coating performance and how to specify the right coating for your next project.
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Susan Borne
Architectural Manager, Northeast and Canada
Most facades and enclosures perform well in the center of the system, failures typically occur where systems meet, at penetration and projections and at geometry changes. This workshop will begin with a primer on critical detailing concerns with our group of enclosure experts and then will transition to hands and collaborative design charrette including the panelists and the Workshop participants. This represents an evolution of the successful Advanced Detailing Workshop presented at previous Facades+ to focus on more contemporary and challenging details.
INSTRUCTORS
Chris O Hara, Studio NYL
Bradford J. Prestbo, FAIA, Placetailor
Stan Su, Architect
Felipe Francisco, Manager
In a rapidly changing and unpredictable world, designers find themselves lodged between the pressures of economics and delivery, and the need for staying innovative and improving upon processes and methods. As building professionals, we need to not only strike a balance between these two, but ideally have them inform and augment each other. The workshop will showcase examples of applied research as experienced by the participants of the annually recurring design-to-fabrication event of the Architectural Ceramic Assemblies Workshop (ACAW). Since 2016, architects, engineers, fabricators, artists, and academics have all come together at ACAW in a collaborative fashion, with the aim of progressively transforming problem solving.
Over time the ACAW event has come to extend beyond its experimental roots and started feeding back into built projects through novel ways of executing architectural assemblies. Illustrative case studies from the organizers’ collective body of work serve as point of departure for an interactive discussion around the workshop theme and what it means to innovate in applied technology.
INSTRUCTORS
Gustav Fagerstrom, Walter P Moore
Erik Verboon, Walter P Moore
Graham Clegg, Studios Architects
Craig Copeland, Pelli Clarke Pelli Architects
Omar Khan, Carnegie Mellon University
Forum & Hotel Location
The Westin Copley Place
10 Huntington Ave
Boston, MA 02116
Traditional 1 King Room and Double: $339 plus tax & incidentals.
Special sleeping rates end September 24th, 2021.
Guests may make their reservations online here.
Parking
$34 Valet Parking Rate for event use only based on availability (not valid for overnight).
Your safety is our top priority.
We are keeping things safe to present this event in
person. Learn about our safety protocols here.
Sponsors
Pricing
Your conference ticket includes unlimited access to our online event, the advice and knowledge of our speakers, exclusive roundtables, a chance to network with others in the AEC industry.