Thesis Defence: Snehanjali Sumanth
Of the thesis entitled: Submechanophilia
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Of the thesis entitled: Submechanophilia
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Of the thesis entitled: PORTABLE POST-DISASTER HOME
Providing a long-term temporary solution for the displaced people affected by natural disasters
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Of the thesis entitled: Collective Form: Infill housing and new domestic spaces in Toronto's residential neighbourhoods
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Of the thesis entitled: City Familiaris: A Study in Domesticating Infrastructures
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Of the thesis entitled: Tactics to Tiny: Finding Your Way Home
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Of the thesis entitled: A Home for Urban Families: An Alternative Approach to Housing in Downtown Toronto
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Of the thesis entitled: The Small-er House Design Scheme
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Of the thesis entitled: Contemplative Space: Design for Generative Parametric Tessellations Applied to a Shell Structure
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Presented in conversation with the student-led initiative Treaty Lands Global Stories.
Building on differences
2017 marks 150 years of colonialism since Canadian Confederation and the rise of authoritarian populism around the world. In this context, the winter lecture series brings together architects and artists, historians and designers, who are constructively struggling to create possible futures of equitable co-existence for people of different cultural beliefs and practices.
David Lepofsky, disability fights advocate and Thea Kurdi, Accessibility Specialist, will be here to lecture on Designing Accessible Buildings. Join us for a lunch time lecture on February 7 at 1pm, in the Main Lecture Hall of the School of Architecture.