AMMAN LAB WORKSHOP 2010:
COMFORT EXHIBITION OPENING
 
 
 
 

Thursday, August 5 at 6:30 p.m.

Nabad Art Gallery
46 Uthman bin Affan Street, First Circle
Amman, Jordan

Reception is complimentary and open to the public.

 
 
 
 

The Columbia University Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation’s Amman Lab invites you to attend the Amman Lab Workshop 2010: Comfort exhibition opening, which will present final projects of students from Columbia University Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation; American University of Sharjah, College of Architecture, Art and Design; Birzeit University, Department of Architectural Engineering; and Jordan University of Science and Technology, College of Architecture and Design.

The Amman Lab Workshop is an intensive three-week exploration of emergent issues concerning contemporary public space in the Middle East. With the city of Amman serving as an active testing ground, students and faculty from universities throughout the region collaborate to expand their understanding of design issues through research, experimentation, discussion, and feedback.

The 2010 session of the workshop focuses on Comfort. As a precondition of public space, Comfort is necessary to provide an environment in which assembly and exchange may occur. With physical, virtual, sensorial, and emotional attributes, Comfort can be expressed through different mediums and at varying scales. It is delicate, elusive, and necessary.

If you have any questions, please contact Malwina Łyś-Dobradin at StudioX@columbia.edu.

We hope to see you there!

 
 
 
 

ORGANIZED BY:

Amman Lab, Columbia University Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation
Columbia University Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation’s Amman Lab opened within the Columbia University Middle East Research Center (CUMERC) in March 2009 and includes a studio workshop, seminar room, offices, and exhibition space. The Amman Lab is a regional research laboratory for exploring the future of the built environment. Studies of city planning processes, historic preservation projects, architectural design, and urban planning studios have already been conducted, engaging local experts and organizations throughout the process. GSAPP teams are collaborating with the city of Amman to restore a historic house that will act as the future downtown Studio-X Amman.

Columbia University Middle East Research Center (CUMERC)
The Columbia University Middle East Research Center is one of the first in a network of Columbia Global Centers the University has launched around the world. The Center, headquartered in Amman, Jordan, provides a base for scholarly activities throughout the Middle East, advancing the University’s academic partnerships and programs in the region. The Center establishes a community where faculty engage in onsite research, scholars collaborate to offer training and develop research initiatives, students experience the Middle East firsthand, and regional alumni build networks and interact directly with the University. The activities of CUMERC include a wide range of disciplines, fostering communication and collaboration in a dynamic region.

 
 
 
 
Visit the GSAPP Amman Lab Web site at
www.arch.columbia.edu/studiox/ammanlab.

Visit the Columbia University Middle East Research Center Web site at
cumerc.columbia.edu.

Visit the GSAPP Studio X Web site at
www.arch.columbia.edu/studiox.