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The love of building w/ Constance Lai

The love of building w/ Constance Lai

FromTangible Remnants


The love of building w/ Constance Lai

FromTangible Remnants

ratings:
Length:
42 minutes
Released:
Feb 24, 2021
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

In this episode, I talk with Constance "Connie" Lai about being an architect and a woman working in the preservation trades and construction field.  We talk about professional differences she observed while completing her Richard Morris Hunt Fellowship in France and the importance of valuing the impact of tradespeople on the built environment.  It's a great conversation that explores the impact of builders on the built environment and different ways to problem solve people & construction problems.

Parable:
A man came upon a construction site where three people were working. He asked the first, “What are you doing?” and the man replied: “I am laying bricks.” He asked the second, “What are you doing?” and the man replied: “I am building a wall.” As he approached the third, he heard him humming a tune as he worked, and asked, “What are you doing?” The man stood, looked up at the sky, and smiled, “I am building a cathedral!” - Vision Parable
Links:
Washington Building Congress
Nat'l Association of window restoration specialists FB group
Hope Crew
Preservation Trades Network
Architect's Foundation  
Richard Morris Hunt Prize
Diversity Advancement Scholarship
Laboratoire de recherche des monuments historiques (LRMH)
National Preservation Institute
National Organization of Minority Architects
Black in Historic Preservation
Tangible Remnants on Instagram
Tangible Remnants on Facebook
Tangible Remnants Webpage

Bio:  Constance Lai, FAIA, NCARB, LEED AP BD+C, USACE-CQM
Constance Lai is the Historic Preservation Manager for Grunley Construction. She provides Historic Preservation and Conservation support to both the Pre-Construction and Operations Departments. Her expertise ranges from design-build to quality control to sustainability. She has over 18 years of experience in historic preservation and has worked on the Eisenhower Executive Office Building, the Washington Monument, and the U.S. Capitol. She has lectured on integrating conservation into the design and construction process, the Washington Monument Earthquake Repair project, and the contributions of Thomas Casey and Bernard Green to the Washington, DC, built environment.
She received her Bachelor of Architecture from Rice University and her Master of Science in Architectural Studies (History, Theory, and Criticism) from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. She is an alumna of the AIADC Chapter’s Christopher Kelley Leadership Program.  In 2017, she was awarded the Richard Morris Hunt Prize Scholarship, which afforded her the opportunity to spend five weeks in France visiting preservation architecture firms and visiting construction sites.
https://www.patreon.com/user?u=66435616 (Support the show) (https://www.patreon.com/user?u=66435616)
Released:
Feb 24, 2021
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (54)

Historic preservation and sustainability are not mutually exclusive. They are actually two sides of the same coin: both involve buildings and both are about our collective future. Such historic buildings are also created by people in a specific place in time and are subject to the cultural prejudices of race and gender. These buildings are the Tangible Remnants of people who shaped the world and can serve as temporal touchpoints for future generations. Join sustainable preservation architect, Nakita Reed, as she explores the interconnectedness of architecture, preservation, sustainability, race and gender. You’ll learn about people, buildings, and policies that made a historical impact and hear from women and BIPOC practitioners who are impacting the built environment today.