The biennial Dissertation Colloquium brings together a select group of doctoral students from diverse institutional and disciplinary backgrounds working on dissertation topics related to the history, theory, and criticism of American architecture, urbanism, and landscape.
The Buell Conference on the History of Architecture brings together scholars in architectural and urban history to discuss topics in architecture, urbanism, and modernity as broadly understood.
This year, the Buell Center continues and concludes its series of “Conversations on Architecture and Land in and out of the Americas” which began in Winter 2021. The theme of land, and the plural, Americas, is meant to help expand the Center’s mission in two ways: first, by situating US building practices comparatively in hemispheric relation with the rest of the continent; and second, by suggesting that there are several Americas within the United States. This Fall, we will host speakers who turn our attention to architecture’s role in the political economy of land.
In celebration of the Buell’s 40th Anniversary and its participation in the 5th Annual Chicago Architecture Biennial, events will be held in various locations throughout New York City and Chicago. All events will be held in person and on Zoom, as well as live-streamed to GSAPP’s YouTube channel here. Please email [email protected] to RSVP or register for the Zoom link on the event's page.
February 29, 2024, 12 pm | A conversation between Stella Nair (UCLA) and Caroline Murphy (MIT); Ateya Khorakiwala (Columbia GSAPP) will provide a response
November 16, 2023, 6pm CST/ 7pm EST| A conversation between Łukasz Stanek (University of Michigan), Ana María León (Harvard GSD), with Jacobé Huet (University of Chicago)
October 12, 2023, 12pm | A conversation between Deepa Ramaswamy (University of Houston) and Amiel Bizé (Cornell University), with Reinhold Martin (Columbia University)
October 20, 2022, 12pm | A conversation between Vanessa Agard-Jones (Columbia University), Seth Denizen (Princeton University), and Linda F. Chavez Baca (JGMA), with Catherine Fennell (Columbia University)
December 8, 2022, 12pm | A conversation between Zeynep Çelik Alexander (Columbia University) and Aleksandr Bierig (University of Chicago) with Jonathan Levy (University of Chicago)
October 27, 2022, 12pm | A conversation between Tatiana Bilbao (Tatiana Bilbao Estudio) and Michael Meredith (MOS Architects) with Gary Leggett (Leggett & Cahuas)
April 7, 2022, 12pm | A conversation between Stéphanie Barral (Sociologist at the French National Institute for Agronomic and Environmental Research) and Timothy Mitchell (William B. Ransford Professor of Middle Eastern, South Asian, and African Studies at Columbia University)
March 24, 2022, 12pm | A conversation between Benedict Clouette (Doctoral Student in Architecture at Columbia GSAPP) and Alma Steingart (Assistant Professor in the Department of History at Columbia University)
February 24, 2022, 12pm | A conversation between Joseph Kunkel (Director, Sustainable Native Communities Design Lab at MASS Design Group) and Teresa Montoya (Assistant Professor of Anthropology at the University of Chicago)
April 7, 12pm
When the architect Cass Gilbert described the skyscraper as a “machine that makes the land pay” in 1900, the pressure was growing for architects to build and design ever-faster. He set the stage for a century’s worth of discourse about the relation of building and land, one in which a building simply multiplies the value of a plot of land in the vertical dimension. But if his quip continues to ring true, it is sorely in need of a technopolitical update.
For this event, after an introduction by Lucia Allais (Director, Buell Center), Timothy Mitchell will present on the the Urban Property Rights Project, an initiative led by the World Bank from 1998–2004 that facilitated the titling of already-built, working class housing in and around Lima, Peru. With ramifications ranging from local labor markets to the discipline of economics itself, Mitchell will ask with what, for whom, and to what ends, "natural" experiments on the land are designed to work. Then, following Mitchell, Stéphanie Barral will discuss "conservation banks," landed financial instruments that, like the property title, are engineered to encourage development as a "win-win" for both local and distanced interests. But in her presentation, focusing on a specific site and beetle in Oklahoma, Barral will show that the "natural" features meant to be protected by these instruments are put in at times irresolvable tension with the imperatives of changing landscapes, growing markets, and diversifying human and more-than-human habitats.
Timothy Mitchell writes about colonialism, political economy, the politics of energy, and the making of expert knowledge. Trained in the fields of law, history, and political theory, he works across the disciplinary boundaries of history and the social sciences. Many of his writings explore materials from the history and contemporary politics of Egypt, where he has conducted research over many years. Heis currently working on a study of durability, examining how the more durable apparatuses for capturing wealth characteristic of late nineteenth-century colonialism (railways, canals, apartment buildings, dams) engineered a new method of extracting income from the future—a future we now inhabit precariously today. Like much of his work, this research combines the study of the built world, technical devices, ecological processes, and the history of economic and political concepts.Mitchellis the William B. Ransford Professor of Middle Eastern Studies at Columbia University. He is based in the Department of Middle Eastern, South Asian, and African Studies, for which he served as chair from 2011 until 2017. He also teaches occasionally in Columbia’s School of International and Public Affairs.
Stéphanie Barral is a social scientist at the French National Institute for Agronomic and Environmental Research (INRAE), with expertise in economic and political sociology. Her work focuses on the rise of private investments within environmental and agricultural policies. Her first book (Capitalismes Agraires, Presses de Sciences Po, 2015) analyzes the growth of capitalist palm oil plantations in South East Asia despite social and environmental criticism. Her ongoing research deals with the construction of markets as institutional answers to environmental issues. Through the cases of biodiversity and carbon markets, she explores the interplay of scientific knowledge, expertise, regulations, markets, and finance in the making of environmental policies, with investigations in France and the US.