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The Temple Hoyne
Buell Center
for the Study of
American Architecture
at Columbia University

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Buell Postdoctoral Fellowship, 2023–2025

Cycling white text on a green and blue background reads “Research & Teaching Fellow > Call for Applicants > Postdoc in New York City > Twenty-one Months > Join Us Fall 2023 > Apply By May 24” and a blue "Buell Center" gradually loses words with each progressive slide, along the bottom of the green square beneath the main message.

The Buell Center seeks a recent doctoral recipient to join its intellectual community for a 21-month fellowship as a “Buell Center Research and Teaching Fellow.”

2023 Buell Dissertation Colloquium

A black-and-white image is cut up to reveal human figures moving in an urban setting, where the background streetscape has largely been removed. The buildings remain.

This biennial colloquium brings together doctoral students working on topics related to the history, theory, and criticism of American architecture, urbanism, and landscape.

2023 Buell Graduate Fellowships

Cycling yellow text on a green and yellow background reads "Graduate Fellowships > Call for Applicants > Apply by April 14" and a light green "Buell Center" gradually loses words with each progressive slide, along the bottom of the green square beneath the main message.

Buell Graduate Fellowships are annual awards available to Columbia University students for historical research on the built environment, including but not limited to architecture, urbanism, landscape, and the building sciences.

Architecture in Development: Systems and the Emergence of the Global South

A book with a light brown and grey textured cover, potentially a line drawing or potentially photographic, reads "Architecture in Development: Systems and the Emergence of the Global South | Aggregate."

A March 3rd discussion marking the launch of "Architecture in Development: Systems and the Emergence of the Global South" (Routledge, 2022)

Conversations on Architecture and Land in and out of the Americas

On a pink and purple, blurred background, a cylindrical shape with matching colors and pattern floats and spins in the middle of the image

The Buell Center hosts discussions with scholars, artists, and practitioners whose work helps to redefine architecture’s imbrications with land in and out of the Americas.

2023 Course Development Prize in Architecture, Climate Change, and Society

On a white background, red, green, and blue doppler radar–like figure moves somewhat erratically across the screen.

A competitive call for course proposals on the theme “Architecture, Climate Change, and Society” from the Buell Center and the Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture (ACSA)

Green Reconstruction: A Curricular Toolkit for the Built Environment

On a textured, tall vertical purple background, white text reads: "GREEN RECONSTRUCTION: A Curricular Toolkit for the Built Environment." Institutional information for the Buell Center is in small text at the bottom.

On September 21st, the Buell Center marked the launch of "Green Reconstruction: A Curricular Toolkit for the Built Environment"

Unbroken Windows

A boxy, White police office head is drawn such that his shoulders double as streets. On these streets, daily life takes place — much of which is depicted as seemingly criminal — all under his watchful eye.

A digital archive tracing the spatial cultures of Broken Windows policing, developed in collaboration with the Queens Museum's "Year of Uncertainty"

Power: Infrastructure in America

A series of images display in pairs, including weather patterns, aerial flooding, blue cables, smokestacks

POWER challenges participants to think about how infrastructure relates to life across a series of intersecting concerns, including democratic governance and climate justice.

Living in America: Frank Lloyd Wright, Harlem & Modern Housing

Living in America Exhibition Install, Photo by Naho Kubota

How to live together? Wright’s exurban settlement of single-family houses offered one possible answer; large public housing in cities presented another. Although these two visions seem a world apart, they share a common history. Exhibited at the Wallach Gallery in the fall of 2017.

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The Temple Hoyne
Buell Center
for the Study of
American Architecture