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A lecture by Byron Stigge, CEO of Level Infrastructure

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A lecture by Byron Stigge, CEO of Level Infrastructure

Time: 7:00PM - 9:00PM Eastern Daylight Time, 19:00 - 21:00 Tokyo time

https://levelinfrastructure.com

"A lecture by Byron Stigge, CEO of Level Infrastructure of New York City, presenting diverse projects from around the world including, Project BIG U, a collaborative project with Bjarke Ingles Group and One Architecture, to devise an integrated flood barrier around the southern half of Manhattan, Kabul Urban Design Framework project which won the 2020 AIA Award for Regional & Urban Design  based on the work of Sasaki Associates and Level Infrastructure, a project for a hospital in rural Burundi, and River Study in New Clark City north of Manila, Philippines."

You can join the lecture via ZOOM from the link below.

https://zoom.us/j/95828601651?pwd=ZGI3ZVpTS0hGMHdOQys4U3pxc1pndz09

Meeting ID: 958 2860 1651

Password: 989315

Please note that the maximum number of attendees is 100. 

2.0 LUs(HSW) to be accredited for AIA members

Please enter your name and membership number via "chat" during the lecture, so that you can obtain the 2.0 learning units with HSW accreditation.

This lecture will describe the engineering and urban design approach of Level Infrastructure, an ecological engineering and infrastructure planning firm based in New York City.  

The introductory material for the presentation will describe our holistic perspective to engineering and infrastructure planning which integrates ecological, social, financial, and real-world constraints unique to each project.  We begin our design process with first principles of engineering to try to find new design solutions that meet the aspirational goals of our clients.  We often partner with local engineering firms across the US and around the world to be sure to integrate local practices into our award-winning designs.

The first project will be the BIG U, a collaborative project with Bjarke Ingles Group and One Architecture, to devise an integrated flood barrier around the southern half of Manhattan.  The magic of the design was the way design, programming, and engineering worked together to create a new edge to Manhattan that attracted and drew people to the water’s edge rather than creating a barrier between the city and water.

Secondly our work on the Kabul Urban Design Framework will be presented to describe how the redevelopment of key corridors can revitalize a city that has seen decades of underinvestment and conflict.  By integrating new Bus Rapid Transit line, green infrastructure, new sanitary trunk sewers, lush streetscape and street trees, and bike lanes can create a catalytic effect that spurs private development along the corridor. This project won the 2020 AIA Award for Regional & Urban Design  based on the work of Sasaki Associates and Level Infrastructure.

Then an interesting project for a hospital in rural Burundi will describe how the natural resources of a rural site can provide energy, water, sanitation, and waste management in an integrated way for a hospital with no connection to other public services.

Lastly a recent River Study in New Clark City north of Manila, Philippines will show how to re-think urban stormwater to create flood resilience, a central urban park, and a sustainable water supply for a new city of one million people.

We hope to inspire participants to expand their design skills both for projects within their region as well as around the world in places where those skills can have an even bigger impact on the everyday lives of people.