Oldcastle BuildingEnvelope, Columbia University to Present “The Future of Energy”

Oldcastle BuildingEnvelope, Columbia University to Present “The Future of Energy”

Oldcastle BuildingEnvelope, Columbia University to Present “The Future of Energy”

Oldcastle BuildingEnvelope has partnered with Columbia University’s Graduate School of Architecture, Planningand Preservation (GSAPP) on “The Future of Energy,” assembling experts to exchange ideas on how best to address energy production and consumption issues for the future. This full-day conference is open to the public and will be held on Oct. 2, 2013, at The Museum of Modern Art in New York City from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.

“The Future of Energy” is an interdisciplinary research program devoted to exploring key questions facing designers, developers and other professionals who are concerned with energy, efficiency and sustainability in the building industry. This collaborative effort between Oldcastle BuildingEnvelope and GSAPP resists focusing on specific technologies or prospective energy sources. 

Instead, it examines energy, both discursively and thematically, addressing such issues as how problems of the future of energy are framed and how these problems are conceived and discussed.

Along with a panel of leaders in the fields of architecture, engineering and construction, keynote speakers include two of the preeminent minds in energy today. Matthias Schuler is an engineer, an adjunct professor of Environmental Technology at Harvard GSD and the founder of Stuttgart, Germany-based Transsolar. Schuler works with architects to develop sustainable design strategies for buildings.  

Economist Jeffrey Sachs is the director of The Earth Institute, a professor at Columbia University, special advisor to United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, and author of several books, including “The Price of Civilization.”

To learn more about “The Future of Energy,” go to http://events.gsapp.org/event/auditor-the-future-of-energy. For more information about GSAPP, contact Gavin Browning, 212-854-9248 or Gdb2106@columbia.edu.

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