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American Institute of Architects [2]

Webpages concerning "American Institute of Architects [2]"

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http://www.aialasvegas.org

http://www.aialasvegas.org

http://www.aianewmexico.org

http://www.aianewmexico.org

http://www.aiascv.org/

http://www.aiascv.org/

AIA Dayton - A Chapter of the American Institute of Architects
http://www.aiadayton.org

http://www.aiadayton.org

http://www.soaia.org/

http://www.soaia.org/

http://www.aiapgh.org/

http://www.aiapgh.org/

http://www.aians.org

http://www.aians.org

http://www.aia-arizona.org/

http://www.aia-arizona.org/

http://www.aiacentralpa.org/

http://www.aiacentralpa.org/

http://www.aiacolumbus.org

http://www.aiacolumbus.org

http://www.aiann.org

http://www.aiann.org

http://www.aianys.org/

http://www.aianys.org/

Web site for AIA Philadelphia, a Chapter of the American Institute of Architects, offers events, member information, Architect Finder, architecture books, gifts and AIA documents from the AIA Bookstore and Design Center.
http://www.aiaphila.org/

http://www.aiaphila.org/

http://www.bayareayoungarchitects.org/
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Wikipedia-Article "American Institute of Architects [2]"

The American Institute of Architects (AIA) is the professional organization for architects in the United States. Organized in 1857, the Institute conducts various activities and programs to support the profession and enhance its public image, including periodically awarding the AIA Gold Medal and the Architecture Firm Award.

Contents

Historical background

In the 1800's, anyone (masons, carpenters, bricklayers,...) could claim to be an architect; no schools of architecture or architectural licensing laws existed.

On February 23, 1857, A group of 13 architects in New York City (Richard Upjohn, H. W. Cleaveland, Henry Dudley, Leopold Eidlitz, Edward Gardiner, Richard Morris Hunt, J. Wrey Mould, Fred A. Peterson, J. M. Priest, John Welch, Joseph C. Wells, and Charles Babcock) met to form the organization (originally New York Society of Architects) with Richard Upjohn as its first president.

The mission statement was modified in 1867:

"The objects of this Institute are to unite in fellowship the Architects of this continent, and to combine their efforts so as to promote the artistic, scientific, and practical efficiency of the profession."

The short-lived Western Association of Architects (WAA) in Chicago, which championed licensure for architects, merged with the AIA in 1889.

In 1898, the Institute moved to Washington D.C. where a large number of public building projects were being commissioned by the federal government, to be paid for with funds controlled by Congress. The AIA was headquartered in the Octagon, a historic house built in 1799, and Glenn Brown became executive secretary.

The U.S. Commission of Fine Arts was established in 1910.

Membership

The AIA membership has grown to over 75,000 with more than 300 chapters, called components, in the U.S., U.K., Europe, and Hong Kong.

membership classifications:

  • AIA (licensed architects)
  • Associate AIA (interns, academics, nonlicensed architects)
  • FAIA (Fellows of the AIA)
  • AIA Emeritus (retired licensed architects)

Louise Bethune was the first woman member.

Honors and awards

Achievement

CoSponsored

  • Housing Committee Awards
  • AIA/ACSA Topaz Medallion
  • AIA/HUD Secretary Awards
  • AIA/ALA Library Building Awards

Design

  • AIA/ALA Library Building Awards
  • Regional & Urban Design
  • Architecture
  • Housing Committee Awards
  • AIA/HUD Secretary Awards
  • Twenty-five Year Award
  • Interior

See also

External link

This article is based on the article "American Institute of Architects [2]" from Wikipedia - the free encyclopedia created and edited by online user community. This article is distributed under the terms of GNU Free Documentation License. Here you find the list of authors of this article. The article can only edited within Wikipedia. Edit this article in Wikipedia.