Remembering Dorwin AJ Thomas FAIA Dorwin Arthur Jackson Thomas passed away peacefully on April 23, 2021. Thomas was an active member of the AIA since 1972 and served as an officer in three AIA components. He also served as chairman of the AIA Design-Build knowledge community in 2003, 2004, and 2005. Remembering Sep 27, 2021
Remembering Phil Loheed AIA Philip Norton Loheed AIA died August 13, 2021, after a year-long struggle with cancer, peacefully napping at home with family and close friends at dinner toasting his full and energetic life of design work and teaching. Remembering Sep 01, 2021
Remembering Robert "Buz" Brannen FAIA Robert Brannen, known to all as Buz, died July 29, 2021 at the age of 90. With Yu Sing Jung, Brannen was the founder of Jung/Brannen Associates, Inc., which in the 1980s was the largest architectural firm in Boston with about 260 employees. Remembering Aug 03, 2021
Remembering Art Gensler FAIA Art Gensler, the American architect, interior designer and founder of global architecture firm Gensler, has passed away at the age of 85 after a long illness. The founder of the world's largest architecture firm died in his sleep at his family home in Mill Valley, Marin County, reported the San Franciso Chronicle. Remembering May 11, 2021
Remembering Donald L. Stull FAIA Mr. Stull passed away on November 28 in his Milton home. He was 83. With the two groundbreaking architectural firms he founded and led, Donald Stull designed Boston landmarks such as Roxbury Community College, the Ruggles MBTA station, the Harriet Tubman House in the South End, and Boston Police Headquarters. Remembering Jan 04, 2021
Remembering Mysore Ravindra, PE Mysore Ravindra passed away peacefully at his home in Natick on August 15, 2020. He leaves his wife Judy and daughter Jyothi, two siblings Raghu and Vasumathi in India, and many nieces, nephews, and their children. He was born in India and became an American citizen. He is predeceased by his brothers Prabhakar and Gopinath and his sister Malathi. Remembering Sep 09, 2020
Remembering John L. Wilson FAIA “A society that allows some of its citizens to be without homes, sometimes literally living like animals, must recognize that it is structurally flawed, despite the superficial beauty of the monuments it erects,” John Wilson FAIA. Remembering Aug 20, 2019