This is not a Wikipedia article: It is an individual user's work-in-progress page, and may be incomplete and/or unreliable. For guidance on developing this draft, see Wikipedia:So you made a userspace draft. Find sources: Google (books · news · scholar · free images · WP refs) · FENS · JSTOR · TWL |
Douglas E. Noble is an American architect and tenured faculty member at the USC School of Architecture. He is a fellow of the American Institute of Architects.[1] He received the the ACSA/AIAS New Faculty Teaching Award in 1995,[2] and the ACSA Creative Achievement Award in 2013[3] He was named among the "10 most admired educators" in architecture in 2010[4] and was selected again in 2015 [5]
Early career
editNoble completed a Bachelor of Science in Architecture and a Bachelor of Architecture at California State Polytechnic University, Pomona, and both a Master of Architecture and Ph.D. at the University of California at Berkeley. His doctoral dissertation built on the work of Horst Rittel by creating a computer supported Issue-Based Information System. Noble taught for a few years at UC Berkeley and then joined the faculty of the USC School of Architecture in 1991.
Later career
editWith Karen M. Kensek, he founded the CLIPPER Lab at USC in 1991 for the study of architectural computing. Noble has taught at USC since 1991, focusing on architectural computing, building science, and design theories and methods. He has written more than 100 articles, and collaborated with noted architects and educators, including Pierre Koenig, Horst Rittel, and Ralph Lewis Knowles. He served as Associate Dean of the School from 2007-2009,[6] and has served as Chair of the Ph.D. program and Director of Graduate Building Science since 2009. With Kensek and Mic Patterson, he founded the Facade Tectonics Institute in 2007 as a university-based research and education organization. The Facade Tectonics Institute has hosted dozens of conferences and published hundreds of research papers focusing on research in building facade technology.[7] He received a Graham Foundation Grant in 2011 for research related to the Freeman House, a residence designed in 1924 by Frank Lloyd Wright.[8] Together, Noble and Kensek have received several awards for their innovative "NotLY: Not Licensed Yet" support system for individuals preparing for the Architect Registration Examination.[9] In addition to completing several buildings as an architect, Noble is a widely-recognized leader in championing and mentoring emerging architecture professionals.
Published works
editBooks:
- Building Information Modeling: BIM in Current and Future Practice. Wiley. (2014) ISBN 9781118766309
- The Frank Lloyd Wright Freeman House Archive: Volumes 1-7. Clipper Lab Press / Graham Foundation for Advanced Studies in the Fine Arts (2014)
Edited Journals and Conference Proceedings:
- Computer Supported Design in Architecture: Mission, Method, Madness. Conference Proceedings, ACADIA (1992)
- The ACADIA Quarterly, The Association for Computer-Aided Design in Architecture, 1993-1997
- Issue-Based Information Systems for Design: Issues, Positions, Arguments. Volumes 1 and 2. Clipper Lab (1995)
- Facade Tectonics: The Building Envelope. The Journal of the Facade Tectonics Institute, 2007-2017
- Face Time: The Emergence of the Facade as the Integrative Factor in Holistic Building Design, Proceedings of the 2016 World Congress Conference of the Facade Tectonics Institute, Volumes 1 and 2, Los Angeles, 2016.
Catalog:
- Software for Architects: The Guide to Computer Applications for the Architecture Profession. 1992
Video:
References
edit- ^ AIA College of Fellows Red Book DIrectory
- ^ ACSA/AIAS New Faculty Teaching Award Winners
- ^ ACSA Creative Achievement Award Winners
- ^ "10 Most Admired Educators in Architecture for 2011". USC News.
- ^ "Design Intelligence 30 Most Admired Educators for 2015" (PDF). UC Berkeley College of Environmental Design.
- ^ USC University News webpage
- ^ "Facade Tectonics Institute website". Facade Tectonics Institute.
- ^ Graham Foundation grant
- ^ "2016 Presidential Citation website". AIA Los Angeles.
- ^ "USC Living History Project - Ralph Knowles (2012)". USC Living History Project.
- ^ "USC Living History Project - Robert S. Harris (2016)". USC Living History Project.