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CHC team tackles Alcatraz, Texas shipwreck preservation projects

CHC images Alcatraz, LaSalle's 1686 ship

posted June 21, 2011
Researchers from the Center for Heritage Conservation visited Alcatraz Island in San Francisco Bay June 6-11, 2011 where they used sophisticated surveying equipment to collect data to create detailed 2- and 3-D models of the island and its historic structures for documentation purposes.
Ph.D. student assists preservation of wooden churches in  Ukraine

Student preserving wooden churches

posted June 15, 2011
Hans Schneider, a doctoral student studying urban and regional science at Texas A&M, has received a Fulbright grant funding a 10-month project aimed at developing a comprehensive regional plan for preserving eight historically significant wooden churches and other historic sites in western Ukraine.
Student, professor appear in video highlighting undergrad research

Video highlighting undergrad research

posted May 23, 2011
Environmental design major Jordan Mason and his research mentor, professor Stephen Caffey, are featured in a new video highlighting the benefits of undergraduate research at Texas A&M, discussing Mason’s 10-day field trip to research European Baroque-style churches.
Jordanian scholar lectures on use of muqarnas in Islamic architecture

Scholar discusses Islamic architecture

posted April 29, 2011
Mohammad Yaghan, a visiting scholar from Jordan, lectured on muqarnas, a type of corbel that is one of the most distinctive elements of Islamic architecture, March 29 at the Langford Architecture Center as part of the Melbern G. Glasscock Center for the Humanities Notable Lecture Series.
Alumni create professorship, host dinner to honor John Only Greer

Alums honor Greer, create professorship

posted April 29, 2011
June 4 was an evening of celebration as former students, colleagues and friends toasted retiring architecture professor John Only Greer '55. Greer, a former department head, interim dean, executive associate dean and mentor to generations of Aggie architects, retired in May after 49 years on the Aggie faculty.
Neuman pens and co-edits books about past, future urbanization

Neuman pens, edits new 
planning books

posted April 4, 2011
Texas A&M urban planning professor Michael Neuman has authored a new book examining the city of Madrid’s 20-year urban planning cycle and co-edited another that eyes the future of urbanization.
Historic Preservation Symposium eyes adaptive reuse research

Symposium eyes adaptive reuse

posted March 1, 2011
Texas A&M's Center for Heritage Conservation focused on the adaptation of old structures for new purposes during "Adaptive Reuse: Architecture as Found Object," the 13th annual Historic Preservation Symposium Feb. 25 and 26 at the Langford Architecture Center's Preston Geren Auditorium.