Next Tuesday, May 25, BIArch renews its Open Lecture cycle with a talk by Chinese architect and head of the Architecture Department at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Yung Ho Chang. The lecture, titled "China, Carb, City, China" will be delivered in the Auditorium of La Pedrera, at 8pm.

Chang will be introduced by Albert Ferré, Editorial director at Actar Publishers, Barcelona, and managing editor of the Prince Claus Fund
Library, Amsterdam.

In 1993, after receiving a Masters degree in Architecture at University of California Berkeley and teaching in universities in the U.S. for over 15 years, Chang founded the first private architecture firm in China: Atelier FCJZ (which stands for Feichang Jianzhu, or "unusual architecture.") In 1999 he founded and became the first director of the Graduate Center of Architecture at Peking University, and in 2005 he was named head of the Architecture Department at the MIT.

Yung Ho Chang's work reflects the tensions and opportunities that mark contemporary China's constant debate between local character or tradition and a stronger global presence. The architecture of Atelier FCJZ strives for a delicate yet significant balance (or play) between the two, putting particular emphasis on physicality and materiality, on the actual process of making buildings.

The firm's projects include residential and smaller-scale tourist projects reminiscent of both traditional Chinese courtyard house typologies and classic American modernism, as well as larger mixed-use complexes and boldly-designed public commissions boasting advanced technological features.

Yung Ho Chang is a member of the BIArch Advisory Council. During his intervention at Council's first meeting last June, Chang emphasized his conviction that architecture has to be anchored in a discipline that feeds on information exchanges between teaching, research and practice. BIArch Open Lecture "China, Carb, City, China" Yung Ho Chang Introduction by Albert Ferré (Actar) Tuesday, May 25, 2010. 8 PM Auditorium of "La Pedrera" Passeig de Gràcia 92 Barcelona Download a detailed flyer of the event here. Attendance is free, but capacity is limited. RSVP through Facebook. For more information, visit the event page on the BIArch website or contact us at events@biarch.eu.
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