Design-build architect and scholar dedicated to design excellence and attention to detail augmented by analytic skills and experience in building and data science. Technical interests include methods of complex spatial analysis using fractal geometry applied to architecture and cities. Outstanding technical writer with a number of peer reviewed publications.
John C Driscoll Architect, Ithaca, NY, US, Architect
Design-build architect and scholar dedicated to design excellence and attention to detail augmented by analytic skills and experience in building and data science. Technical interests include methods of complex spatial analysis using fractal geometry applied to architecture and cities. Outstanding technical writer with a number of peer reviewed publications.
Lichten Craig Architecture and Interiors, New York, NY , Senior Architect
Senior Architect for award winning residential firm specializing in townhouses and apartments in Manhattan and stand alone houses in Long Island and the Jersey Shore. Responsible for preservation work for various churches and historic clubs in NYC.
Robert Oshatz Architect, Portland, OR, US, Project Designer
Generated design proposals for principle and client including 3D visualizations of complex geometry.
Produced and red-lined working drawings in conjunction with office staff.
Coordinated structural design with engineers.
Worked with vendors, including design studies for photovoltaics
Portland State University, Portland, OR, US, PhD, Systems Science
My academic career is focused on the rationalization of city planning and the emerging field of building science and the science of cities. From the perspective of an architect and scientist, I am researching the processes by which urban spatio-temporal structures behave as multi-scale complex adaptive systems. My goal is to apply theory and methods from complex systems science to the research, analysis and design of urban environments. Cities are simultaneously the physical manifestation of buildings and infrastructure or hardware as well as the software and wetware of socio-economic systems and biological-ecological systems. Fractal cartography, cellular automata simulation, genetic algorithms and statistical physics are some of the theoretical components underlying a scientific framework for architecture. I have developed and applied these tools in a number of projects to date as well as peer reviewed white papers.
University of North Carolina at Charlotte, Charlotte, NC, US, BArch, Architecture
Traveling exhibition of the work of American Organic Architects curated by Brian A. Spencer Architect.