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Charles Rice
Charles Rice is an architectural historian, theorist and critic. He studied at the University of Queensland, the London Consortium, and received his PhD from the University of New South Wales. He is currently Senior Lecturer and MArch Course Director in the School of Architecture at the University of Technology Sydney. He has also taught in histories and theories at the Architectural Association, and has lectured internationally. Rice’s research considers questions of the interior in the context of domestic and urban culture. His book The Emergence of the Interior: Architecture, Modernity, Domesticity was published by Routledge in 2007, and essays have appeared in recent anthologies including Walter Benjamin and History (Continuum, 2005), Architecture and Authorship (Black Dog, 2007), Critical Architecture (Routledge, 2007), as well as in journals including Architectural Design, The Journal of Architecture, and Home Cultures. Rice is a member of the editorial board of The Journal of Architecture.

Contact: Charles.Rice@uts.edu.au
For further information see: http://www.dab.uts.edu.au/achitecture/index.html

Anthony Burke
Anthony Burke (M.S. AAD, B.Arch (hons1)) is the Director of the Masters of Digital Architecture at the University of Technology, Sydney and Director of Offshorestudio.net a Sydney based design practice specializing in design and theory related to new media, and advanced computational methods. A graduate of the Advanced Architecture Design Masters at Columbia University (2000) and the University of New South Wales (1996), Anthony has lectured and taught extensively in Australia and internationally, returning to Sydney in 2007 after 5 years as an Assistant Professor in Architecture at the University of California, Berkeley.

Anthony’s work has appeared in numerous journals, and has been exhibited internationally including the Stazione Leopolda Florence, the SfMoMA, and the Museum of Contemporary Art Sydney, SFAIA and Seattle AIA. In October 2004, he co-convened the international symposia “Distributed Form: Network Practice” at UCB, with Therese Tierney and they co-edited the publication “Network practices: New strategies in architecture and design” by Princeton Architectural press released in 2007. Anthony is a regularly contributor to architectural media including Architecture Review, and Architecture Australia, and has published in numerous international forums including AD Collective Intelligence.

In 2007, Anthony curated the exhibition “Out from Under, Australian Architecture Now” which has shown in SF and Seattle and is now moving to venues in Hong Kong, Macau, Kuala Lumpur and Shanghai in 2008. Anthony has also worked with Intel on urban computing initiatives and is currently researching intelligent design systems in Architecture and Urbanism.


Adrian Lahoud
Adrian Lahoud (B.Arch (Hon) UNSW) is a practicing architect and senior lecturer at The University of Technology Sydney. He studied at the University of New South Wales and the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology. He is currently completing a post graduate degree into emergent forms of urban design and development with a focus on the use of digital technology. Current research also addresses issues of mobility with regards to tourism, refugees and urbanism in the Middle East.

Adrian has been teaching for 7 years and currently co-ordinates urban design studios and technology seminars at The University of Technology Sydney. He has been a contributor to a number architectural and political publications and has been invited to give presentations at a number of Australian universities and foreign institutions. Adrian has also worked on the Australasian CRC for Interaction Design (ACID) looking at the deployment of informational feedback systems in new urban developments.

In 2003 he established //Asabiyah. This research based architectural practice works across a range of projects from infrastructure design and urban design to commercial and residential work in Australia and Asia. Prior to establishing his own practice Adrian worked with a number of prominent Australian artists, architects and landscape architects.


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