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Mary Jo Olenick: Architecture Is a Partner in Human PerformanceMary Jo Olenick has been this month’s Buildings & Grounds guest blogger.
My Chronicle blogging experience has been interesting. Although I thought that my professional experience had prepared me for deadline-driven creativity and that I was a natural “idea guy,” this writing thing was different. Harder and more fun—like learning how to ride a bicycle. It gave me the chance to define what architecture is (at least from my perspective): not just a passive, artful container of human activity, but a partner in human performance. It was also a soap box from which I could shout encouragement to the higher-education establishment:
If higher education is about teaching and discovery, we need to find ways to measure our impact—as architects and planners—on both. Right now the approach is often to apply corporate metrics like revenue, growth, and productivity. But is bigger really better when it comes to building environments that inspire and enable creative thinking? Thanks for listening. Mary Jo Olenick is an architect who leads the S/L/A/M Collaborative’s higher-education practice. Read her earlier posts here, here, and here. Lawrence Biemiller | Friday March 28, 2008 | Permalink | Contact us
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