A half-day lecture event
focusing on the unique role design and culture have played in the 40-year
evolution of Gensler, the award-winning San Francisco-based architecture,
planning and design firm, begins at noon, Feb. 9 at the Annenberg
Presidential Conference Center on the Texas A&M University
campus in College Station, Texas.
The presentation, “Gensler: The Power of Design,” is
the 28th annual John Miles Rowlett Lecture, which each year features
a distinguished firm from the design, planning and construction
industries. The Rowlett Lecture Series is sponsored by the CRS
Center for Leadership and Management in the Design and Construction
Industry and the College of Architecture at Texas A&M University.
“Our goal is to harness design's ability to empower people
and transform organizations,” reads the Gensler Web site,
which characterizes the company as an “entrepreneurial
firm, flat and non-hierarchical, emphasizing teamwork, innovation,
and the creation of real value.” The firm, founded in Houston
in 1966 as a three-person interior design practice, today boasts
more than 2,400 employees and offices in 30 cities, including
London, Amsterdam, Tokyo and Shanghai, with 13 specialized practice
areas and more than 2000 active clients.
Highlighting the 2007 Rowlett lecture will be a presentation
by the firm’s founder and AIA Fellow, Art Gensler, who
will trace the company’s history and transformation, which
was achieved, he said, without compromising the unique Gensler
culture. Other presentations and panel discussions will feature
Gensler employees and clients addressing topics such as “the
power of design,” “building great relationships,” and “charting
a new course.
For two years running, Gensler was voted Contract Magazine's “Most
Admired Firm.” In 2000, the firm earned the American Institute
of Architects’ Architecture Firm Award, AIA’s highest
award to a collaborative design practice. In presenting the award,
the AIA cited Gensler as a model for the design professions in
the 21st century. Since 1998 the firm has garnered three Business
Week Design Awards for work exemplifying how great design is
informed by great strategy.
The $75 Rowlett Lecture Series registration fee will be waived
for Texas A&M University faculty, staff and students. After
Jan. 26, 2007 the registration fee increases to $90. Registration
and program information are available from the CRS Center at
(979) 847-9357 or online at http://rowlett.tamu.edu. Continuing
education units will be available to AIA members attending the
conference.
The John Miles Rowlett Lecture Series was endowed in 1979 through
a grant to the Texas Architectural Foundation from the founders
of CRS and Mrs. Virginia Rowlett. The goal of the lecture series
was to attract speakers of national and international significance
to the College of Architecture at Texas A&M University. The
original firm of CRS was established in 1946 by William W. Caudill
and John M. Rowlett, professors of architecture at Texas A&M
University.
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