American Institute of Architects

From Archiplanet

(Redirected from AIA)
Jump to: navigation, search
Organization The American Institute of Architects
People
Address 1735 New York Ave., NW
Washington, District of Columbia, 20006-5292 USA
Telephone 800-AIA-3837 or 202-626-7300
Fax 202-626-7547
Email infocentral@aia.org
Web Site http://www.aia.org/
Type of Organization Professional
Members Architects

Contents


[edit] Discussion

The American Institute of Architects (AIA) is the professional organization for architects in the United States. Organized in 1857, the Institute conducts various activities and programs to support the profession and enhance its public image, including periodically awarding the AIA Gold Medal and the Architecture Firm Award.

[edit] Membership

The AIA membership is over 80,000 with more than 300 state and local chapters, called components, in the U.S., UK, Europe, and Hong Kong.

Membership classifications:

  • AIA (architects--by law, only those with professional licenses may be titled "architects")
  • Associate--designated as Assoc. AIA--(licensure candidates; those with degrees in architecture; those working in a learning capacity under the supervision of an architect; or architectural faculty)
  • International Associate--designated as Int'l Assoc. AIA--(those licensed as architects internationally but not legally allowed to practice architecture in the United States)
  • FAIA (Fellows of the AIA)
  • Emeritus --designated as AIA-E--(retired licensed architects)
  • Allied Member (marketing professionals, engineers, photographers, contractors, landscape architects, etc. Those folks who work in affiliated industries to architects. At some local chapters this category is termed "Affiliate Member.")
  • Student--Not a National AIA membership; most students are "local chapter only" members.

Allied and student members may choose to be members only at their local chapters; allied members can also choose National-only membership. All other membership categories are required to pay dues to their local, state and National chapter.

[edit] Honors and Awards

see also: AIA Awards

Awards for architects licensed in the United States

Honors Program:

Institute Honors:

  • AIA Honor Awards - new and restoration projects anywhere in the world
    • Architecture
    • Interior Architecture
    • Regional and Urban Design
  • Twenty-five Year Award
    This award, recognizing architectural design of enduring significance, is conferred on a project that has stood the test of time for 25 to 35 years. The project must have been designed by an architect licensed in the United States at the time of the project's completion. AIA members, AIA components, and Knowledge Communities are urged to submit projects completed between 1972 and 1982 that have contributed meaningfully to American life and architecture.[1]

Achievement:

  • Young Architects Award
  • Edward C. Kemper Award
  • Thomas Jefferson Awards
  • Whitney M. Young Jr. Award

CoSponsored:

Membership Honors

  • Fellowship
  • Honorary Fellowship
  • Honorary Membership

[edit] Chapters

The AIA has over 300 state, local and regional chapters, known as "components". See also: AIA Chapters

[edit] History

In the 1800s, anyone (masons, carpenters, bricklayers, etc.) could claim to be an architect; no schools of architecture or architectural licensing laws existed.

On February 23, 1857, a group of 13 architects in New York City (Richard Upjohn, H. W. Cleaveland, Henry Dudley, Leopold Eidlitz, Edward Gardiner, Richard Morris Hunt, J. Wrey Mould, Fred A. Peterson, J. M. Priest, John Welch, Joseph C. Wells, and Charles Babcock) met to form the organization (originally New York Society of Architects) with Richard Upjohn as its first president.

The mission statement was modified in 1867:

"The objects of this Institute are to unite in fellowship the Architects of this continent, and to combine their efforts so as to promote the artistic, scientific, and practical efficiency of the profession."

The short-lived Western Association of Architects (WAA) in Chicago, which championed licensure for architects, merged with the AIA in 1889.

In 1898, the Institute moved to Washington D.C. where a large number of public building projects were being commissioned by the federal government, to be paid for with funds controlled by Congress. The AIA was headquartered in the Octagon, a historic house built in 1799, and Glenn Brown became executive secretary.

[edit] References

Parts of this document are taken from Wikipedia.org and are displayed here under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.

[edit] External Links

Personal tools