|
||
Credits After the Flood: Building on Higher Ground Panama |
||
Christian Ditlev Bruun, Curator, Exhibit Design Jens Holm, Exhibit Design Robert Ivy, Commissioner Suzanne Stephens, Vice-Commissioner Clifford A. Pearson, Vice-Commissioner PANAMA Contributors: Presented and organized by the Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs of the U.S. Department of State>> and Christian D. Bruun in cooperation with Museo del Canal Interoceanico de Panama >> and the U.S. Embassy Panama >> Thanks to: Anthony Fontenot, Symposium Organizer William A. Eaton, Ambassador to Panama Teresita Mans, Cultural Affairs, US Embassy Original contributors: Exhibition Design: Jens Holm, Exhibition Designer Christian Ditlev Bruun, Exhibition Designer Exhibition Design Team: Charles Esteves Lorenzo Mattii David Marchisotto, Research Mike Huang, 3D modeling Keely Colcleugh, 3D Visualization Reed Kroloff, Dean, Tulane School of Architecture Anna Egger-Schlesinger, Graphic Designer Paula Kelly, Brochure Designer Laura Viscusi, Corporate Sponsorships Barbara Kroll, Sponsor Relations Organized by Architectural Record With support from: Patron: Sponsors: Donors: Rockwell Group, FXFowle, Gund Partnership, Kaplan McLaughlin Diaz, Kohn Pedersen Fox, NBBJ, Perkins Eastman, Perkins & Will, Zimmer Gunsul Frasca, Pei Cobb Freed, Pelli Clarke Pelli, Studios Architecture, EDAW, Davis Brody Bond, Elise Jaffe + Jeffrey Brown, Johnson Fain, Alexander Gorlin Architects, Tsao & McKown, Voorsanger Architects, Gruzen Samton, Lance Brown, and Christopher Nolan Other contributors: The American Architectural Foundation, Montenidoli Wines, New World Manufacturing, Seattle Tarp Company, Skybox Realty, Bay Rubber Company, Seattle Textiles, Seaman Corporation, and Brown Innovations. Film & Photography © Neil Alexander and Michael Goodman Film clip from “Design/e2,” a television series on sustainable architecture, produced bykontentreal. |
||
|
||
Michael Goodman iFrom helicopters and on the ground, photographerGoodman documented the scale and scope of the hurricane’s aftermath in New Orleans. Both abstract and immediate, his work offers a variety of perspectives on the confrontation between the built and the natural environments. |
||
Neil Alexander iArchitectural photographer and documentary filmmaker Alexander remained in New Orleans during Hurricane Katrina. Excerpts from his video An Eye in the Storm lend a human face to the harrowing days of this disaster. |
||
|
||