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side_sponsors.php
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The AIA gratefully
acknowledges the following sponsors of our 150th Anniversary
celebration:
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Founders Circle: $1,000,000:
McGraw-Hill Construction,
Official Media
Sponsor
Autodesk,
Official Software Sponsor |
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On February 23, 1857, 13 architects met in Richard
Upjohn's office to form what would become The American Institute of
Architects. The group included H. W. Cleaveland, Henry Dudley,
Leopold Eidlitz, Edward Gardiner, Richard Morris Hunt, J. Wrey
Mould, Fred A. Petersen, J. M. Priest, John Welch, and Joseph C.
Wells, as well as Upjohn's son Richard and son-in-law Charles
Babcock. The group sought to create an architecture organization
that would "promote the scientific and practical perfection of its
members" and "elevate the standing of the
profession."
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| Richard Upjohn |
Until this point, anyone who wished to call
him-or herself an architect could do so. This included masons,
carpenters, bricklayers, and other members of the building trades.
No schools of architecture or architectural licensing laws existed
to shape the calling.
The first steps of this small group of 13
were to change the profession of architecture in the United States
profoundly.
At their meeting, the founding members
decided to invite 16 other architects, including A. J. Davis,
Thomas U. Walter, and Calvert Vaux, to the second meeting on March
10, 1857. A draft constitution and bylaws were read there, and the
only change made was to the name of the organization, at that time
the New York Society of Architects. Thomas U. Walter, a well-known
Philadelphia practitioner, suggested The American Institute of
Architects.
The members ordered a copy of the constitution
and bylaws on vellum for signature, as well as printed versions for
reference and daily use. On April 13, after a luncheon at
Delmonico's restaurant, a small group, led by Richard Upjohn, went
to New York City Hall and filed a certificate of incorporation
before Judge James J. Roosevelt. As reported in the minutes of the
AIA Board of Directors, the judge said he didn't worry about the
AIA failing because the members were "aware of the necessity of a
solid foundation whereupon to construct an edifice & that
consequently he felt assured that we had laid our cornerstone on a
rock." Two days later, the members signed the constitution at the
chapel at New York University. AIA presidents
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| T. U. Walter |
In 1858 the constitution was amended,
enlarging the mission of the AIA "to promote the artistic,
scientific, and practical profession of its members; to facilitate
their intercourse and good fellowship; to elevate the standing of
the profession; and to combine the efforts of those engaged in the
practice of Architecture, for the general advancement of the Art."
To achieve these ends, the document called for regular meetings of
the membership, lectures on topics of general interest, creation of
a library, and development of an architectural model and design
collection for the use of the membership. To ensure good rapport,
the constitution banned all discussions of a religious or political
nature from the meetings.
The mission statement remained in effect
until 1867, when it was modified to read, "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."
Over time, these precepts have been further refined, but the basic
objectives have remained the same.
The Message
Spreads
By the mid-1860s, architects from other
cities wanted to join the AIA, so the members began a series of
debates on the best way to include them. Some suggested the AIA
invite architects from Mexico and Canada to join, but nothing came
of this idea, and the focus returned to architects in other U.S.
cities.
While it was obvious that groups should be
formed in other cities, the burning question was what to call them.
Debate raged over the use of the terms "branch" versus "chapter."
Eventually, the membership determined that "branch" had a negative
connotation, implying subservience to the Institute, while
"chapter" had a more egalitarian tone. With this decided, the
membership voted to make their original group the first official
chapter. The newly minted New York Chapter of The American
Institute of Architects held its first meeting on March 19, 1867.
By October the chapter had held four meetings and built a
membership of 32 regular members and four associate
members.
By 1887, AIA chapters had been formed in
Philadelphia, Chicago, Cincinnati, Boston, Baltimore, Albany, Rhode
Island, San Francisco, St. Louis, Indianapolis, and Washington,
D.C. Today, the AIA has more than 300 chapters, now called components, in
the United States and its territories, as well as in the United
Kingdom, Continental Europe, and Hong Kong.
The AIA constitution called for a special
meeting to take place annually on February 22 to commemorate the
organization of the Institute and the birthday of George
Washington. Many of the early meetings were held at the same
Delmonico's restaurant where the founders celebrated the creation
of the Institute. The AIA held its first convention in New York
City on October 22 and 23, 1867. Participants read reports
regarding the Institute and its committees and presented papers
about advances in the field of architecture. The proceedings of the
convention were printed and distributed to the membership. Later
editions of the proceedings included reports from chapters and
lists of members. Convention proceedings were published until
1931.
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| 1883 Convention |
These gatherings provide members with
opportunities to network, learn about the latest technologies and
products, and gain continuing education credits. The AIA's 2005
annual convention, held May 19-21 in Las Vegas, was the largest in
AIA history, attracting more than 24,400 registrants.
Convention locations
All for One
In 1884, a rival organization, the Western
Association of Architects, was founded in Chicago. This group's
membership comprised architects from the Midwest and the South.
Chapters formed in several states, and the organization began
championing the idea of licensure for architects. By 1888, it was
clear that the WAA and the AIA had similar goals and, in some
cases, the same members. In 1889, the two groups met in Cincinnati
and decided to merge. The merger was approved by a two-thirds
majority vote of the WAA, and its membership, property, and records
were transferred to the AIA. As part of the negotiations, it was
decided the new consolidated group would retain the name "The
American Institute of Architects." In return, the AIA agreed to
honor the membership nomenclature of the WAA: "Fellow." The
AIA had a similar category, but instead of applying it to all
members, it reserved the title for a select few. In addition, the
AIA agreed to continue the push for
licensure.
Over time, membership in the AIA has grown
from the original 29 members in 1857, to 11,500 in 1957, to 75,000
in 2005. From the beginning, membership in the Institute was to
be limited to practicing architects. Provisions were made to
allow associate members to join, as well as honorary members and
honorary corresponding members (architects from other countries).
Today, the AIA has four membership classifications: AIA (licensed
architects), Associate AIA (interns, academics, nonlicensed
architects), FAIA (Fellows of the AIA), and AIA Emeritus
(retired licensed architects).
United in
Fellowship
In the early years, advancement to Fellowship
in the AIA was basically self-initiated. Members needed only to
state their qualifications and have support for their application
from other Fellows. When the AIA and WAA merged in 1889, the WAA
members were allowed to keep their title of Fellow, and
everyone who was a member of the AIA in that year became a Fellow
as well. This included Louise Bethune, who was a member of both
organizations. She had broken the gender barrier in 1886 as the
AIA's first woman member, and she became the first woman Fellow in
1889.
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| Louise Bethune |
In 1920, membership changed the rules of
Fellowship so the process for elevation would be more
institutionalized. A jury of Fellows would select candidates from
the various AIA chapters. Chapter members would then vote on the
selected candidates, and those who won the most votes would go
before the full membership. The process was changed in 1935 to give
full power for selection to the Jury of Fellows, who would consider
résumés of work submitted by the applicants.
Then, in 1952 AIA leadership established the College of Fellows as an entity within the
Institute. Its purpose was to "stimulate and express the opinions
and advice of honored and experienced members of the Profession."
Over time, the mission statement of the College has evolved and now
states as its goal to "stimulate a sharing of interests among
Fellows, to promote the purpose of the Institute, to advance the
profession of architecture, and to be of ever-increasing service to
society." With the establishment of the College of Fellows,
bestowing fellowship became more formalized, including an
investiture ceremony and convocation dinner held at the annual
convention of the AIA.
A Capital
Move
Near the end of the nineteenth century, the
Institute began to see the need to move its offices from New York
City. Members considered a number of locations and ultimately
selected Washington, D.C., where the Institute moved in 1898. The
prime reason for choosing Washington was the large number of public
building projects commissioned by the federal government, which
were to be paid for with funds controlled by Congress. In order to
influence what was built and who would build it, it made sense to
be headquartered where the money and power resided. At the urging
of the Washington Chapter, the AIA leased the Octagon, a historic
house built in 1799, to serve as its headquarters.
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| Glenn Brown |
Glenn Brown, a founding
member of the Washington Chapter, was tapped to become executive
secretary of the AIA when it moved to Washington. Brown was a
strong administrator and had the connections to position the
Institute as a major player in shaping the architectural landscape
of this country. During Brown's tenure, the Institute was
instrumental in consolidating the MacMillan Commission (also know
as the Senate Park Commission) plan for Washington and ensuring
that it became a reality. This plan reasserted the open spaces and
planning concepts of the eighteenth-century L'Enfant plan. In
addition, the commission envisioned complexes for government
buildings in the Federal Triangle and around the Mall and Lafayette
Square.
The Institute
was also instrumental in the formation of and appointments to the
U.S. Commission of Fine Arts, established in 1910. Today, this body
continues to advise the federal government on matters of art and
architecture that affect the appearance of the nation's
capital.
The MacMillan Plan and the Fine Arts
Commission were significant factors in the development of
Washington during the twentieth century. In asserting its role on
the national stage, the AIA played a key part in construction of
the Lincoln Highway, advocacy for the Appalachian Trail, and
support for the Vietnam Veterans Memorial designed by Maya Lin.
Most recently, the AIA has lobbied for school construction funding,
brownfields legislation, and state licensure issues, and has taken
a leading role in combining security concerns with architectural
aesthetics. Visit AIA Government Affairs.
General Advancement of the
Art
The Institute also forwards
the profession through a series of honors and awards. The highest honor the
Institute can bestow is the Gold Medal, awarded by the Board of
Directors in recognition of distinguished service to the
architecture profession or to the Institute. It was first awarded
in 1907, the fiftieth anniversary of the founding of the AIA, to an
Englishman, Sir Aston Webb.
American sculptor A. A. Weinman designed
the Gold Medal in 1906. On the obverse of the medal appear three
heads borrowed from the Greek Parthenon-from left to right,
Ictinus, an architect; Phidias, a sculptor; and Polygnotos, a
painter. A triangle, compass, and brushes represent their tools.
The legend, "Presented by The American Institute of Architects,
Organized MDCCCLVII," also appears. The reverse bears an eagle and
an olive branch, along with the initials "AIA," the sculptor's
name, and 1907, the date the medal was first presented.
The most elaborate of all Gold Medal
ceremonies was held in 1923 at the Lincoln Memorial. It honored
Henry Bacon, architect of the memorial. AIA members, dressed in
colorful robes, carried banners and standards. They marched down
the Reflecting Pool accompanied by architecture students, who
manned a series of ropes to pull Bacon, seated on a "royal" barge,
down the pool's length. Bacon sat under a golden wooden statue of a
boy with a laurel wreath that represented a crown. As the barge
made its way, trumpeters from the Marine Band played a "joyous
processional," Walter's "Prize Song" from Der Meistersinger.
William Howard Taft, chief justice of the U.S. Supreme Court and
former president of the United States, met Bacon at the bottom of
the steps and presented him to President Warren G. Harding, who
bestowed the Gold Medal. After the ceremony, the participants dined
al fresco on the grounds of the Lincoln Memorial.
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| Bacon Gold Medal Ceremony |
A Documented Success
One of the urgent needs of the AIA in the nineteenth century was to
standardize the contract documents used by the construction
industry. The first such document, adopted in 1866, was a fee
schedule. It helped define who an architect was and what an
architect did. The second important document, adopted by the AIA in
1870, ensured that architects would be involved in planning,
overseeing, and judging competitions for building design.
The AIA adopted the first of its
construction documents, an architect and owner agreement for
construction that was to become the A-201, in 1888. Today, the AIA's Contract Documents program publishes
more than 70 contracts and forms that cover all phases of the
design and construction process, including bid bonds and change
order lists.
On Education and
Licensure
In 1867, the AIA also looked at architecture
education in the United States. The Institute debated creating a
national school of architecture based on the model of the Ecole des
Beaux-Arts in Paris. Members envisioned evening classes in drawing,
aesthetics, and the history of art and architecture. Unfortunately,
efforts to secure funding failed, and the Institute chose instead
to support the fledgling architecture program developed by Robert
Ware for the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (1868). Programs
were also developed at Cornell (1871), the University of Illinois
(1873), Columbia University (1881), and Tuskegee (1881).
Today, 113 accredited schools of
architecture serve the profession. The AIA, in conjunction
with the American Institute
of Architecture Students (AIAS), the Association of Collegiate Schools
of Architecture (ACSA), and the National Architectural Accrediting
Board (NAAB), continues to ensure the highest quality of
architecture education in the United States.
Before 1897, no legal definition of
"architect," nor any legal requirements concerning the use of the
title or the provision of architectural services, existed. In that
year, however, Illinois became the first state to adopt an
architectural licensing law. It would take more than 50 years for
all of the states to follow suit and adopt licensing laws. Today
the AIA works in conjunction with the National Council of Architectural
Registration Boards (NCARB) to develop and recommend standards
regulating the practice of architecture.
From a small group of professionals
sharing a meal, the American Institute of Architects has grown to a
robust, focused organization providing guidance, service, and
standards to architects around the world. The AIA continues to
strive for quality, consistency, and safety in the built
environment and to serve as the voice of the architecture. For more
information, contact the AIA Library and Archives, open to all AIA
members.
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