More On: CADC

Civil Rights Movement Research Seminar
In the fall 2021 semester McWhorter School of Building Science School Head Dr. Richard Burt collaborated with the University Honors College and College of Liberal Arts Associate Professor of History Dr. Keith S. Herbert to teach HONR 3987: Selma, Bloody Sunday, and Civil Rights Movement Research Seminar.

Faculty Members Heck and Nell Named Professors Emeriti
Professors Corky Nell and Ross Heck, graphic design faculty members in the School of Industrial and Graphic Design, have been named Professors Emeriti by Auburn University’s Board of Trustees.

Addressing Resiliency, Healthy Eating through Research by Design
Rusty Lay has created a sponsored research-by-design studio to develop affordable approaches to family-scale aquaponics.

Building the Future: Paul Holley
A longtime construction industry manager and executive, Holley was looking for a change of pace in 2002 when friend and emeritus Auburn University McWhorter School of Building Science faculty member Steve Williams told him about a teaching job at his alma mater.

Dessein: Representing the Underrepresented
A course in Auburn's Bachelor of Architecture program that many students look forward to is ARCH 3410: Dessein Elective.

Senior Project Portfolios: Fall 2021
Fall 2021 Graphic Design Senior Portfolio Galleries

Building Science Student Served as CADC’s Fall Commencement Marshal
Jordan Sibley of the McWhorter School of Building Science has been selected as the College of Architecture, Design and Construction student marshal for Auburn University’s fall 2021 commencement.

Spotlight: Alumnus J.T. Carter
Four years ago, J.T. Carter was an Auburn student interviewing with industry recruiters in the McWhorter School of Building Science. These days, he’s back in the lobby of the Miller Gorrie Center on the other side of the table as the lead recruiter at Auburn for Linbeck Construction.

Building Science, Architecture faculty digitally preserving Alabama’s disappearing Rosenwald Schools
In the early decades of the 1900s when racial segregation was the norm, almost 400 schools were built in rural Alabama to serve as educational facilities for African American children.

Urban Studio Addresses Birmingham’s Historic Ensley Neighborhood
Urban Studio projects underscore how critical community engagement is to successful collaboration.