More On: Faculty Work

ASLA Recognizes Auburn APLA Student, Professor and Alumnus in 2024
A fourth-year student, an Assistant Professor and a distinguished alumnus from Auburn’s School of Planning and Landscape Architecture (APLA) have all received recognition and high honors from the American Society of Landscape Architects (ASLA) in 2024, demonstrating the excellence of the program.

Landscape Architecture Faculty Research Recognized with ASLA Honor Award
Links between landscape architecture and social justice? Sounds like an odd match.

LeBleu Celebrates Legacy of Service to ASLA, CELA
After four years as a member of the American Society of Landscape Architects’ (ASLA) Fellows Jury, the last of which she has spent as chair, Auburn University Landscape Architecture Professor Charlene LeBleu will soon close out her jury service.

Auburn expert: Using AI can make construction work safer, more productive
Artificial Intelligence, or AI, is everywhere these days, and the United States’ booming construction industry is no exception. So, how might the use of AI change the industry in the future?

Silt Sand Slurry Shines Light on Coastal Dredging and Sediment Use
Although exact figures differ, the U.S. Environmental Protection agency estimates that several billion cubic yards of sediment are dredged from the nation’s waterways every year.

Knox Promoted to Associate Professor, Named MLA Program Chair
Emily Knox, who joined the landscape architecture faculty at Auburn University as a Visiting Assistant Professor in 2018, has been promoted to Associate Professor with tenure and named the new Program Chair of the Master of Landscape Architecture (MLA) program.

Auburn team shaping Alabama’s State Wildlife Action Plan
Alabama is home to unique ecosystems like the Appalachian Plateau, the Mobile-Tensaw Delta and the Black Belt Prairie, and protecting these delicate environments is crucial to maintaining biodiversity across the state.

Former Director of Urban Studio is Dreaming and Doing
For Cheryl Morgan ’74, the best plans are a good mix of doable and aspirational.

Better Notes for Better Learning: First-year engineering students to study ‘sketchnoting’
Can doodling count as classwork? It sure can when a student is using “sketchnoting,” a note taking technique combining traditional text with symbols and illustrations.

BSCI’s Leathem Co-teaching TLP Certification Workshops
Tom Leathem, Associate Professor and Undergraduate Program Chair in the McWhorter School of Building Science, is teaching workshops for construction educators in collaboration with faculty members at Arizona State University and Northern Arizona University.