site graphic Home  >  People  >  Speakers  >  William Sherman
Designing Matter category image: speakers/speaker-sherman.jpg

Prof. William Sherman’s research and teaching is focused on the relationship between architecture and the city from the perspective of the cultural responsibilities of technology. Currently, he teaches graduate design studios and is the Director of the graduate Venice Program. At the undergraduate level, his required fourth year technology course, Building III: Elastic Boundaries, investigates the role of the built environment in mediating human experience and dynamic natural systems.

 

Three related areas of research are: the exploration of the perceptual link between ecological systems and physiological responses as a fundamental property of architecture, with perception being the first step to understandings of responsibility; the critical reconsideration of architectural and urban spaces of the contemporary city in relation to the support of intergenerational relationships, with the University's Institute for Aging; and the work of his practice.

 

In his practice, Prof. Sherman is focused on charging the ordinary events of everyday life with an enriched perception of the specific place, time and cultural context of the experience. Through the design of projects ranging in scale from an addition to the School of Architecture, a cohousing community, houses, housing and museum renovations, he works with modest materials to structure a setting for new institutional, communal and personal relationships. Sherman's work has received a number of awards from the American Institute of Architects and has been published in “Progressive Architecture” and “Architecture” magazines.

Links

William Sherman's Home Page