Fitzgibbon Charrette Kickoff Lecture: Brennan Buck and David Freeland
Brennan Buck is a principal at FreelandBuck in New York City and a senior critic at the Yale School of Architecture. Buck’s writing on technology and representation within the discipline of architecture has been published in numerous academic and professional journals. Prior to teaching at Yale, he was an assistant professor in Studio Greg Lynn at the University of Applied Arts, Vienna. He has worked in the offices of Neil M. Denari Architects and Johnston Marklee & Associates in Los Angeles, and Walker Macy in Portland, Oregon. Buck is a graduate of Cornell University and the University of California, Los Angeles.
David Freeland is a principal at FreelandBuck in Los Angeles and part of the design faculty at Southern California Institute of Architecture. Prior to SCI-Arc, he taught at Woodbury University where he was instrumental in developing the FabLab and teaching fabrication and computation. Freeland has worked with architecture offices in Los Angeles and New York, including Michael Maltzan Architecture and Peter Eisenman Architects. He holds a bachelor of science in architecture from the University of Virginia and a master of architecture from the University of California, Los Angeles.
Established in 2009, FreelandBuck has been recognized in the Architectural League of New York’s 2019 Emerging Voices, the 2017 Architectural Record Design Vanguard, as a 2018 MOMA PS1 Young Architects Program Finalist and as an Emerging Architecture Practice by the Los Angeles AIA in 2013.
One AIA continuing education credit available.
Cache Me if You Can
(image courtesy of FreelandBuck)
Down the Block
(image courtesy of FreelandBuck)
David Freeland and Brennan Buck
(image courtesy of FreelandBuck)
Second House
(image courtesy of FreelandBuck)
Stack House
(image courtesy of FreelandBuck)
Views from the Field
(image courtesy of FreelandBuck)
Views from the Field
(image courtesy of FreelandBuck)
About the Fitzgibbon Charrette
The annual Fitzgibbon Charrette is a one-day sketch problem open to all juniors and seniors in architecture.