Fall 2025 Sciame Lecture Series: Tamar Renaud

Dates
Thu, Sep 11, 2025 - 05:30 PM — Thu, Sep 11, 2025 - 07:00 PM
Website
Admission Fee
free
Event Address
Sciame Auditorium (Room 107)
141 Convent Avenue
New York, NY 10031
Phone Number
2126506225
Event Location
Sciame Auditorium (Room 107)
141 Convent Avenue
New York, NY 10031
Event Details

This in-person lecture is part of the Fall 2025 Sciame Lecture Series, "rePURPOSE."

 is the New York State Director at , where she leads a team working to expand access to the outdoors by creating trails, revitalizing schoolyards, and protecting public land. With a background in public health and experience at Vital Strategies, the NYC Health Department, and the UN, she brings deep expertise in improving community health and the environment. She holds degrees from Brown and Johns Hopkins Universities.

"Asphalt, Rails, and Rights-of-Way: Repurposing Underused Spaces for Nature and Recreation": How can underused spaces like asphalt schoolyards, abandoned rail corridors, and paths under power lines be repurposed into welcoming places for nature and recreation? This session explores how Trust for Public Land works with communities and partners to transform land into public assets—combining design, engagement, and a commitment to outdoor access that supports public health and environmental resilience.

Suggested Reading: .

"rePURPOSE" centers on the practice of adaptive reuse in the built environment. Repurposing, the practice of adaptive reuse, embedded in historical patterns of city building, and for the most part discarded in the modern movement, is undergoing a remarkable renaissance. In the Fall 2025 rePURPOSE lecture series, architects, planners, developers, advocates, and engineers will present the technologies, designs, economic incentives, and policy changes that are needed to advance a substantively renewed and at-scale program of repurposing in New York and other global cities. The reuse of old structures is not a new idea. (After the fall of the Roman empire, for example, the Colosseum was repurposed for housing and workshops during the medieval period). Although reuse is understood as a convention that both requires and imposes minimal impact, rePURPOSE shines light on how the methodology might not be entirely benign, how it might in fact have impact, and the ways in which it challenges and would necessarily disrupt the very conventions with which we typically assume it is aligned. Of special, although not exclusive, interest is unpacking the relationship of repurposing to the climate crisis. Might historic preservation sit at the center of technical innovation? Are all older buildings valuable as climate mitigation assets? What rules, laws, and incentives are needed to sustain innovative approaches to meaningful reuse?

Do preservation rules and laws need to be amended to allow for modification to protected historic fabric?
Will financing tax credit incentive programs need to be created to enable ROI and economic impact?
Measuring the environmental impact of reuse and whether it promotes or offsets economic development in emerging economies.
Will new uses, such as data storage in old buildings, undermine the LCA embodied carbon savings achieved?
To what extent will conversions such as office to residential require new zoning frameworks and complete reform of regulatory, density, and FAR considerations?
Could conversions enable innovation in ventilation systems and even off-site transfer of geothermal energy systems energy and if maximized could represent significant impact?

All lectures are free, open to the public, and held in the Bernard and Anne Spitzer School of Architecture Sciame Auditorium. For live captioning, ASL interpretation, or access requests, please contact  ssadean@ccny.cuny.edu " rel="noopener" target="_blank"> ssadean@ccny.cuny.edu .

This lecture series is made possible by the Spitzer Architecture Fund and the generous support of Frank Sciame ’74, CEO of Sciame Construction.

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