• Login / Join
  • About
  • •
  • Contact
  • •
  • Advertising
bustler logo
bustler logo
  • News
  • Competitions
  • Events
  • Bustler is powered by Archinect
  • Sign up for Bustler's Email Newsletters

  • Follow these Bustler feeds:

  • Search

    Search in

  • Submit

    What are you submitting?

    News Pitch
    Competition
    Event
  • Login / Join
  • News|Competitions|Events
  • Search
    | Submit
    | Follow
  • Search in

    What are you submitting?

    News Pitch
    Competition
    Event

    Follow these Bustler feeds:

  • About|Contact|Advertising
  • Login / Join

Archinect presents Next Up: The L.A. River, at the A+D Museum, October 29!

By Amelia Taylor-Hochberg|

Tuesday, Oct 18, 2016

© Archinect

For the latest installment of our sister site Archinect's live podcasting series, Next Up, the focus is on the L.A. River, and the wide swath of urbanist concerns within its ongoing master planning efforts.

It could be the project that makes, or breaks, Los Angeles. With a complex historical legacy and an often-misunderstood ecology, the L.A. River’s 51-mile stretch is at once a huge urban opportunity, and to many, an even bigger eyesore. Thirty years ago, nonprofit Friends of the Los Angeles River was founded to protect and advocate for the river, and shortly after, the City of L.A. began looking at ways to take better advantage of the immense resource. Since then, many more communities and stakeholders have joined the conversation, raising concerns of ecology, sustainability, gentrification, public space, affordable housing, social equity—a wealth of complexities that testifies to what a lightning rod of urbanist discourse the River has become.

While conversations about the L.A. River’s future have been percolating for decades, not until only a few years ago did the plans become a divisive topic for the general public—in no small part due to the appointment of Frank Gehry’s office as a leader in the city’s master planning initiative. Reporting on the public’s first peek at the firm’s plans, Christopher Hawthorne, architecture critic for the Los Angeles Times, wrote, “as the river takes on new shades of economic and political meaning—becoming a magnet for attention and investment after decades of near invisibility—the race to reimagine it is growing more crowded.”

Loaded with passion and ambition, the public dialogue rages about the river, and stokes the debate over what L.A. is becoming overall. Archinect’s live podcasting event, Next Up: The L.A. River will be a dynamic platform to gather and discuss the river within current urbanist discourse. Through a series of short-form interviews and guided group discussions with participants Frances Anderton (KCRW’s DnA), Steven Appleton (LA River Kayak Safari), Marissa Christansen (FOLAR), Catherine Gudis (Play the L.A. River game), Christopher Hawthorne (Los Angeles Times), Mia Lehrer (Mia Lehrer & Associates), Julia Meltzer (Clock Shop), Alexander Robinson (Office of Outdoor Research), Elizabeth Timme (LA-Más), Renee Dake Wilson (L.A. City Planning Commission), Deborah Weintraub (Chief Deputy City Engineer), and others, Next Up will be a place for airing dreams, concerns, plans and ideas for the River’s next phase, and its identity in a changing L.A.

Next Up: The L.A. River will take place on Saturday, October 29, beginning at 5pm at the A+D Museum in Los Angeles’ Arts District. The event is free and open to the public.

For more information, visit the Next Up Bustler event.

RELATED NEWS Archinect and Chicago Architecture Biennial present "Next Up," a live podcasting event, October 3rd!
RELATED NEWS Archinect presents "Next Up: Podcasting the Future of Architecture"

Related

los angeles ● california ● usa ● a+d museum ● next up ● archinect ● talk ● discussion ● panel discussion ● interview ● river ● water ● landscape ● landscape architecture ● planning ● urban planning ● revitalization ● la river ● los angeles river ● archinect sessions ● podcast
Archinect
Archinect
Archinect Sessions
Archinect Sessions

Share

  • Follow

    0 Comments

  • Comment as :

Archinect presents Next Up: The L.A. River, at the A+D Museum, October 29!

Over $500,000 awarded to architectural discourse projects by Graham Foundation

Best in urban planning recognized at AIA Regional & Urban Design Award 2026

Sponsored Post by Buildner

Re:Form - New Life for Old Spaces / Edition #3 advance registration deadline is approaching!

New architecture and design competitions: IDEAS Awards, UIA-HYP CUP International Student Competition, Vancouver Tall Challenge, and Memorial to the Sixth Extinction

Best small projects chosen at AIA Small Project Award 2026

10 standout sustainable projects honored at AIA COTE Top Ten Award 2026

Best residential architecture of 2026 honored at AIA Housing Award

Best new interiors of 2026 chosen at AIA Interior Architecture Awards

Sign up for Bustler's Email Newsletters

Best global architecture honored at RIBA International Awards 2026

World’s most beautiful airports of 2026 chosen by Prix Versailles

New architecture and design competitions: Brick in Architecture Awards, Study Architecture Student Showcase, N.Y.C. Groceries, and New York High Falls Riverfront Market

SmithGroup’s ‘pioneering’ Philip Merrill Environmental Center wins AIA Twenty-five Year Award

Sponsored Post by Buildner

Museum of Emotions / Edition #8 FINAL registration deadline is in 5 DAYS!

Here are the winners of the 2026 AIA Architecture Awards

40 emerging architects and designers under 40 from Europe honored

Next page » Loading

Archinect presents Next Up: The L.A. River, at the A+D Museum, October 29!

By Amelia Taylor-Hochberg|

Tuesday, Oct 18, 2016

Share

© Archinect

Related

los angeles ● california ● usa ● a+d museum ● next up ● archinect ● talk ● discussion ● panel discussion ● interview ● river ● water ● landscape ● landscape architecture ● planning ● urban planning ● revitalization ● la river ● los angeles river ● archinect sessions ● podcast
Archinect
Archinect
Archinect Sessions
Archinect Sessions

For the latest installment of our sister site Archinect's live podcasting series, Next Up, the focus is on the L.A. River, and the wide swath of urbanist concerns within its ongoing master planning efforts.

It could be the project that makes, or breaks, Los Angeles. With a complex historical legacy and an often-misunderstood ecology, the L.A. River’s 51-mile stretch is at once a huge urban opportunity, and to many, an even bigger eyesore. Thirty years ago, nonprofit Friends of the Los Angeles River was founded to protect and advocate for the river, and shortly after, the City of L.A. began looking at ways to take better advantage of the immense resource. Since then, many more communities and stakeholders have joined the conversation, raising concerns of ecology, sustainability, gentrification, public space, affordable housing, social equity—a wealth of complexities that testifies to what a lightning rod of urbanist discourse the River has become.

While conversations about the L.A. River’s future have been percolating for decades, not until only a few years ago did the plans become a divisive topic for the general public—in no small part due to the appointment of Frank Gehry’s office as a leader in the city’s master planning initiative. Reporting on the public’s first peek at the firm’s plans, Christopher Hawthorne, architecture critic for the Los Angeles Times, wrote, “as the river takes on new shades of economic and political meaning—becoming a magnet for attention and investment after decades of near invisibility—the race to reimagine it is growing more crowded.”

Loaded with passion and ambition, the public dialogue rages about the river, and stokes the debate over what L.A. is becoming overall. Archinect’s live podcasting event, Next Up: The L.A. River will be a dynamic platform to gather and discuss the river within current urbanist discourse. Through a series of short-form interviews and guided group discussions with participants Frances Anderton (KCRW’s DnA), Steven Appleton (LA River Kayak Safari), Marissa Christansen (FOLAR), Catherine Gudis (Play the L.A. River game), Christopher Hawthorne (Los Angeles Times), Mia Lehrer (Mia Lehrer & Associates), Julia Meltzer (Clock Shop), Alexander Robinson (Office of Outdoor Research), Elizabeth Timme (LA-Más), Renee Dake Wilson (L.A. City Planning Commission), Deborah Weintraub (Chief Deputy City Engineer), and others, Next Up will be a place for airing dreams, concerns, plans and ideas for the River’s next phase, and its identity in a changing L.A.

Next Up: The L.A. River will take place on Saturday, October 29, beginning at 5pm at the A+D Museum in Los Angeles’ Arts District. The event is free and open to the public.

For more information, visit the Next Up Bustler event.

RELATED NEWS Archinect and Chicago Architecture Biennial present "Next Up," a live podcasting event, October 3rd!
RELATED NEWS Archinect presents "Next Up: Podcasting the Future of Architecture"

Share

  • Follow

    0 Comments

  • Comment as :

Archinect JobsArchinect Jobs

The Archinect Job Board attracts the world's top architectural design talents.

VIEW ALL JOBS POST A JOB

Studio Coordinator

Sarah Jacoby Architect

Studio Coordinator

Long Island City, NY, US

Architectural Project Manager - Residential

DAHLIN Architecture | Planning | Interiors

Architectural Project Manager - Residential

Pleasanton, CA, US

Design Director or Sr. Architect

b.hills architecture, P.C.

Design Director or Sr. Architect

Boise, ID, US

Project Manager/architect

MKNH Architects

Project Manager/architect

New York, NY, US

Project Architect

Fowlkes Studio

Project Architect

Washington, DC, US

Senior Associate/ Project Manager

DWY Landscape Architects

Senior Associate/ Project Manager

Sarasota, FL, US

Project Architect

The Goldman Group

Project Architect

Walpole, MA, US

Project Designer / Manager

BuiltIN Studio

Project Designer / Manager

New York, NY, US

Architectural Designer

7th Street Burger

Architectural Designer

New York, NY, US

Architectural team Memeber

Meraki Architects, LLC

Architectural team Memeber

Middleburg Heights, OH, US

Next page » Loading