加州大学伯克利分校环境设计学院导师教师师资介绍简介-Christopher Calott

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Christopher Calott

Calott Lalanne Chair (2015-2019) - R.E.Development, Arch. & Urbanism; Vice Chair - Master of Urban Design; Associate Professor of Architecture
Address
352 Wurster Hall #1800
Phone
5 1 0 . 6 4 2 . 4 9 4 2
Email
calott@berkeley.edu




Address
352 Wurster Hall #1800
Phone
5 1 0 . 6 4 2 . 4 9 4 2

Email
calott@berkeley.edu



EDUCATION
Christopher Calott holds a Bachelor of Arts, Honors, in Urban Theory and Design from Brown University, while also studying at the Rhode Island School of Design.? He received a Certificate in Architecture from the Institute for Architecture and Urban Studies in New York, and his Master of Architecture degree from Princeton University.






BIOGRAPHY
Christopher Calott, AIA is an award-winning architect, urban designer, academic and real estate developer.? He is the inaugural Lalanne Chair in Real Estate Development, Architecture & Urbanism at UC Berkeley, and the founding Faculty Director of a new Master of Real Estate Development + Design Program, which he launched in 2018. He is also currently the Vice Chair of the Master of Urban Design Program, where he instructs on urban design practice, theory, and large scale urban redevelopment. Previously, he was the Director of the Master of Sustainable Real Estate Development Program at Tulane University, where he developed a curriculum in “regenerative development”, working in post-Katrina New Orleans, and throughout the United States. His academic focus and applied research investigates the agency and role that design can play in the creation of more vibrant and socially equitable urban places, often through a critical understanding of development practices and their impact on social, economic and urban form. Calott has pursued significant research in the areas of urbanism, affordable housing, informal settlements and sustainability through competitions, community-based projects and published work tied to teaching appointments at numerous Universities throughout the United States, Mexico and Latin America. And, his longstanding work and research on informal urbanization patterns and social justice issues at the US - Mexico Borderlands culminated in FRONTERA / BORDER: 7th Concurso Internacional ARQUINE, an international design competition and Congress convened in Mexico City. He has continued his research and writing on informal settlement communities, also working in Mumbai, India, and while at Berkeley recently investigating fringe settlements in Cairo, Egypt through a National Science Foundation grant.
Calott’s practice-based research at Berkeley investigates the role that private sector real estate development plays in creating more equitable and resilient communities through his professional work in the Bay Area. Focused on disinvested urban communities, he is currently employing innovative financing and urban design strategies with a development team on a large housing redevelopment area and the creation of a new town center. He helped organize an International Competition for the redevelopment of a prominent 50-acre Silicon Valley site, engaging some of the leading urban designers and architects in the world, seeking to demonstrate new models for infill housing density. His significant practical expertise on climate change, sustainability and urban redevelopment, notably as a ULI Advisory Services Specialist, contributed to a resilience and disaster relief study for the municipality of Toa Baja, in post-Hurricane Maria Puerto Rico. And, most recently, he was called to serve on ULI’s Sonoma County Resilience Advisory Services Panel to prepare a report assessing land use, development, and local energy grid strategies which promote community preparedness and economic resilience in the face of increasing California wildfire events.
Formerly, Chris was a founding principal of CALOTT + GIFFORD Architecture / Urban Design and founding partner of the real estate development firm INFILL SOLUTIONS: Innovative Urban Design and Development, based in Albuquerque and Santa Fe, New Mexico. For over 15 years his two firms worked together to create innovative mixed-use housing, dense infill developments, historic adaptive re-use projects, and vibrant public spaces working principally in cities throughout the Southwest. Employing regional urban building typologies in strikingly modern forms, Calott’s work also engaged non-profit affordable housing and publicly financed urban design projects, often working with urban and rural Native American populations and traditional Hispanic communities throughout the region. Fast Company magazine recognized CALOTT + GIFFORD’s award-winning design practice in 2011 as one of the “50 brilliant urbanites helping to build the cities of American’s future.” Practicing architecture and real estate development as a “form of Urbanism”, his projects have been recognized with over 65 local, State, National, and International Design Awards.
Calott began his career working as a Lead Project Designer in Antoine Predock Architect's office in Albuquerque, New Mexico. There he was involved in the design of a number of winning International Competitions, including the Classroom, Laboratory and Administrative complex at Cal Poly, Pomona, the United States World’s Fair Pavilion Competition in Seville, Spain, and the Palm Bay New Town & Convention Center Competition for the King of Morocco, in Agadir, Morocco. Later, he established and led Mr. Predock's Los Angeles office, completing projects on several UC California campuses and the City of Thousand Oaks Civic Center.
Christopher Calott holds a Bachelor of Arts, Honors, in Urban Theory and Design from Brown University, while also studying at the Rhode Island School of Design.? He received a Certificate in Architecture from the Institute for Architecture and Urban Studies in New York, and his Master of Architecture degree from Princeton University. Most recently, Calott was awarded a Loeb Fellowship at Harvard University’s Graduate School of Design. Calott held the Lalanne Chair from 2015-2019


Publications
“Housing as a Form of Non-formal Urbanism in Mumbai” published in Extreme Urbanism II, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 2013.
“Return to Common Ground: New and Revitalized Plazas in New Mexico,” published in The Plazas of New Mexico, Trinity Press, San Antonio, 2012.
The Pacheco Street Lofts Infill Development, published in ULI Development Case Studies, Urban Land Institute, Washington, D.C., 2009.
“Urban Interlopers,” published in Metropolis, March, 2008.
“Unexpected Opportunities of an Urbanist Practice,” published in Professional Practice 101: Business Strategies and Case Studies in Architecture, John Wiley? & Sons, Hoboken, New Jersey, 2006.
“FRONTERA / BORDER, 7th Concurso Internacional ARQUINE: A Border Crossing at Anapra, Ciudad Juarez –Sunland Park, New Mexico,” published in ARQUINE: Revista Internacioanal de Arquitectura, Mexico City, 2005.


Work








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