ADP

ADP - Architectural Design Project

awards

Awards and Recognition:

17) Collaborated with TEG (Taylor's Education Group) to host an engaging ESG (Environmental, Social, and Governance) awareness workshop, highlighting the essential aspects of sustainability.

16) International Ideas Competition: First Colony on Mars - Shortlisted.

15) Awarded a Certificate of Participation by ThinkCity in Recognition of Valued Participation in the Klang City Rejuvenation.

14) Awarded with an Honorable Mention in the Eleven's Third International Ideas and Design Competition, Moontopia. (Link)

13) Invited to give a talk on "Architects as Craftsmen: Where Making is Part of Thinking" in conjunction with the exhibition "Rumah'16" held at White Box, Publika.

12) Conducted a mentoring workshop for PAM 2016 Masterclass Programme on the occasion of KL Architecture Festival.

11) UNESCO Bamiyan Cultural Centre Design Competition - Top 15 Design Submissions out of 1070 entries submitted worldwide. (Link)

10) A Finalist team's supervisor in the Archiprix SEA 2014 Competition.

9) Invited as a judge for the 2013 TETRA PAK’s Design for Good Competition.

8) 2013 UM-EPIC Shelter For Orang Asli Design Competition. (Jury Commendation)

7) Winner of the 2013 Eco-B PAM Youth Portable Pavilion Competition.

6) Winner of the 2011 International Bright Ideas Lighting Design Competition. (Link)

5) Recipient of the 2001 Peddle Thorp Architecture Award (Australia) for best final year design unit. (Joint winner)

4) First Prize Winner (University Level) of the 1996 Concrete Masonry Association of Australia Architectural Students Competition.

3) Highly Commendation Award (National level) of the 1996 Concrete Masonry Association of Australia Architectural Students Competition.

2) First Prize Winner of the USM/PAM Student Design Idea Competition 1995. (Joint winner)

1) Tunku Abdul Rahman Book Prize Winner. (1992/1993)

about edchew

Ed Chew is a registered architect with the Board of Architects Malaysia (LAM) currently dividing his time between practice and teaching. He teaches both architecture and urban design at Taylor’s University, continually seeking to merge the two bodies of knowledge. His interest focuses on exploring ways in which the principles of “making architecture” can be emplaced into the practice of placemaking.

His main area of interest is in the principles of community place-making; exploring the nature and meaning of place. His other areas of interest are: Tectonic Thinking - Where Making is Part of Designing; Role of Educational Institutions as Catalysts for Urban Regeneration and Growth; Architecture of the Third Age - Creating Places for Active Third Age Communities; and Upcycled Architecture - The Art of Using (and Re-using) Recycled and Reclaimed Materials to Create Architectural Space.

In 2011, Ed Chew gained international recognition by winning the Grand Jury Prize in an international lighting competition organized by Inhabitat.com and Philips USA. His 2015 entry to the UNESCO Bamiyan Cultural Centre Design Competition was among the fifteen entries out of 1,070 design proposals from 117 countries, selected to grace the exhibition hall of the Garden of Babur, Afghanistan.

archiQuotes

Appreciating architecture can take many forms: some find visual images of architecture inspiring, while others may argue that direct engagement with architectural subjects is the best form of experience one could possibly attain. As for me, reading about architecture can be deeply motivating and fulfilling to keep my passion burning. 

My name is Ed Chew, and I am a graduate of Deakin University, Australia. I started the ArchiQuotes.info website in 2004, two years after graduating from architecture school.  

Like many fresh graduates, especially those who are more inclined towards academia, I had difficulty reconciling the reality of the architectural profession with the architecture’s ideals that I had been taught in school. As time passed, the constant feeling of discontentment with what I was doing in the office gradually sets in.  

Thus, to keep the enthusiasm and passion for architecture flowing, I began to source architectural news or articles on the Internet practically every night after work to keep myself abreast of the latest architectural updates available from around the world. This pastime activity of quenching mental thirst soon becomes habitual and gratifying.  

And from time to time, as I came across interesting statements made by architects or architecture-related citations while doing my reading, I would jot them down on a notebook. But as the Internet became more widely accessible, I began to explore alternative media to store and create my personal anthology.  

An online platform, which offers many advantages such as easy indexing and searching, seemed to be the perfect medium for the task.  

ArchiQuotes.info soon became my "commonplace book".

  

A commonplace Book

Many of us might not be aware of just what a commonplace book is. The term commonplace, which is a literal translation of the Latin locus communis, simply means “a place to collect common items or thoughts.”  

Historically, commonplace books have been the companions of many great men and women of the past who used them to collect passages, excerpts, and other quotes from various sources in which they have read. A commonplace book is essentially a personal journal to store information so that its compiler may use or retrieve the information for future reference.  

PS: I founded the ArchiQuotes.info website in 2004, but as of 2020, I no longer own it. I now use this Facebook page as my new commonplace book: facebook.com/archiquotes

What's New in 1.5?

This article deliberately archived as an example.

As with previous releases, Joomla! provides a unified and easy-to-use framework for delivering content for Web sites of all kinds. To support the changing nature of the Internet and emerging Web technologies, Joomla! required substantial restructuring of its core functionality and we also used this effort to simplify many challenges within the current user interface. Joomla! 1.5 has many new features.

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