Norwich Lecture Series: Wendy Cox Presenting DIMENSIONS, DENSITIES, AND GRATITUDE

Norwich Lecture Series Wendy Cox Presenting DIMENSIONS DENSITIES AND GRATITUDE

Date: 1/31/25 4:00 PM
Website: www.norwich.edu
Location: Northfield, VT

Norwich University’s School of Architecture + Art
2024-25 Lecture Series Continues with Professor Wendy Cox
Presenting DIMENSIONS, DENSITIES, AND GRATITUDE
NORTHFIELD, Vt. – Norwich University’s School of Architecture + Art continues its 2024-25
series with DIMENSIONS, DENSITIES, AND GRATITUDE a presentation by Professor Wendy
Cox on Friday, January 31, 2025, at 4 p.m. in Chaplin Hall Gallery. The series is free and open to
the public. For those unable to attend, a virtual option is available.
(1.5 LU’s Pending)

Wendy Cox is a Professor of Architecture at Norwich University and a registered architect since
1996 with a private practice, studio twentyseven, located in Warren, Vermont, and Vinalhaven,
Maine. Her dual research areas are developing theories connecting the physical sciences with the
architectural discipline and the historic mid-twentieth century firm The Architects Collaborative,
focusing on work by early female architects. In addition, she teaches modern architectural history
and theory and design studios and seminars examining social justice and resilient design through
cultural critique. She has been a guest critic for SCI-Arc, Dartmouth College, École Nationale
Supérieure d'Architecture de Paris-La Villette, UMass Amherst, Smith College, Marywood, RISD,
and the Cranbrook Academy of Art and a Visiting Assistant Professor in Middlebury College's
Architectural Studies program.

She received her undergraduate degree from Miami University, Master of Architecture degree from the University of Colorado, Denver, and Post Graduate EDGE Master of Design Theory and Pedagogy degree from SCI-Arc, Los Angeles. Several publications recognize her participation as an intern with Eisenman Architects. Her entry received an award in the Women in Military Service for America competition with her boards exhibited at the National Building Museum in Washington D.C. and archived at the completed building. She received a research fellowship at the Wolfram Science Summer Program at Brown University. She initiated the study of 3D branching with surface envelope and furthered this project through an artist residency at the Vermont Studio Center in Johnson, Vermont. Realizing through her practice what she teaches in her classes, she transitioned a 2006 shipping container into a two-bedroom home in Vermont.

Contact: Eleanor D'Aponte
Email: edaponte@ norwich.edu