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X-WR-CALDESC:Events for AIA California Calendar
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BEGIN:VTIMEZONE
TZID:UTC
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:+0000
TZOFFSETTO:+0000
TZNAME:UTC
DTSTART:20190101T000000
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20211208T120000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20211208T130000
DTSTAMP:20260716T182935
CREATED:20211208T200011Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231209T170818Z
UID:10000173-1638964800-1638968400@events.aiacalifornia.org
SUMMARY:AIA CA Climate Action Webinar Series | Case Studies of All-Electric Buildings: UCI Medical Campus
DESCRIPTION:When:Thursday September 22nd\, 202212pm – 1:30pm Units:1.5 LU/HSW (pending approval) Qualifies for Zero Net Carbon Design Mandatory Continuing Education. Certificate of completion will be provided to those who stay on and watch the webinar live. Moderator:Carmen Suero\, Associate AIA — Principal with GPCO Speaker:David Arkin\, AIA — Principal | Arkin Tilt Architects While reducing the operational carbon impacts of structures is important\, focus has turned to the impacts of material choices and construction itself – the embodied carbon of a building from extraction\, processing\, and assembly of materials. This is especially important in California given the relatively low carbon intensity of our grid-supplied electricity. An all-electric\, grid-harmonized building will have low operational carbon emissions in California because of our electric grid’s cleaner energy mix. Thus\, the need to shift focus toward embodied carbon. The AIA 2030 Commitment’s Design Data Exchange (DDx) added reporting of embodied carbon in 2021. In this session\, David Arkin outlines the basics of embodied carbon\, discusses materials that have low embodied carbon or store carbon\, and introduces a range of tools for measuring your project’s kilograms of CO2 emitted per meter squared. Examples of carbon storing materials and the range of tools available for measuring embodied carbon will be shared. The presentation will include challenges to answer questions regarding embodied carbon and climate impacts\, such as: ‘Name the earth’s five carbon sinks’\, ‘What process drives the sequestration of carbon in plants and soil’\, and ‘Other than wood\, what bio-based resources are potential carbon storing building materials’\, to name a few. Earn 1.5 LU|HSW and 1.5hrs ZNCD MCE for attending live.								\n				\n				\n				\n							\n					\n						\n				\n				\n				\n							\n			\n									Additional Resources\n							\n			\n									Additional Resources\n					PDF Presentation | Small Firm Carbon Basics: Why It’s Important and How to Measure It
URL:https://events.aiacalifornia.org/event/aia-ca-climate-action-webinar-series-case-studies-of-all-electric-buildings-uci-medical-campus/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:Climate Action
ORGANIZER;CN="Sarah Vasquez":MAILTO:svasquez@aiacalifornia.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20211207T120000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20211207T130000
DTSTAMP:20260716T182935
CREATED:20211211T200048Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231209T170703Z
UID:10000172-1638878400-1638882000@events.aiacalifornia.org
SUMMARY:AIA CA Presents: SFx Roundtable
DESCRIPTION:When:Thursday September 22nd\, 202212pm – 1:30pm Units:1.5 LU/HSW (pending approval) Qualifies for Zero Net Carbon Design Mandatory Continuing Education. Certificate of completion will be provided to those who stay on and watch the webinar live. Moderator:Carmen Suero\, Associate AIA — Principal with GPCO Speaker:David Arkin\, AIA — Principal | Arkin Tilt Architects While reducing the operational carbon impacts of structures is important\, focus has turned to the impacts of material choices and construction itself – the embodied carbon of a building from extraction\, processing\, and assembly of materials. This is especially important in California given the relatively low carbon intensity of our grid-supplied electricity. An all-electric\, grid-harmonized building will have low operational carbon emissions in California because of our electric grid’s cleaner energy mix. Thus\, the need to shift focus toward embodied carbon. The AIA 2030 Commitment’s Design Data Exchange (DDx) added reporting of embodied carbon in 2021. In this session\, David Arkin outlines the basics of embodied carbon\, discusses materials that have low embodied carbon or store carbon\, and introduces a range of tools for measuring your project’s kilograms of CO2 emitted per meter squared. Examples of carbon storing materials and the range of tools available for measuring embodied carbon will be shared. The presentation will include challenges to answer questions regarding embodied carbon and climate impacts\, such as: ‘Name the earth’s five carbon sinks’\, ‘What process drives the sequestration of carbon in plants and soil’\, and ‘Other than wood\, what bio-based resources are potential carbon storing building materials’\, to name a few. Earn 1.5 LU|HSW and 1.5hrs ZNCD MCE for attending live.								\n				\n				\n				\n							\n					\n						\n				\n				\n				\n							\n			\n									Additional Resources\n							\n			\n									Additional Resources\n					PDF Presentation | Small Firm Carbon Basics: Why It’s Important and How to Measure It
URL:https://events.aiacalifornia.org/event/aia-ca-presents-sfx-roundtable/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:Practice
ORGANIZER;CN="Sarah Vasquez":MAILTO:svasquez@aiacalifornia.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20211123T120000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20211123T130000
DTSTAMP:20260716T182935
CREATED:20211123T200004Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231209T170530Z
UID:10000171-1637668800-1637672400@events.aiacalifornia.org
SUMMARY:AIA CA Climate Action Webinar Series | HVAC Resilience through IEQ and EE
DESCRIPTION:When:Thursday September 22nd\, 202212pm – 1:30pm Units:1.5 LU/HSW (pending approval) Qualifies for Zero Net Carbon Design Mandatory Continuing Education. Certificate of completion will be provided to those who stay on and watch the webinar live. Moderator:Carmen Suero\, Associate AIA — Principal with GPCO Speaker:David Arkin\, AIA — Principal | Arkin Tilt Architects While reducing the operational carbon impacts of structures is important\, focus has turned to the impacts of material choices and construction itself – the embodied carbon of a building from extraction\, processing\, and assembly of materials. This is especially important in California given the relatively low carbon intensity of our grid-supplied electricity. An all-electric\, grid-harmonized building will have low operational carbon emissions in California because of our electric grid’s cleaner energy mix. Thus\, the need to shift focus toward embodied carbon. The AIA 2030 Commitment’s Design Data Exchange (DDx) added reporting of embodied carbon in 2021. In this session\, David Arkin outlines the basics of embodied carbon\, discusses materials that have low embodied carbon or store carbon\, and introduces a range of tools for measuring your project’s kilograms of CO2 emitted per meter squared. Examples of carbon storing materials and the range of tools available for measuring embodied carbon will be shared. The presentation will include challenges to answer questions regarding embodied carbon and climate impacts\, such as: ‘Name the earth’s five carbon sinks’\, ‘What process drives the sequestration of carbon in plants and soil’\, and ‘Other than wood\, what bio-based resources are potential carbon storing building materials’\, to name a few. Earn 1.5 LU|HSW and 1.5hrs ZNCD MCE for attending live.								\n				\n				\n				\n							\n					\n						\n				\n				\n				\n							\n			\n									Additional Resources\n							\n			\n									Additional Resources\n					PDF Presentation | Small Firm Carbon Basics: Why It’s Important and How to Measure It
URL:https://events.aiacalifornia.org/event/aia-ca-climate-action-webinar-series-hvac-resilience-through-ieq-and-ee/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:Climate Action
ORGANIZER;CN="Sarah Vasquez":MAILTO:svasquez@aiacalifornia.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20211111T120000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20211111T130000
DTSTAMP:20260716T182935
CREATED:20211111T200057Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231212T074954Z
UID:10000169-1636632000-1636635600@events.aiacalifornia.org
SUMMARY:AIA CA and CA CACE Present How We House: Long Beach / South Bay
DESCRIPTION:When:Thursday September 22nd\, 202212pm – 1:30pm Units:1.5 LU/HSW (pending approval) Qualifies for Zero Net Carbon Design Mandatory Continuing Education. Certificate of completion will be provided to those who stay on and watch the webinar live. Moderator:Carmen Suero\, Associate AIA — Principal with GPCO Speaker:David Arkin\, AIA — Principal | Arkin Tilt Architects While reducing the operational carbon impacts of structures is important\, focus has turned to the impacts of material choices and construction itself – the embodied carbon of a building from extraction\, processing\, and assembly of materials. This is especially important in California given the relatively low carbon intensity of our grid-supplied electricity. An all-electric\, grid-harmonized building will have low operational carbon emissions in California because of our electric grid’s cleaner energy mix. Thus\, the need to shift focus toward embodied carbon. The AIA 2030 Commitment’s Design Data Exchange (DDx) added reporting of embodied carbon in 2021. In this session\, David Arkin outlines the basics of embodied carbon\, discusses materials that have low embodied carbon or store carbon\, and introduces a range of tools for measuring your project’s kilograms of CO2 emitted per meter squared. Examples of carbon storing materials and the range of tools available for measuring embodied carbon will be shared. The presentation will include challenges to answer questions regarding embodied carbon and climate impacts\, such as: ‘Name the earth’s five carbon sinks’\, ‘What process drives the sequestration of carbon in plants and soil’\, and ‘Other than wood\, what bio-based resources are potential carbon storing building materials’\, to name a few. Earn 1.5 LU|HSW and 1.5hrs ZNCD MCE for attending live.								\n				\n				\n				\n							\n					\n						\n				\n				\n				\n							\n			\n									Additional Resources\n							\n			\n									Additional Resources\n					PDF Presentation | Small Firm Carbon Basics: Why It’s Important and How to Measure It
URL:https://events.aiacalifornia.org/event/aia-ca-and-ca-cace-present-how-we-house-long-beach-south-bay/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:Housing
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://events.aiacalifornia.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/CACE-How-We-House-LRG-LONGBEACH-01.png
ORGANIZER;CN="Sarah Vasquez":MAILTO:svasquez@aiacalifornia.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20211111T120000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20211111T130000
DTSTAMP:20260716T182935
CREATED:20211111T200039Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231214T022410Z
UID:10000170-1636632000-1636635600@events.aiacalifornia.org
SUMMARY:CA CACE Fonteva Training
DESCRIPTION:When:Thursday September 22nd\, 202212pm – 1:30pm Units:1.5 LU/HSW (pending approval) Qualifies for Zero Net Carbon Design Mandatory Continuing Education. Certificate of completion will be provided to those who stay on and watch the webinar live. Moderator:Carmen Suero\, Associate AIA — Principal with GPCO Speaker:David Arkin\, AIA — Principal | Arkin Tilt Architects While reducing the operational carbon impacts of structures is important\, focus has turned to the impacts of material choices and construction itself – the embodied carbon of a building from extraction\, processing\, and assembly of materials. This is especially important in California given the relatively low carbon intensity of our grid-supplied electricity. An all-electric\, grid-harmonized building will have low operational carbon emissions in California because of our electric grid’s cleaner energy mix. Thus\, the need to shift focus toward embodied carbon. The AIA 2030 Commitment’s Design Data Exchange (DDx) added reporting of embodied carbon in 2021. In this session\, David Arkin outlines the basics of embodied carbon\, discusses materials that have low embodied carbon or store carbon\, and introduces a range of tools for measuring your project’s kilograms of CO2 emitted per meter squared. Examples of carbon storing materials and the range of tools available for measuring embodied carbon will be shared. The presentation will include challenges to answer questions regarding embodied carbon and climate impacts\, such as: ‘Name the earth’s five carbon sinks’\, ‘What process drives the sequestration of carbon in plants and soil’\, and ‘Other than wood\, what bio-based resources are potential carbon storing building materials’\, to name a few. Earn 1.5 LU|HSW and 1.5hrs ZNCD MCE for attending live.								\n				\n				\n				\n							\n					\n						\n				\n				\n				\n							\n			\n									Additional Resources\n							\n			\n									Additional Resources\n					PDF Presentation | Small Firm Carbon Basics: Why It’s Important and How to Measure It
URL:https://events.aiacalifornia.org/event/ca-cace-fonteva-training/
LOCATION:Virtual
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://events.aiacalifornia.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/08/General-AIACA-Event-graphic-1.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Sarah Vasquez":MAILTO:svasquez@aiacalifornia.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20211012T120000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20211012T130000
DTSTAMP:20260716T182935
CREATED:20211012T070008Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231212T081025Z
UID:10000210-1634040000-1634043600@events.aiacalifornia.org
SUMMARY:How We House: Central Valley
DESCRIPTION:When:Thursday September 22nd\, 202212pm – 1:30pm Units:1.5 LU/HSW (pending approval) Qualifies for Zero Net Carbon Design Mandatory Continuing Education. Certificate of completion will be provided to those who stay on and watch the webinar live. Moderator:Carmen Suero\, Associate AIA — Principal with GPCO Speaker:David Arkin\, AIA — Principal | Arkin Tilt Architects While reducing the operational carbon impacts of structures is important\, focus has turned to the impacts of material choices and construction itself – the embodied carbon of a building from extraction\, processing\, and assembly of materials. This is especially important in California given the relatively low carbon intensity of our grid-supplied electricity. An all-electric\, grid-harmonized building will have low operational carbon emissions in California because of our electric grid’s cleaner energy mix. Thus\, the need to shift focus toward embodied carbon. The AIA 2030 Commitment’s Design Data Exchange (DDx) added reporting of embodied carbon in 2021. In this session\, David Arkin outlines the basics of embodied carbon\, discusses materials that have low embodied carbon or store carbon\, and introduces a range of tools for measuring your project’s kilograms of CO2 emitted per meter squared. Examples of carbon storing materials and the range of tools available for measuring embodied carbon will be shared. The presentation will include challenges to answer questions regarding embodied carbon and climate impacts\, such as: ‘Name the earth’s five carbon sinks’\, ‘What process drives the sequestration of carbon in plants and soil’\, and ‘Other than wood\, what bio-based resources are potential carbon storing building materials’\, to name a few. Earn 1.5 LU|HSW and 1.5hrs ZNCD MCE for attending live.								\n				\n				\n				\n							\n					\n						\n				\n				\n				\n							\n			\n									Additional Resources\n							\n			\n									Additional Resources\n					PDF Presentation | Small Firm Carbon Basics: Why It’s Important and How to Measure It
URL:https://events.aiacalifornia.org/event/how-we-house-central-valley/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:Housing
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://events.aiacalifornia.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/CACE-How-We-House-LRG-CENTRAL-VALLEY-01.png
ORGANIZER;CN="Sarah Vasquez":MAILTO:svasquez@aiacalifornia.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20211004T120000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20211004T130000
DTSTAMP:20260716T182935
CREATED:20211012T070902Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231212T080929Z
UID:10000211-1633348800-1633352400@events.aiacalifornia.org
SUMMARY:How We House: Redwood Empire
DESCRIPTION:When:Thursday September 22nd\, 202212pm – 1:30pm Units:1.5 LU/HSW (pending approval) Qualifies for Zero Net Carbon Design Mandatory Continuing Education. Certificate of completion will be provided to those who stay on and watch the webinar live. Moderator:Carmen Suero\, Associate AIA — Principal with GPCO Speaker:David Arkin\, AIA — Principal | Arkin Tilt Architects While reducing the operational carbon impacts of structures is important\, focus has turned to the impacts of material choices and construction itself – the embodied carbon of a building from extraction\, processing\, and assembly of materials. This is especially important in California given the relatively low carbon intensity of our grid-supplied electricity. An all-electric\, grid-harmonized building will have low operational carbon emissions in California because of our electric grid’s cleaner energy mix. Thus\, the need to shift focus toward embodied carbon. The AIA 2030 Commitment’s Design Data Exchange (DDx) added reporting of embodied carbon in 2021. In this session\, David Arkin outlines the basics of embodied carbon\, discusses materials that have low embodied carbon or store carbon\, and introduces a range of tools for measuring your project’s kilograms of CO2 emitted per meter squared. Examples of carbon storing materials and the range of tools available for measuring embodied carbon will be shared. The presentation will include challenges to answer questions regarding embodied carbon and climate impacts\, such as: ‘Name the earth’s five carbon sinks’\, ‘What process drives the sequestration of carbon in plants and soil’\, and ‘Other than wood\, what bio-based resources are potential carbon storing building materials’\, to name a few. Earn 1.5 LU|HSW and 1.5hrs ZNCD MCE for attending live.								\n				\n				\n				\n							\n					\n						\n				\n				\n				\n							\n			\n									Additional Resources\n							\n			\n									Additional Resources\n					PDF Presentation | Small Firm Carbon Basics: Why It’s Important and How to Measure It
URL:https://events.aiacalifornia.org/event/how-we-house-redwood-empire/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:Housing
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://events.aiacalifornia.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/12/CACE-How-We-House-LRG-REDWOOD-EMPIRE-01.png
ORGANIZER;CN="Sarah Vasquez":MAILTO:svasquez@aiacalifornia.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20210915T120000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20210915T130000
DTSTAMP:20260716T182935
CREATED:20210915T190019Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231209T153740Z
UID:10000168-1631707200-1631710800@events.aiacalifornia.org
SUMMARY:2021 Healthcare Facilities Forum: Evolving Technologies in Healthcare Treatment and Delivery
DESCRIPTION:When:Thursday September 22nd\, 202212pm – 1:30pm Units:1.5 LU/HSW (pending approval) Qualifies for Zero Net Carbon Design Mandatory Continuing Education. Certificate of completion will be provided to those who stay on and watch the webinar live. Moderator:Carmen Suero\, Associate AIA — Principal with GPCO Speaker:David Arkin\, AIA — Principal | Arkin Tilt Architects While reducing the operational carbon impacts of structures is important\, focus has turned to the impacts of material choices and construction itself – the embodied carbon of a building from extraction\, processing\, and assembly of materials. This is especially important in California given the relatively low carbon intensity of our grid-supplied electricity. An all-electric\, grid-harmonized building will have low operational carbon emissions in California because of our electric grid’s cleaner energy mix. Thus\, the need to shift focus toward embodied carbon. The AIA 2030 Commitment’s Design Data Exchange (DDx) added reporting of embodied carbon in 2021. In this session\, David Arkin outlines the basics of embodied carbon\, discusses materials that have low embodied carbon or store carbon\, and introduces a range of tools for measuring your project’s kilograms of CO2 emitted per meter squared. Examples of carbon storing materials and the range of tools available for measuring embodied carbon will be shared. The presentation will include challenges to answer questions regarding embodied carbon and climate impacts\, such as: ‘Name the earth’s five carbon sinks’\, ‘What process drives the sequestration of carbon in plants and soil’\, and ‘Other than wood\, what bio-based resources are potential carbon storing building materials’\, to name a few. Earn 1.5 LU|HSW and 1.5hrs ZNCD MCE for attending live.								\n				\n				\n				\n							\n					\n						\n				\n				\n				\n							\n			\n									Additional Resources\n							\n			\n									Additional Resources\n					PDF Presentation | Small Firm Carbon Basics: Why It’s Important and How to Measure It
URL:https://events.aiacalifornia.org/event/2021-healthcare-facilities-forum-evolving-technologies-in-healthcare-treatment-and-delivery/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:HFF
ORGANIZER;CN="Sarah Vasquez":MAILTO:svasquez@aiacalifornia.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20210914T120000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20210914T130000
DTSTAMP:20260716T182935
CREATED:20210914T190027Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231209T153542Z
UID:10000167-1631620800-1631624400@events.aiacalifornia.org
SUMMARY:2021 Healthcare Facilities Forum: Business Care - Model Transformation : DPR Construction
DESCRIPTION:When:Thursday September 22nd\, 202212pm – 1:30pm Units:1.5 LU/HSW (pending approval) Qualifies for Zero Net Carbon Design Mandatory Continuing Education. Certificate of completion will be provided to those who stay on and watch the webinar live. Moderator:Carmen Suero\, Associate AIA — Principal with GPCO Speaker:David Arkin\, AIA — Principal | Arkin Tilt Architects While reducing the operational carbon impacts of structures is important\, focus has turned to the impacts of material choices and construction itself – the embodied carbon of a building from extraction\, processing\, and assembly of materials. This is especially important in California given the relatively low carbon intensity of our grid-supplied electricity. An all-electric\, grid-harmonized building will have low operational carbon emissions in California because of our electric grid’s cleaner energy mix. Thus\, the need to shift focus toward embodied carbon. The AIA 2030 Commitment’s Design Data Exchange (DDx) added reporting of embodied carbon in 2021. In this session\, David Arkin outlines the basics of embodied carbon\, discusses materials that have low embodied carbon or store carbon\, and introduces a range of tools for measuring your project’s kilograms of CO2 emitted per meter squared. Examples of carbon storing materials and the range of tools available for measuring embodied carbon will be shared. The presentation will include challenges to answer questions regarding embodied carbon and climate impacts\, such as: ‘Name the earth’s five carbon sinks’\, ‘What process drives the sequestration of carbon in plants and soil’\, and ‘Other than wood\, what bio-based resources are potential carbon storing building materials’\, to name a few. Earn 1.5 LU|HSW and 1.5hrs ZNCD MCE for attending live.								\n				\n				\n				\n							\n					\n						\n				\n				\n				\n							\n			\n									Additional Resources\n							\n			\n									Additional Resources\n					PDF Presentation | Small Firm Carbon Basics: Why It’s Important and How to Measure It
URL:https://events.aiacalifornia.org/event/2021-healthcare-facilities-forum-business-care-model-transformation-dpr-construction/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:HFF
ORGANIZER;CN="Sarah Vasquez":MAILTO:svasquez@aiacalifornia.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20210910T120000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20210910T130000
DTSTAMP:20260716T182935
CREATED:20210910T190047Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231209T153415Z
UID:10000166-1631275200-1631278800@events.aiacalifornia.org
SUMMARY:2021 Healthcare Facilities Forum Day 1: Owner Insights- Planning Strategies | Don Orndoff
DESCRIPTION:When:Thursday September 22nd\, 202212pm – 1:30pm Units:1.5 LU/HSW (pending approval) Qualifies for Zero Net Carbon Design Mandatory Continuing Education. Certificate of completion will be provided to those who stay on and watch the webinar live. Moderator:Carmen Suero\, Associate AIA — Principal with GPCO Speaker:David Arkin\, AIA — Principal | Arkin Tilt Architects While reducing the operational carbon impacts of structures is important\, focus has turned to the impacts of material choices and construction itself – the embodied carbon of a building from extraction\, processing\, and assembly of materials. This is especially important in California given the relatively low carbon intensity of our grid-supplied electricity. An all-electric\, grid-harmonized building will have low operational carbon emissions in California because of our electric grid’s cleaner energy mix. Thus\, the need to shift focus toward embodied carbon. The AIA 2030 Commitment’s Design Data Exchange (DDx) added reporting of embodied carbon in 2021. In this session\, David Arkin outlines the basics of embodied carbon\, discusses materials that have low embodied carbon or store carbon\, and introduces a range of tools for measuring your project’s kilograms of CO2 emitted per meter squared. Examples of carbon storing materials and the range of tools available for measuring embodied carbon will be shared. The presentation will include challenges to answer questions regarding embodied carbon and climate impacts\, such as: ‘Name the earth’s five carbon sinks’\, ‘What process drives the sequestration of carbon in plants and soil’\, and ‘Other than wood\, what bio-based resources are potential carbon storing building materials’\, to name a few. Earn 1.5 LU|HSW and 1.5hrs ZNCD MCE for attending live.								\n				\n				\n				\n							\n					\n						\n				\n				\n				\n							\n			\n									Additional Resources\n							\n			\n									Additional Resources\n					PDF Presentation | Small Firm Carbon Basics: Why It’s Important and How to Measure It
URL:https://events.aiacalifornia.org/event/2021-healthcare-facilities-forum-day-1-owner-insights-planning-strategies-don-orndoff/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:HFF
ORGANIZER;CN="Sarah Vasquez":MAILTO:svasquez@aiacalifornia.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20210910T120000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20210910T130000
DTSTAMP:20260716T182935
CREATED:20210910T190025Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231209T151759Z
UID:10000165-1631275200-1631278800@events.aiacalifornia.org
SUMMARY:2021 Healthcare Facilities Forum Day 1: How to Plan For and Pay For Future Improvements
DESCRIPTION:When:Thursday September 22nd\, 202212pm – 1:30pm Units:1.5 LU/HSW (pending approval) Qualifies for Zero Net Carbon Design Mandatory Continuing Education. Certificate of completion will be provided to those who stay on and watch the webinar live. Moderator:Carmen Suero\, Associate AIA — Principal with GPCO Speaker:David Arkin\, AIA — Principal | Arkin Tilt Architects While reducing the operational carbon impacts of structures is important\, focus has turned to the impacts of material choices and construction itself – the embodied carbon of a building from extraction\, processing\, and assembly of materials. This is especially important in California given the relatively low carbon intensity of our grid-supplied electricity. An all-electric\, grid-harmonized building will have low operational carbon emissions in California because of our electric grid’s cleaner energy mix. Thus\, the need to shift focus toward embodied carbon. The AIA 2030 Commitment’s Design Data Exchange (DDx) added reporting of embodied carbon in 2021. In this session\, David Arkin outlines the basics of embodied carbon\, discusses materials that have low embodied carbon or store carbon\, and introduces a range of tools for measuring your project’s kilograms of CO2 emitted per meter squared. Examples of carbon storing materials and the range of tools available for measuring embodied carbon will be shared. The presentation will include challenges to answer questions regarding embodied carbon and climate impacts\, such as: ‘Name the earth’s five carbon sinks’\, ‘What process drives the sequestration of carbon in plants and soil’\, and ‘Other than wood\, what bio-based resources are potential carbon storing building materials’\, to name a few. Earn 1.5 LU|HSW and 1.5hrs ZNCD MCE for attending live.								\n				\n				\n				\n							\n					\n						\n				\n				\n				\n							\n			\n									Additional Resources\n							\n			\n									Additional Resources\n					PDF Presentation | Small Firm Carbon Basics: Why It’s Important and How to Measure It
URL:https://events.aiacalifornia.org/event/2021-healthcare-facilities-forum-day-1-how-to-plan-for-and-pay-for-future-improvements/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:HFF
ORGANIZER;CN="Sarah Vasquez":MAILTO:svasquez@aiacalifornia.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20210910T120000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20210910T130000
DTSTAMP:20260716T182935
CREATED:20210910T190001Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231209T151559Z
UID:10000164-1631275200-1631278800@events.aiacalifornia.org
SUMMARY:2021 Healthcare Facilities Forum Day 1: Opening Keynote- 2022 Outlook | Mark Gamble
DESCRIPTION:When:Thursday September 22nd\, 202212pm – 1:30pm Units:1.5 LU/HSW (pending approval) Qualifies for Zero Net Carbon Design Mandatory Continuing Education. Certificate of completion will be provided to those who stay on and watch the webinar live. Moderator:Carmen Suero\, Associate AIA — Principal with GPCO Speaker:David Arkin\, AIA — Principal | Arkin Tilt Architects While reducing the operational carbon impacts of structures is important\, focus has turned to the impacts of material choices and construction itself – the embodied carbon of a building from extraction\, processing\, and assembly of materials. This is especially important in California given the relatively low carbon intensity of our grid-supplied electricity. An all-electric\, grid-harmonized building will have low operational carbon emissions in California because of our electric grid’s cleaner energy mix. Thus\, the need to shift focus toward embodied carbon. The AIA 2030 Commitment’s Design Data Exchange (DDx) added reporting of embodied carbon in 2021. In this session\, David Arkin outlines the basics of embodied carbon\, discusses materials that have low embodied carbon or store carbon\, and introduces a range of tools for measuring your project’s kilograms of CO2 emitted per meter squared. Examples of carbon storing materials and the range of tools available for measuring embodied carbon will be shared. The presentation will include challenges to answer questions regarding embodied carbon and climate impacts\, such as: ‘Name the earth’s five carbon sinks’\, ‘What process drives the sequestration of carbon in plants and soil’\, and ‘Other than wood\, what bio-based resources are potential carbon storing building materials’\, to name a few. Earn 1.5 LU|HSW and 1.5hrs ZNCD MCE for attending live.								\n				\n				\n				\n							\n					\n						\n				\n				\n				\n							\n			\n									Additional Resources\n							\n			\n									Additional Resources\n					PDF Presentation | Small Firm Carbon Basics: Why It’s Important and How to Measure It
URL:https://events.aiacalifornia.org/event/2021-healthcare-facilities-forum-day-1-opening-keynote-2022-outlook-mark-gamble/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:HFF
ORGANIZER;CN="Sarah Vasquez":MAILTO:svasquez@aiacalifornia.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20210909T120000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20210909T130000
DTSTAMP:20260716T182935
CREATED:20210910T013832Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231201T023943Z
UID:10000131-1631188800-1631192400@events.aiacalifornia.org
SUMMARY:2021 Healthcare Facilities Forum Day 1: California”™s Emergency Design Guide | Richard Tannahill
DESCRIPTION:When:Thursday September 22nd\, 202212pm – 1:30pm Units:1.5 LU/HSW (pending approval) Qualifies for Zero Net Carbon Design Mandatory Continuing Education. Certificate of completion will be provided to those who stay on and watch the webinar live. Moderator:Carmen Suero\, Associate AIA — Principal with GPCO Speaker:David Arkin\, AIA — Principal | Arkin Tilt Architects While reducing the operational carbon impacts of structures is important\, focus has turned to the impacts of material choices and construction itself – the embodied carbon of a building from extraction\, processing\, and assembly of materials. This is especially important in California given the relatively low carbon intensity of our grid-supplied electricity. An all-electric\, grid-harmonized building will have low operational carbon emissions in California because of our electric grid’s cleaner energy mix. Thus\, the need to shift focus toward embodied carbon. The AIA 2030 Commitment’s Design Data Exchange (DDx) added reporting of embodied carbon in 2021. In this session\, David Arkin outlines the basics of embodied carbon\, discusses materials that have low embodied carbon or store carbon\, and introduces a range of tools for measuring your project’s kilograms of CO2 emitted per meter squared. Examples of carbon storing materials and the range of tools available for measuring embodied carbon will be shared. The presentation will include challenges to answer questions regarding embodied carbon and climate impacts\, such as: ‘Name the earth’s five carbon sinks’\, ‘What process drives the sequestration of carbon in plants and soil’\, and ‘Other than wood\, what bio-based resources are potential carbon storing building materials’\, to name a few. Earn 1.5 LU|HSW and 1.5hrs ZNCD MCE for attending live.								\n				\n				\n				\n							\n					\n						\n				\n				\n				\n							\n			\n									Additional Resources\n							\n			\n									Additional Resources\n					PDF Presentation | Small Firm Carbon Basics: Why It’s Important and How to Measure It
URL:https://events.aiacalifornia.org/event/2021-healthcare-facilities-forum-day-1-californias-emergency-design-guide-richard-tannahill/
LOCATION:Virtual
ORGANIZER;CN="Sarah Vasquez":MAILTO:svasquez@aiacalifornia.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20210901T120000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20210901T130000
DTSTAMP:20260716T182935
CREATED:20210901T190034Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231209T150603Z
UID:10000163-1630497600-1630501200@events.aiacalifornia.org
SUMMARY:AIA CA Climate Action Webinar Series | Wood Buildings: Innovative Products\, Carbon and Forestry
DESCRIPTION:When:Thursday September 22nd\, 202212pm – 1:30pm Units:1.5 LU/HSW (pending approval) Qualifies for Zero Net Carbon Design Mandatory Continuing Education. Certificate of completion will be provided to those who stay on and watch the webinar live. Moderator:Carmen Suero\, Associate AIA — Principal with GPCO Speaker:David Arkin\, AIA — Principal | Arkin Tilt Architects While reducing the operational carbon impacts of structures is important\, focus has turned to the impacts of material choices and construction itself – the embodied carbon of a building from extraction\, processing\, and assembly of materials. This is especially important in California given the relatively low carbon intensity of our grid-supplied electricity. An all-electric\, grid-harmonized building will have low operational carbon emissions in California because of our electric grid’s cleaner energy mix. Thus\, the need to shift focus toward embodied carbon. The AIA 2030 Commitment’s Design Data Exchange (DDx) added reporting of embodied carbon in 2021. In this session\, David Arkin outlines the basics of embodied carbon\, discusses materials that have low embodied carbon or store carbon\, and introduces a range of tools for measuring your project’s kilograms of CO2 emitted per meter squared. Examples of carbon storing materials and the range of tools available for measuring embodied carbon will be shared. The presentation will include challenges to answer questions regarding embodied carbon and climate impacts\, such as: ‘Name the earth’s five carbon sinks’\, ‘What process drives the sequestration of carbon in plants and soil’\, and ‘Other than wood\, what bio-based resources are potential carbon storing building materials’\, to name a few. Earn 1.5 LU|HSW and 1.5hrs ZNCD MCE for attending live.								\n				\n				\n				\n							\n					\n						\n				\n				\n				\n							\n			\n									Additional Resources\n							\n			\n									Additional Resources\n					PDF Presentation | Small Firm Carbon Basics: Why It’s Important and How to Measure It
URL:https://events.aiacalifornia.org/event/aia-ca-climate-action-webinar-series-wood-buildings-innovative-products-carbon-and-forestry/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:Climate Action
ORGANIZER;CN="Sarah Vasquez":MAILTO:svasquez@aiacalifornia.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20210831T120000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20210831T130000
DTSTAMP:20260716T182935
CREATED:20210901T010707Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231214T022332Z
UID:10000129-1630411200-1630414800@events.aiacalifornia.org
SUMMARY:AIA CA CACE Meeting: Fonteva Questions w/ Mike Skiadas
DESCRIPTION:When:Thursday September 22nd\, 202212pm – 1:30pm Units:1.5 LU/HSW (pending approval) Qualifies for Zero Net Carbon Design Mandatory Continuing Education. Certificate of completion will be provided to those who stay on and watch the webinar live. Moderator:Carmen Suero\, Associate AIA — Principal with GPCO Speaker:David Arkin\, AIA — Principal | Arkin Tilt Architects While reducing the operational carbon impacts of structures is important\, focus has turned to the impacts of material choices and construction itself – the embodied carbon of a building from extraction\, processing\, and assembly of materials. This is especially important in California given the relatively low carbon intensity of our grid-supplied electricity. An all-electric\, grid-harmonized building will have low operational carbon emissions in California because of our electric grid’s cleaner energy mix. Thus\, the need to shift focus toward embodied carbon. The AIA 2030 Commitment’s Design Data Exchange (DDx) added reporting of embodied carbon in 2021. In this session\, David Arkin outlines the basics of embodied carbon\, discusses materials that have low embodied carbon or store carbon\, and introduces a range of tools for measuring your project’s kilograms of CO2 emitted per meter squared. Examples of carbon storing materials and the range of tools available for measuring embodied carbon will be shared. The presentation will include challenges to answer questions regarding embodied carbon and climate impacts\, such as: ‘Name the earth’s five carbon sinks’\, ‘What process drives the sequestration of carbon in plants and soil’\, and ‘Other than wood\, what bio-based resources are potential carbon storing building materials’\, to name a few. Earn 1.5 LU|HSW and 1.5hrs ZNCD MCE for attending live.								\n				\n				\n				\n							\n					\n						\n				\n				\n				\n							\n			\n									Additional Resources\n							\n			\n									Additional Resources\n					PDF Presentation | Small Firm Carbon Basics: Why It’s Important and How to Measure It
URL:https://events.aiacalifornia.org/event/aia-ca-cace-meeting-fonteva-questions-w-mike-skiadas/
LOCATION:Virtual
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://events.aiacalifornia.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/08/General-AIACA-Event-graphic-1.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Nicki Dennis Stephens":MAILTO:ndennis@aiacalifornia.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20210819T120000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20210819T130000
DTSTAMP:20260716T182935
CREATED:20210819T190026Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231209T150417Z
UID:10000162-1629374400-1629378000@events.aiacalifornia.org
SUMMARY:AIA CA presents AIA Minnesota: Culture Change Initiative
DESCRIPTION:When:Thursday September 22nd\, 202212pm – 1:30pm Units:1.5 LU/HSW (pending approval) Qualifies for Zero Net Carbon Design Mandatory Continuing Education. Certificate of completion will be provided to those who stay on and watch the webinar live. Moderator:Carmen Suero\, Associate AIA — Principal with GPCO Speaker:David Arkin\, AIA — Principal | Arkin Tilt Architects While reducing the operational carbon impacts of structures is important\, focus has turned to the impacts of material choices and construction itself – the embodied carbon of a building from extraction\, processing\, and assembly of materials. This is especially important in California given the relatively low carbon intensity of our grid-supplied electricity. An all-electric\, grid-harmonized building will have low operational carbon emissions in California because of our electric grid’s cleaner energy mix. Thus\, the need to shift focus toward embodied carbon. The AIA 2030 Commitment’s Design Data Exchange (DDx) added reporting of embodied carbon in 2021. In this session\, David Arkin outlines the basics of embodied carbon\, discusses materials that have low embodied carbon or store carbon\, and introduces a range of tools for measuring your project’s kilograms of CO2 emitted per meter squared. Examples of carbon storing materials and the range of tools available for measuring embodied carbon will be shared. The presentation will include challenges to answer questions regarding embodied carbon and climate impacts\, such as: ‘Name the earth’s five carbon sinks’\, ‘What process drives the sequestration of carbon in plants and soil’\, and ‘Other than wood\, what bio-based resources are potential carbon storing building materials’\, to name a few. Earn 1.5 LU|HSW and 1.5hrs ZNCD MCE for attending live.								\n				\n				\n				\n							\n					\n						\n				\n				\n				\n							\n			\n									Additional Resources\n							\n			\n									Additional Resources\n					PDF Presentation | Small Firm Carbon Basics: Why It’s Important and How to Measure It
URL:https://events.aiacalifornia.org/event/aia-ca-presents-aia-minnesota-culture-change-initiative/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:Practice
ORGANIZER;CN="Sarah Vasquez":MAILTO:svasquez@aiacalifornia.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20210818T120000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20210818T130000
DTSTAMP:20260716T182935
CREATED:20210818T190049Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231209T150209Z
UID:10000161-1629288000-1629291600@events.aiacalifornia.org
SUMMARY:AIA CA Climate Action Webinar Series | Positive Water & the Kendeda Living Building
DESCRIPTION:When:Thursday September 22nd\, 202212pm – 1:30pm Units:1.5 LU/HSW (pending approval) Qualifies for Zero Net Carbon Design Mandatory Continuing Education. Certificate of completion will be provided to those who stay on and watch the webinar live. Moderator:Carmen Suero\, Associate AIA — Principal with GPCO Speaker:David Arkin\, AIA — Principal | Arkin Tilt Architects While reducing the operational carbon impacts of structures is important\, focus has turned to the impacts of material choices and construction itself – the embodied carbon of a building from extraction\, processing\, and assembly of materials. This is especially important in California given the relatively low carbon intensity of our grid-supplied electricity. An all-electric\, grid-harmonized building will have low operational carbon emissions in California because of our electric grid’s cleaner energy mix. Thus\, the need to shift focus toward embodied carbon. The AIA 2030 Commitment’s Design Data Exchange (DDx) added reporting of embodied carbon in 2021. In this session\, David Arkin outlines the basics of embodied carbon\, discusses materials that have low embodied carbon or store carbon\, and introduces a range of tools for measuring your project’s kilograms of CO2 emitted per meter squared. Examples of carbon storing materials and the range of tools available for measuring embodied carbon will be shared. The presentation will include challenges to answer questions regarding embodied carbon and climate impacts\, such as: ‘Name the earth’s five carbon sinks’\, ‘What process drives the sequestration of carbon in plants and soil’\, and ‘Other than wood\, what bio-based resources are potential carbon storing building materials’\, to name a few. Earn 1.5 LU|HSW and 1.5hrs ZNCD MCE for attending live.								\n				\n				\n				\n							\n					\n						\n				\n				\n				\n							\n			\n									Additional Resources\n							\n			\n									Additional Resources\n					PDF Presentation | Small Firm Carbon Basics: Why It’s Important and How to Measure It
URL:https://events.aiacalifornia.org/event/aia-ca-climate-action-webinar-series-positive-water-the-kendeda-living-building/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:Climate Action
ORGANIZER;CN="Sarah Vasquez":MAILTO:svasquez@aiacalifornia.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20210818T120000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20210818T130000
DTSTAMP:20260716T182935
CREATED:20210818T190029Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231214T010929Z
UID:10000160-1629288000-1629291600@events.aiacalifornia.org
SUMMARY:AIA CA COTE Roundtable: Reducing Embodied Carbon
DESCRIPTION:When:Thursday September 22nd\, 202212pm – 1:30pm Units:1.5 LU/HSW (pending approval) Qualifies for Zero Net Carbon Design Mandatory Continuing Education. Certificate of completion will be provided to those who stay on and watch the webinar live. Moderator:Carmen Suero\, Associate AIA — Principal with GPCO Speaker:David Arkin\, AIA — Principal | Arkin Tilt Architects While reducing the operational carbon impacts of structures is important\, focus has turned to the impacts of material choices and construction itself – the embodied carbon of a building from extraction\, processing\, and assembly of materials. This is especially important in California given the relatively low carbon intensity of our grid-supplied electricity. An all-electric\, grid-harmonized building will have low operational carbon emissions in California because of our electric grid’s cleaner energy mix. Thus\, the need to shift focus toward embodied carbon. The AIA 2030 Commitment’s Design Data Exchange (DDx) added reporting of embodied carbon in 2021. In this session\, David Arkin outlines the basics of embodied carbon\, discusses materials that have low embodied carbon or store carbon\, and introduces a range of tools for measuring your project’s kilograms of CO2 emitted per meter squared. Examples of carbon storing materials and the range of tools available for measuring embodied carbon will be shared. The presentation will include challenges to answer questions regarding embodied carbon and climate impacts\, such as: ‘Name the earth’s five carbon sinks’\, ‘What process drives the sequestration of carbon in plants and soil’\, and ‘Other than wood\, what bio-based resources are potential carbon storing building materials’\, to name a few. Earn 1.5 LU|HSW and 1.5hrs ZNCD MCE for attending live.								\n				\n				\n				\n							\n					\n						\n				\n				\n				\n							\n			\n									Additional Resources\n							\n			\n									Additional Resources\n					PDF Presentation | Small Firm Carbon Basics: Why It’s Important and How to Measure It
URL:https://events.aiacalifornia.org/event/aia-ca-cote-roundtable-reducing-embodied-carbon/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:Climate Action,COTE
ORGANIZER;CN="Sarah Vasquez":MAILTO:svasquez@aiacalifornia.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20210803T120000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20210803T130000
DTSTAMP:20260716T182935
CREATED:20210803T190043Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231212T075101Z
UID:10000159-1627992000-1627995600@events.aiacalifornia.org
SUMMARY:AIA CA and CA CACE Present How We House: Orange County
DESCRIPTION:When:Thursday September 22nd\, 202212pm – 1:30pm Units:1.5 LU/HSW (pending approval) Qualifies for Zero Net Carbon Design Mandatory Continuing Education. Certificate of completion will be provided to those who stay on and watch the webinar live. Moderator:Carmen Suero\, Associate AIA — Principal with GPCO Speaker:David Arkin\, AIA — Principal | Arkin Tilt Architects While reducing the operational carbon impacts of structures is important\, focus has turned to the impacts of material choices and construction itself – the embodied carbon of a building from extraction\, processing\, and assembly of materials. This is especially important in California given the relatively low carbon intensity of our grid-supplied electricity. An all-electric\, grid-harmonized building will have low operational carbon emissions in California because of our electric grid’s cleaner energy mix. Thus\, the need to shift focus toward embodied carbon. The AIA 2030 Commitment’s Design Data Exchange (DDx) added reporting of embodied carbon in 2021. In this session\, David Arkin outlines the basics of embodied carbon\, discusses materials that have low embodied carbon or store carbon\, and introduces a range of tools for measuring your project’s kilograms of CO2 emitted per meter squared. Examples of carbon storing materials and the range of tools available for measuring embodied carbon will be shared. The presentation will include challenges to answer questions regarding embodied carbon and climate impacts\, such as: ‘Name the earth’s five carbon sinks’\, ‘What process drives the sequestration of carbon in plants and soil’\, and ‘Other than wood\, what bio-based resources are potential carbon storing building materials’\, to name a few. Earn 1.5 LU|HSW and 1.5hrs ZNCD MCE for attending live.								\n				\n				\n				\n							\n					\n						\n				\n				\n				\n							\n			\n									Additional Resources\n							\n			\n									Additional Resources\n					PDF Presentation | Small Firm Carbon Basics: Why It’s Important and How to Measure It
URL:https://events.aiacalifornia.org/event/aia-ca-and-ca-cace-present-how-we-house-orange-county/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:Housing
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://events.aiacalifornia.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/08/CACE-How-We-House-LRG-ORANGE-COUNTY-01.png
ORGANIZER;CN="Sarah Vasquez":MAILTO:svasquez@aiacalifornia.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20210802T120000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20230802T130000
DTSTAMP:20260716T182935
CREATED:20210802T190057Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231209T145209Z
UID:10000158-1627905600-1690981200@events.aiacalifornia.org
SUMMARY:AIA CA Climate Action Webinar Series | Storm Water as a Site Design Element
DESCRIPTION:When:Thursday September 22nd\, 202212pm – 1:30pm Units:1.5 LU/HSW (pending approval) Qualifies for Zero Net Carbon Design Mandatory Continuing Education. Certificate of completion will be provided to those who stay on and watch the webinar live. Moderator:Carmen Suero\, Associate AIA — Principal with GPCO Speaker:David Arkin\, AIA — Principal | Arkin Tilt Architects While reducing the operational carbon impacts of structures is important\, focus has turned to the impacts of material choices and construction itself – the embodied carbon of a building from extraction\, processing\, and assembly of materials. This is especially important in California given the relatively low carbon intensity of our grid-supplied electricity. An all-electric\, grid-harmonized building will have low operational carbon emissions in California because of our electric grid’s cleaner energy mix. Thus\, the need to shift focus toward embodied carbon. The AIA 2030 Commitment’s Design Data Exchange (DDx) added reporting of embodied carbon in 2021. In this session\, David Arkin outlines the basics of embodied carbon\, discusses materials that have low embodied carbon or store carbon\, and introduces a range of tools for measuring your project’s kilograms of CO2 emitted per meter squared. Examples of carbon storing materials and the range of tools available for measuring embodied carbon will be shared. The presentation will include challenges to answer questions regarding embodied carbon and climate impacts\, such as: ‘Name the earth’s five carbon sinks’\, ‘What process drives the sequestration of carbon in plants and soil’\, and ‘Other than wood\, what bio-based resources are potential carbon storing building materials’\, to name a few. Earn 1.5 LU|HSW and 1.5hrs ZNCD MCE for attending live.								\n				\n				\n				\n							\n					\n						\n				\n				\n				\n							\n			\n									Additional Resources\n							\n			\n									Additional Resources\n					PDF Presentation | Small Firm Carbon Basics: Why It’s Important and How to Measure It
URL:https://events.aiacalifornia.org/event/aia-ca-climate-action-webinar-series-storm-water-as-a-site-design-element/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:Climate Action
ORGANIZER;CN="Sarah Vasquez":MAILTO:svasquez@aiacalifornia.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20210227T120000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20210227T130000
DTSTAMP:20260716T182935
CREATED:20210228T015916Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231201T024157Z
UID:10000128-1614427200-1614430800@events.aiacalifornia.org
SUMMARY:2021 Tour d'Architecture Sacramento
DESCRIPTION:When:Thursday September 22nd\, 202212pm – 1:30pm Units:1.5 LU/HSW (pending approval) Qualifies for Zero Net Carbon Design Mandatory Continuing Education. Certificate of completion will be provided to those who stay on and watch the webinar live. Moderator:Carmen Suero\, Associate AIA — Principal with GPCO Speaker:David Arkin\, AIA — Principal | Arkin Tilt Architects While reducing the operational carbon impacts of structures is important\, focus has turned to the impacts of material choices and construction itself – the embodied carbon of a building from extraction\, processing\, and assembly of materials. This is especially important in California given the relatively low carbon intensity of our grid-supplied electricity. An all-electric\, grid-harmonized building will have low operational carbon emissions in California because of our electric grid’s cleaner energy mix. Thus\, the need to shift focus toward embodied carbon. The AIA 2030 Commitment’s Design Data Exchange (DDx) added reporting of embodied carbon in 2021. In this session\, David Arkin outlines the basics of embodied carbon\, discusses materials that have low embodied carbon or store carbon\, and introduces a range of tools for measuring your project’s kilograms of CO2 emitted per meter squared. Examples of carbon storing materials and the range of tools available for measuring embodied carbon will be shared. The presentation will include challenges to answer questions regarding embodied carbon and climate impacts\, such as: ‘Name the earth’s five carbon sinks’\, ‘What process drives the sequestration of carbon in plants and soil’\, and ‘Other than wood\, what bio-based resources are potential carbon storing building materials’\, to name a few. Earn 1.5 LU|HSW and 1.5hrs ZNCD MCE for attending live.								\n				\n				\n				\n							\n					\n						\n				\n				\n				\n							\n			\n									Additional Resources\n							\n			\n									Additional Resources\n					PDF Presentation | Small Firm Carbon Basics: Why It’s Important and How to Measure It
URL:https://events.aiacalifornia.org/event/2021-tour-darchitecture-sacramento/
LOCATION:Virtual
ORGANIZER;CN="Nicki Dennis Stephens":MAILTO:ndennis@aiacalifornia.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20210224T120000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20210224T130000
DTSTAMP:20260716T182935
CREATED:20210225T022405Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231214T010748Z
UID:10000130-1614168000-1614171600@events.aiacalifornia.org
SUMMARY:AIA CA Committee on the Environment: Local Advocacy Tips and Tricks
DESCRIPTION:When:Thursday September 22nd\, 202212pm – 1:30pm Units:1.5 LU/HSW (pending approval) Qualifies for Zero Net Carbon Design Mandatory Continuing Education. Certificate of completion will be provided to those who stay on and watch the webinar live. Moderator:Carmen Suero\, Associate AIA — Principal with GPCO Speaker:David Arkin\, AIA — Principal | Arkin Tilt Architects While reducing the operational carbon impacts of structures is important\, focus has turned to the impacts of material choices and construction itself – the embodied carbon of a building from extraction\, processing\, and assembly of materials. This is especially important in California given the relatively low carbon intensity of our grid-supplied electricity. An all-electric\, grid-harmonized building will have low operational carbon emissions in California because of our electric grid’s cleaner energy mix. Thus\, the need to shift focus toward embodied carbon. The AIA 2030 Commitment’s Design Data Exchange (DDx) added reporting of embodied carbon in 2021. In this session\, David Arkin outlines the basics of embodied carbon\, discusses materials that have low embodied carbon or store carbon\, and introduces a range of tools for measuring your project’s kilograms of CO2 emitted per meter squared. Examples of carbon storing materials and the range of tools available for measuring embodied carbon will be shared. The presentation will include challenges to answer questions regarding embodied carbon and climate impacts\, such as: ‘Name the earth’s five carbon sinks’\, ‘What process drives the sequestration of carbon in plants and soil’\, and ‘Other than wood\, what bio-based resources are potential carbon storing building materials’\, to name a few. Earn 1.5 LU|HSW and 1.5hrs ZNCD MCE for attending live.								\n				\n				\n				\n							\n					\n						\n				\n				\n				\n							\n			\n									Additional Resources\n							\n			\n									Additional Resources\n					PDF Presentation | Small Firm Carbon Basics: Why It’s Important and How to Measure It
URL:https://events.aiacalifornia.org/event/aia-ca-committee-on-the-environment-local-advocacy-tips-and-tricks/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:Climate Action
ORGANIZER;CN="Nicki Dennis Stephens":MAILTO:ndennis@aiacalifornia.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20210218T120000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20210218T130000
DTSTAMP:20260716T182935
CREATED:20210218T200059Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231209T144820Z
UID:10000157-1613649600-1613653200@events.aiacalifornia.org
SUMMARY:AIA CA Climate Action Webinar Series | Design for Change: CALGreen\, Zero Code & IEBC
DESCRIPTION:When:Thursday September 22nd\, 202212pm – 1:30pm Units:1.5 LU/HSW (pending approval) Qualifies for Zero Net Carbon Design Mandatory Continuing Education. Certificate of completion will be provided to those who stay on and watch the webinar live. Moderator:Carmen Suero\, Associate AIA — Principal with GPCO Speaker:David Arkin\, AIA — Principal | Arkin Tilt Architects While reducing the operational carbon impacts of structures is important\, focus has turned to the impacts of material choices and construction itself – the embodied carbon of a building from extraction\, processing\, and assembly of materials. This is especially important in California given the relatively low carbon intensity of our grid-supplied electricity. An all-electric\, grid-harmonized building will have low operational carbon emissions in California because of our electric grid’s cleaner energy mix. Thus\, the need to shift focus toward embodied carbon. The AIA 2030 Commitment’s Design Data Exchange (DDx) added reporting of embodied carbon in 2021. In this session\, David Arkin outlines the basics of embodied carbon\, discusses materials that have low embodied carbon or store carbon\, and introduces a range of tools for measuring your project’s kilograms of CO2 emitted per meter squared. Examples of carbon storing materials and the range of tools available for measuring embodied carbon will be shared. The presentation will include challenges to answer questions regarding embodied carbon and climate impacts\, such as: ‘Name the earth’s five carbon sinks’\, ‘What process drives the sequestration of carbon in plants and soil’\, and ‘Other than wood\, what bio-based resources are potential carbon storing building materials’\, to name a few. Earn 1.5 LU|HSW and 1.5hrs ZNCD MCE for attending live.								\n				\n				\n				\n							\n					\n						\n				\n				\n				\n							\n			\n									Additional Resources\n							\n			\n									Additional Resources\n					PDF Presentation | Small Firm Carbon Basics: Why It’s Important and How to Measure It
URL:https://events.aiacalifornia.org/event/aia-ca-climate-action-webinar-series-design-for-change-calgreen-zero-code-iebc/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:Climate Action
ORGANIZER;CN="Sarah Vasquez":MAILTO:svasquez@aiacalifornia.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20210201T120000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20210201T130000
DTSTAMP:20260716T182935
CREATED:20210201T084556Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231201T024120Z
UID:10000122-1612180800-1612184400@events.aiacalifornia.org
SUMMARY:AIA CA Climate Action Webinar Series AIA 2030 Commitment and Practice: A Culture of Firm Excellence
DESCRIPTION:When:Thursday September 22nd\, 202212pm – 1:30pm Units:1.5 LU/HSW (pending approval) Qualifies for Zero Net Carbon Design Mandatory Continuing Education. Certificate of completion will be provided to those who stay on and watch the webinar live. Moderator:Carmen Suero\, Associate AIA — Principal with GPCO Speaker:David Arkin\, AIA — Principal | Arkin Tilt Architects While reducing the operational carbon impacts of structures is important\, focus has turned to the impacts of material choices and construction itself – the embodied carbon of a building from extraction\, processing\, and assembly of materials. This is especially important in California given the relatively low carbon intensity of our grid-supplied electricity. An all-electric\, grid-harmonized building will have low operational carbon emissions in California because of our electric grid’s cleaner energy mix. Thus\, the need to shift focus toward embodied carbon. The AIA 2030 Commitment’s Design Data Exchange (DDx) added reporting of embodied carbon in 2021. In this session\, David Arkin outlines the basics of embodied carbon\, discusses materials that have low embodied carbon or store carbon\, and introduces a range of tools for measuring your project’s kilograms of CO2 emitted per meter squared. Examples of carbon storing materials and the range of tools available for measuring embodied carbon will be shared. The presentation will include challenges to answer questions regarding embodied carbon and climate impacts\, such as: ‘Name the earth’s five carbon sinks’\, ‘What process drives the sequestration of carbon in plants and soil’\, and ‘Other than wood\, what bio-based resources are potential carbon storing building materials’\, to name a few. Earn 1.5 LU|HSW and 1.5hrs ZNCD MCE for attending live.								\n				\n				\n				\n							\n					\n						\n				\n				\n				\n							\n			\n									Additional Resources\n							\n			\n									Additional Resources\n					PDF Presentation | Small Firm Carbon Basics: Why It’s Important and How to Measure It
URL:https://events.aiacalifornia.org/event/aia-ca-climate-action-webinar-series-aia-2030-commitment-and-practice-a-culture-of-firm-excellence/
LOCATION:Virtual
ORGANIZER;CN="Sarah Vasquez":MAILTO:svasquez@aiacalifornia.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20210125T120000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20210125T130000
DTSTAMP:20260716T182935
CREATED:20210125T084154Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231201T024104Z
UID:10000121-1611576000-1611579600@events.aiacalifornia.org
SUMMARY:AIA CA Climate Action Webinar Series | Design for Integration: Integrated Design Process Basics
DESCRIPTION:When:Thursday September 22nd\, 202212pm – 1:30pm Units:1.5 LU/HSW (pending approval) Qualifies for Zero Net Carbon Design Mandatory Continuing Education. Certificate of completion will be provided to those who stay on and watch the webinar live. Moderator:Carmen Suero\, Associate AIA — Principal with GPCO Speaker:David Arkin\, AIA — Principal | Arkin Tilt Architects While reducing the operational carbon impacts of structures is important\, focus has turned to the impacts of material choices and construction itself – the embodied carbon of a building from extraction\, processing\, and assembly of materials. This is especially important in California given the relatively low carbon intensity of our grid-supplied electricity. An all-electric\, grid-harmonized building will have low operational carbon emissions in California because of our electric grid’s cleaner energy mix. Thus\, the need to shift focus toward embodied carbon. The AIA 2030 Commitment’s Design Data Exchange (DDx) added reporting of embodied carbon in 2021. In this session\, David Arkin outlines the basics of embodied carbon\, discusses materials that have low embodied carbon or store carbon\, and introduces a range of tools for measuring your project’s kilograms of CO2 emitted per meter squared. Examples of carbon storing materials and the range of tools available for measuring embodied carbon will be shared. The presentation will include challenges to answer questions regarding embodied carbon and climate impacts\, such as: ‘Name the earth’s five carbon sinks’\, ‘What process drives the sequestration of carbon in plants and soil’\, and ‘Other than wood\, what bio-based resources are potential carbon storing building materials’\, to name a few. Earn 1.5 LU|HSW and 1.5hrs ZNCD MCE for attending live.								\n				\n				\n				\n							\n					\n						\n				\n				\n				\n							\n			\n									Additional Resources\n							\n			\n									Additional Resources\n					PDF Presentation | Small Firm Carbon Basics: Why It’s Important and How to Measure It
URL:https://events.aiacalifornia.org/event/aia-ca-climate-action-webinar-series-design-for-integration-integrated-design-process-basics/
LOCATION:Virtual
ORGANIZER;CN="Sarah Vasquez":MAILTO:svasquez@aiacalifornia.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20201209T120000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20201209T130000
DTSTAMP:20260716T182935
CREATED:20201209T200055Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231209T181947Z
UID:10000209-1607515200-1607518800@events.aiacalifornia.org
SUMMARY:AIA CA Climate Action Webinar Series | The Role of Housing in Designing for Equitable Communities
DESCRIPTION:When:Thursday September 22nd\, 202212pm – 1:30pm Units:1.5 LU/HSW (pending approval) Qualifies for Zero Net Carbon Design Mandatory Continuing Education. Certificate of completion will be provided to those who stay on and watch the webinar live. Moderator:Carmen Suero\, Associate AIA — Principal with GPCO Speaker:David Arkin\, AIA — Principal | Arkin Tilt Architects While reducing the operational carbon impacts of structures is important\, focus has turned to the impacts of material choices and construction itself – the embodied carbon of a building from extraction\, processing\, and assembly of materials. This is especially important in California given the relatively low carbon intensity of our grid-supplied electricity. An all-electric\, grid-harmonized building will have low operational carbon emissions in California because of our electric grid’s cleaner energy mix. Thus\, the need to shift focus toward embodied carbon. The AIA 2030 Commitment’s Design Data Exchange (DDx) added reporting of embodied carbon in 2021. In this session\, David Arkin outlines the basics of embodied carbon\, discusses materials that have low embodied carbon or store carbon\, and introduces a range of tools for measuring your project’s kilograms of CO2 emitted per meter squared. Examples of carbon storing materials and the range of tools available for measuring embodied carbon will be shared. The presentation will include challenges to answer questions regarding embodied carbon and climate impacts\, such as: ‘Name the earth’s five carbon sinks’\, ‘What process drives the sequestration of carbon in plants and soil’\, and ‘Other than wood\, what bio-based resources are potential carbon storing building materials’\, to name a few. Earn 1.5 LU|HSW and 1.5hrs ZNCD MCE for attending live.								\n				\n				\n				\n							\n					\n						\n				\n				\n				\n							\n			\n									Additional Resources\n							\n			\n									Additional Resources\n					PDF Presentation | Small Firm Carbon Basics: Why It’s Important and How to Measure It
URL:https://events.aiacalifornia.org/event/aia-ca-climate-action-webinar-series-the-role-of-housing-in-designing-for-equitable-communities/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:Climate Action
ORGANIZER;CN="Sarah Vasquez":MAILTO:svasquez@aiacalifornia.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20201208T120000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20201208T130000
DTSTAMP:20260716T182935
CREATED:20201208T200038Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231209T181831Z
UID:10000208-1607428800-1607432400@events.aiacalifornia.org
SUMMARY:AIA CA 2020 Awards Full Video
DESCRIPTION:When:Thursday September 22nd\, 202212pm – 1:30pm Units:1.5 LU/HSW (pending approval) Qualifies for Zero Net Carbon Design Mandatory Continuing Education. Certificate of completion will be provided to those who stay on and watch the webinar live. Moderator:Carmen Suero\, Associate AIA — Principal with GPCO Speaker:David Arkin\, AIA — Principal | Arkin Tilt Architects While reducing the operational carbon impacts of structures is important\, focus has turned to the impacts of material choices and construction itself – the embodied carbon of a building from extraction\, processing\, and assembly of materials. This is especially important in California given the relatively low carbon intensity of our grid-supplied electricity. An all-electric\, grid-harmonized building will have low operational carbon emissions in California because of our electric grid’s cleaner energy mix. Thus\, the need to shift focus toward embodied carbon. The AIA 2030 Commitment’s Design Data Exchange (DDx) added reporting of embodied carbon in 2021. In this session\, David Arkin outlines the basics of embodied carbon\, discusses materials that have low embodied carbon or store carbon\, and introduces a range of tools for measuring your project’s kilograms of CO2 emitted per meter squared. Examples of carbon storing materials and the range of tools available for measuring embodied carbon will be shared. The presentation will include challenges to answer questions regarding embodied carbon and climate impacts\, such as: ‘Name the earth’s five carbon sinks’\, ‘What process drives the sequestration of carbon in plants and soil’\, and ‘Other than wood\, what bio-based resources are potential carbon storing building materials’\, to name a few. Earn 1.5 LU|HSW and 1.5hrs ZNCD MCE for attending live.								\n				\n				\n				\n							\n					\n						\n				\n				\n				\n							\n			\n									Additional Resources\n							\n			\n									Additional Resources\n					PDF Presentation | Small Firm Carbon Basics: Why It’s Important and How to Measure It
URL:https://events.aiacalifornia.org/event/aia-ca-2020-awards-full-video/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:Awards
ORGANIZER;CN="Sarah Vasquez":MAILTO:svasquez@aiacalifornia.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20201123T120000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20201123T130000
DTSTAMP:20260716T182935
CREATED:20201123T200000Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231209T181727Z
UID:10000207-1606132800-1606136400@events.aiacalifornia.org
SUMMARY:AIA CA Climate Action Webinar Series | New Code Provisions for Tall Timber Structures in CA
DESCRIPTION:When:Thursday September 22nd\, 202212pm – 1:30pm Units:1.5 LU/HSW (pending approval) Qualifies for Zero Net Carbon Design Mandatory Continuing Education. Certificate of completion will be provided to those who stay on and watch the webinar live. Moderator:Carmen Suero\, Associate AIA — Principal with GPCO Speaker:David Arkin\, AIA — Principal | Arkin Tilt Architects While reducing the operational carbon impacts of structures is important\, focus has turned to the impacts of material choices and construction itself – the embodied carbon of a building from extraction\, processing\, and assembly of materials. This is especially important in California given the relatively low carbon intensity of our grid-supplied electricity. An all-electric\, grid-harmonized building will have low operational carbon emissions in California because of our electric grid’s cleaner energy mix. Thus\, the need to shift focus toward embodied carbon. The AIA 2030 Commitment’s Design Data Exchange (DDx) added reporting of embodied carbon in 2021. In this session\, David Arkin outlines the basics of embodied carbon\, discusses materials that have low embodied carbon or store carbon\, and introduces a range of tools for measuring your project’s kilograms of CO2 emitted per meter squared. Examples of carbon storing materials and the range of tools available for measuring embodied carbon will be shared. The presentation will include challenges to answer questions regarding embodied carbon and climate impacts\, such as: ‘Name the earth’s five carbon sinks’\, ‘What process drives the sequestration of carbon in plants and soil’\, and ‘Other than wood\, what bio-based resources are potential carbon storing building materials’\, to name a few. Earn 1.5 LU|HSW and 1.5hrs ZNCD MCE for attending live.								\n				\n				\n				\n							\n					\n						\n				\n				\n				\n							\n			\n									Additional Resources\n							\n			\n									Additional Resources\n					PDF Presentation | Small Firm Carbon Basics: Why It’s Important and How to Measure It
URL:https://events.aiacalifornia.org/event/aia-ca-climate-action-webinar-series-new-code-provisions-for-tall-timber-structures-in-ca/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:Climate Action
ORGANIZER;CN="Sarah Vasquez":MAILTO:svasquez@aiacalifornia.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20201119T120000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20201119T130000
DTSTAMP:20260716T182935
CREATED:20201119T200021Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231209T181537Z
UID:10000206-1605787200-1605790800@events.aiacalifornia.org
SUMMARY:CA Urban Design: Live/Work\, Work/Live
DESCRIPTION:When:Thursday September 22nd\, 202212pm – 1:30pm Units:1.5 LU/HSW (pending approval) Qualifies for Zero Net Carbon Design Mandatory Continuing Education. Certificate of completion will be provided to those who stay on and watch the webinar live. Moderator:Carmen Suero\, Associate AIA — Principal with GPCO Speaker:David Arkin\, AIA — Principal | Arkin Tilt Architects While reducing the operational carbon impacts of structures is important\, focus has turned to the impacts of material choices and construction itself – the embodied carbon of a building from extraction\, processing\, and assembly of materials. This is especially important in California given the relatively low carbon intensity of our grid-supplied electricity. An all-electric\, grid-harmonized building will have low operational carbon emissions in California because of our electric grid’s cleaner energy mix. Thus\, the need to shift focus toward embodied carbon. The AIA 2030 Commitment’s Design Data Exchange (DDx) added reporting of embodied carbon in 2021. In this session\, David Arkin outlines the basics of embodied carbon\, discusses materials that have low embodied carbon or store carbon\, and introduces a range of tools for measuring your project’s kilograms of CO2 emitted per meter squared. Examples of carbon storing materials and the range of tools available for measuring embodied carbon will be shared. The presentation will include challenges to answer questions regarding embodied carbon and climate impacts\, such as: ‘Name the earth’s five carbon sinks’\, ‘What process drives the sequestration of carbon in plants and soil’\, and ‘Other than wood\, what bio-based resources are potential carbon storing building materials’\, to name a few. Earn 1.5 LU|HSW and 1.5hrs ZNCD MCE for attending live.								\n				\n				\n				\n							\n					\n						\n				\n				\n				\n							\n			\n									Additional Resources\n							\n			\n									Additional Resources\n					PDF Presentation | Small Firm Carbon Basics: Why It’s Important and How to Measure It
URL:https://events.aiacalifornia.org/event/ca-urban-design-live-work-work-live/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:Practice
ORGANIZER;CN="Sarah Vasquez":MAILTO:svasquez@aiacalifornia.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20201117T120000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20201117T130000
DTSTAMP:20260716T182935
CREATED:20201117T200002Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231209T181410Z
UID:10000205-1605614400-1605618000@events.aiacalifornia.org
SUMMARY:2020 AIA CA Leadership Celebration & Installation
DESCRIPTION:When:Thursday September 22nd\, 202212pm – 1:30pm Units:1.5 LU/HSW (pending approval) Qualifies for Zero Net Carbon Design Mandatory Continuing Education. Certificate of completion will be provided to those who stay on and watch the webinar live. Moderator:Carmen Suero\, Associate AIA — Principal with GPCO Speaker:David Arkin\, AIA — Principal | Arkin Tilt Architects While reducing the operational carbon impacts of structures is important\, focus has turned to the impacts of material choices and construction itself – the embodied carbon of a building from extraction\, processing\, and assembly of materials. This is especially important in California given the relatively low carbon intensity of our grid-supplied electricity. An all-electric\, grid-harmonized building will have low operational carbon emissions in California because of our electric grid’s cleaner energy mix. Thus\, the need to shift focus toward embodied carbon. The AIA 2030 Commitment’s Design Data Exchange (DDx) added reporting of embodied carbon in 2021. In this session\, David Arkin outlines the basics of embodied carbon\, discusses materials that have low embodied carbon or store carbon\, and introduces a range of tools for measuring your project’s kilograms of CO2 emitted per meter squared. Examples of carbon storing materials and the range of tools available for measuring embodied carbon will be shared. The presentation will include challenges to answer questions regarding embodied carbon and climate impacts\, such as: ‘Name the earth’s five carbon sinks’\, ‘What process drives the sequestration of carbon in plants and soil’\, and ‘Other than wood\, what bio-based resources are potential carbon storing building materials’\, to name a few. Earn 1.5 LU|HSW and 1.5hrs ZNCD MCE for attending live.								\n				\n				\n				\n							\n					\n						\n				\n				\n				\n							\n			\n									Additional Resources\n							\n			\n									Additional Resources\n					PDF Presentation | Small Firm Carbon Basics: Why It’s Important and How to Measure It
URL:https://events.aiacalifornia.org/event/2020-aia-ca-leadership-celebration-installation/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:AIACA
ORGANIZER;CN="Sarah Vasquez":MAILTO:svasquez@aiacalifornia.org
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR