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DTSTART:20200101T000000
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20220914T000000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20220914T000000
DTSTAMP:20260716T221503
CREATED:20220909T013130Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231026T021746Z
UID:10000040-1663113600-1663113600@events.aiacalifornia.org
SUMMARY:Carbon Part 1. | Carbon Accounting: Terminology and Metrics
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/carbon-part-1-carbon-accounting-terminology-and-metrics/
CATEGORIES:Climate Action
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20220831T000000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20220831T000000
DTSTAMP:20260716T221503
CREATED:20220809T042054Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231122T031557Z
UID:10000039-1661904000-1661904000@events.aiacalifornia.org
SUMMARY:Adaptive Reuse\, Efficient by Default: Projects with Embedded Energy Efficiency
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/adaptive-reuse-efficient-by-default-projects-with-embedded-energy-efficiency/
CATEGORIES:Climate Action
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20220825T120000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20220825T130000
DTSTAMP:20260716T221503
CREATED:20220809T040842Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240326T033213Z
UID:10000038-1661428800-1661432400@events.aiacalifornia.org
SUMMARY:Resilient Design: Performance Assessment  of Structural Materials
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/resilient-design-performance-assessment-of-structural-materials/
CATEGORIES:Climate Action
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://events.aiacalifornia.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/08/2023-Climate-Action-Webinar-RESILIENT-DESIGN-PERFORMANCE-ASSESSMENT-OF-STRUCTURAL-MATERIALS-1200x800-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20220818T000000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20220818T000000
DTSTAMP:20260716T221503
CREATED:20220707T060309Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231026T015413Z
UID:10000036-1660780800-1660780800@events.aiacalifornia.org
SUMMARY:Climate Action Webinar : Title 24 Interface to The 2030 Commitment - Zero Net Carbon Designed ADUs and Residential Projects
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/climate-action-webinar-title-24-interface-to-the-2030-commitment-zero-net-carbon-designed-adus/
CATEGORIES:Climate Action
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20220810T000000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20220810T000000
DTSTAMP:20260716T221503
CREATED:20220719T234141Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231026T015259Z
UID:10000037-1660089600-1660089600@events.aiacalifornia.org
SUMMARY:ZNCD Case Study: California Air Resources Board\, Mary D. Nichols 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/zncd-case-study-california-air-resources-board-mary-d-nichols-campus/
CATEGORIES:Climate Action
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20220727T120000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20220727T130000
DTSTAMP:20260716T221503
CREATED:20220630T053710Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231214T024012Z
UID:10000051-1658923200-1658926800@events.aiacalifornia.org
SUMMARY:In Practice: Life Cycle Assessment of Concrete Buildings
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/in-practice-life-cycle-assessment-of-concrete-buildings/
CATEGORIES:Practice
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20220713T000000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20220713T000000
DTSTAMP:20260716T221503
CREATED:20220615T231535Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230719T233951Z
UID:10000035-1657670400-1657670400@events.aiacalifornia.org
SUMMARY:Resilient Sustainable Outcomes Pt. II | Design Approaches to Integration of Natural and Built Systems
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/resilient-sustainable-outcomes-pt-ii-design-approaches-to-integration-of-natural-and-built-systems/
CATEGORIES:Climate Action
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20220707T120000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20220707T130000
DTSTAMP:20260716T221503
CREATED:20220419T050910Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230720T022640Z
UID:10000046-1657195200-1657198800@events.aiacalifornia.org
SUMMARY:AIA CA Statewide Advocacy Update
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-statewide-advocacy-update/
CATEGORIES:Practice
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=:
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20220630T120000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20220630T130000
DTSTAMP:20260716T221503
CREATED:20220503T035043Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250422T181328Z
UID:10000047-1656590400-1656594000@events.aiacalifornia.org
SUMMARY:Easing Energy Code Compliance Through the Virtual Compliance Assistant
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/easing-energy-code-compliance-through-the-virtual-compliance-assistant/
CATEGORIES:Practice
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=:
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20220615T000000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20220615T000000
DTSTAMP:20260716T221503
CREATED:20220524T002402Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230719T233951Z
UID:10000034-1655251200-1655251200@events.aiacalifornia.org
SUMMARY:Design for Wildfire Resilience
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/design-for-wildfire-resilience/
CATEGORIES:Climate Action
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=:
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20220608T120000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20220608T130000
DTSTAMP:20260716T221503
CREATED:20220419T041931Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231026T044935Z
UID:10000045-1654689600-1654693200@events.aiacalifornia.org
SUMMARY:Division of the State Architect Update ”“ Sustainability Education and Outreach and Regulatory Activity
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/division-of-the-state-architect-update-sustainability-education-and-outreach-and-regulatory-activity/
CATEGORIES:Practice
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=:
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20220525T120000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20220525T130000
DTSTAMP:20260716T221503
CREATED:20220504T040024Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230719T233951Z
UID:10000033-1653480000-1653483600@events.aiacalifornia.org
SUMMARY:Water: Resilient Sustainable Outcomes Part I
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/water-resilient-sustainable-outcomes-part-i/
CATEGORIES:Climate Action
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20220525T000000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20220525T000000
DTSTAMP:20260716T221503
CREATED:20220526T014532Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231026T065822Z
UID:10000050-1653436800-1653436800@events.aiacalifornia.org
SUMMARY:AIA”™s Economic Outlook: 6 Things You Need to Know
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/aias-economic-outlook-6-things-you-need-to-know/
CATEGORIES:Practice
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20220413T120000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20220413T130000
DTSTAMP:20260716T221503
CREATED:20220302T073638Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231026T015150Z
UID:10000032-1649851200-1649854800@events.aiacalifornia.org
SUMMARY:Designing for Zero Net Carbon - 3 Case Studies\, All Electric Buildings
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/designing-for-zero-net-carbon-3-case-studies-all-electric-buildings/
CATEGORIES:Climate Action
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20220412T120000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20220412T130000
DTSTAMP:20260716T221503
CREATED:20220413T045437Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230719T233951Z
UID:10000029-1649764800-1649768400@events.aiacalifornia.org
SUMMARY:Optimizing Facades to Achieve Better Daylit and High-Performance Spaces with Lower 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/optimizing-facades-to-achieve-better-daylit-and-high-performance-spaces-with-lower-embodied-carbon/
CATEGORIES:Climate Action
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20220412T120000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20220412T130000
DTSTAMP:20260716T221503
CREATED:20220413T040258Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231026T015031Z
UID:10000028-1649764800-1649768400@events.aiacalifornia.org
SUMMARY:Induction Cooking: The All-Electric Kitchen of Today and Zero Net Carbon Design for Food Service
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/induction-cooking-the-all-electric-kitchen-of-today-and-zero-net-carbon-design-for-food-service/
CATEGORIES:Climate Action
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20220401T120000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20220401T130000
DTSTAMP:20260716T221503
CREATED:20220402T033543Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230719T233951Z
UID:10000027-1648814400-1648818000@events.aiacalifornia.org
SUMMARY:Top 10 Ways to Reduce Concrete”™s Carbon Footprint
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/top-10-ways-to-reduce-concretes-carbon-footprint/
CATEGORIES:Climate Action
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20220324T120000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20220324T130000
DTSTAMP:20260716T221503
CREATED:20220311T053820Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231208T053150Z
UID:10000024-1648123200-1648126800@events.aiacalifornia.org
SUMMARY:2022 1 Hour Code Breaker: Single Family All Electric
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/2022-1-hour-code-breaker-single-family-all-electric/
CATEGORIES:Climate Action
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=:
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20220323T120000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20220323T130000
DTSTAMP:20260716T221503
CREATED:20220324T053547Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231026T012408Z
UID:10000026-1648036800-1648040400@events.aiacalifornia.org
SUMMARY:ADUs: A Climate Action Standard
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/adus-a-climate-action-standard/
CATEGORIES:Climate Action
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=:
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20220322T120000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20220322T130000
DTSTAMP:20260716T221503
CREATED:20220323T060635Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230719T233950Z
UID:10000025-1647950400-1647954000@events.aiacalifornia.org
SUMMARY:Smart Carbon Goals: Life Cycle Assessment in Design Practice
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/smart-carbon-goals-life-cycle-assessment-in-design-practice/
CATEGORIES:Climate Action
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=:
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20220301T120000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20220301T130000
DTSTAMP:20260716T221503
CREATED:20220302T062216Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230719T233727Z
UID:10000031-1646136000-1646139600@events.aiacalifornia.org
SUMMARY:AIA CA Climate Action Webinar: Visual Delight in Architecture
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-visual-delight-in-architecture/
CATEGORIES:Climate Action
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20220217T120000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20220217T133000
DTSTAMP:20260716T221503
CREATED:20220201T114443Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230719T233728Z
UID:10000023-1645099200-1645104600@events.aiacalifornia.org
SUMMARY:California Architect”™s Role in Climate Resiliency\, brought to you by AIA CA Climate Action Resilient Design Committee and Urban Design Committee
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/california-architects-role-in-climate/
CATEGORIES:Climate Action
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=:
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20220209T120000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20220209T130000
DTSTAMP:20260716T221503
CREATED:20220122T150653Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230830T001930Z
UID:10000022-1644408000-1644411600@events.aiacalifornia.org
SUMMARY:Understanding Carbon Analysis for Existing Building Renovation
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/understanding-carbon-analysis-for-existing-building-renovation/
CATEGORIES:Climate Action
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20220201T120000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20220201T130000
DTSTAMP:20260716T221503
CREATED:20220202T041551Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240716T212102Z
UID:10000030-1643716800-1643720400@events.aiacalifornia.org
SUMMARY:The Case for Performance Analysis in Renovation Projects
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/the-case-for-performance-analysis-in-renovation-projects/
CATEGORIES:Climate Action
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://events.aiacalifornia.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/plug-in-wall.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20220113T120000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20220113T130000
DTSTAMP:20260716T221503
CREATED:20220108T053838Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230719T233728Z
UID:10000021-1642075200-1642078800@events.aiacalifornia.org
SUMMARY:”˜SONRAI IAQ”™ Using Intelligent Analytics Platform to optimize Air Quality\, Occupant Comfort and Energy Use in Buildings | DLR Group
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/sonrai-iaq/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:Climate Action
ORGANIZER;CN="Sarah Vasquez":MAILTO:svasquez@aiacalifornia.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20211217T120000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20211217T130000
DTSTAMP:20260716T221503
CREATED:20211217T200050Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231209T171254Z
UID:10000176-1639742400-1639746000@events.aiacalifornia.org
SUMMARY:AIA CA Climate Action Webinar Series | Post-Occupancy Evaluations and Building Performance
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-post-occupancy-evaluations-and-building-performance/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:Climate Action
ORGANIZER;CN="Sarah Vasquez":MAILTO:svasquez@aiacalifornia.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20211217T120000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20211217T130000
DTSTAMP:20260716T221503
CREATED:20211217T200008Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231214T022441Z
UID:10000175-1639742400-1639746000@events.aiacalifornia.org
SUMMARY:CA CACE: AIA Accreditation
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-aia-accreditation/
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:20211214T120000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20211214T130000
DTSTAMP:20260716T221503
CREATED:20211214T200026Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231209T170952Z
UID:10000174-1639483200-1639486800@events.aiacalifornia.org
SUMMARY:EDI Informational Meeting: Panelist Presentations
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/edi-informational-meeting-panelist-presentations/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:Practice
ORGANIZER;CN="Sarah Vasquez":MAILTO:svasquez@aiacalifornia.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20211208T120000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20211208T130000
DTSTAMP:20260716T221503
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:20260716T221503
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
END:VCALENDAR