Contributors

Conference contributors listed alphabetically by last name.

A : B : C : D : E : F : G : H : J : K : L : M : N : O : P : R : S : T : U : W

A  

Ellen Andersen is of Ngati Raukawa descent, and completed her Bachelor of Arts in Classics and Architectural Studies at Victoria University in Wellington New Zealand. Her research in architecture focuses on Maori architectural history and building technology. ellenandersen@hotmail.com

Professor Helen Armstrong is Director of the Cultural Landscape Research Unit in the School of Design and Built Environment at the Queensland University of Technology. Her research interests include design as research and issues of migration and place.

Mike Austin is currently Professor of Architecture at the UNITEC School of Architecture in Auckland after teaching design at the Auckland University School of Architecture for many years. His research area is the Architecture of the Pacific.

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Eugenie Keefer Bell was appointed Lecturer in Architecture at the University of Canberra in 2001. Her research interests include the history, theory and practice of architecture and design. She is completing a PhD in Architecture and Fine Arts at UWA.

Andrew Benjamin is Visiting Professor of Architecture at The University of Sydney and Research Professor of Critical Theory at Monash University. He was previously Professor of Philosophy and Director of the Centre for Research in Philosophy and Literature at Warwick University. An internationally recognised authority on contemporary French and German critical theory, he has been Visiting Professor at Columbia University in New York and Visiting Critic at the Architectural Association in London. His many books include: What is Deconstruction? (1988), Art, Mimesis and the Avant-Garde (1991), Present Hope: Philosophy, Architecture, Judaism (1997), Architectural Philosophy (2000) and Philosophy's Literature (2001). He also edited The Lyotard Reader (1989), Abjection, Melancholia and Love: the Work of Julia Kristeva (1990) and Walter Benjamin's Philosophy: Destruction and Experience (1993).

Thom Blake is a Brisbane based consultant historian. His research interests include the social history of railways and indigenous history. His most recent publication is A dumping ground: a history of the Cherbourg Aboriginal Settlement, published by the University of Queensland Press, 2001. tblake@optusnet.com.au

Richard Blythe is senior lecturer in architecture at the University of Tasmania and a company director of the architectural practice terroir. His research interest is nature and architecture. His paper for the ADDITIONS conference draws on research he is undertaking for his PhD at the University of Queensland. blythe@utas.edu.au

Dr Deidre Brown is Senior Lecturer in Aotearoa New Zealand Art History at the School of Fine Arts, University of Canterbury, Christchurch. Her current research interests are Northland Maori whakairo rakau (woodcarving), virtual museums and museology, and curating technology-focussed Maori art exhibitions. d.brown@fina.canterbury.ac.nz

Jane Burry is currently working as a researcher in the Spatial Information Laboratory at RMIT University. Since 1999 she has assisted Mark Burry with research supporting the continuing construction of the Sagrada Familia Church, Barcelona.

Mark Burry is Professor of Innovation (Spatial Information Architecture) at RMIT University.

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Barbara Cadeddu, is a graduating student from the Building Engineering and Architecture course, University of Cagliari, Italy.

Jo Case studied architecture at the University of Queensland before gaining professional experience in the offices of Lindsay Clare Architects and John Mainwaring Architects. She is now teaching Interior Architecture at Curtin University in Perth.

Michael Chapman completed his B.Arch (Hons 1) in 2000 at the University of Newcastle and is currently employed there as a research assistant and design tutor. He is in the process of completing a Masters in Architectural Theory focussing on the philosophy of Nietzsche.

Li Lian Chee is a Senior Tutor in Architecture at the National University of Singapore. Her interest in feminist and psychoanalytic spatial theories were explored while she was doing a Masters in Architectural History at the Bartlett, London. She is currently conducting PhD research at the Bartlett on travel and the spatial imagination. fishnginger@hotmail.com

Lynn Churchill is an academic at Curtin University of Technology. Her PhD research is concerned with the body’s relations with architecture. Her recent solo exhibition at the verge Gallery, Perth, Joyriding an Architectural Object is accompanied by her paper Conveying Sensation: Joyriding an Architectural Object which is currently in press.

Justine Clark is assistant editor of Architecture Australia, the magazine of the RAIA. She is the author, with Dr Paul Walker, of Looking for the Local: Architecture and the New Zealand Modern (Wellington: Victoria University Press, 2000). Her current research interests focus on architectural drawing and on the index in architecture. This is a development of earlier work. Smdge@bigpond.com

Scott Colman is a doctoral candidate at the University of Sydney, Australia. His research focuses on the question of intention in architecture, focusing on the work of Ludwig Mies van der Rohe. He has recently published ‘Drawing the Line Between Technology and Nature in Architectural Theory: Blade Runner's Critique of the Intention of the 'Primitive Hut,’ Architectural Theory Review, 6, 1 (April: 2001), pp. 156-74.

Graham Crist is a lecturer in the architecture programme at RMIT University, and partner in the Melbourne practice S-architecture. His interest is in the contemporary relationship between design theory and practice.

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Shirley Daborn is a PhD candidate in the Faculty of the Built Environment, at the University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia. Her research focuses on the mid-20th century suburban shopping centre with particular interest in the relationship between the centre and representations of women.

James Davidson is currently a PhD student at the University of Queensland. He graduated from UQ with a Bachelor of Architecture (Hons 1) in 1999. His current research concerns producing a contemporary regional survey of the change associated with traditional Maya housing typologies of the Central American region. james.davidson@mailbox.uq.edu.au

Wouter Davidts is a scholar at the Department of Architecture and Urban Planning, Ghent University in Belgium, where he’s finishing a PhD about museum architecture. His research focuses on the relationship between art, architecture and the museum and he has regularly published about the topic in the art magazine De Witte Raaf. wouter.davidts@rug.ac.be

Ursula de Jong is Senior Lecturer in art and architectural history in the School of Architecture and Building at Deakin University, Geelong, Victoria. Her research focuses on nineteenth century architectural history, particularly the Gothic Revival, and more recently on the concept and notion of place. She has just published Blairgowrie: The Meaning of Place, in Urban Policy and Research (UPR) Journal, Vol 20 No 1 March 2002, pp 73 - 86. ursuladj@deakin.edu.au

Professor dr. Mil De Kooning is chairman of the Department of Architecture and Urban Planning, Ghent University, Belgium. His research concerns architecture in postwar Belgium. He is editor of Horta and After. 25 Masters of Modern Architecture in Belgium, Ghent: Department of Architecture and Urban Planning, Ghent University, 1999. emiel.dekooning@rug.ac.be

Caroline Denigan is the Women’s Health Information Officer at Barwon Health. Her research explores gender and vernacular architecture. Caroline’s paper for the ADDITIONS conference draws on research she is conducting for her PhD at the University of Adelaide, Australia. caroline.denigan@adelaide.edu.au

Kim Dovey is a Professor of Architecture and Urban Design at the University of Melbourne. Recent publications include "Architecture and Freedom", "Myth and Media" (both in J. of Architectural Education) and the book Framing Places (Routledge, 1999). dovey@unimelb.edu.au

Scott Drake lectures in architectural science and design at the University of South Australia. He is currently completing a PhD thesis under the supervision of Professor Stephen Frith at the University of Canberra, titled “‘A Well-Composed Body’: Anthropomorphism in Architecture.”

Grant Dunlop is currently working as a researcher in the Spatial Information Laboratory at RMIT University.

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Doug Evans is a Senior Lecturer in the School of Architecture and Design, Faculty of Constructed Environment at RMIT University, Melbourne. doug.evans@rmit.edu.au

Professor Harriet Edquist is Head of School, Architecture and Design, RMIT University, Melbourne. harriet.edquist@rmit.edu.au

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Shaneen Fantin is a PhD candidate and senior research assistant in the Aboriginal Environments Research Centre at the University of Queensland. She is an architectural practitioner with experience in Indigenous housing and community projects in the Northern Territory, Queensland and Canada. Her PhD research considers the architectural design implications of Aboriginal cultural beliefs and practices in Arnhem Land.

Sean Flanagan is Masters student at the School of Architecture, University of Auckland. His research focuses upon the Weissenhofsiedlung, the exhibition of Modernist housing built in Stuttgart, 1927. sfla008@ec.auckland.ac.nz

Steven Fleming is an associate lecturer in architectural history and theory at The University of Newcastle, Australia. His main area of research is into Louis Kahn’s design theory, and he has recently published “Louis Kahn’s Platonic approach to number and geometry,” in José Francisco Rodrigues and Kim Williams (eds.), Nexus IV: Architecture and Mathematics, Florence: Kim Williams Books, 2002. steven.fleming@newcastle.edu.au

Fredie Floré is a research assistant at the Department of Architecture and Urban Planning, Ghent University, Belgium. Her Ph. D. focuses on interior and modernity in postwar Belgium and she has recently published 'Sociaal modernisme. De designkritiek van K.N. Elno (1920-1993)', De Witte Raaf, 89 (January-February 2001), 6-8. fredie.flore@rug.ac.be

Martin Fowler is a research fellow in Melanesian and colonial architecture, and teaches in design at Melbourne University. His paper draws on research he is conducting for his PhD at Melbourne University. He recently published "Science, Fashion and Tropical Architecture," Sustaining the Future: energy - ecology - architecture, vol 1, PLEA International 1999, Brisbane, pp 327-332. brucemf@unimelb.edu.au

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Julia Gatley is a PhD candidate in the Faculty of Architecture, Building and Planning at the University of Melbourne. Her thesis explores issues of imperialism and gender in early 20th century Australian and New Zealand town planning discourse. With Anéne Cusins-Lewer she has recently published ‘The “Myers Park Experiment” (1913-1916) and its Legacy in Auckland’, Fabrications, 12, 1 (June 2002): 59-80. j.gatley@pgrad.unimelb.edu.au

Dr Philip Goad is a Professor in the Faculty of Architecture Building and Planning at the University of Melbourne. He is the author of Melbourne Architecture (1999) and New Directions in Australian Architecture (2001).

Kevin Green is a lecturer in Architecture at the Northern Territory University. and doctoral candidate at the University of Queensland. His ADDITIONS paper draws upon research he is undertaking for his thesis on the impact of metal construction on nineteenth century architecture. Kevin.Green@ntu.edu.au

Pedro Guedes is a senior lecturer at the Queensland University of Technology. His research focuses on the iron and architecture in the nineteenth century. His paper for the ADDITIONS conference draws on research he is conducting for his PhD at the University of Queensland. p.guedes@qut.edu.au

Dr Qinghua Guo, Lecturer in Asian Architecture, the University of Melbourne. Publications include: A Visual Dictionary of Chinese Architecture (Melbourne, 2002) and The Structure of Chinese Timber Architecture (London, 1999).

Maryam Gusheh is a lecturer in Architecture at the Faculty of the Built Environment, The University of New South Wales, Australia. Her research interests include cross-cultural architectural practices and architecture and national identity. m.gusheh@unsw.edu.au

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Michelle Hamer is currently undertaking a Masters in architectural history by research at the University of Melbourne, on the Melbourne firm of Joyce Nankivell Partnership. mich_e_l_l_e@hotmail.com

Gevork Hartoonian is lecturer and coordinator of Masters Program in Architecture, University of Sydney. He is the author of Modernity and its Other, 1997, and Ontology of Construction, 1994. He recently has published “Frank Gehry: roofing, wrapping, and wrapping the roof” in The Journal of Architecture, vol. 7, spring 2002. gevork@arch.usyd.edu.au

Hilde Heynen is Associate Professor of architectural theory at the Catholic University of Leuven, and has been Visiting assistant Professor at the MIT School of Architecture. She is the author of Wonen tussen gemeenplaats en poëzie (1993) and Architecture and Modernity (1999), and has published in Assemblage, Archis and OASE. She is also a member of the editorial staff at Archis. Her work has focused on the negative critique of the Frankfurter Schule, and has written extensively on Walter Benjamin, Ernst Bloch, Theodor Adorno, and Manfredo Tafuri. Her interest in Constant's New Babylon project arises from the way in which it exemplifies contradictory and paradoxical aspects of avant-garde modernism. Hilde Heynen has also been active in the field of Women's Studies. She assisted in the organization of a conference on the feminine side of architecture, and the FE/male cre/ATURES symposium. She has also participated in Studio Open Stad, the 'Reconstructing the Past' colloquium, and the first Network for Theory, History and Criticism of Architecture colloquium 'Inside Density'.

Mark Hiley is a postgraduate student and tutor at the University of Queensland. Research interests include: the historiography of modern architecture and theories of subjectivity.

Dr Glen Hill is a lecturer in the Faculty of Architecture at the University of Sydney.

Dr Michael Hill teaches at the Faculty of the Built Environment, University of New South Wales. His research focuses on architectural theory, and the art and architecture of 17th-century Rome; MichaelRH@fbe.edu.au

Angela Hirst is a PhD student in the Department of Architecture, University of Queensland, Australia. Her research focuses on the philosophy of food practice and its relationship to urban space. She has recently published ‘Permaculture and Ecofeminism’ in Janis Birkeland (ed.), Design for Sustainability: A sourcebook of integrated, eco-logical solutions, London: Earthscan, 2002, pp. 76-80. s302828@student.uq.edu.au

Paul Hogben is an Associate Lecturer in the Faculty of the Built Environment at the University of New South Wales. He is currently working on his PhD which is a study of the architectural profession’s public relations. PaulH@fbe.unsw.edu.au

Rachel Hurst lectures in architecture and is Design Studio co-ordinator for the Architecture discipline in the Louis Laybourne-Smith School of Architecture and Design at the University of South Australia. Rachel.Hurst@unisa.edu.au

Andrew Hutson is a senior lecturer at the Faculty of Architecture, Building and Planning, the University of Melbourne. His research interests continue to be the construction of early Roman theatres but he has an increasing interest in the development of Australian architecture in the 1970s. aewhuts@unimelb.edu.au.

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Kerry Jordan is a PhD student at the University of Melbourne, where she is researching nineteenth century mansions in Australia.

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Dr Peter Kohane is a senior lecturer in the Faculty of the Built Environment, University of New South Wales. His research focuses on nineteenth-century theory and the architecture of Louis Kahn; p.kohane@unsw.edu.au

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Esa Laaksonen is the current Director of the Alvar Aalto Academy, Finland. In 1998-99 he worked as head of the exhibition department at Museum of Finnish Architecture and between 1995-99 he was Editor-in-chief of ARKKITEHTI, The Finnish Architectural Review. Laaksonen is also a practising architect sharing office with architects Kimmo Friman and Sari Nieminen. He is in Australia as 2002 Visiting Professor at the School of Design and Built Environment, Queensland University of Technology.

Johan Lagae is a research assistant at the department of Architecture and Urban Planning at the Ghent University, Belgium. He holds a PhD on 20th century colonial architecture in the Belgian Congo and has published on this topic, as well as on the architecture of 1930s colonial expositions (Third Text, 50, 2000, pp 21-32). johan.lagae@rug.ac.be.

Andrew Leach is a senior lecturer in design at the Wellington Institute of Technology and Secretary of SAHANZ. His paper for the ADDITIONS conference draws on research he is conducting on Manfredo Tafuri’s œuvre for his doctorate at the University of Ghent. andrew.leach@weltec.ac.nz; aia@etoast.com

Associate Professor Gini Lee is Head of the Louis Laybourne-Smith School of Architecture and Design at the University of South Australia. She is an Interior Designer and Landscape Architect who has practised and taught in multidisciplinary design. Her research interests include cross cultural and cross disciplinary design practices which span different cultural histories and narratives.

Hannah Lewi is a senior lecturer in architecture at Curtin University of Technology. Her research focuses on theories of place-making, architectural heritage, the conservation of modernism and new technologies of historical representation. She is co-editor of Fabrications, the journal of SAHANZ. She has recently co-authored and published Visualising the Architecture of Federation CD-Rom, 2001, and has a forthcoming chapter ‘Paradoxes in the Conservation of Modernism’ in Back from Utopia, 010 Publishers, Rotterdam, 2002. lewih@arch.curtin.edu.au

Michael Linzey is a Senior Lecturer in Architecture at University of Auckland. His field of research is a study of the cultural logic of architecture, including questions relating to meaning, narrative, myth and metaphor, western and non-western cultural logics, and bicultural developments in New Zealand architecture.

Stephen Long is a student and part-time senior research assistant at the Aboriginal Environments Research Centre. His paper for the ADDITIONS conference draws on his PhD research which is concerned with Aboriginal constructs of place and cultural heritage in north- west Queensland. He recently published: ‘Phenomenology Place and Cultural Heritage in Aboriginal Queensland’, People and Physical Environment Research, No. 55-56, 2000, pp. 19-37. stephen.long@mailbox.uq.edu.au

Stephen Loo is a lecturer at the Louis Laybourne Smith School of Architecture and Design, University of South Australia. He is also a practicing architect and Partner of Mulloway Studio. Steve’s research focuses on the relationship between ontology and architectural theory, and he has recently published "Belonging and Time: Technology, Heidegger's 'Event of Appropriation,' and New Dutch Architecture" in Architectural Theory Review, Vol. 6, No. 2, Sydney: University of Sydney, November 2001: pp.40-55. stephen.loo@unisa.edu.au

Desley Luscombe is currently head of the Architecture Program and Associate Professor at the University of New South Wales. Parallelling this she has been a Director of Campbell Luscombe Architects of Sydney. Her recent research focuses on the narrative structure and allegorical function of frontispieces to architectural treatises of the Renaissance.

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Maddalena Mameli is a graduating student from the Building Engineering and Architecture course, University of Cagliari, Italy.

Dr. Harry Margalit teaches architecture at the University of Sydney and is active in architectural practice. His research interests include Australian Modernist and contemporary architecture. He has published in the academic and professional press, and is author, with Philip Goad, of a monograph on Durbach Block Architects published by Pesaro. harry@arch.usyd.edu.au

Gill Matthewson is Programme Manager in Interior Design at the Wellington Institute of Technology. Her research interests are in domesticity and photography in architecture, this SAHANZ paper building on MA research originally conducted at the University of East London. Gill.matthewson@weltec.ac.nz

Christine McCarthy teaches interior architecture at the School of Design, Victoria University, Wellington, New Zealand christine.mccarthy@vuw.ac.nz

Lesley McFadyen is currently conducting research at School of Humanities and Sciences University of Wales, College Newport, UK.

Bill McKay is an architect and also teaches at the School of Design, Unitec, Auckland, New Zealand. His research is in the area of New Zealand architectural history, where he is particularly interested in issues of representation and interpretation.

Associate Professor Paul Memmott is Director of the Aboriginal Environments Research Centre based at the University of Queensland. He is also Honorary Reader at the Department of Architecture, University of Sydney.

Dr Greg Missingham is a Senior Lecturer in the Faculty of Architecture Building and Planning, University of Melbourne. He teaches architectural design, design approaches and methods, and environmental psychology, and lectures on Chinese gardens. He consults on landscape architectural design and FPM. g.missingham@unimelb.edu.au

Elizabeth Musgrave is an Associate Lecturer in the Department of Architecture at the University of Queensland. Research investigates links between the domain of architectural ideas and the pragmatics and poetics of construction. Her paper for the ADDITIONS conference draws on work contributing to a Masters of Architecture thesis entitled ‘Mapping the Edge’. e.musgrave@uq.edu.au

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Clare Newton is a senior lecturer in the Faculty of Architecture, Building & Planning at the University of Melbourne. Her research focuses on the translation between architectural drawings and their built form. Her paper for the ADDITIONS conference draws on research undertaken while on study leave in the first half of 2002.

Helen Norrie is an associate lecturer at the University of Tasmania. Her research into new museum buildings considers the relationship between architectural ideas and museum and curatorial policy. This paper for the ADDITIONS conference draws on research into she is conducting for her PhD at the University of Melbourne.

Mari North is a recent architecture graduate from Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand. She is currently working as a research assistant evaluating user experience of a Lapori Birthing Room at Wellington Hospital, and is in private practice.

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Judith O’Callaghan teaches in the Interior Architecture Program of the Faculty of the Built Environment, UNSW. As a Ph.D. candidate, her research focuses on architect-designed project housing in Australia.

Tim O’Rourke is an architect and a postgraduate student studying at the Aboriginal Environments Research Centre, in the School of Geography, Planning and Architecture, at the University of Queensland. His paper draws on current research into ethno-architecture in the humid tropics of Queensland. t.orourke@mailbox.uq.edu.au

Kirsten Orr is an architect who is associate lecturer in the Architecture Program at the University of Technology, Sydney. She is a PhD candidate at the University of New South Wales. Her thesis focuses on the nineteenth-century Australian international exhibitions as a force for urbanism and national identity. kirsten.orr@uts.edu.au

Professor Michael Ostwald is Head of the School of Architecture and Built Environment. He has held previous academic positions in the United Kingdom, Europe and North America. His research in architectural theory explores the relationship between architecture, philosophy, mathematics, and virtual environments.

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Shaji K. Panicker is completing his Masters in Architecture from the University of Newcastle, Australia. Under the guidance of Professor Michael J. Ostwald and John Moore, his thesis examines the works of a couple of architects in post-liberalization India, with the framework of “Critical Regionalism” by Alexander Tzonis and Liane Lefaivre.

Patricia Pringle is a senior lecturer in the School of Architecture & Design at RMIT University, Melbourne, Australia. Her current research investigates aspects of spatial experience in popular amusements and their relation to design. 'The Space of Stage Magic' will appear in 'Space & Culture', vol. 5, no. 4 in November 2002. trish.pringle@rmit.edu.au

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Peter Raisbeck is currently a PhD student in the Department of Architecture at Melbourne University. His doctoral thesis is a study of underwater, marine and immersive architectures between the years 1960 and 1975. His email is peterraisbeck@hotmail.com

Judy Gale Rechner is a professional historian specialising in cultural heritage, local and social history research and the author of several books and papers. She is a member of the Professional Historians Association (Qld) Inc.

Albert L Refiti is an architectural historian and theorist who is a lecturer at the Auckland University of Technology School of Art and Design. He has written on architecture and art of the Pacific region.

Jane Rendell BA (Hons), Dip. Arch., MSc., PhD, is lecturer in architecture at the Bartlett, UCL. An architectural researcher and writer, she is author of The Pursuit of Pleasure, (Athlone Press, 2001), editor of 'A Place Between', Public Art Journal, (October 1999) and co-editor of Strangely Familiar, (Routledge, 1995), Gender Space Architecture, (Routledge, 1999), Intersections, (Routledge, 2000) and The Unknown City, (MIT Press, 2000). She has just completed a new book for Reaktion Press, A Place Between: Art, Architecture and Critical Theories and is currently working on Writing Aloud, a two part project of site-specific writings and text-based readings, performances and installations.

Charles Rice is lecturer in architecture in the Faculty of the Built Environment at the University of New South Wales. His research looks at subjectivity, inhabitation and the image at both the domestic and urban scale. He has recently published in Critical Quarterly and Architectural Design.

Robert Riddel is an architect in Brisbane. He has studied the work of architect R. S. Dods (1869-1920) and conserved a number of his buildings in South-East Queensland. His paper for the ADDITIONS conference draws on research he is conducting for his Ph.D. at the University of Queensland. 7diddams@tpgi.com.au

Sam Ridgway is an architect and a lecturer in construction and design at the School of Architecture, Landscape Architecture and Urban Design, The University of Adelaide. His research focuses on Technology Theory as it relates to the way architects design buildings. This research is in part based on current Philosophy of Technology discourse and forms a basis from which he teaches in the area of architectural construction.

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Merrill Schleier Ph.D. is a professor of Art and Architectural History and Film Studies at the University of the Pacific in Stockton, California. Her research interests include the manner in which gendered discourses effect architectural imagery. An article entitled, 'Ayn Rand and King Vidor's The Fountainhead: Architectural Discourse, the Gendered Body and Political Ideology,'has just been published in the September JSAH. Her book Skyscrapers, Gender, Film will be published by the University of Minnesota Press in 2005. mschleier@uop.edu

Yves Schoonjans is an assistant professor in architectural history and architectural theory at the Department of Architecture, St-Lucas Institute of Architecture, Brussels, Belgium and the Department of Architecture, Free University of Brussels, Belgium. His research focuses on 19th century eclecticism as a theoretical notion. He publishes in Feit en Fictie, Tmesis, DWB, Open City…. Yvesschoonjans@hotmail.com

Alex Selenitsch is a Senior Lecturer in the Faculty of Architecture Building and Planning, University of Melbourne. He teaches in architectural design and practices as an architect and poet. His 'The Gunn Atrium' was published in Transition, Volume 61/62, pp 140-151. asele@unimelb.edu.au

Anna Franca Sibiriu is a graduating student from the Building Engineering and Architecture course, University of Cagliari, Italy.

Rebecca Sinclair is a lecturer in Art & Design Studies at Massey University, Wellington, New Zealand. Her research focuses on connections between architecture and what might be thought of as ‘improper’ to it. She has recently completed her MArch thesis at the University of Auckland, entitled ‘The Incidental Architecture of the Children’s Dental Clinic.’ r.sinclair@massey.ac.nz

Robin Skinner is a lecturer and studio tutor at the School of Architecture, Victoria University Wellington. He has formal training in civil engineering and architecture.

Chris L. Smith is a post-graduate student at the University of Newcastle, Australia. His research focuses on interdisciplinary appropriation and the body construct in architectural theory. He is presently working towards the completion of his doctoral dissertation and teaches Design Integration within the School of Architecture and the Built Environment. clsmith@mail.newcastle.edu.au

Rory Spence is a lecturer in architecture at the University of Tasmania, Australia. His research interests focus on aspects of late 19th and 20th/21st century architecture in England and Australia. His paper for the ADDITIONS conference draws on current research for a book on the work of Sydney architect Richard Leplastrier. R.Spence@utas.edu.au

Naomi Stead teaches in the Faculty of Design, Architecture and Building at the University of Technology, Sydney. Naomi Stead. Her research interests include museum architecture, the history and theory of museums and collections; and spectacle and populism in contemporary architecture.

Dr Quentin Stevens is associate lecturer in urban design in the School of Geography, Planning and Architecture at the University of Queensland. His research examines urban leisure settings. His chapter “Urban Escapades: Play in Melbourne’s Public Spaces” is soon to be published by Sage as part of the edited collection The Emancipatory City: paradoxes and possibilities. q@uq.edu.au

Susan Stewart teaches theory and design in the Interior Design Program at the University of Technology, Sydney. Sir Henry Wotton's treatise, The Elements of Architecture was the subject of her doctoral dissertation, completed in 1999.

Lee Stickells is an architectural postgraduate student at the University of Western Australia His research interest is in urban design. His paper for the ADDITIONS conference draws on research he is conducting for his PhD at UWA . lstickel@cyllene.uwa.edu.au

Iwan Strauven is a research assistant at the Department of Architecture and Urban Planning, Ghent University, Belgium. His PhD-research focuses on the Belgian modernist architect Victor Bourgeois (1897-1962). He regularly publishes on modern architecture and is co-editor of a book on postwar furnishing design in Belgium. iwan.strauven@rug.ac.be

Nicole Sully is a postgraduate student in the Faculty of Architecture, Landscape and Visual Arts at the University of Western Australia. Her research focuses on the interdisciplinary relationship between architecture and memory, and the employment of concepts of memory in contemporary architectural discourse and practice. nsully@cyllene.uwa.edu.au

Karina Sunk is an architectural graduate and urban designer with the Urban Design and Major Places Unit, Department for Planning and Infrastructure, Government of Western Australia.

A. Krista Sykes is a PhD candidate in Architectural History and Theory at Harvard University. Her research focuses on the architectural culture of the 1960s and 70s. asykes@fas.harvard.edu

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Mark Taylor is a Senior Lecturer in design and architectural theory at Victoria University Wellington, New Zealand. His research focuses on gender and architecture. He is currently guest editor for a special issue of Architectural Design entitled “Surface Consciousness” to be published by John Wiley in May 2003.

William Taylor is Senior Lecturer in the Faculty of Architecture, Landscape and Visual Arts, University of Western Australia, Perth, Australia. His forthcoming monograph The Vital Landscape: the 19th century discovery of the environment in the English home and garden will be published by Ashgate Press in 2003. btaylor@cyllene.uwa.edu.au.

Reena Tiwari is an academic in Architecture at Curtin University of Technology, Perth. She is currently completing a PhD that focuses on the idea of performativity in cities.

Sarah Treadwell is a senior lecturer in architecture at the School of Architecture, University of Auckland, New Zealand. Her research focuses on issues of colonial representation and she has recently published “Tracing the Grotesque: Angas and Kaitangata”, Fabrications, vol. 11, no. 2, 60-72, 2001.

Rachel Trigg is a strategic planner at the City of Perth in Western Australia. She is currently undertaking a PhD at Curtin University of Technology, with a research focus on places of the dead in Australian cities. rachel_trigg@cityofperth.wa.gov.au

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Pieter Uyttenhove is professor in theory and history of urban planning at the Department of Architecture and Urban Planning at Ghent University, Belgium. His research and publications focus on 19th and 20th century city and landscape design, and planning theory. His PhD (EHESS, Paris) on Marcel Lods is under press. He currently also teaches in the New York Paris Program at Columbia University (Paris).

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Paul Walker is a senior lecturer in architecture at the University of Melbourne where he teaches architectural design, history and theory. His current research is concerned with architectural strategies in colonial and postcolonial contexts.

Jillian Walliss is a Senior Lecturer at the School of Design, Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand. Her research focuses on issues of national identity and its interpretation /representation in contemporary design practice and she has recently published ‘The Public Place design competition as cultural infrastructure’ in Kerb A Journal of Landscape Architecture , #10, Nov, 2001. Jillian.Walliss@vuw.ac.nz

Roxana Waterson is an Associate Professor in the Department of Sociology, National University of Singapore. She has done fieldwork with the Sa’dan Toraja people of Sulawesi, Indonesia, since 1978. She is the author of The Living House: An Anthropology of Architecture in South-East Asia (3rd edn., Thames & Hudson, 1997). Her current research interests include ethnohistory, landscape and social memory, and the study of life histories and personal narratives in Southeast Asia. socroxan@nus.edu.sg

Nigel Westbrook is Senior Lecturer in architectural design and history in the Faculty of Architecture, Landscape Architecture and Fine Arts, The University of Western Australia. His research interests include the development of Melbourne’s 19th century parks, and Byzantine secular architecture

Dr Julie Willis is a Senior Lecturer in the Faculty of Architecture Building and Planning at the University of Melbourne. She is the author of Women Architects in Australia 1900-1950 (2001) and editor of Fabrications, Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians, Australia and New Zealand.

Tracey Woods is currently undertaking postgraduate research at University of Queensland on the relations of space, form and the body in contemporary architectural theory. Her paper draws on an Honours research project undertaken at the University of Tasmania on the spatial theories of Deleuze and Guattari. traceywoods@hotmail.com

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