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An 1896 map of Oil City, Pennsylvania.

Architecture students focus on concrete 3D printing to help revitalize Oil City

Darrin Thornton

Arts and Architecture appoints interim graphic design head for spring

A rendering of solar lights along Shaver's Creek.

Graphic design professor’s project featured in Philadelphia design festival

Laia Celma

Stuckeman architecture professor awarded inaugural Obel teaching fellowship

A time-lapse image showing a robotic arm extruding a concrete substance as it 3D prints a structure.

Adaptive 3D concrete printing work earns Stuckeman collaborative research grant

At left, a photo from showing an inlet that was formed during Superstorm Sandy on the Rhode Island coast. At right is a visualization of a model simulation of the same event.

Penn State researcher and partners earn collaborative coastal resilience grant

A promotional poster for the Work in Progress exhibit.

Graphic design students to host exhibition that highlights the process of design

Winners selected for fall 2023 Gallery@104 student art competition

An AI-generated concept of a sustainable community.

Collaborative landscape design approach may improve resiliency, human well-being

A rose shape made with isocord lying flat at left and under tension at right.

Architecture lab's computational textiles work featured in upcoming exhibition

Ryan Russell

Arts and Architecture mourns the passing of graphic design professor Ryan Russell

The "Unsettling Matter, Gaining Ground" exhibit installed at the Carnegie Museum of Art’s Heinz Architectural Center.

Work by Stuckeman professors featured in Carnegie Museum of Art exhibition

The cover of "My Annoying, Irritating, Always-in-the-way Shadow" by Ryan Russell.

Children's book by Stuckeman professor illustrates the power of perspective

A three-dimensional visualization showing inundation depths in Providence, Rhode Island, from a hypothetical storm dubbed "Hurricane Rhody." Darker colors indicated deeper inundation levels. Peter Stempel, associate professor of landscape architecture, creates visualizations such as the one above to help coastal communities quickly understand the risks posed by hurricanes and other coastal storms. Credit: Image courtesy of Peter Stempel. All Rights Reserved.

Q&A: Seeing coastal storm impacts in advance can help communities prepare

J. Meejin Yoon

Stuckeman School's fall lecture series concludes with architect and educator

Julie Stevens

Stuckeman School lecture series continues with a talk on trauma-informed design

A cluster of houses nearly on top of one another in Medellín, Colombia.

Stuckeman symposium to highlight issues surrounding displacement in architecture

A prototype of an architectural gridshell structure made with fiberglass tent poles and industrial knit panels.

Penn State-led sustainable building materials research showcased in exhibition

Penn State NASA Mars Challenge team standing together in front of full-size 3d-printed concrete dwellings holding Penn State flag

Penn State work featured in upcoming long-term Franklin Institute space exhibit

Black and white photos of David Heasty at left and Martin Rauch at right.

Stuckeman School to host architect and graphic designer as lecturers on Oct. 4

The front and back cover of the "First There Was Chaos" novel.

Graphic design professor's graphic novel relates Greek Olympians' origins

young woman and man pose on Penn State campus

'It's Penn State': Happy Valley is the right answer for Kappel family

Headshot of Kelleann Foster.

Emeritus landscape architecture professor elected to ASLA Council of Fellows