By A Mystery Man Writer
UACDC advances creative development in Arkansas through design, research, and education solutions that enhance the physical environment. Originated in 1995 as an outreach center of the fay Jones School of Architecture, the center has its own downtown facilities and full-time design and planning staff who deliver professional services for communities and organizations statewide. Several staff also hold faculty appointments. While students participate in the development of some of the center's projects, when a project sponsor commissions the center they hire the professional staff. UACDC regularly collaborates with allied professionals and faculty in multiple disciplines. UACDC's signature design approach works with sponsors and agencies to define a multidisciplinary problem framework that solves for the triple bottom line, simultaneously solving for social, economic, and environmental benchmarks--sustainability.
Pro soccer, 5,000-seat stadium coming to Northwest Arkansas - Talk Business & Politics
The University of Arkansas Community Design Center is restoring a 98-acre wetland landscape as a commons for culture, heritage, and science in an inclusive and accessible environment that promotes public education and
Community Design Center's Housing, Greenhouse Project Wins 2023 Future House Award
University of Arkansas Community Design Center
Community Design Center, Fay Jones School
University of Arkansas Community Design Center Proposes Downtown Housing Regeneration Scheme - Architizer Journal
University of Arkansas Community Design Center + Marlon Blackwell Architects - The Circle, A Mixed-Use Live-Work Destination In A Small Town
ASLA 2011 Professional Awards LID Low Impact Development: a design manual for urban areas
University of Arkansas Community Design Center + Urban Works Architecture - Value-Added Agricultural Product Development Center in Wahiawa
15 Constructed Wetland Ideas wetland, urban landscape design, landscape architecture diagram
ECOSYSTEM FOR HEALTH: OSD BREAKS GROUND ON A NEW 230 ACRE MIXED-USE COMMUNITY INTEGRATING NEURODIVERSITY, ACCESSIBILITY, AND NATURE-BASED LIVING IN THE HEART OF ARKANSAS' OZARKS - Civil + Structural Engineer magazine