OFFICIAL PUBLICATION OF AIA UTAH

2026 Pub. 7 Issue 2

Designing for Urgency

Utahn Perspectives Shape New Handbook on Urban Design Practice

What role can architects play in shaping more resilient, equitable and adaptable cities at a time of accelerating change? The Routledge Handbook of Urban Design Practice explores this question through a global collection of perspectives on the practice of urban design.

Designing for Urgency

Utahn Perspectives Shape New Handbook on Urban Design Practice

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Salt Lake City’s Japantown: Can It Be More Than a Historic Footnote?

A Plan for Revitalization

“We had a Japantown?” Valerie Nagasawa, principal at GSBS Architects, recalls the reaction some of her peers had when learning about Salt Lake City’s historic Japantown for the first time. Japantown was not a part of her youth; she was raised in Las Vegas and moved to Utah to attend the University of Utah. After meeting and later marrying Ralph Nagasawa, AIA, however, she came to understand Japantown’s deep significance in the life and history of his family and the broader Japanese American community in Salt Lake City. Her husband’s family owned one of the most well-known businesses in Japantown, the Sunrise Fish Market. That business and many others are no longer around, and memories of Japantown have faded into obscurity for many in Salt Lake City and Utah at large.

Salt Lake City’s Japantown: Can It Be More Than a Historic Footnote?

A Plan for Revitalization

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2026 Legislative Recap: The Sweet Science

Perhaps as early as the 3rd millennium B.C.E., evidence suggests, bare-fisted, hand-to-hand combat was taking shape as a sport in Egypt — albeit one played to the death. This early form of boxing was later taken up by the Greeks and incorporated into the Olympic Games circa 688 B.C.E. While the contenders wrapped leather around their fists to protect their knuckles, they still fought to the death (or inability to continue).

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Member Spotlight: Kory Cox

The importance of community cannot be understated for the balance of the human mind. Our lives are increasingly complex and isolated. When I made the decision to start my own firm, I understood the risk I was taking, psychologically as well as financially. Spending time amongst other motivated practitioners has been my bulwark against the isolation that I knew would be inevitable if I took no action. The AIA brings us together to discuss issues that plague our profession and the state of Utah, and gets me out of the home office to be amongst other architects. I have enjoyed learning from all of you, and I look forward to our next event together.

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AIA Utah Scholarship Golf Tournament

Help Raise Money for the AIA Utah Scholarship Fund

AIA Utah is hosting its annual scholarship golf tournament on Tuesday, July 21, at Wasatch Mountain Golf Course in Midway, Utah. This event raises money for scholarships to support graduate students pursuing an architectural education. 100% of the proceeds go to AIA Utah’s scholarship fund.

AIA Utah Scholarship Golf Tournament

Help Raise Money for the AIA Utah Scholarship Fund

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A Message from the President-Elect: Defining the Utah Moment

Architects do hard things. We are trained to adapt to complex environmental and technological forces, working collaboratively to generate positive outcomes. The real power in our roles in Utah, however, is not in reacting but in envisioning. We are the ones planning, designing and constructing the environments where we live, work, play and worship — all within the increasingly populated yet fragile ecosystem of the Great Basin.

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