BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:2.0
CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
PRODID:iCalendar-Ruby
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Academics,World & Culture
DESCRIPTION:Our society is currently faced with two significant challenges:
  human-made climate change and the need to provide housing for an ever-incr
 easing world population. Since the Industrial Revolution\, we have relied o
 n steel and concrete as the primary building materials for the construction
  of our cities. Their refinement and processing require large amounts of en
 ergy\, which is mostly generated by the burning of fossil fuels. As a resul
 t\, carbon that has been stored for millions of years has been released int
 o the earth’s atmosphere in a relatively short period of about 150 years in
  the form of carbon dioxide\, contributing significantly to the climate shi
 ft we are experiencing today. The manufacture of cement\, the key ingredien
 t of concrete\, constitutes one of the most polluting processes in today’s 
 construction industry. To provide sufficient housing for future generations
 \, while at the same time lessening the impact on our environment\, we must
  rethink the way we build.\n \nWood is a truly renewable building material 
 that is unlimited in supply if its growth and harvest are sustainably manag
 ed. Trees store carbon through photosynthesis as they grow\, simultaneously
  releasing oxygen. When wood decays or burns\, it only releases as much car
 bon dioxide into the atmosphere as has been bound during its growth\, there
 fore completing a carbon neutral life cycle. The latest innovations in engi
 neering allow for the use of timber in the construction of multi-story and 
 long-span structures.\n\n \n\nWe invite you to explore six innovative struc
 tures in North America and Europe that have been recently completed or are 
 currently under construction. By replacing steel and concrete with timber\,
  they illustrate how buildings and cities can function as carbon sinks rath
 er than sources of CO2 emissions. \n\n \n\nThe Time for Timber exhibition i
 s open for public viewing in the Mebane Gallery on the ground floor of Gold
 smith Hall during normal business hours (8am-5pm).\n\n \n\nThis exhibition 
 is organized by Ulrich Dangel\, Meadows Foundation Centennial Fellow in Arc
 hitecture\, and sponsored by the Center for American Architecture and Desig
 n at The University of Texas at Austin School of Architecture.
DTEND:20180131T230000Z
DTSTAMP:20260317T033314Z
DTSTART:20180131T140000Z
GEO:30.285314;-97.741175
LOCATION:Mebane Gallery\, Goldsmith Hall\, GOL 2.105
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Exhibition: Time For Timber
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_3332686
URL:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/exhibition_time_for_timber
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Academics,World & Culture
DESCRIPTION:Our society is currently faced with two significant challenges:
  human-made climate change and the need to provide housing for an ever-incr
 easing world population. Since the Industrial Revolution\, we have relied o
 n steel and concrete as the primary building materials for the construction
  of our cities. Their refinement and processing require large amounts of en
 ergy\, which is mostly generated by the burning of fossil fuels. As a resul
 t\, carbon that has been stored for millions of years has been released int
 o the earth’s atmosphere in a relatively short period of about 150 years in
  the form of carbon dioxide\, contributing significantly to the climate shi
 ft we are experiencing today. The manufacture of cement\, the key ingredien
 t of concrete\, constitutes one of the most polluting processes in today’s 
 construction industry. To provide sufficient housing for future generations
 \, while at the same time lessening the impact on our environment\, we must
  rethink the way we build.\n \nWood is a truly renewable building material 
 that is unlimited in supply if its growth and harvest are sustainably manag
 ed. Trees store carbon through photosynthesis as they grow\, simultaneously
  releasing oxygen. When wood decays or burns\, it only releases as much car
 bon dioxide into the atmosphere as has been bound during its growth\, there
 fore completing a carbon neutral life cycle. The latest innovations in engi
 neering allow for the use of timber in the construction of multi-story and 
 long-span structures.\n\n \n\nWe invite you to explore six innovative struc
 tures in North America and Europe that have been recently completed or are 
 currently under construction. By replacing steel and concrete with timber\,
  they illustrate how buildings and cities can function as carbon sinks rath
 er than sources of CO2 emissions. \n\n \n\nThe Time for Timber exhibition i
 s open for public viewing in the Mebane Gallery on the ground floor of Gold
 smith Hall during normal business hours (8am-5pm).\n\n \n\nThis exhibition 
 is organized by Ulrich Dangel\, Meadows Foundation Centennial Fellow in Arc
 hitecture\, and sponsored by the Center for American Architecture and Desig
 n at The University of Texas at Austin School of Architecture.
DTEND:20180201T230000Z
DTSTAMP:20260317T033314Z
DTSTART:20180201T140000Z
GEO:30.285314;-97.741175
LOCATION:Mebane Gallery\, Goldsmith Hall\, GOL 2.105
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Exhibition: Time For Timber
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_3333479
URL:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/exhibition_time_for_timber
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Academics,World & Culture
DESCRIPTION:Our society is currently faced with two significant challenges:
  human-made climate change and the need to provide housing for an ever-incr
 easing world population. Since the Industrial Revolution\, we have relied o
 n steel and concrete as the primary building materials for the construction
  of our cities. Their refinement and processing require large amounts of en
 ergy\, which is mostly generated by the burning of fossil fuels. As a resul
 t\, carbon that has been stored for millions of years has been released int
 o the earth’s atmosphere in a relatively short period of about 150 years in
  the form of carbon dioxide\, contributing significantly to the climate shi
 ft we are experiencing today. The manufacture of cement\, the key ingredien
 t of concrete\, constitutes one of the most polluting processes in today’s 
 construction industry. To provide sufficient housing for future generations
 \, while at the same time lessening the impact on our environment\, we must
  rethink the way we build.\n \nWood is a truly renewable building material 
 that is unlimited in supply if its growth and harvest are sustainably manag
 ed. Trees store carbon through photosynthesis as they grow\, simultaneously
  releasing oxygen. When wood decays or burns\, it only releases as much car
 bon dioxide into the atmosphere as has been bound during its growth\, there
 fore completing a carbon neutral life cycle. The latest innovations in engi
 neering allow for the use of timber in the construction of multi-story and 
 long-span structures.\n\n \n\nWe invite you to explore six innovative struc
 tures in North America and Europe that have been recently completed or are 
 currently under construction. By replacing steel and concrete with timber\,
  they illustrate how buildings and cities can function as carbon sinks rath
 er than sources of CO2 emissions. \n\n \n\nThe Time for Timber exhibition i
 s open for public viewing in the Mebane Gallery on the ground floor of Gold
 smith Hall during normal business hours (8am-5pm).\n\n \n\nThis exhibition 
 is organized by Ulrich Dangel\, Meadows Foundation Centennial Fellow in Arc
 hitecture\, and sponsored by the Center for American Architecture and Desig
 n at The University of Texas at Austin School of Architecture.
DTEND:20180202T230000Z
DTSTAMP:20260317T033314Z
DTSTART:20180202T140000Z
GEO:30.285314;-97.741175
LOCATION:Mebane Gallery\, Goldsmith Hall\, GOL 2.105
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Exhibition: Time For Timber
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_3333480
URL:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/exhibition_time_for_timber
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Academics,World & Culture
DESCRIPTION:Our society is currently faced with two significant challenges:
  human-made climate change and the need to provide housing for an ever-incr
 easing world population. Since the Industrial Revolution\, we have relied o
 n steel and concrete as the primary building materials for the construction
  of our cities. Their refinement and processing require large amounts of en
 ergy\, which is mostly generated by the burning of fossil fuels. As a resul
 t\, carbon that has been stored for millions of years has been released int
 o the earth’s atmosphere in a relatively short period of about 150 years in
  the form of carbon dioxide\, contributing significantly to the climate shi
 ft we are experiencing today. The manufacture of cement\, the key ingredien
 t of concrete\, constitutes one of the most polluting processes in today’s 
 construction industry. To provide sufficient housing for future generations
 \, while at the same time lessening the impact on our environment\, we must
  rethink the way we build.\n \nWood is a truly renewable building material 
 that is unlimited in supply if its growth and harvest are sustainably manag
 ed. Trees store carbon through photosynthesis as they grow\, simultaneously
  releasing oxygen. When wood decays or burns\, it only releases as much car
 bon dioxide into the atmosphere as has been bound during its growth\, there
 fore completing a carbon neutral life cycle. The latest innovations in engi
 neering allow for the use of timber in the construction of multi-story and 
 long-span structures.\n\n \n\nWe invite you to explore six innovative struc
 tures in North America and Europe that have been recently completed or are 
 currently under construction. By replacing steel and concrete with timber\,
  they illustrate how buildings and cities can function as carbon sinks rath
 er than sources of CO2 emissions. \n\n \n\nThe Time for Timber exhibition i
 s open for public viewing in the Mebane Gallery on the ground floor of Gold
 smith Hall during normal business hours (8am-5pm).\n\n \n\nThis exhibition 
 is organized by Ulrich Dangel\, Meadows Foundation Centennial Fellow in Arc
 hitecture\, and sponsored by the Center for American Architecture and Desig
 n at The University of Texas at Austin School of Architecture.
DTEND:20180203T230000Z
DTSTAMP:20260317T033314Z
DTSTART:20180203T140000Z
GEO:30.285314;-97.741175
LOCATION:Mebane Gallery\, Goldsmith Hall\, GOL 2.105
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Exhibition: Time For Timber
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_3333481
URL:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/exhibition_time_for_timber
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Academics,World & Culture
DESCRIPTION:Our society is currently faced with two significant challenges:
  human-made climate change and the need to provide housing for an ever-incr
 easing world population. Since the Industrial Revolution\, we have relied o
 n steel and concrete as the primary building materials for the construction
  of our cities. Their refinement and processing require large amounts of en
 ergy\, which is mostly generated by the burning of fossil fuels. As a resul
 t\, carbon that has been stored for millions of years has been released int
 o the earth’s atmosphere in a relatively short period of about 150 years in
  the form of carbon dioxide\, contributing significantly to the climate shi
 ft we are experiencing today. The manufacture of cement\, the key ingredien
 t of concrete\, constitutes one of the most polluting processes in today’s 
 construction industry. To provide sufficient housing for future generations
 \, while at the same time lessening the impact on our environment\, we must
  rethink the way we build.\n \nWood is a truly renewable building material 
 that is unlimited in supply if its growth and harvest are sustainably manag
 ed. Trees store carbon through photosynthesis as they grow\, simultaneously
  releasing oxygen. When wood decays or burns\, it only releases as much car
 bon dioxide into the atmosphere as has been bound during its growth\, there
 fore completing a carbon neutral life cycle. The latest innovations in engi
 neering allow for the use of timber in the construction of multi-story and 
 long-span structures.\n\n \n\nWe invite you to explore six innovative struc
 tures in North America and Europe that have been recently completed or are 
 currently under construction. By replacing steel and concrete with timber\,
  they illustrate how buildings and cities can function as carbon sinks rath
 er than sources of CO2 emissions. \n\n \n\nThe Time for Timber exhibition i
 s open for public viewing in the Mebane Gallery on the ground floor of Gold
 smith Hall during normal business hours (8am-5pm).\n\n \n\nThis exhibition 
 is organized by Ulrich Dangel\, Meadows Foundation Centennial Fellow in Arc
 hitecture\, and sponsored by the Center for American Architecture and Desig
 n at The University of Texas at Austin School of Architecture.
DTEND:20180204T230000Z
DTSTAMP:20260317T033314Z
DTSTART:20180204T140000Z
GEO:30.285314;-97.741175
LOCATION:Mebane Gallery\, Goldsmith Hall\, GOL 2.105
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Exhibition: Time For Timber
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_3333482
URL:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/exhibition_time_for_timber
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Academics,World & Culture
DESCRIPTION:Our society is currently faced with two significant challenges:
  human-made climate change and the need to provide housing for an ever-incr
 easing world population. Since the Industrial Revolution\, we have relied o
 n steel and concrete as the primary building materials for the construction
  of our cities. Their refinement and processing require large amounts of en
 ergy\, which is mostly generated by the burning of fossil fuels. As a resul
 t\, carbon that has been stored for millions of years has been released int
 o the earth’s atmosphere in a relatively short period of about 150 years in
  the form of carbon dioxide\, contributing significantly to the climate shi
 ft we are experiencing today. The manufacture of cement\, the key ingredien
 t of concrete\, constitutes one of the most polluting processes in today’s 
 construction industry. To provide sufficient housing for future generations
 \, while at the same time lessening the impact on our environment\, we must
  rethink the way we build.\n \nWood is a truly renewable building material 
 that is unlimited in supply if its growth and harvest are sustainably manag
 ed. Trees store carbon through photosynthesis as they grow\, simultaneously
  releasing oxygen. When wood decays or burns\, it only releases as much car
 bon dioxide into the atmosphere as has been bound during its growth\, there
 fore completing a carbon neutral life cycle. The latest innovations in engi
 neering allow for the use of timber in the construction of multi-story and 
 long-span structures.\n\n \n\nWe invite you to explore six innovative struc
 tures in North America and Europe that have been recently completed or are 
 currently under construction. By replacing steel and concrete with timber\,
  they illustrate how buildings and cities can function as carbon sinks rath
 er than sources of CO2 emissions. \n\n \n\nThe Time for Timber exhibition i
 s open for public viewing in the Mebane Gallery on the ground floor of Gold
 smith Hall during normal business hours (8am-5pm).\n\n \n\nThis exhibition 
 is organized by Ulrich Dangel\, Meadows Foundation Centennial Fellow in Arc
 hitecture\, and sponsored by the Center for American Architecture and Desig
 n at The University of Texas at Austin School of Architecture.
DTEND:20180205T230000Z
DTSTAMP:20260317T033315Z
DTSTART:20180205T140000Z
GEO:30.285314;-97.741175
LOCATION:Mebane Gallery\, Goldsmith Hall\, GOL 2.105
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Exhibition: Time For Timber
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_3333483
URL:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/exhibition_time_for_timber
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Academics,World & Culture
DESCRIPTION:Our society is currently faced with two significant challenges:
  human-made climate change and the need to provide housing for an ever-incr
 easing world population. Since the Industrial Revolution\, we have relied o
 n steel and concrete as the primary building materials for the construction
  of our cities. Their refinement and processing require large amounts of en
 ergy\, which is mostly generated by the burning of fossil fuels. As a resul
 t\, carbon that has been stored for millions of years has been released int
 o the earth’s atmosphere in a relatively short period of about 150 years in
  the form of carbon dioxide\, contributing significantly to the climate shi
 ft we are experiencing today. The manufacture of cement\, the key ingredien
 t of concrete\, constitutes one of the most polluting processes in today’s 
 construction industry. To provide sufficient housing for future generations
 \, while at the same time lessening the impact on our environment\, we must
  rethink the way we build.\n \nWood is a truly renewable building material 
 that is unlimited in supply if its growth and harvest are sustainably manag
 ed. Trees store carbon through photosynthesis as they grow\, simultaneously
  releasing oxygen. When wood decays or burns\, it only releases as much car
 bon dioxide into the atmosphere as has been bound during its growth\, there
 fore completing a carbon neutral life cycle. The latest innovations in engi
 neering allow for the use of timber in the construction of multi-story and 
 long-span structures.\n\n \n\nWe invite you to explore six innovative struc
 tures in North America and Europe that have been recently completed or are 
 currently under construction. By replacing steel and concrete with timber\,
  they illustrate how buildings and cities can function as carbon sinks rath
 er than sources of CO2 emissions. \n\n \n\nThe Time for Timber exhibition i
 s open for public viewing in the Mebane Gallery on the ground floor of Gold
 smith Hall during normal business hours (8am-5pm).\n\n \n\nThis exhibition 
 is organized by Ulrich Dangel\, Meadows Foundation Centennial Fellow in Arc
 hitecture\, and sponsored by the Center for American Architecture and Desig
 n at The University of Texas at Austin School of Architecture.
DTEND:20180206T230000Z
DTSTAMP:20260317T033315Z
DTSTART:20180206T140000Z
GEO:30.285314;-97.741175
LOCATION:Mebane Gallery\, Goldsmith Hall\, GOL 2.105
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Exhibition: Time For Timber
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_3333484
URL:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/exhibition_time_for_timber
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Academics,World & Culture
DESCRIPTION:Our society is currently faced with two significant challenges:
  human-made climate change and the need to provide housing for an ever-incr
 easing world population. Since the Industrial Revolution\, we have relied o
 n steel and concrete as the primary building materials for the construction
  of our cities. Their refinement and processing require large amounts of en
 ergy\, which is mostly generated by the burning of fossil fuels. As a resul
 t\, carbon that has been stored for millions of years has been released int
 o the earth’s atmosphere in a relatively short period of about 150 years in
  the form of carbon dioxide\, contributing significantly to the climate shi
 ft we are experiencing today. The manufacture of cement\, the key ingredien
 t of concrete\, constitutes one of the most polluting processes in today’s 
 construction industry. To provide sufficient housing for future generations
 \, while at the same time lessening the impact on our environment\, we must
  rethink the way we build.\n \nWood is a truly renewable building material 
 that is unlimited in supply if its growth and harvest are sustainably manag
 ed. Trees store carbon through photosynthesis as they grow\, simultaneously
  releasing oxygen. When wood decays or burns\, it only releases as much car
 bon dioxide into the atmosphere as has been bound during its growth\, there
 fore completing a carbon neutral life cycle. The latest innovations in engi
 neering allow for the use of timber in the construction of multi-story and 
 long-span structures.\n\n \n\nWe invite you to explore six innovative struc
 tures in North America and Europe that have been recently completed or are 
 currently under construction. By replacing steel and concrete with timber\,
  they illustrate how buildings and cities can function as carbon sinks rath
 er than sources of CO2 emissions. \n\n \n\nThe Time for Timber exhibition i
 s open for public viewing in the Mebane Gallery on the ground floor of Gold
 smith Hall during normal business hours (8am-5pm).\n\n \n\nThis exhibition 
 is organized by Ulrich Dangel\, Meadows Foundation Centennial Fellow in Arc
 hitecture\, and sponsored by the Center for American Architecture and Desig
 n at The University of Texas at Austin School of Architecture.
DTEND:20180207T230000Z
DTSTAMP:20260317T033315Z
DTSTART:20180207T140000Z
GEO:30.285314;-97.741175
LOCATION:Mebane Gallery\, Goldsmith Hall\, GOL 2.105
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Exhibition: Time For Timber
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_3333485
URL:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/exhibition_time_for_timber
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Academics,World & Culture
DESCRIPTION:Our society is currently faced with two significant challenges:
  human-made climate change and the need to provide housing for an ever-incr
 easing world population. Since the Industrial Revolution\, we have relied o
 n steel and concrete as the primary building materials for the construction
  of our cities. Their refinement and processing require large amounts of en
 ergy\, which is mostly generated by the burning of fossil fuels. As a resul
 t\, carbon that has been stored for millions of years has been released int
 o the earth’s atmosphere in a relatively short period of about 150 years in
  the form of carbon dioxide\, contributing significantly to the climate shi
 ft we are experiencing today. The manufacture of cement\, the key ingredien
 t of concrete\, constitutes one of the most polluting processes in today’s 
 construction industry. To provide sufficient housing for future generations
 \, while at the same time lessening the impact on our environment\, we must
  rethink the way we build.\n \nWood is a truly renewable building material 
 that is unlimited in supply if its growth and harvest are sustainably manag
 ed. Trees store carbon through photosynthesis as they grow\, simultaneously
  releasing oxygen. When wood decays or burns\, it only releases as much car
 bon dioxide into the atmosphere as has been bound during its growth\, there
 fore completing a carbon neutral life cycle. The latest innovations in engi
 neering allow for the use of timber in the construction of multi-story and 
 long-span structures.\n\n \n\nWe invite you to explore six innovative struc
 tures in North America and Europe that have been recently completed or are 
 currently under construction. By replacing steel and concrete with timber\,
  they illustrate how buildings and cities can function as carbon sinks rath
 er than sources of CO2 emissions. \n\n \n\nThe Time for Timber exhibition i
 s open for public viewing in the Mebane Gallery on the ground floor of Gold
 smith Hall during normal business hours (8am-5pm).\n\n \n\nThis exhibition 
 is organized by Ulrich Dangel\, Meadows Foundation Centennial Fellow in Arc
 hitecture\, and sponsored by the Center for American Architecture and Desig
 n at The University of Texas at Austin School of Architecture.
DTEND:20180208T230000Z
DTSTAMP:20260317T033315Z
DTSTART:20180208T140000Z
GEO:30.285314;-97.741175
LOCATION:Mebane Gallery\, Goldsmith Hall\, GOL 2.105
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Exhibition: Time For Timber
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_3333486
URL:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/exhibition_time_for_timber
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Academics,World & Culture
DESCRIPTION:Our society is currently faced with two significant challenges:
  human-made climate change and the need to provide housing for an ever-incr
 easing world population. Since the Industrial Revolution\, we have relied o
 n steel and concrete as the primary building materials for the construction
  of our cities. Their refinement and processing require large amounts of en
 ergy\, which is mostly generated by the burning of fossil fuels. As a resul
 t\, carbon that has been stored for millions of years has been released int
 o the earth’s atmosphere in a relatively short period of about 150 years in
  the form of carbon dioxide\, contributing significantly to the climate shi
 ft we are experiencing today. The manufacture of cement\, the key ingredien
 t of concrete\, constitutes one of the most polluting processes in today’s 
 construction industry. To provide sufficient housing for future generations
 \, while at the same time lessening the impact on our environment\, we must
  rethink the way we build.\n \nWood is a truly renewable building material 
 that is unlimited in supply if its growth and harvest are sustainably manag
 ed. Trees store carbon through photosynthesis as they grow\, simultaneously
  releasing oxygen. When wood decays or burns\, it only releases as much car
 bon dioxide into the atmosphere as has been bound during its growth\, there
 fore completing a carbon neutral life cycle. The latest innovations in engi
 neering allow for the use of timber in the construction of multi-story and 
 long-span structures.\n\n \n\nWe invite you to explore six innovative struc
 tures in North America and Europe that have been recently completed or are 
 currently under construction. By replacing steel and concrete with timber\,
  they illustrate how buildings and cities can function as carbon sinks rath
 er than sources of CO2 emissions. \n\n \n\nThe Time for Timber exhibition i
 s open for public viewing in the Mebane Gallery on the ground floor of Gold
 smith Hall during normal business hours (8am-5pm).\n\n \n\nThis exhibition 
 is organized by Ulrich Dangel\, Meadows Foundation Centennial Fellow in Arc
 hitecture\, and sponsored by the Center for American Architecture and Desig
 n at The University of Texas at Austin School of Architecture.
DTEND:20180209T230000Z
DTSTAMP:20260317T033315Z
DTSTART:20180209T140000Z
GEO:30.285314;-97.741175
LOCATION:Mebane Gallery\, Goldsmith Hall\, GOL 2.105
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Exhibition: Time For Timber
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_3333487
URL:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/exhibition_time_for_timber
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Academics,World & Culture
DESCRIPTION:Our society is currently faced with two significant challenges:
  human-made climate change and the need to provide housing for an ever-incr
 easing world population. Since the Industrial Revolution\, we have relied o
 n steel and concrete as the primary building materials for the construction
  of our cities. Their refinement and processing require large amounts of en
 ergy\, which is mostly generated by the burning of fossil fuels. As a resul
 t\, carbon that has been stored for millions of years has been released int
 o the earth’s atmosphere in a relatively short period of about 150 years in
  the form of carbon dioxide\, contributing significantly to the climate shi
 ft we are experiencing today. The manufacture of cement\, the key ingredien
 t of concrete\, constitutes one of the most polluting processes in today’s 
 construction industry. To provide sufficient housing for future generations
 \, while at the same time lessening the impact on our environment\, we must
  rethink the way we build.\n \nWood is a truly renewable building material 
 that is unlimited in supply if its growth and harvest are sustainably manag
 ed. Trees store carbon through photosynthesis as they grow\, simultaneously
  releasing oxygen. When wood decays or burns\, it only releases as much car
 bon dioxide into the atmosphere as has been bound during its growth\, there
 fore completing a carbon neutral life cycle. The latest innovations in engi
 neering allow for the use of timber in the construction of multi-story and 
 long-span structures.\n\n \n\nWe invite you to explore six innovative struc
 tures in North America and Europe that have been recently completed or are 
 currently under construction. By replacing steel and concrete with timber\,
  they illustrate how buildings and cities can function as carbon sinks rath
 er than sources of CO2 emissions. \n\n \n\nThe Time for Timber exhibition i
 s open for public viewing in the Mebane Gallery on the ground floor of Gold
 smith Hall during normal business hours (8am-5pm).\n\n \n\nThis exhibition 
 is organized by Ulrich Dangel\, Meadows Foundation Centennial Fellow in Arc
 hitecture\, and sponsored by the Center for American Architecture and Desig
 n at The University of Texas at Austin School of Architecture.
DTEND:20180210T230000Z
DTSTAMP:20260317T033315Z
DTSTART:20180210T140000Z
GEO:30.285314;-97.741175
LOCATION:Mebane Gallery\, Goldsmith Hall\, GOL 2.105
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Exhibition: Time For Timber
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_3333488
URL:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/exhibition_time_for_timber
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Academics,World & Culture
DESCRIPTION:Our society is currently faced with two significant challenges:
  human-made climate change and the need to provide housing for an ever-incr
 easing world population. Since the Industrial Revolution\, we have relied o
 n steel and concrete as the primary building materials for the construction
  of our cities. Their refinement and processing require large amounts of en
 ergy\, which is mostly generated by the burning of fossil fuels. As a resul
 t\, carbon that has been stored for millions of years has been released int
 o the earth’s atmosphere in a relatively short period of about 150 years in
  the form of carbon dioxide\, contributing significantly to the climate shi
 ft we are experiencing today. The manufacture of cement\, the key ingredien
 t of concrete\, constitutes one of the most polluting processes in today’s 
 construction industry. To provide sufficient housing for future generations
 \, while at the same time lessening the impact on our environment\, we must
  rethink the way we build.\n \nWood is a truly renewable building material 
 that is unlimited in supply if its growth and harvest are sustainably manag
 ed. Trees store carbon through photosynthesis as they grow\, simultaneously
  releasing oxygen. When wood decays or burns\, it only releases as much car
 bon dioxide into the atmosphere as has been bound during its growth\, there
 fore completing a carbon neutral life cycle. The latest innovations in engi
 neering allow for the use of timber in the construction of multi-story and 
 long-span structures.\n\n \n\nWe invite you to explore six innovative struc
 tures in North America and Europe that have been recently completed or are 
 currently under construction. By replacing steel and concrete with timber\,
  they illustrate how buildings and cities can function as carbon sinks rath
 er than sources of CO2 emissions. \n\n \n\nThe Time for Timber exhibition i
 s open for public viewing in the Mebane Gallery on the ground floor of Gold
 smith Hall during normal business hours (8am-5pm).\n\n \n\nThis exhibition 
 is organized by Ulrich Dangel\, Meadows Foundation Centennial Fellow in Arc
 hitecture\, and sponsored by the Center for American Architecture and Desig
 n at The University of Texas at Austin School of Architecture.
DTEND:20180211T230000Z
DTSTAMP:20260317T033315Z
DTSTART:20180211T140000Z
GEO:30.285314;-97.741175
LOCATION:Mebane Gallery\, Goldsmith Hall\, GOL 2.105
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Exhibition: Time For Timber
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_3333489
URL:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/exhibition_time_for_timber
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Academics,World & Culture
DESCRIPTION:Our society is currently faced with two significant challenges:
  human-made climate change and the need to provide housing for an ever-incr
 easing world population. Since the Industrial Revolution\, we have relied o
 n steel and concrete as the primary building materials for the construction
  of our cities. Their refinement and processing require large amounts of en
 ergy\, which is mostly generated by the burning of fossil fuels. As a resul
 t\, carbon that has been stored for millions of years has been released int
 o the earth’s atmosphere in a relatively short period of about 150 years in
  the form of carbon dioxide\, contributing significantly to the climate shi
 ft we are experiencing today. The manufacture of cement\, the key ingredien
 t of concrete\, constitutes one of the most polluting processes in today’s 
 construction industry. To provide sufficient housing for future generations
 \, while at the same time lessening the impact on our environment\, we must
  rethink the way we build.\n \nWood is a truly renewable building material 
 that is unlimited in supply if its growth and harvest are sustainably manag
 ed. Trees store carbon through photosynthesis as they grow\, simultaneously
  releasing oxygen. When wood decays or burns\, it only releases as much car
 bon dioxide into the atmosphere as has been bound during its growth\, there
 fore completing a carbon neutral life cycle. The latest innovations in engi
 neering allow for the use of timber in the construction of multi-story and 
 long-span structures.\n\n \n\nWe invite you to explore six innovative struc
 tures in North America and Europe that have been recently completed or are 
 currently under construction. By replacing steel and concrete with timber\,
  they illustrate how buildings and cities can function as carbon sinks rath
 er than sources of CO2 emissions. \n\n \n\nThe Time for Timber exhibition i
 s open for public viewing in the Mebane Gallery on the ground floor of Gold
 smith Hall during normal business hours (8am-5pm).\n\n \n\nThis exhibition 
 is organized by Ulrich Dangel\, Meadows Foundation Centennial Fellow in Arc
 hitecture\, and sponsored by the Center for American Architecture and Desig
 n at The University of Texas at Austin School of Architecture.
DTEND:20180212T230000Z
DTSTAMP:20260317T033315Z
DTSTART:20180212T140000Z
GEO:30.285314;-97.741175
LOCATION:Mebane Gallery\, Goldsmith Hall\, GOL 2.105
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Exhibition: Time For Timber
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_3333490
URL:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/exhibition_time_for_timber
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Academics,World & Culture
DESCRIPTION:Our society is currently faced with two significant challenges:
  human-made climate change and the need to provide housing for an ever-incr
 easing world population. Since the Industrial Revolution\, we have relied o
 n steel and concrete as the primary building materials for the construction
  of our cities. Their refinement and processing require large amounts of en
 ergy\, which is mostly generated by the burning of fossil fuels. As a resul
 t\, carbon that has been stored for millions of years has been released int
 o the earth’s atmosphere in a relatively short period of about 150 years in
  the form of carbon dioxide\, contributing significantly to the climate shi
 ft we are experiencing today. The manufacture of cement\, the key ingredien
 t of concrete\, constitutes one of the most polluting processes in today’s 
 construction industry. To provide sufficient housing for future generations
 \, while at the same time lessening the impact on our environment\, we must
  rethink the way we build.\n \nWood is a truly renewable building material 
 that is unlimited in supply if its growth and harvest are sustainably manag
 ed. Trees store carbon through photosynthesis as they grow\, simultaneously
  releasing oxygen. When wood decays or burns\, it only releases as much car
 bon dioxide into the atmosphere as has been bound during its growth\, there
 fore completing a carbon neutral life cycle. The latest innovations in engi
 neering allow for the use of timber in the construction of multi-story and 
 long-span structures.\n\n \n\nWe invite you to explore six innovative struc
 tures in North America and Europe that have been recently completed or are 
 currently under construction. By replacing steel and concrete with timber\,
  they illustrate how buildings and cities can function as carbon sinks rath
 er than sources of CO2 emissions. \n\n \n\nThe Time for Timber exhibition i
 s open for public viewing in the Mebane Gallery on the ground floor of Gold
 smith Hall during normal business hours (8am-5pm).\n\n \n\nThis exhibition 
 is organized by Ulrich Dangel\, Meadows Foundation Centennial Fellow in Arc
 hitecture\, and sponsored by the Center for American Architecture and Desig
 n at The University of Texas at Austin School of Architecture.
DTEND:20180213T230000Z
DTSTAMP:20260317T033315Z
DTSTART:20180213T140000Z
GEO:30.285314;-97.741175
LOCATION:Mebane Gallery\, Goldsmith Hall\, GOL 2.105
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Exhibition: Time For Timber
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_3333491
URL:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/exhibition_time_for_timber
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Academics,World & Culture
DESCRIPTION:Our society is currently faced with two significant challenges:
  human-made climate change and the need to provide housing for an ever-incr
 easing world population. Since the Industrial Revolution\, we have relied o
 n steel and concrete as the primary building materials for the construction
  of our cities. Their refinement and processing require large amounts of en
 ergy\, which is mostly generated by the burning of fossil fuels. As a resul
 t\, carbon that has been stored for millions of years has been released int
 o the earth’s atmosphere in a relatively short period of about 150 years in
  the form of carbon dioxide\, contributing significantly to the climate shi
 ft we are experiencing today. The manufacture of cement\, the key ingredien
 t of concrete\, constitutes one of the most polluting processes in today’s 
 construction industry. To provide sufficient housing for future generations
 \, while at the same time lessening the impact on our environment\, we must
  rethink the way we build.\n \nWood is a truly renewable building material 
 that is unlimited in supply if its growth and harvest are sustainably manag
 ed. Trees store carbon through photosynthesis as they grow\, simultaneously
  releasing oxygen. When wood decays or burns\, it only releases as much car
 bon dioxide into the atmosphere as has been bound during its growth\, there
 fore completing a carbon neutral life cycle. The latest innovations in engi
 neering allow for the use of timber in the construction of multi-story and 
 long-span structures.\n\n \n\nWe invite you to explore six innovative struc
 tures in North America and Europe that have been recently completed or are 
 currently under construction. By replacing steel and concrete with timber\,
  they illustrate how buildings and cities can function as carbon sinks rath
 er than sources of CO2 emissions. \n\n \n\nThe Time for Timber exhibition i
 s open for public viewing in the Mebane Gallery on the ground floor of Gold
 smith Hall during normal business hours (8am-5pm).\n\n \n\nThis exhibition 
 is organized by Ulrich Dangel\, Meadows Foundation Centennial Fellow in Arc
 hitecture\, and sponsored by the Center for American Architecture and Desig
 n at The University of Texas at Austin School of Architecture.
DTEND:20180214T230000Z
DTSTAMP:20260317T033315Z
DTSTART:20180214T140000Z
GEO:30.285314;-97.741175
LOCATION:Mebane Gallery\, Goldsmith Hall\, GOL 2.105
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Exhibition: Time For Timber
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_3333492
URL:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/exhibition_time_for_timber
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Academics,World & Culture
DESCRIPTION:Our society is currently faced with two significant challenges:
  human-made climate change and the need to provide housing for an ever-incr
 easing world population. Since the Industrial Revolution\, we have relied o
 n steel and concrete as the primary building materials for the construction
  of our cities. Their refinement and processing require large amounts of en
 ergy\, which is mostly generated by the burning of fossil fuels. As a resul
 t\, carbon that has been stored for millions of years has been released int
 o the earth’s atmosphere in a relatively short period of about 150 years in
  the form of carbon dioxide\, contributing significantly to the climate shi
 ft we are experiencing today. The manufacture of cement\, the key ingredien
 t of concrete\, constitutes one of the most polluting processes in today’s 
 construction industry. To provide sufficient housing for future generations
 \, while at the same time lessening the impact on our environment\, we must
  rethink the way we build.\n \nWood is a truly renewable building material 
 that is unlimited in supply if its growth and harvest are sustainably manag
 ed. Trees store carbon through photosynthesis as they grow\, simultaneously
  releasing oxygen. When wood decays or burns\, it only releases as much car
 bon dioxide into the atmosphere as has been bound during its growth\, there
 fore completing a carbon neutral life cycle. The latest innovations in engi
 neering allow for the use of timber in the construction of multi-story and 
 long-span structures.\n\n \n\nWe invite you to explore six innovative struc
 tures in North America and Europe that have been recently completed or are 
 currently under construction. By replacing steel and concrete with timber\,
  they illustrate how buildings and cities can function as carbon sinks rath
 er than sources of CO2 emissions. \n\n \n\nThe Time for Timber exhibition i
 s open for public viewing in the Mebane Gallery on the ground floor of Gold
 smith Hall during normal business hours (8am-5pm).\n\n \n\nThis exhibition 
 is organized by Ulrich Dangel\, Meadows Foundation Centennial Fellow in Arc
 hitecture\, and sponsored by the Center for American Architecture and Desig
 n at The University of Texas at Austin School of Architecture.
DTEND:20180215T230000Z
DTSTAMP:20260317T033315Z
DTSTART:20180215T140000Z
GEO:30.285314;-97.741175
LOCATION:Mebane Gallery\, Goldsmith Hall\, GOL 2.105
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Exhibition: Time For Timber
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_3333493
URL:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/exhibition_time_for_timber
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Academics,World & Culture
DESCRIPTION:Our society is currently faced with two significant challenges:
  human-made climate change and the need to provide housing for an ever-incr
 easing world population. Since the Industrial Revolution\, we have relied o
 n steel and concrete as the primary building materials for the construction
  of our cities. Their refinement and processing require large amounts of en
 ergy\, which is mostly generated by the burning of fossil fuels. As a resul
 t\, carbon that has been stored for millions of years has been released int
 o the earth’s atmosphere in a relatively short period of about 150 years in
  the form of carbon dioxide\, contributing significantly to the climate shi
 ft we are experiencing today. The manufacture of cement\, the key ingredien
 t of concrete\, constitutes one of the most polluting processes in today’s 
 construction industry. To provide sufficient housing for future generations
 \, while at the same time lessening the impact on our environment\, we must
  rethink the way we build.\n \nWood is a truly renewable building material 
 that is unlimited in supply if its growth and harvest are sustainably manag
 ed. Trees store carbon through photosynthesis as they grow\, simultaneously
  releasing oxygen. When wood decays or burns\, it only releases as much car
 bon dioxide into the atmosphere as has been bound during its growth\, there
 fore completing a carbon neutral life cycle. The latest innovations in engi
 neering allow for the use of timber in the construction of multi-story and 
 long-span structures.\n\n \n\nWe invite you to explore six innovative struc
 tures in North America and Europe that have been recently completed or are 
 currently under construction. By replacing steel and concrete with timber\,
  they illustrate how buildings and cities can function as carbon sinks rath
 er than sources of CO2 emissions. \n\n \n\nThe Time for Timber exhibition i
 s open for public viewing in the Mebane Gallery on the ground floor of Gold
 smith Hall during normal business hours (8am-5pm).\n\n \n\nThis exhibition 
 is organized by Ulrich Dangel\, Meadows Foundation Centennial Fellow in Arc
 hitecture\, and sponsored by the Center for American Architecture and Desig
 n at The University of Texas at Austin School of Architecture.
DTEND:20180216T230000Z
DTSTAMP:20260317T033315Z
DTSTART:20180216T140000Z
GEO:30.285314;-97.741175
LOCATION:Mebane Gallery\, Goldsmith Hall\, GOL 2.105
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Exhibition: Time For Timber
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_3333494
URL:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/exhibition_time_for_timber
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Academics,World & Culture
DESCRIPTION:Our society is currently faced with two significant challenges:
  human-made climate change and the need to provide housing for an ever-incr
 easing world population. Since the Industrial Revolution\, we have relied o
 n steel and concrete as the primary building materials for the construction
  of our cities. Their refinement and processing require large amounts of en
 ergy\, which is mostly generated by the burning of fossil fuels. As a resul
 t\, carbon that has been stored for millions of years has been released int
 o the earth’s atmosphere in a relatively short period of about 150 years in
  the form of carbon dioxide\, contributing significantly to the climate shi
 ft we are experiencing today. The manufacture of cement\, the key ingredien
 t of concrete\, constitutes one of the most polluting processes in today’s 
 construction industry. To provide sufficient housing for future generations
 \, while at the same time lessening the impact on our environment\, we must
  rethink the way we build.\n \nWood is a truly renewable building material 
 that is unlimited in supply if its growth and harvest are sustainably manag
 ed. Trees store carbon through photosynthesis as they grow\, simultaneously
  releasing oxygen. When wood decays or burns\, it only releases as much car
 bon dioxide into the atmosphere as has been bound during its growth\, there
 fore completing a carbon neutral life cycle. The latest innovations in engi
 neering allow for the use of timber in the construction of multi-story and 
 long-span structures.\n\n \n\nWe invite you to explore six innovative struc
 tures in North America and Europe that have been recently completed or are 
 currently under construction. By replacing steel and concrete with timber\,
  they illustrate how buildings and cities can function as carbon sinks rath
 er than sources of CO2 emissions. \n\n \n\nThe Time for Timber exhibition i
 s open for public viewing in the Mebane Gallery on the ground floor of Gold
 smith Hall during normal business hours (8am-5pm).\n\n \n\nThis exhibition 
 is organized by Ulrich Dangel\, Meadows Foundation Centennial Fellow in Arc
 hitecture\, and sponsored by the Center for American Architecture and Desig
 n at The University of Texas at Austin School of Architecture.
DTEND:20180217T230000Z
DTSTAMP:20260317T033315Z
DTSTART:20180217T140000Z
GEO:30.285314;-97.741175
LOCATION:Mebane Gallery\, Goldsmith Hall\, GOL 2.105
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Exhibition: Time For Timber
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_3333495
URL:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/exhibition_time_for_timber
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Academics,World & Culture
DESCRIPTION:Our society is currently faced with two significant challenges:
  human-made climate change and the need to provide housing for an ever-incr
 easing world population. Since the Industrial Revolution\, we have relied o
 n steel and concrete as the primary building materials for the construction
  of our cities. Their refinement and processing require large amounts of en
 ergy\, which is mostly generated by the burning of fossil fuels. As a resul
 t\, carbon that has been stored for millions of years has been released int
 o the earth’s atmosphere in a relatively short period of about 150 years in
  the form of carbon dioxide\, contributing significantly to the climate shi
 ft we are experiencing today. The manufacture of cement\, the key ingredien
 t of concrete\, constitutes one of the most polluting processes in today’s 
 construction industry. To provide sufficient housing for future generations
 \, while at the same time lessening the impact on our environment\, we must
  rethink the way we build.\n \nWood is a truly renewable building material 
 that is unlimited in supply if its growth and harvest are sustainably manag
 ed. Trees store carbon through photosynthesis as they grow\, simultaneously
  releasing oxygen. When wood decays or burns\, it only releases as much car
 bon dioxide into the atmosphere as has been bound during its growth\, there
 fore completing a carbon neutral life cycle. The latest innovations in engi
 neering allow for the use of timber in the construction of multi-story and 
 long-span structures.\n\n \n\nWe invite you to explore six innovative struc
 tures in North America and Europe that have been recently completed or are 
 currently under construction. By replacing steel and concrete with timber\,
  they illustrate how buildings and cities can function as carbon sinks rath
 er than sources of CO2 emissions. \n\n \n\nThe Time for Timber exhibition i
 s open for public viewing in the Mebane Gallery on the ground floor of Gold
 smith Hall during normal business hours (8am-5pm).\n\n \n\nThis exhibition 
 is organized by Ulrich Dangel\, Meadows Foundation Centennial Fellow in Arc
 hitecture\, and sponsored by the Center for American Architecture and Desig
 n at The University of Texas at Austin School of Architecture.
DTEND:20180218T230000Z
DTSTAMP:20260317T033315Z
DTSTART:20180218T140000Z
GEO:30.285314;-97.741175
LOCATION:Mebane Gallery\, Goldsmith Hall\, GOL 2.105
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Exhibition: Time For Timber
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_3333496
URL:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/exhibition_time_for_timber
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Academics,World & Culture
DESCRIPTION:Our society is currently faced with two significant challenges:
  human-made climate change and the need to provide housing for an ever-incr
 easing world population. Since the Industrial Revolution\, we have relied o
 n steel and concrete as the primary building materials for the construction
  of our cities. Their refinement and processing require large amounts of en
 ergy\, which is mostly generated by the burning of fossil fuels. As a resul
 t\, carbon that has been stored for millions of years has been released int
 o the earth’s atmosphere in a relatively short period of about 150 years in
  the form of carbon dioxide\, contributing significantly to the climate shi
 ft we are experiencing today. The manufacture of cement\, the key ingredien
 t of concrete\, constitutes one of the most polluting processes in today’s 
 construction industry. To provide sufficient housing for future generations
 \, while at the same time lessening the impact on our environment\, we must
  rethink the way we build.\n \nWood is a truly renewable building material 
 that is unlimited in supply if its growth and harvest are sustainably manag
 ed. Trees store carbon through photosynthesis as they grow\, simultaneously
  releasing oxygen. When wood decays or burns\, it only releases as much car
 bon dioxide into the atmosphere as has been bound during its growth\, there
 fore completing a carbon neutral life cycle. The latest innovations in engi
 neering allow for the use of timber in the construction of multi-story and 
 long-span structures.\n\n \n\nWe invite you to explore six innovative struc
 tures in North America and Europe that have been recently completed or are 
 currently under construction. By replacing steel and concrete with timber\,
  they illustrate how buildings and cities can function as carbon sinks rath
 er than sources of CO2 emissions. \n\n \n\nThe Time for Timber exhibition i
 s open for public viewing in the Mebane Gallery on the ground floor of Gold
 smith Hall during normal business hours (8am-5pm).\n\n \n\nThis exhibition 
 is organized by Ulrich Dangel\, Meadows Foundation Centennial Fellow in Arc
 hitecture\, and sponsored by the Center for American Architecture and Desig
 n at The University of Texas at Austin School of Architecture.
DTEND:20180219T230000Z
DTSTAMP:20260317T033315Z
DTSTART:20180219T140000Z
GEO:30.285314;-97.741175
LOCATION:Mebane Gallery\, Goldsmith Hall\, GOL 2.105
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Exhibition: Time For Timber
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_3333497
URL:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/exhibition_time_for_timber
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Academics,World & Culture
DESCRIPTION:Our society is currently faced with two significant challenges:
  human-made climate change and the need to provide housing for an ever-incr
 easing world population. Since the Industrial Revolution\, we have relied o
 n steel and concrete as the primary building materials for the construction
  of our cities. Their refinement and processing require large amounts of en
 ergy\, which is mostly generated by the burning of fossil fuels. As a resul
 t\, carbon that has been stored for millions of years has been released int
 o the earth’s atmosphere in a relatively short period of about 150 years in
  the form of carbon dioxide\, contributing significantly to the climate shi
 ft we are experiencing today. The manufacture of cement\, the key ingredien
 t of concrete\, constitutes one of the most polluting processes in today’s 
 construction industry. To provide sufficient housing for future generations
 \, while at the same time lessening the impact on our environment\, we must
  rethink the way we build.\n \nWood is a truly renewable building material 
 that is unlimited in supply if its growth and harvest are sustainably manag
 ed. Trees store carbon through photosynthesis as they grow\, simultaneously
  releasing oxygen. When wood decays or burns\, it only releases as much car
 bon dioxide into the atmosphere as has been bound during its growth\, there
 fore completing a carbon neutral life cycle. The latest innovations in engi
 neering allow for the use of timber in the construction of multi-story and 
 long-span structures.\n\n \n\nWe invite you to explore six innovative struc
 tures in North America and Europe that have been recently completed or are 
 currently under construction. By replacing steel and concrete with timber\,
  they illustrate how buildings and cities can function as carbon sinks rath
 er than sources of CO2 emissions. \n\n \n\nThe Time for Timber exhibition i
 s open for public viewing in the Mebane Gallery on the ground floor of Gold
 smith Hall during normal business hours (8am-5pm).\n\n \n\nThis exhibition 
 is organized by Ulrich Dangel\, Meadows Foundation Centennial Fellow in Arc
 hitecture\, and sponsored by the Center for American Architecture and Desig
 n at The University of Texas at Austin School of Architecture.
DTEND:20180220T230000Z
DTSTAMP:20260317T033315Z
DTSTART:20180220T140000Z
GEO:30.285314;-97.741175
LOCATION:Mebane Gallery\, Goldsmith Hall\, GOL 2.105
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Exhibition: Time For Timber
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_3333498
URL:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/exhibition_time_for_timber
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Academics,World & Culture
DESCRIPTION:Our society is currently faced with two significant challenges:
  human-made climate change and the need to provide housing for an ever-incr
 easing world population. Since the Industrial Revolution\, we have relied o
 n steel and concrete as the primary building materials for the construction
  of our cities. Their refinement and processing require large amounts of en
 ergy\, which is mostly generated by the burning of fossil fuels. As a resul
 t\, carbon that has been stored for millions of years has been released int
 o the earth’s atmosphere in a relatively short period of about 150 years in
  the form of carbon dioxide\, contributing significantly to the climate shi
 ft we are experiencing today. The manufacture of cement\, the key ingredien
 t of concrete\, constitutes one of the most polluting processes in today’s 
 construction industry. To provide sufficient housing for future generations
 \, while at the same time lessening the impact on our environment\, we must
  rethink the way we build.\n \nWood is a truly renewable building material 
 that is unlimited in supply if its growth and harvest are sustainably manag
 ed. Trees store carbon through photosynthesis as they grow\, simultaneously
  releasing oxygen. When wood decays or burns\, it only releases as much car
 bon dioxide into the atmosphere as has been bound during its growth\, there
 fore completing a carbon neutral life cycle. The latest innovations in engi
 neering allow for the use of timber in the construction of multi-story and 
 long-span structures.\n\n \n\nWe invite you to explore six innovative struc
 tures in North America and Europe that have been recently completed or are 
 currently under construction. By replacing steel and concrete with timber\,
  they illustrate how buildings and cities can function as carbon sinks rath
 er than sources of CO2 emissions. \n\n \n\nThe Time for Timber exhibition i
 s open for public viewing in the Mebane Gallery on the ground floor of Gold
 smith Hall during normal business hours (8am-5pm).\n\n \n\nThis exhibition 
 is organized by Ulrich Dangel\, Meadows Foundation Centennial Fellow in Arc
 hitecture\, and sponsored by the Center for American Architecture and Desig
 n at The University of Texas at Austin School of Architecture.
DTEND:20180221T230000Z
DTSTAMP:20260317T033315Z
DTSTART:20180221T140000Z
GEO:30.285314;-97.741175
LOCATION:Mebane Gallery\, Goldsmith Hall\, GOL 2.105
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Exhibition: Time For Timber
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_3333499
URL:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/exhibition_time_for_timber
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Academics,World & Culture
DESCRIPTION:Our society is currently faced with two significant challenges:
  human-made climate change and the need to provide housing for an ever-incr
 easing world population. Since the Industrial Revolution\, we have relied o
 n steel and concrete as the primary building materials for the construction
  of our cities. Their refinement and processing require large amounts of en
 ergy\, which is mostly generated by the burning of fossil fuels. As a resul
 t\, carbon that has been stored for millions of years has been released int
 o the earth’s atmosphere in a relatively short period of about 150 years in
  the form of carbon dioxide\, contributing significantly to the climate shi
 ft we are experiencing today. The manufacture of cement\, the key ingredien
 t of concrete\, constitutes one of the most polluting processes in today’s 
 construction industry. To provide sufficient housing for future generations
 \, while at the same time lessening the impact on our environment\, we must
  rethink the way we build.\n \nWood is a truly renewable building material 
 that is unlimited in supply if its growth and harvest are sustainably manag
 ed. Trees store carbon through photosynthesis as they grow\, simultaneously
  releasing oxygen. When wood decays or burns\, it only releases as much car
 bon dioxide into the atmosphere as has been bound during its growth\, there
 fore completing a carbon neutral life cycle. The latest innovations in engi
 neering allow for the use of timber in the construction of multi-story and 
 long-span structures.\n\n \n\nWe invite you to explore six innovative struc
 tures in North America and Europe that have been recently completed or are 
 currently under construction. By replacing steel and concrete with timber\,
  they illustrate how buildings and cities can function as carbon sinks rath
 er than sources of CO2 emissions. \n\n \n\nThe Time for Timber exhibition i
 s open for public viewing in the Mebane Gallery on the ground floor of Gold
 smith Hall during normal business hours (8am-5pm).\n\n \n\nThis exhibition 
 is organized by Ulrich Dangel\, Meadows Foundation Centennial Fellow in Arc
 hitecture\, and sponsored by the Center for American Architecture and Desig
 n at The University of Texas at Austin School of Architecture.
DTEND:20180222T230000Z
DTSTAMP:20260317T033315Z
DTSTART:20180222T140000Z
GEO:30.285314;-97.741175
LOCATION:Mebane Gallery\, Goldsmith Hall\, GOL 2.105
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Exhibition: Time For Timber
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_3333500
URL:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/exhibition_time_for_timber
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Academics,World & Culture
DESCRIPTION:Our society is currently faced with two significant challenges:
  human-made climate change and the need to provide housing for an ever-incr
 easing world population. Since the Industrial Revolution\, we have relied o
 n steel and concrete as the primary building materials for the construction
  of our cities. Their refinement and processing require large amounts of en
 ergy\, which is mostly generated by the burning of fossil fuels. As a resul
 t\, carbon that has been stored for millions of years has been released int
 o the earth’s atmosphere in a relatively short period of about 150 years in
  the form of carbon dioxide\, contributing significantly to the climate shi
 ft we are experiencing today. The manufacture of cement\, the key ingredien
 t of concrete\, constitutes one of the most polluting processes in today’s 
 construction industry. To provide sufficient housing for future generations
 \, while at the same time lessening the impact on our environment\, we must
  rethink the way we build.\n \nWood is a truly renewable building material 
 that is unlimited in supply if its growth and harvest are sustainably manag
 ed. Trees store carbon through photosynthesis as they grow\, simultaneously
  releasing oxygen. When wood decays or burns\, it only releases as much car
 bon dioxide into the atmosphere as has been bound during its growth\, there
 fore completing a carbon neutral life cycle. The latest innovations in engi
 neering allow for the use of timber in the construction of multi-story and 
 long-span structures.\n\n \n\nWe invite you to explore six innovative struc
 tures in North America and Europe that have been recently completed or are 
 currently under construction. By replacing steel and concrete with timber\,
  they illustrate how buildings and cities can function as carbon sinks rath
 er than sources of CO2 emissions. \n\n \n\nThe Time for Timber exhibition i
 s open for public viewing in the Mebane Gallery on the ground floor of Gold
 smith Hall during normal business hours (8am-5pm).\n\n \n\nThis exhibition 
 is organized by Ulrich Dangel\, Meadows Foundation Centennial Fellow in Arc
 hitecture\, and sponsored by the Center for American Architecture and Desig
 n at The University of Texas at Austin School of Architecture.
DTEND:20180223T230000Z
DTSTAMP:20260317T033315Z
DTSTART:20180223T140000Z
GEO:30.285314;-97.741175
LOCATION:Mebane Gallery\, Goldsmith Hall\, GOL 2.105
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Exhibition: Time For Timber
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_3333501
URL:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/exhibition_time_for_timber
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Academics,World & Culture
DESCRIPTION:Our society is currently faced with two significant challenges:
  human-made climate change and the need to provide housing for an ever-incr
 easing world population. Since the Industrial Revolution\, we have relied o
 n steel and concrete as the primary building materials for the construction
  of our cities. Their refinement and processing require large amounts of en
 ergy\, which is mostly generated by the burning of fossil fuels. As a resul
 t\, carbon that has been stored for millions of years has been released int
 o the earth’s atmosphere in a relatively short period of about 150 years in
  the form of carbon dioxide\, contributing significantly to the climate shi
 ft we are experiencing today. The manufacture of cement\, the key ingredien
 t of concrete\, constitutes one of the most polluting processes in today’s 
 construction industry. To provide sufficient housing for future generations
 \, while at the same time lessening the impact on our environment\, we must
  rethink the way we build.\n \nWood is a truly renewable building material 
 that is unlimited in supply if its growth and harvest are sustainably manag
 ed. Trees store carbon through photosynthesis as they grow\, simultaneously
  releasing oxygen. When wood decays or burns\, it only releases as much car
 bon dioxide into the atmosphere as has been bound during its growth\, there
 fore completing a carbon neutral life cycle. The latest innovations in engi
 neering allow for the use of timber in the construction of multi-story and 
 long-span structures.\n\n \n\nWe invite you to explore six innovative struc
 tures in North America and Europe that have been recently completed or are 
 currently under construction. By replacing steel and concrete with timber\,
  they illustrate how buildings and cities can function as carbon sinks rath
 er than sources of CO2 emissions. \n\n \n\nThe Time for Timber exhibition i
 s open for public viewing in the Mebane Gallery on the ground floor of Gold
 smith Hall during normal business hours (8am-5pm).\n\n \n\nThis exhibition 
 is organized by Ulrich Dangel\, Meadows Foundation Centennial Fellow in Arc
 hitecture\, and sponsored by the Center for American Architecture and Desig
 n at The University of Texas at Austin School of Architecture.
DTEND:20180224T230000Z
DTSTAMP:20260317T033315Z
DTSTART:20180224T140000Z
GEO:30.285314;-97.741175
LOCATION:Mebane Gallery\, Goldsmith Hall\, GOL 2.105
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Exhibition: Time For Timber
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_3333502
URL:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/exhibition_time_for_timber
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Academics,World & Culture
DESCRIPTION:Our society is currently faced with two significant challenges:
  human-made climate change and the need to provide housing for an ever-incr
 easing world population. Since the Industrial Revolution\, we have relied o
 n steel and concrete as the primary building materials for the construction
  of our cities. Their refinement and processing require large amounts of en
 ergy\, which is mostly generated by the burning of fossil fuels. As a resul
 t\, carbon that has been stored for millions of years has been released int
 o the earth’s atmosphere in a relatively short period of about 150 years in
  the form of carbon dioxide\, contributing significantly to the climate shi
 ft we are experiencing today. The manufacture of cement\, the key ingredien
 t of concrete\, constitutes one of the most polluting processes in today’s 
 construction industry. To provide sufficient housing for future generations
 \, while at the same time lessening the impact on our environment\, we must
  rethink the way we build.\n \nWood is a truly renewable building material 
 that is unlimited in supply if its growth and harvest are sustainably manag
 ed. Trees store carbon through photosynthesis as they grow\, simultaneously
  releasing oxygen. When wood decays or burns\, it only releases as much car
 bon dioxide into the atmosphere as has been bound during its growth\, there
 fore completing a carbon neutral life cycle. The latest innovations in engi
 neering allow for the use of timber in the construction of multi-story and 
 long-span structures.\n\n \n\nWe invite you to explore six innovative struc
 tures in North America and Europe that have been recently completed or are 
 currently under construction. By replacing steel and concrete with timber\,
  they illustrate how buildings and cities can function as carbon sinks rath
 er than sources of CO2 emissions. \n\n \n\nThe Time for Timber exhibition i
 s open for public viewing in the Mebane Gallery on the ground floor of Gold
 smith Hall during normal business hours (8am-5pm).\n\n \n\nThis exhibition 
 is organized by Ulrich Dangel\, Meadows Foundation Centennial Fellow in Arc
 hitecture\, and sponsored by the Center for American Architecture and Desig
 n at The University of Texas at Austin School of Architecture.
DTEND:20180225T230000Z
DTSTAMP:20260317T033315Z
DTSTART:20180225T140000Z
GEO:30.285314;-97.741175
LOCATION:Mebane Gallery\, Goldsmith Hall\, GOL 2.105
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Exhibition: Time For Timber
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_3333503
URL:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/exhibition_time_for_timber
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Academics,World & Culture
DESCRIPTION:Our society is currently faced with two significant challenges:
  human-made climate change and the need to provide housing for an ever-incr
 easing world population. Since the Industrial Revolution\, we have relied o
 n steel and concrete as the primary building materials for the construction
  of our cities. Their refinement and processing require large amounts of en
 ergy\, which is mostly generated by the burning of fossil fuels. As a resul
 t\, carbon that has been stored for millions of years has been released int
 o the earth’s atmosphere in a relatively short period of about 150 years in
  the form of carbon dioxide\, contributing significantly to the climate shi
 ft we are experiencing today. The manufacture of cement\, the key ingredien
 t of concrete\, constitutes one of the most polluting processes in today’s 
 construction industry. To provide sufficient housing for future generations
 \, while at the same time lessening the impact on our environment\, we must
  rethink the way we build.\n \nWood is a truly renewable building material 
 that is unlimited in supply if its growth and harvest are sustainably manag
 ed. Trees store carbon through photosynthesis as they grow\, simultaneously
  releasing oxygen. When wood decays or burns\, it only releases as much car
 bon dioxide into the atmosphere as has been bound during its growth\, there
 fore completing a carbon neutral life cycle. The latest innovations in engi
 neering allow for the use of timber in the construction of multi-story and 
 long-span structures.\n\n \n\nWe invite you to explore six innovative struc
 tures in North America and Europe that have been recently completed or are 
 currently under construction. By replacing steel and concrete with timber\,
  they illustrate how buildings and cities can function as carbon sinks rath
 er than sources of CO2 emissions. \n\n \n\nThe Time for Timber exhibition i
 s open for public viewing in the Mebane Gallery on the ground floor of Gold
 smith Hall during normal business hours (8am-5pm).\n\n \n\nThis exhibition 
 is organized by Ulrich Dangel\, Meadows Foundation Centennial Fellow in Arc
 hitecture\, and sponsored by the Center for American Architecture and Desig
 n at The University of Texas at Austin School of Architecture.
DTEND:20180226T230000Z
DTSTAMP:20260317T033315Z
DTSTART:20180226T140000Z
GEO:30.285314;-97.741175
LOCATION:Mebane Gallery\, Goldsmith Hall\, GOL 2.105
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Exhibition: Time For Timber
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_3333504
URL:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/exhibition_time_for_timber
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Academics,World & Culture
DESCRIPTION:Our society is currently faced with two significant challenges:
  human-made climate change and the need to provide housing for an ever-incr
 easing world population. Since the Industrial Revolution\, we have relied o
 n steel and concrete as the primary building materials for the construction
  of our cities. Their refinement and processing require large amounts of en
 ergy\, which is mostly generated by the burning of fossil fuels. As a resul
 t\, carbon that has been stored for millions of years has been released int
 o the earth’s atmosphere in a relatively short period of about 150 years in
  the form of carbon dioxide\, contributing significantly to the climate shi
 ft we are experiencing today. The manufacture of cement\, the key ingredien
 t of concrete\, constitutes one of the most polluting processes in today’s 
 construction industry. To provide sufficient housing for future generations
 \, while at the same time lessening the impact on our environment\, we must
  rethink the way we build.\n \nWood is a truly renewable building material 
 that is unlimited in supply if its growth and harvest are sustainably manag
 ed. Trees store carbon through photosynthesis as they grow\, simultaneously
  releasing oxygen. When wood decays or burns\, it only releases as much car
 bon dioxide into the atmosphere as has been bound during its growth\, there
 fore completing a carbon neutral life cycle. The latest innovations in engi
 neering allow for the use of timber in the construction of multi-story and 
 long-span structures.\n\n \n\nWe invite you to explore six innovative struc
 tures in North America and Europe that have been recently completed or are 
 currently under construction. By replacing steel and concrete with timber\,
  they illustrate how buildings and cities can function as carbon sinks rath
 er than sources of CO2 emissions. \n\n \n\nThe Time for Timber exhibition i
 s open for public viewing in the Mebane Gallery on the ground floor of Gold
 smith Hall during normal business hours (8am-5pm).\n\n \n\nThis exhibition 
 is organized by Ulrich Dangel\, Meadows Foundation Centennial Fellow in Arc
 hitecture\, and sponsored by the Center for American Architecture and Desig
 n at The University of Texas at Austin School of Architecture.
DTEND:20180227T230000Z
DTSTAMP:20260317T033315Z
DTSTART:20180227T140000Z
GEO:30.285314;-97.741175
LOCATION:Mebane Gallery\, Goldsmith Hall\, GOL 2.105
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Exhibition: Time For Timber
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_3333505
URL:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/exhibition_time_for_timber
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Academics,World & Culture
DESCRIPTION:Our society is currently faced with two significant challenges:
  human-made climate change and the need to provide housing for an ever-incr
 easing world population. Since the Industrial Revolution\, we have relied o
 n steel and concrete as the primary building materials for the construction
  of our cities. Their refinement and processing require large amounts of en
 ergy\, which is mostly generated by the burning of fossil fuels. As a resul
 t\, carbon that has been stored for millions of years has been released int
 o the earth’s atmosphere in a relatively short period of about 150 years in
  the form of carbon dioxide\, contributing significantly to the climate shi
 ft we are experiencing today. The manufacture of cement\, the key ingredien
 t of concrete\, constitutes one of the most polluting processes in today’s 
 construction industry. To provide sufficient housing for future generations
 \, while at the same time lessening the impact on our environment\, we must
  rethink the way we build.\n \nWood is a truly renewable building material 
 that is unlimited in supply if its growth and harvest are sustainably manag
 ed. Trees store carbon through photosynthesis as they grow\, simultaneously
  releasing oxygen. When wood decays or burns\, it only releases as much car
 bon dioxide into the atmosphere as has been bound during its growth\, there
 fore completing a carbon neutral life cycle. The latest innovations in engi
 neering allow for the use of timber in the construction of multi-story and 
 long-span structures.\n\n \n\nWe invite you to explore six innovative struc
 tures in North America and Europe that have been recently completed or are 
 currently under construction. By replacing steel and concrete with timber\,
  they illustrate how buildings and cities can function as carbon sinks rath
 er than sources of CO2 emissions. \n\n \n\nThe Time for Timber exhibition i
 s open for public viewing in the Mebane Gallery on the ground floor of Gold
 smith Hall during normal business hours (8am-5pm).\n\n \n\nThis exhibition 
 is organized by Ulrich Dangel\, Meadows Foundation Centennial Fellow in Arc
 hitecture\, and sponsored by the Center for American Architecture and Desig
 n at The University of Texas at Austin School of Architecture.
DTEND:20180228T230000Z
DTSTAMP:20260317T033315Z
DTSTART:20180228T140000Z
GEO:30.285314;-97.741175
LOCATION:Mebane Gallery\, Goldsmith Hall\, GOL 2.105
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Exhibition: Time For Timber
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_3333506
URL:https://calendar.utexas.edu/event/exhibition_time_for_timber
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR
