Kimo Griggs
Assistant Professor, Department of Architecture
Kimo Griggs is an architect and fabricator, teaching design studios and workshop-based coursework in materials- making, and digital-design-and manufacturing technologies. He received his B. A and M.Arch from Yale University, and studied at the Architectural Association School of Architecture in London. Kimo's research and professional activities have long been focused on the intersection of craft, materials and manufacturing technologies. This trajectory has included the development of hands-on, workshop-based coursework incorporating these elements.
Kimo previously taught at the Yale School of Architecture, the Harvard Graduate School of Design, the Columbia University School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation, and Carnegie-Mellon University. He was the 2002 Teacher of the Year at the Harvard GSD.
Rob Corser
Assistant Professor, Department of Architecture
Rob Corser, AIA, has worked and taught in the US, Italy and the UK. Educated at the University of Virginia and Harvard's Graduate School of Design, Corser has won numerous academic awards including Harvard's Peter Rice Prize for the integration of engineering and architecture. He taught at Syracuse University and the University of Kansas before joining the faculty at the University of Washington where he teaches architectural design, computer applications and digital fabrication courses. A licensed architect in the state of California, Corser's professional experience includes work in San Francisco and London, as well as collaborative design-build programs in Italy, and in post-Katrina New Orleans. His research focuses on collaborative design, and construction systems and strategies for deployable and sustainable structures.
Ben Dalton
Miller-Hull Partnership
Benjamin Dalton has a Bachelor of Environmental Design from North Carolina State University and Master's of Architecture from The University of Washington. He is currently practicing architecture with The Miller Hull Partnership.
Ben has a passion for exploring the potential of technology and digital manufacturing in the field of architecture. Following his graduation from the University of Washington, he developed and taught a course for the Master's Program entitled the Digital Craft Workshop from 2005-2008. His course explored theories of digital design and manufacturing and developed hands on skills for both subtractive and additive fabrication in a workshop environment.
Scott Crawford
Scott Crawford earned a BA in Psychology from the University of Maryland, Baltimore County and a Master's of Architecture from the University of Washington. He is currently completing a Master of Science in Design Computing from the University of Washington.
Scott has extensive professional experience in CAD drafting and digital modeling.
Instructors are subject to change.