Lecture: Tim Love, AIA
Lecturer: Tim Love, AIA -Principle, Utile Design Inc., Boston, Massachusetts
When: Wednesday, November 14, 2007
Where: Dudley Hall - Room 402
Timothy Love was born and raised in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania and Wilton, Connecticut. He received a Bachelor of Science majoring in Architecture from the University of Virginia in 1984 where he was the Alpha Rho Chi Medalist. In 1989 he graduated with Distinction from the Graduate School of Design at Harvard University with a Masters in Architecture. Love received the Henry Adams Medal, the school’s highest academic honor. After graduating from Harvard, Love practiced for several years in New York City for large firms as a senior designer and project manager. Love joined Machado and Silvetti Associates in Boston in 1994, and was promoted to Vice President in 1998. While at Machado and Silvetti, he was project director and lead designer for clients as diverse as the Getty Trust, the Boston Public Library, the University of Virginia, and the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum. He provided strategic leadership for programming of such complex entities as the Getty Villa project in Malibu or for community involvement in the design of the Allston Branch of the Boston Public Library.
In the late summer of 2002, Love founded Utile, Inc., an architecture and planning firm in Boston. In addition, Love is an Assistant Professor of Architecture at Northeastern University. He is on the editorial board of the magazine Architecture Boston and writes frequently about architecture and urban design. He is an active participant on the Commonwealth of Massachusetts Sustainable Design Roundtable.
Love is registered as an architect in Massachusetts, New York, and Virginia. He is also a LEED accredited professional.
