PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Stuckeman professor’s new book explores ‘socially sustainable’ architecture

2025-07-03
(Press-News.org) UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — Alexandra Staub, author and professor of architecture in the College of Arts and Architecture’s Stuckeman School at Penn State, examines how architects can better serve society by changing their approach to the building process in her latest book titled “Architecture and Social Sustainability: Understanding the New Paradigm.”

Published by Routledge, the book presents examples of “how we can better design for stakeholder agency, serve historically marginalized populations, and further our theoretical thinking about sustainability writ large,” according to the book’s abstract.

As Staub discusses, sustainability is usually presented as having three components: ecological, economic and social. Architects often talk about ecological sustainability, such as designing energy efficient buildings or using materials that don’t harm the planet. Social sustainability in the context of the built environment is less discussed and remains poorly defined.

“The book explores the design of buildings and urban settings to illustrate how we can create more inclusive and equitable communities through broadening our design approach,” said Staub, who is an affiliate researcher with Penn State's Rock Ethics Institute and the Hamer Center for Community Design.

The first section of the book traces the history of how architecture and urban design became exclusionary and identifies theoretical and practical tools that can be used to bring more stakeholders into the process of constructing a building.

Part two of the book offers nine case studies from the United States, Brazil, Nigeria, the United Kingdom, Germany, Sweden and India that illustrate instances of socially sustainable design at a variety of scales.

Thanks to a grant from the College of Arts and Architecture, the book is open access and can be viewed and downloaded via the Routledge website.

“Having the publication readily available was important for me because a book that discusses social sustainability should be available to everyone, regardless of [their] ability to pay,” Staub said.

“Architecture and Social Sustainability: Understanding the New Paradigm” is written for students, professionals, educators and anyone interested in how the built environment is shaped — and what could be done to make that process more sustainable.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Synthetic DNA nanoparticles for gene therapy

2025-07-03
CLEVELAND—Case Western Reserve University chemist Divita Mathur was awarded a National Science Foundation (NSF) Faculty Early Career Development Program (CAREER) grant for her research in synthetic DNA nanoparticles, which have potential applications in gene therapy. The grant will support Mathur’s work in synthesizing nanoparticles and studying how they behave inside cells in a laboratory. She will use single-cell injections and a microscope to track the nanoparticles and watch what happens to them over time ...

New model to find treatments for an aggressive blood cancer

2025-07-03
Researchers working on an incurable blood cancer can now use a new lab model which could make testing potential new treatments and diagnostics easier and quicker, new research has found.   In a paper published in Nature Communications a team of researchers led from the University of Birmingham have studied blood cells from patients with a blood cancer called myelodysplastic syndrome disease (MDS). This disease often develops into a highly aggressive form of Acute Myeloid Leukaemia (AML).   Working with this new model ...

Special issue of Journal of Intensive Medicine analyzes non-invasive respiratory support

2025-07-03
Acute hypoxemic respiratory failure (AHRF) represents one of the most common yet challenging conditions treated in intensive care units (ICUs) worldwide. While the emergence of multiple options for non-invasive respiratory support has revolutionized care in such cases, selecting the optimal approach remains difficult. Now, a special issue from the Journal of Intensive Medicine titled “Non-invasive respiratory support for acute hypoxemic respiratory failure” provides key insights to guide these critical treatment decisions. This collection establishes a robust foundation for understanding the key respiratory support ...

T cells take aim at Chikungunya virus

2025-07-03
LA JOLLA, CA—A new study, published recently in Nature Communications, offers the first-ever map of which parts of Chikungunya virus trigger the strongest response from the body's T cells.  With this map in hand, researchers are closer to developing Chikungunya vaccines or therapies that harness T cells to strike specific targets, or "epitopes," to halt infection. The new study also offers important clues for understanding why many people experience chronic, severe joint pain for years after clearing the virus. "Now we can see what T cells are seeing patients with chronic disease," says LJI Assistant Professor ...

Gantangqing site in southwest China yields 300,000-year-old wooden tools

2025-07-03
  New discoveries from the Pleistocene-age Gantangqing site in southwestern China reveal a diverse collection of wooden tools dated from ~361,000 to 250,000 years ago, marking the earliest known evidence of complex wooden tool technology in East Asia. The findings reveal that the Middle Pleistocene humans who used these tools crafted the wooden implements not for hunting, but for digging and processing plants. Although early humans have worked with wood for over a million years, wooden artifacts are quite rare in the archaeological ...

Forests can’t keep up: Adaptation will lag behind climate change

2025-07-03
Ecologists are concerned that forest ecosystems will not keep pace with a rapidly changing climate, failing to remain healthy and productive. Before the rapid climate change of the past century, tree populations in the Northern Hemisphere adapted to colder and warmer periods over thousands of years. During onsets of Ice Ages, tree populations migrated south, seeking warmer conditions as global temperatures cooled, their seeds dispersed by winds and carried by animals. When the climate warmed again, tree species adapted by migrating north to more suitable conditions. Mature trees are long-lived, and their populations can’t migrate quickly. Current climate change ...

Sturgeon reintroduction initiative yields promising first-year survival rate

2025-07-03
Ecologists celebrated the release of thousands of palm-sized lake sturgeon into northwest Ohio's Maumee River in 2018, kicking off an ambitious two-decade plan to re-establish the ancient species in the waters it once called home. More than five years later, it’s still too soon to declare success. But early signs are promising, according to recent research led by The University of Toledo and published in the peer-reviewed North American Journal of Fisheries Management. The research tracked the first-year survival rates for cohorts released in 2018, 2019 and 2021, with results suggesting that the initiative is on track to achieve its goal of a self-sustaining ...

Study: Babies’ poor vision may help organize visual brain pathways

2025-07-03
CAMBRIDGE, MA -- Incoming information from the retina is channeled into two pathways in the brain’s visual system: one that’s responsible for processing color and fine spatial detail, and another that’s involved in spatial localization and detecting high temporal frequencies. A new study from MIT provides an account for how these two pathways may be shaped by developmental factors. Newborns typically have poor visual acuity and poor color vision because their retinal cone cells are not well-developed at birth. This means that early in life, they are seeing blurry, color-reduced imagery. The MIT team proposes that such blurry, color-limited ...

Research reveals Arctic region was permafrost-free when global temperatures were 4.5˚ C higher than today

2025-07-03
Scientists have found evidence that the Asian continent was free of permafrost all the way to its northerly coast with the Arctic Ocean when Earth’s average temperature was 4.5˚C warmer than today, suggesting that the whole Northern Hemisphere would have also been free of permafrost at the time. The stark findings indicate that if average global temperatures were to rise by this amount in the future, permafrost found in the Northern Hemisphere today would thaw. Such a temperature increase would release up to 130 billion tonnes of carbon currently frozen in the ground over the coming decades. The ...

Novel insights into chromophobe renal cell carcinoma biology and potential therapeutic strategies

2025-07-03
New Haven, Conn. — Cancer fighting T-cells, the immune system’s primary enforcers, are scarce in the rare kidney cancer called chromophobe renal cell carcinoma (ChRCC) and those that are present are indifferent to the tumor threat and traditional immune therapies, revealing the need for new targets and treatments.   Those are among the results described in a July 2 published report in the Journal of Clinical Oncology that set out to understand the biology of certain kidney tumors, including ChRCC, and their immune responses.   The study found that ChRCC, which accounts ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Texas A&M researchers expose hidden risks of firefighter gear in an effort to improve safety and performance

Wood burning in homes drives dangerous air pollution in winter

The Journal of Nuclear Medicine Ahead-of-Print Tip Sheet: January 23, 2026

ISSCR statement in response to new NIH policy on research using human fetal tissue (Notice NOT-OD-26-028)

Biologists and engineers follow goopy clues to plant-wilting bacteria

What do rats remember? IU research pushes the boundaries on what animal models can tell us about human memory

Frontiers Science House: did you miss it? Fresh stories from Davos – end of week wrap

Watching forests grow from space

New grounded theory reveals why hybrid delivery systems work the way they do

CDI scientist joins NIH group to improve post-stem cell transplant patient evaluation

Uncovering cancer's hidden oncRNA signatures: From discovery to liquid biopsy

Multiple maternal chronic conditions and risk of severe neonatal morbidity and mortality

Interactive virtual assistant for health promotion among older adults with type 2 diabetes

Ion accumulation in liquid–liquid phase separation regulates biomolecule localization

Hemispheric asymmetry in the genetic overlap between schizophrenia and white matter microstructure

Research Article | Evaluation of ten satellite-based and reanalysis precipitation datasets on a daily basis for Czechia (2001–2021)

Nano-immunotherapy synergizing ferroptosis and STING activation in metastatic bladder cancer

Insilico Medicine receives IND approval from FDA for ISM8969, an AI-empowered potential best-in-class NLRP3 inhibitor

Combined aerobic-resistance exercise: Dual efficacy and efficiency for hepatic steatosis

Expert consensus outlines a standardized framework to evaluate clinical large language models

Bioengineered tissue as a revolutionary treatment for secondary lymphedema

Forty years of tracking trees reveals how global change is impacting Amazon and Andean Forest diversity

Breathing disruptions during sleep widespread in newborns with severe spina bifida

Whales may divide resources to co-exist under pressures from climate change

Why wetland restoration needs citizens on the ground

Sharktober: Study links October shark bite spike to tiger shark reproduction

PPPL launches STELLAR-AI platform to accelerate fusion energy research

Breakthrough in development of reliable satellite-based positioning for dense urban areas

DNA-templated method opens new frontiers in synthesizing amorphous silver nanostructures

Stress-testing AI vision systems: Rethinking how adversarial images are generated

[Press-News.org] Stuckeman professor’s new book explores ‘socially sustainable’ architecture