"Things are such, that someone lifting a cup, or watching the rain, petting a dog or singing, just singing – could be doing as much for this universe as anyone.” Rumi

The Forum for Architecture, Culture and Spirituality will host its 2015 International Symposium embedded in the serene setting of the vast and inspiring landscape of  New Mexico in the southwest of the United States. Its central theme will be to explore how experiences of nature and of otherwise ordinary things in our everyday existence have been elevated to the realm of the spiritual and imbued with special meaning for individuals, societies, and cultures in the past, and to speculate on what designers can do to facilitate the connection between the quotidian and the sacred in the built environment of today.

The Seventh Annual Meeting of the Forum will take place June 18-21 2015 at Ghost Ranch, an education and retreat center 14 miles north of the village of Abiquiu, New Mexico, and about two hours by car north of the city of Albuquerque, the closest major airport. Ghost Ranch is surrounded by national forests, the mesas and pueblos of Native American tribes, and the natural beauty that acted as the inspiration for the artist Georgia O’Keefe (former owner of Ghost Ranch where she spent most of her career as a painter). It offers the ideal setting to contemplate the theme of the symposium in an environment of great natural, cultural, and spiritual power.

As in the past, the symposium will be structured around several subtopics focusing on various aspects of the general theme, and the number of attendees will be kept small on purpose to secure an atmosphere conducive to personal connections and in-depth dialogue. Optional meditation will be offered each morning and there will be some free time for connecting to oneself, other people and the surroundings. A keynote address by Ted Jojola, Distinguished Professor of Community and Regional Planning at the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque, will contribute to our collective understanding of the meaning and symbolism of the physical environment of Native American populations of the region. Dr. Jojola is a Native American from Isleta, one of today's active pueblos in the Rio Grande Valley of Northern New Mexico, continuously occupied for roughly the past one thousand years.

The Forum for Architecture, Culture and Spirituality is an international scholarly group established in 2007 to advance the development and dissemination of architectural and interdisciplinary scholarship, research, practice, and education on the significance, experience, and meaning of the built environment.

Process:  Interested individuals are invited to submit proposals of 500 to 1,000 words for either Open or Symposium Topic Sessions. Each proposal should be an expanded abstract and include a summary statement, topic, scope, case-study(ies) if appropriate, and intended conclusions. Only one submission per individual is accepted.

Proposals will follow a blind peer-review process with at least three ACS scholars/professionals considering each submission. Their individual recommendations will be sent and studied by the ACS7 Symposium chairs who will make the final determination regarding accepting or rejecting a proposal. The Symposium chairs' decision is final. Chosen proposals will be electronically published on the symposium website 3 weeks before the meeting. Efforts will also be made to publish the accepted work in paper format.

Format & Place of Submission: Clearly state your selected session type. All proposals should be sent as an attached file saved in a “DOC” or “RTF” or "PDF" format. If images are embedded in the document, make sure your file total size does NOT exceed 5 MB. Send your submission to 2015 Symposium co-chair: Julio Bermudez (Catholic University of America) [email protected]

IMPORTANT: All reference to the author should be removed from the submission in order to guarantee strict blind-peer review. The symposium chairs, upon receiving the submission from the author will provide them with a key number to identify the paper.

Timeline: Proposals are due MONDAY 19 JANUARY, 2015

Favor: in order to better plan the peer-review logistics, we request interested authors to send us an email indicating their intention to submit work. Send email to bermudez at cua.edu

Important dates that follow:

  • Peer-review process: January 20-March 15, 2015
  • Feedback to authors: March 20, 2015 (Friday)
  • Deadline to confirm author participation: April 20, 2015 (Monday)
  • Room Reservation deadline (payment due): May 15, 2015 (Friday) — More information will be available later on, as necessary
  • Submission of revised paper for online publication: May 15, 2015 (Friday)
  • Final symposium scheduling + e-publication available : June 1, 2015 (Monday)
  • Symposium starts: June 18, 2015 (Thursday)