University holds its annual Commencement: Honorary degree to
innovative architect/educator
April 21, 2008
University of Detroit Mercy will hold its annual commencement
ceremony for undergraduate and graduate students on Saturday, May
10, 1:30 p.m. at Calihan Hall on the McNichols Campus. More than
750 graduates and their families are expected to attend the event,
as well as "Class of 1958" alumni, who will be honored at the
ceremony. Valedictorian Beth Ann Dalrymple, a mechanical
engineering major, will address the audience.

During the ceremony, the University will also
award an honorary degree to Maurice D. Cox, director of Design for
the National Endowment of the Arts. A leading architect, educator
and urban design advocate, Cox has devoted his career to improving
urban design across the country.
A native of New York City, Cox received a Bachelor of Architecture
from Cooper Union School of Architecture in 1983. He spent 10 years
in Florence, Italy in professional practice and partnering with
Giovanna Galfione in the Studio di Architettura. Six of those years
were also spent as an assistant professor of Architecture with
Syracuse University's Italian Program.
In 1993, Cox joined the faculty of the University of Virginia
School of Architecture, where he taught graduate seminars with an
emphasis on community-based collaborative efforts in urban design.
In 1996, Cox with partners Craig Barton, Giovanna Galfione, and
Martha Rowen founded the architectural practice of RBGC
Architecture, Research and Urbanism. In 2006, he also became a
partner in the Community Planning + Design WORKSHOP in
Charlottesville, Virginia.
Throughout his career, Cox has been an advocate for citizen
involvement in city design. He served on the city council in
Charlottesville, Virginia for eight years, two of which he was the
city's mayor. There he promoted citizens' involvement in the city's
civil activities, which led to the creation of a new transit center
downtown. Frommer's Cities Ranked and Rated selected
Charlottesville as "Best Place to Live" out of 400 cities in the
U.S. and Canada during Cox's term as mayor. According to Cox,
"Well-designed cities are not a luxury"they are a public
necessity." His groundbreaking design in Bayview, Virginia, was the
subject of an award-winning documentary, "This Black Soil," which
was featured in a full episode of "60 Minutes." The
community-minded designer has also been featured in Fast Company
magazine as one of America's "20 Masters of Design," the New York
Times, the Washington Post and Architecture Magazine.
Cox served as co-director of the Brookings Institute study of
downtown Detroit in 2006. His work has focused on the study of
Detroit, involving his graduate students through semester-long
projects. He currently is studying the shrinking population of
urban cities, with a major emphasis on Detroit.
Cox's long-standing commitment to the field of architecture has
earned him many awards and honors, including the Cooper Union
School of Architecture's most distinguished alumni award, the
Presidential Medal, and the Cooper Union John Hejduk Award for
Architecture. In 2005, he received Harvard University's Graduate
School of Design's Loeb Fellowship.
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