Associate Professor Susan Ross recently accepted a higher level of cross-appointment to the Azrieli School of Architecture & Urbanism, which means she will spend 25 percent of her time at the school.
The balance is with the School of Indigenous and Canadian Studies, one of the Azrieli School’s partners in delivering the Graduate Diploma in Architectural Conservation.
This adjustment recognizes Ross’s long-term commitment to undergraduate teaching in Conservation and Sustainability and thesis advising of Master of Architecture students. It also recognizes her co-applicant role in successful multi-year Heritage Engineering and New Paradigms New Tools research grants.
This greater involvement will allow Ross to further contribute to the school in shaping academic programs in conservation and beyond. “I am very pleased to contribute to greater collaboration between the two schools,” she says.
Ross is a graduate of McGill University’s School of Architecture and the Faculté d’Aménagement of Université de Montréal, and a licensed architect in Quebec. She has practiced in the private sector in Montreal and Berlin, including on the rehabilitation of industrial sites, hospitals, and museums. She also worked with not-for-profit heritage and urban environmental organizations before moving to Ottawa to work as a senior conservation architect in the federal government.