Craig Barton

ceb8x@virginia.edu
A.B. Brown University;
B.F.A. The School of Visual Arts;
M.Arch. Columbia University;
Loeb Fellow Harvard University, Graduate School of Design

Associate Professor, Director of Architecture, and Chair, Department of Architecture & Landscape Architecture

Craig Barton is an associate professor and urban design and the Chair of the Department of Architecture and Landscape Architecture at the University of Virginia. Prior to this appointment Mr. Barton was a member of the faculty at Columbia University’s Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation, where he directed the New York/Paris Program. Mr. Barton was Loeb Fellow at Harvard University’s Graduate School of Design.

Through his practice, research, and teaching Mr. Barton investigates issues of cultural and historical preservation and their interpretation through architectural and urban design. Much of his practice focuses on assisting African-American communities to preserve and interpret their significant cultural resources and to utilize them to stimulate community development.

He is the editor of the anthology, Sites of Memory: Perspectives on Architecture and Race, published by Princeton Architectural Press in March of 2001. In addition he has contributed essays and projects to a number of publications including, "Invisibility upon the Land" for the Your Town Mississippi Delta, anthology published by the National Endowment for the Arts, the essays, If the Walls Could Talk, ROW: Trajectories through the Shotgun House, edited by David Brown and William Williams and "The Mnemonic City", in Writing Urbanism, edited by Douglas Kelbaugh and Kit McCullough.

Mr. Barton is a founding principal in the architectural firm RBGC Associates, located in Charlottesville, Virginia. Some of the firm’s recent projects include, a master plan for the town of Bayview, a historic African-American community on Virginia’s Eastern Shore; the design of a museum and visitors center in Selma, AL for the National Voting Rights Museum, part of the National Park Services National Voting Historic Trail, and designs for the adaptive re-use and interpretation of former Rosenwald Schools in the Virginia including the Greensville County Training School in Emporia, VA and the Scrabble School in Rappahannock County VA.


National Voting Rights Museum; Craig Barton

National Voting Rights Museum; Craig Barton, with Chris Fannin.

View More:
This Image · Craig Barton's Gallery · Faculty Portfolio Gallery