At Recess 01: Aaron Cayer presenting Incorporating Architects
Sunday, November 2nd, 2025 - 6:00 PM
Sunday, November 2nd, 2025 - 6:00 PM
Please join us for the first event of At Recess, a new ongoing series hosted by the Los Angeles Forum for Architecture and Urban Design that celebrates books, architecture, and urban culture. Each session invites authors, editors, and designers to present their recent publications and engage in open conversation about the ideas shaping contemporary architecture and the built environment.
The series takes its name from the notion of “recess” — a pause for reflection, exchange, and informal dialogue. The events provide a relaxed stimulating space for the Los Angeles design community to gather, discover new voices, and discuss ways to continue informing design discourse.
Speakers: Aaron Cayer in conversation with Megan Groth
Location: Bendix Building
Address: to be released to ticket holders
Tickets: Free.
RSVP HERE today to secure your spot!
Bios:
Aaron Cayer
Aaron Cayer is a Los Angeles-based historian, writer, and professor of architecture. He writes and teaches about the work of architects, planners, and engineers, focusing on the ways they contribute and respond to global inequities. He is currently an Assistant Professor of Architecture at Cal Poly Pomona.
Cayer’s research has been recognized and supported by international awards and fellowships, including a 2025 Carnegie Fellowship from the Carnegie Corporation, a 2024 Rome Prize from the American Academy in Rome, and a 2021 Thom Fellowship from the Huntington Library. He was awarded the inaugural Kristine Fallon Prize by the International Archive of Women in Architecture in 2022, and he was named to the Architecture League of New York’s “American Roundtable” in 2020 for research about rural economies and communities.
His recent book, Incorporating Architects: How American Architecture Became a Practice of Empire (UC Press, 2025) traces the rise of US-based architecture and engineering corporations, such as AECOM, as well as their impact on professions and politics after World War II.
Cayer is trained both as a historian and architect: he received his PhD in Architecture History from UCLA as well as undergraduate and graduate degrees in architecture from Norwich University in Vermont.
Outside of the academy, he serves on the Board of Directors of The Architecture Lobby and the Advisory Board of the International Archive of Women in Architecture.
For more on his research and writing, see here.
Megan Groth
Megan Groth is an architect, urbanist, educator and author based in San Diego. She received her Master's of Architecture from the University of Washington and Master's of City Design from the London School of Economics. Megan currently teaches architecture courses at the University of San Diego and, prior to that, taught professional practice at Woodbury University. She is the author of the book 'Places We Love: San Diego Tijuana' and is a founding member of the Transborder Association of Architectural Education (TAAE/ATEA).
Lecture Title
Incorporating Architects
Lecture Description:
Today, there are architecture and engineering firms that hold more capital than entire countries, employ more people than live in many cities, and rent offices in more nations than are represented in the UN. Within them, architects design not just buildings but urban systems—including the infrastructures, legal codes, and financial mechanisms on which those systems depend. This lecture and conversation draws from Incorporating Architects: How American Architecture Became a Practice of Empire, Cayer’s new book about the rise of corporate architecture firms in the US. It traces the origins of one such firm, today known as AECOM, revealing how and why architects used the political and economic power of their firm to grip the reins of their profession, expand their role, and shape global politics.
Image credits
Image 1: Book cover of: Incorporating Architects (UC Press)
Image 2: Aaron Cayer credit: Emily B. Frank
Image 3: Megan Groth
Image 4: Office of DMJM, Los Angeles, CA, 1963. Photo by Julius Shulman. © J. Paul Getty Trust. Getty Research Institute, Los Angeles.
Image 5: Rendering of a Titan I missile launcher by Jack Martin Smith. From: A Presentation of the Work of Daniel, Mann, Johnson, & Mendenhall: Company General Brochure, 1967. Stanley A. Moe papers, Huntington Library, San Marino, CA.