On Thursday, I presented an "invited keynote lecture" in this beautiful and large auditorium. It probably holds 1000 people. There may have been 200-250 in attendance (pretty good, even though visually sparse). I worked hard during the past few weeks to prepare a good lecture and I felt that it went well.
In all, there were 20 keynote lectures (all "mini reviews" of major indoor air topics) and another ten plenary lectures. On Thursday evening, we were all hosted at a dinner in Kowloon, at a restaurant called Towngas Avenue.
Among the attendees were Professor Yi Jiang (L), a member of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (very distinguished!) and Glenn Morrison (R), one of my former students who is now the president of ISIAQ.
Also attending were Professor Qingyan Chen (L), who is a distinguished professor both in China and at Purdue University, Professor Richard Corsi (M), who chairs the Department of Civil, Architectural and Environmental Engineering at UT Austin, and Prof Pawel Wargocki, from DTU, who is the former president of ISIAQ.
Ingrid sat next to Prof Frank Lee from Hong Kong Polytechnic University. (He studied at Berkeley and took an air pollution class from me). Across from her is Prof Kirk Smith, a highly distinguished scholar for his work on household air pollution from biomass cookstoves.
We celebrated the birthday of Prof Jan Sundell (purple t-shirt), who is currently working at Tsinghua University in China.
The meal was quite nice, including this lovely dessert.
It's a small restaurant, so the 40 of us occupied the whole place.
It was a beautiful evening in Hong Kong, with great views of the city lights!
People pictures? That's a first. You've got quite the international crowd! Congratulations on what I'm sure was a very successful set of lectures! SinBerBest is the Singapore-Berkeley project, right?
I started this blog during the first half of 2009, when, along with my wife, Ingrid, and youngest daughter, Daniela, I spent considerable time in Costa Rica and Spain. Here I recorded a summary of my impressions on most days during our travels. The observations are primarily made through the lens of my camera, augmented by a few paragraphs.
After returning to California in June 2009, I decided to continue the blog. Entries when I'm in California will be sporadic; I'll post more frequently when I travel. The goal will be to continue learning and sharing with the subject inspired by what I happened to find visually interesting.
Click on the photos to see larger versions.
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Thanks for visiting!
Acknowledgment: Here is a big THANK YOU to my friend and colleague, Charlie, for his feedback and encouragement of my photography, especially in connection to my 2006 work in Denmark (not posted here) and my 2009 photos from Costa Rica.
1 comment:
People pictures? That's a first. You've got quite the international crowd! Congratulations on what I'm sure was a very successful set of lectures! SinBerBest is the Singapore-Berkeley project, right?
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