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About the Artist

Roger Richmond holding a 3D camera used for 3D photography - 3D macro nature photography
Roger Richmond looking at a piece of his artwork. He does 3D macro nature and architecture photography as well as stained glass artwork

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His work and research for NASA in Hostile Environmental Design continued at the University of Pennsylvania while working toward a Ph.D. and studying conceptual architectural design theory in the World Masters Class of Louis I. Kahn.

He maintains his love of architectural design and is co-founding partner in SpaceTherapy™ a design/behavior pre and post-occupancy analysis service dealing with the psycho-social impact of designed environments on human behavior. 

Mr. Richmond’s 3-D macro nature and architecture photography has been presented in hundreds of 3-dimensional photographic programs to public schools and other public and private organizations on art, architecture, and nature (unique 3-D macro photography) statewide, throughout New England, and internationally.

Currently Mr. Richmond lives in South Freeport, Maine with his wife Beverly, with Suki and Lucy, the cats.

Roger Richmond is Emeritus Professor of Architecture in the BArch program he founded at the University of Maine at Augusta. With more than 35 years of architectural teaching experience, Mr. Richmond continues his architecture as a consultant. He was named UMA’s “The Student’s Choice Teacher Of The Year” in 2001.

 Roger Richmond was the national competition design winner of the Maine’s Vietnam Veteran’s Memorial.  He has also won national design competitions in glass art (Glassmaster’s Guild National Art Glass Competition, NYC) and has given (by invitation) a special workshop on glass art design in Kobe, Japan.

He won an International Design Competition Memorial (unbuilt) for Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., proposed for Cambridge Square in Boston.  He is a registered architect (inactive), and holds a Master of Arts in Architecture Degree from the University of Florida.

Roger was the first and only architect at the time commissioned by NASA (National Aeronautics and Space Administration) in Houston, TX to architecturally conceive and design humanistic zero and “artificial” gravity living environments on space stations and planetary fly-by missions.