Jim Dilamarter

Air Date
October 16, 2017
Jim Dilamarter started working with Parnelli Jones in 1969 and never stopped. Over the years, the master mechanic saw auto racing evolve from a hobby for the well-to-do into a multi-billion dollar industry ranked alongside traditional giants, like Major League Baseball and the National Football League, in audience reach and economic impact. Dilamarter reflects on this change in his interview, as well as the role of innovation in racing and the career path he followed into the sport he loves.
Architect

Throughout her career as a practicing architect and educator, Toshiko Mori has pursued a technical interest in the properties of materials, and especially synthetic materials, in addition to her concerns for purity of line, visual lightness and thermal performance.

Why She Innovates

As an architect, Toshiko Mori has always taken a personal delight in discovering new properties and potentials in materials. Whether designing exhibitions, houses or institutional projects such as the Visitor Center for Frank Lloyd Wright’s Darwin D. Martin House in Buffalo, New York, she enjoys a process that combines intuition with the rigor of research.

Toshiko Mori Interview Highlights Transcript

Toshiko Mori

I would say every architect that I know is a philosopher on his or her own.

Jim Dilamarter

5 Jan, 12:27 PM
Jim Dilamarter started working with Parnelli Jones in 1969 and never stopped. Over the years, the master mechanic saw auto racing evolve from a hobby for the well-to-do into a multi-billion dollar industry ranked alongside traditional giants, like Major League Baseball and the National Football League, in audience reach and economic impact. Dilamarter reflects on this change in his interview, as well as the role of innovation in racing and the career path he followed into the sport he loves.