Lane Duncan is a visiting instructor in the College of Architecture, Georgia Tech, currently teaching a visual arts course in watercolor. Recently he taught a non profit sponsored architectural design studio examining the application of environmentally sustainable research on an urban infill residential project in Atlanta, Georgia. In the past, as a full-time faculty member, he taught a wide range of graduate and undergraduate design studios, visual arts studios, served as a graduate thesis advisor and taught various theory seminars including Theories of Ethics and Aesthetics in Architecture. He has led and contributed to numerous conferences on architectural criticism and design and written periodical articles such as "Atlanta: A Flight From Center" for Spazio e Societa of Milan, Italy.
He has received numerous AIA Design Awards for constructed projects, unbuilt projects and design theory. His architectural work has been exhibited at the Chicago Architectural Foundation, the INTERBUILD Exposition in Birmingham, England, and various other national and regional venues. It has been published in Amazing Space, Metropolis, The Atlanta Journal and Constitution, and others. His paintings have also received numerous merit awards and have been exhibited in the Salon des Indépendants in Paris, regional galleries in the U.S. and are held in numerous corporate and private collections. He continues to exhibit and lecture widely on art and architecture.
He received his Bachelor of Architecture from Georgia Tech in 1968 and a Master of Design Studies in Theory and Criticism from the Graduate School of Design at Harvard in 1987.


