Here are the 2024 AIA California Design Awards winners
The AIA California Design Awards program just unveiled this year's winning projects. Five Honors recipients are joined by twenty-six Merit and Citation winners located across the Golden State as well as beyond California's boundaries. "This outstanding year of awarded projects delivers the positive impact and influence that architects have on daily lives, whether a building’s users are at work or play, rest or learning," 2024 AIA California President Winston Thorne commented on the selected designs.The jury comprised Jim Burnett, Michael Hsu, Alison Mears, Margaret Montgomery, and Jim Zack.HONORS RECIPIENTS(Cover image) Kresge College Expansion at the University of California, Santa Cruz (Santa Cruz, California), Studio Gang (Design Architect and Architect of Record) with TEF Design (Associate Architect) Jury comment: "This is a spectacular project. The buildings were surgically inserted to let nature prevail. A sensitive architectural response to the site, with buildings carefully nestled into the redwood forest, and bridging between the buildings, that elevates students above the forest floor."Read the full post on Bustler
The AIA California Design Awards program just unveiled this year's winning projects. Five Honors recipients are joined by twenty-six Merit and Citation winners located across the Golden State as well as beyond California's boundaries.
"This outstanding year of awarded projects delivers the positive impact and influence that architects have on daily lives, whether a building’s users are at work or play, rest or learning," 2024 AIA California President Winston Thorne commented on the selected designs.
The jury comprised Jim Burnett, Michael Hsu, Alison Mears, Margaret Montgomery, and Jim Zack.
HONORS RECIPIENTS
(Cover image) Kresge College Expansion at the University of California, Santa Cruz (Santa Cruz, California), Studio Gang (Design Architect and Architect of Record) with TEF Design (Associate Architect)
Jury comment: "This is a spectacular project. The buildings were surgically inserted to let nature prevail. A sensitive architectural response to the site, with buildings carefully nestled into the redwood forest, and bridging between the buildings, that elevates students above the forest floor."Read the full post on Bustler