The Christopher C. Gibbs College of Architecture is proud to announce the Division of Architecture student winners of the 2025 Shaw Prize, TAP Prize, and MA+ scholarship.
The Shaw Prize: Emma Bock, 2nd year in Architecture
The TAP Prize: Elisa C. Wilson, 2nd year in Architecture
MA+ Scholarship: Ty Brown-Field, 3rd year in Architecture
Selection from the portfolio of Emma Bock, the 2025 Shaw Prize recipient.
The Shaw Prize and the TAP Prize are awarded as part of a 2nd-year architecture design studio portfolio competition. The 2nd year architecture design studio was tasked with designing their portfolios to highlight their undergraduate studio work, thereby enhancing their portfolio presentation skills. The final recommendations from each teaching team section were reviewed and put to a vote by the architecture division faculty.
The finalist portfolio winners successfully demonstrated their drawing and technical skills, creativity, and design thinking. Showcasing strong storytelling designs with concise narratives that successfully described the varied studio design challenges, their process, and their design proposals. Both students did a fantastic job of documenting their design process through sketches, diagrams, models, and iterations, which effectively illustrated how their ideas evolved over time, going beyond simply presenting finalized designs. In their unique style, each recipient authentically expresses their brand and design identity through their portfolio designs.
Selection from the portfolio of Elisa Wilson, the 2025 TAP Prize recipient.
The MA+ scholarship rotates annually between the Interior Design and Architecture programs. This year, it was available to architecture students. Of their student submissions for the project 772 Avenida San Patricio: A Dwelling for Contemporary Living, Professors Paolo Sanza and Amber Brown selected six. The project challenged students to design a concrete-made mixed-use infill project in San Juan, Puerto Rico. The submissions were anonymously forwarded to MA+ Architecture, who selected three finalists. From these three finalists, the Division of Architecture Scholarship Committee selected the awardee.
Axonometric drawing by Ty Brown-Field, the 2025 MA+ scholarship recipient.
The 772 Avenida San Patricio program comprised four commercial suites, one 1,800-square-foot apartment, one 350-square-foot minimal dwelling, and parking for six cars. The project also required students to respond sensitively to Puerto Rico’s rich culture, climate, and contemporary aesthetics. The project portfolio consisted of a design narrative, preliminary sketches, various orthographic drawings, multiple exploded axonometric drawings, and renderings.
Congratulations Emma, Elisa, and Ty!
A team of Construction Science and Architecture students from the Gibbs College of Architecture made their mark on the national stage this week, earning third place out of 37 universities competing at the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) Student Competition, held during the International Builders' Show in Orlando, February 16-18, 2026.
The American Institute of Architects (AIA) has elevated Gary Armbruster, FAIA, ALEP to its prestigious College of Fellows—AIA’s highest membership honor—for his exceptional work and sustained contributions to architecture and society. Fellowship recognizes architects who have achieved a standard of excellence in the profession and made a significant impact at a national level. Members elevated to this distinction carry the FAIA designation after their name.
Students from the Spring 2026 Graduate 4 Architecture Design Studio, led by Professor Amy Leveno, exhibited their work at the School of Visual Arts. The exhibition, titled Reimagining the OU School of Visual Arts, featured drawings, models, and animations developed throughout the semester's studio project. The show was hosted in The Spotlight, a creative gallery space located on the first floor of the Fred Jones Art Center, and ran from January 20–30, 2026.