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Interior Design Student Reimagines the Workplace, Wins IIDA Texas-Oklahoma Design Excellence Award

Stacy Murphy and Jada Higgins stand side by side at the IIDA Texas-Oklahoma Design Excellence Awards. Murphy holds the Design Excellence Award trophy, while Higgins holds a framed certificate recognizing her student commercial project.

Interior Design Student Reimagines the Workplace, Wins IIDA Texas-Oklahoma Design Excellence Award


Date

November 21, 2025

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Senior Interior Design student, Jada Higgins, has achieved a remarkable milestone by winning the IIDA Excellence Award at the Texas-Oklahoma Chapter’s annual awards ceremony held on Friday, November 7th in Austin, Texas. 

The IIDA Design Excellence Awards are hosted annually by various chapters to celebrate the best projects and designs in the interior design industry. 

Higgins, who is majoring in Interior Design with a minor in Architecture, received the honor for a workplace design project originally created during her junior spring semester. The competition, which typically attracts submissions from professional firms worldwide, recognized her innovative approach to reimagining architectural office environments. 

Two detailed section drawings and reference floor plans of Jada Higgins’ award-winning workplace design project, showing multi-level layouts, interior spatial organization, and visual perspectives.

Section drawings from Higgins’ workplace design project.

The award-winning project centers on a concept called “brutal artistry”, drawing inspiration from brutalist architecture while incorporating multiple artistic disciplines. 

“I really wanted to bring in the ideas of brutalism more so than the materiality,” Higgins explained. “I wanted it to be open, honest, and transparent, but I also wanted it to be artistic and inspire the people working in the firm, because that’s a place that I would want to work in in the future.” 

A rendering of a warm-toned workplace café area featuring built-in seating, long communal tables, overhead lighting, and silhouettes of people interacting in the space.

Rendering of the workplace café space.

According to Higgin's impact statement: “Designed through the lens of a student actively envisioning the future of their profession, this workplace challenges conventional design firm environments by blending research, empathy, and bold conceptual storytelling. It reimagines what an architectural office can feel like—where creativity is sparked by transparency in design and tactile artistic expressions from past and present disciplines. This design becomes more than a place to work; it’s a prototype for how studios can prevent burnout, nurture cross-generational collaboration, and honor the identities of everyone who walks through the door.”

A rendering of a modern reception and lobby space with a sculptural wooden staircase, curved seating, warm lighting, and large windows overlooking the city.

The project’s reception and lobby area.

At the ceremony, Stacy Murphy, president of IIDA Texas-Oklahoma Chapter, presented the award. Higgins was the only student honoree at the event, standing alongside professional firms being recognized for her work.

“It was wonderful to meet the design community that I am potentially going to be in next year,” she shared. “It also strengthened my passion for IIDA because I got to experience how it pushes and supports not only design professionals, but students as well.”

This win marks a significant achievement for a student still completing their degree, demonstrating that bold ideas and thoughtful design can earn recognition at the highest level of the profession. 


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