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The Community Catalyst team, recipients of a 2024–2025 Gibbs Design in Action Award (GDAA), partnered with Sisu Youth Services Inc. to provide architectural services that support the organization’s goal of ending homelessness in the Oklahoma City area. The GDAA is a grant initiative that supports student-led design and research projects that critically engage issues of community, social, and economic concern within the built environment. Through this program, students explore meaningful questions and propose creative design solutions that respond to community needs across Oklahoma.
Site plan showing the pavilion location at Sisu Youth Services in Oklahoma City.
The Community Catalyst team undertook a winding process of learning how to support the design needs of this non-profit. They worked with Sisu Youth Services to create marketing materials for community outreach programming and to reimagine a recently acquired neighboring property, where the organization plans to expand its existing housing. Local architect AHMM had developed a design, but Sisu Youth faced resistance from the surrounding neighborhood. As a trust-building effort, the team helped the organization activate the lot as a public space. Their work culminated in a design-build pavilion that gives young residents a sheltered outdoor space to socialize—its teal blue canopy conferring identity to the center and its community.
Left: Display boards show the students’ “Roots of Recognition” project for Sisu Youth Services. Right: OU architecture students Emma Eitzen, Jordan Hughes, and Gracie Kimbrell stand in front of the completed teal-canopy pavilion.
OU architecture students and community members work together to install posts for the new pavilion at Sisu Youth Services in Oklahoma City.
Walkthrough of the project.
Robert L. Wesley, a pioneering architect and beloved mentor, has died at age 88. A graduate of the University of Oklahoma, Wesley joined Skidmore, Owings & Merrill (SOM) in 1964 and became the firm's first Black partner in 1984. Throughout his career, he contributed to significant architectural projects while maintaining a strong commitment to civic engagement and professional mentorship.
The Christopher C. Gibbs College of Architecture is proud to celebrate a series of recent accomplishments by Dr. Jim Collard, Professor of Practice in the Division of Planning, Landscape Architecture, and Design, whose work continues to shape conversations around Indigenous economic development nationally and internationally.
University of Oklahoma Gibbs College of Architecture Dean Hans E. [PA1.1]Butzer returned to one of his most significant works on December 15, joining survivors and past and present board members for the groundbreaking of a $15.8 million expansion of the Oklahoma City National Memorial & Museum.