First Passive House-certified student residence hall in the United States earns special recognition from the EHDA jury.
The new campus housing references the past but its modern design looks forward.
The limestone striations on these dormitories create light and shadow and hark back to Princeton's old stone buildings.
This campus infill project was designed to "seem more like a village rather than just mass housing."
For years, Muse Architects concentrated nearly exclusively on custom homes and remodels. Now the firm takes on some institutional projects as well, but it hasn't forgotten the lessons that house design taught.
The judges praised the character and scale of this master-planned graduate student community on the edge of historic Westwood Village in Los Angeles.
CO Architects, Los Angeles. Tasked with inserting new student housing among existing 1960s-era structures, CO Architects tucked this new residence hall to one side of the site and configured the building with three wings to create outdoor courtyard spaces
On an urban site bisected by a major highway, RTKL saw an opportunity to display to tens of thousands of passersby what exactly happens in an art school.
Machado and Silvetti Associates + Gould Evans, LLC, Boston. The judges loved the shocks of color that distinguish the three courtyards at this campus housing complex in Tempe, Ariz.
Mark Horton / Architecture, San Francisco. This nifty little dormitory had to please a roll call of constituencies. (Or, as architect Mark Horton tactfully offers, “it had to moderate a number of different conditions.”)