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School of Architecture Faculty Member Honored With Best of Design Award

The Architect鈥檚 Newspaper (AN) recently announced the winners of its 10th annual Best of Design Awards, a unique project-based awards program that showcases great buildings, unbuilt proposals, interiors and installations.

, assistant professor in the School of Architecture, won the Young Architects Award for , a shade pavilion she designed and built with four student researchers鈥擱ayshad Dorsey, Pietro Mendon莽a, Jack Raymond and Audrey Watkins (all M.Arch 鈥23), from the Harvard Graduate School of Design鈥攊n Greene-Rose Heritage Park, one of the more underserved and most diverse neighborhoods of Cambridge, Massachusetts.

The CloudHouse, a shade pavilion in Cambridge Massachusetts. sits in a park-like setting with a person walking beneath it
The CloudHouse structure sits in the corner of the park with its open form facing the center. (Photo by Sam Balukonis)

The pavilion, developed with the City of Cambridge鈥檚 Public Space Lab and Community Development Department, provides temporary respite from the heat and rain and complements the city鈥檚 鈥淩esilient Cambridge鈥 program, which educates the public on urban heat islands and sustainability and recommends an increase in shading parks in lower-income neighborhoods that have a deficit of tree canopy coverage.

CloudHouse鈥檚 design was informed by one central constraint: avoiding material waste. The pavilion is built using HDPE (high-density polyethylene), a recyclable UV-treated plastic. Its translucency provides shade while letting some ambient light through, creating a sheltering membrane that is both illuminated and protective.

Designed and constructed using curved-crease folding鈥攁 geometric technique akin to origami that creates rigid structural surfaces out of low-cost, flat material鈥攖he entire structure is composed of five different reconfigurable modules that shape the walls, individual seats, communal benches and gable-vault roof and require limited skill and cost in assembly. The units are designed around the most standard and readily available stock size (4-foot x 8-foot sheets) and produce zero off-cuts in their construction.

鈥淚 appreciated the fact that this pavilion was made with a couple of different units flipped to their concave or convex sides to make an engaging shape,鈥 said Felecia Davis, a member of the Best of Design Awards jury. 鈥淚t looks like it can expand to be a bigger shelter as well and is, in fact, a building system for a material that is shapable like plastic. Perhaps this works for many kinds of recycled plastics one might find in a material stream in a community.鈥

Offering ample seating and an open form, CloudHouse invites people to socialize, rest and seek necessary refuge from the elements. In April 2022, it fulfilled its intention to celebrate existing usage of Greene-Rose Heritage Park by serving as a venue for Earth Day events organized by local organizations to promote education on climate resilience for Cambridge schoolchildren.

Entrants were invited this past fall to submit completed works in 39 categories that reflected AN鈥檚 editorial coverage, as well as the interests and obsessions of the newspaper鈥檚 readers. This year鈥檚 competition proved to be the largest to date for AN, with more than double the number of submissions than in typical previous iterations of this program, from firms big and small across every corner of the North American continent.

close-up view of the interior of the CloudHouse, a shade pavilion in Cambridge Massachusetts, with children sitting inside the structure
A place of rest and gathering for students from nearby elementary schools (Photo by Sam Balukonis)

The Best of Design Awards jury鈥攊ncluding James Burnett, president of OJB Landscape Architecture; Tei Carpenter, founder of Agency鈥揂gency; Sekou Cooke, director of the master of urban design program at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte; Felecia Davis, associate professor at the Stuckeman Center for Design and Computation; Gabriela Etchegaray, cofounder of AMBROSI | ETCHEGARAY; Ron Stelmarski, principal and design director at Perkins&Will; Aaron Seward, editor-in-chief at The Architect鈥檚 Newspaper; and Jack Murphy, managing editor at The Architect鈥檚 Newspaper鈥攋udged each entry based on several criteria: strength of presentation, evidence of innovation, creative use of new technology, sustainability and, most importantly, good design.

Awards were given to everything from completed commercial and residential buildings to public and urban design projects; from interiors and small spaces to exhibition design and temporary installations; from research initiatives to architectural representations, and beyond.

鈥淚 feel lucky to have had the opportunity to execute this project as a demonstration of how geometry, material and construction processes can have social and environmental impacts even if at modest scales,鈥 says Fayyad. 鈥淚t was an honor and privilege to get to know the neighborhood鈥檚 history, hear stories from members of the community, and work with the City of Cambridge and my dedicated research and fabrication team.鈥

Fayyad is founder and director of project:if, a research practice that places constraints of architectural geometry in dialogue with material economy, visual perception, and the politics of physical space and building practice.

Winning projects, along with photos, descriptions and juror comments, are featured in , distributed at industry events and conferences throughout 2023. Winners will also receive a limited-edition print from Archigram produced especially for AN.

For a full list of 2022 Best of Design Awards winners, honorable mentions, editors鈥 picks and project of the year profiles, visit .