Grace Farms And The Association Of Collegiate Schools Of Architecture Announce Winners Of 2025 Design For Freedom Competition

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Students Awarded for Research in Material and Design to End Forced Labor

New Canaan, CT, August 26, 2025 – Grace Farms and the Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture (ACSA) are pleased to announce the winners of the 2025 Design for Freedom Competition | Ethical and Equitable Materiality to End Forced Labor.

Design for Freedom is Grace Farms’ global movement to eliminate forced and child labor from the building materials supply chain. The Design for Freedom Competition challenged students to explore how architectural materials, research, and design can be used to elevate human rights and design and build more humanely. Participants explored and proposed ways that architects can work to eradicate embedded forced labor from the built environment. The competition was sponsored by Grace Farms and administered by ACSA and reached over 300 students and faculty participating from around the world.

“We were thrilled to see the creativity and strong commitment demonstrated by students to address one of the most overlooked yet pressing humanitarian issues of our time – forced labor in the building materials supply chain,” said Sharon Prince, CEO and Founder of Grace Farms and leader of the Design for Freedom movement. “We must engage the entire ecosystem of the built environment, including universities who are educating the next generation of leaders, to start shifting the marketplace. These projects demonstrate academic rigor and offer potential pathways to build more humanely. We are partnering with ACSA to nurture this vital intersection of architecture and justice.”

The distinguished jurors, who are also a part of the Design for Freedom Working Group, selected first, second, and third place winners, along with honorable mentions, in two categories: Design Project and Material Research.

The design project category offered architecture students the opportunity to select a site and building program using Design for Freedom Principles and the Design for Freedom International Guidance & Toolkit to design more ethically and equitably. Architecture students researched material sourcing, including existing and new industry-wide practices, material transparency measurements, and adopted shorter material supply chain methods to create a more ethical and equitable future.

CATEGORY I: DESIGN PROJECT

First Place: Peace Museum – Beyond the Scars

Students: Nidhi Naik & Shamita Shyam Honawar

Faculty Sponsors: Patricia Saldaña Natke & Soumya Dasgupta

University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign

Second Place: Patches in Waiting A Shelter for Equity and Material Justice

Student: Leonor Aguero Vivas

Faculty Sponsor: Jessie Andjelic

University of Calgary

Third Place: Modular Housing for Material Justice

Student: Sofia Ramirez

Faculty Sponsor: Clare Cardinal-Pett

University of New Mexico

Honorable Mention: A Garden of Stories: Placemaking in 3 Acts

Student: Shruti Jayaraman

Faculty Sponsors: Seema Maiya, Anup Naik, Nagaraj Vastarey & Mehul Patel

RV College of Architecture

Honorable Mention: Omokun Academy

Student: Sebastian Kush

Faculty Sponsor: Francisco Uviña

University of New Mexico

CATEGORY II: MATERIAL RESEARCH

First Place: Unmasking Greenwashing: Creating an Ethical Timber Supply Chain

Students: Natalie Darakjian, Noelle Osborne & Reed Wilson

Faculty Sponsor: Takako Tajima

University of Southern California

Second Place: Behind the Rubber

Student: Xingyu Liu

Faculty Sponsor: Patricia Saldaña Natke

University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign

Third Place: Unbuild to Rebuild

Students: Teodor Mlynczyk & Kritika Sarawagi

Faculty Sponsor: Jongwan Kwon

Carnegie Mellon University

Honorable Mention: Nomadic Walls: Circular Construction System with Low-Carbon, Site Ready Wall Panels

Students: Ishika Dinesh & Yifan Feng

Faculty Sponsor: Jongwan Kwon

Carnegie Mellon University

Honorable Mention: Environmental and Social Justice in Building Materials: Who Bears the True

Student: Qianyi Zhang

Faculty Sponsor: Catherine De Almeida

University of Washington

“ACSA is honored to partner with Grace Farms and the Design for Freedom movement. We believe architectural education is integral to shaping a built environment that is both thoughtful and responsible. ACSA remains firmly committed to advancing equity, social justice, and climate resilience in support of all communities and the built environment,” stated José Gámez, ACSA 2025–2026 President.

The jury was composed of leaders and PhD students in the field of architecture working on Design for Freedom projects. The winning projects were selected based on blind-evaluations, and the competition jury included:

Alan Ricks, Founding Principal and Chief Design Officer, MASS Design Group

Antonio Skillicorn, Ph.D. Candidate in Civil Engineering, Stanford University

Chris Sharples, AIA, Founding Principal, SHoP Architects

Farida Abu-Bakare, Associate Principal and Director of Global Practice, WXY Architecture + Urban Design

Ina Dajci, Ph.D. Researcher, Yale Center for Ecosystems + Architecture

Julia Gamolina, Founder and Editor-in-Chief, Madame Architect &
Associate Principal, Ennead

Kai-Uwe Bergmann, FAIA, Partner, BIG

Michael Crosbie, Ph.D., FAIA, Professor, University of Hartford

Nina Cooke John, Founder & Principal, Studio Cooke John Architecture + Design

The winning participants will be invited to present their projects at the fifth annual Design for Freedom Summit on March 26, 2026 at Grace Farms.

View the projects and get more information here.

About Grace Farms

Grace Farms is a cultural and humanitarian center in New Canaan, Connecticut. We bring together people across sectors to explore nature, arts, justice, community, and faith at the SANAA-designed River building, on 80 acres of publicly accessible natural landscape.

Its humanitarian work to end modern slavery and foster more grace and peace in local and global communities includes leading the Design for Freedom movement. Launched in 2020 by Grace Farms’ CEO and Founder Sharon Prince, Design for Freedom reimagines architecture by raising awareness and inspiring responses to disrupt forced labor in the building materials supply chain. The Design for Freedom Working Group comprises more than 100 leaders who together are spearheading a radical paradigm shift and mobilizing the full ecosystem of the built environment.

This collaborative approach to comprehensively address humanitarian issues and generate new outcomes is reflected across all of its initiatives and the place of Grace Farms, visit www.gracefarms.org

About ACSA

The Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture is a nonprofit, membership association founded in 1912 to advance the quality of architectural education. The school membership in ACSA has grown from 10 charter members to over 250 schools in several membership categories. These include full membership for all accredited programs in the United States and government-sanctioned schools in Canada, candidate membership for schools seeking accreditation, and affiliate membership for schools for two-year and international programs. Through these schools, over 6,000 architecture faculty members are represented. In addition, over 500 supporting members composed of architecture firms, product associations and individuals add to the breadth of interest and support of ACSA goals. ACSA provides a major forum for ideas on the leading edge of architectural thought. Issues that will affect the architectural profession in the future are being examined today in ACSA member schools. For more information, visit www.acsa-arch.org.