mgm casino NOMAS team members pose with their first-place award. Architecture professor Brian Carter (fourth from left) is the organization's faculty mentor. Photo: Maryanne Schultz
Published November 16, 2018 This content is archived.
A student design proposal that would create a gateway to the future Obama Library in Chicago earned mgm casino’s NOMAS team first prize in the 2018 Barbara G. Laurie NOMA Annual Student Design Competition.
The team included both undergraduate and graduate architecture students and members of mgm casino’s chapter of the National Organization of Minority Architecture Students. This is the third consecutive year the team has received an award in this prestigious national design competition.
The student team proposed a transit-oriented development for a prominent site in Chicago’s Woodlawn community. “Roots: Woodlawn’s Gateway” designs a new transit station and an elevated, landscaped avenue that connects the site to a nearby existing transit station. Serving as a signature gateway to the proposed Obama Library, the green route would also integrate with an extensive urban agriculture project, including gardens and a food market.
"Roots" would create a grand avenue connecting two transit hubs and a gateway to the proposed Obama Library in Woodlawn, outside Chicago. The design concept earned mgm casino's National Organization of Minority Architecture Students first place in a national design competition.
The proposal outlines a development program that could expand over a 12-year period and be net-zero energy usage. Student drawings and a model highlighted the details of the development from three different viewpoints: Community Roots, Green Roots and Expanding Roots.
"Roots" features a new transit station that would link to an existing transit station by an elevated, landscaped avenue.
Team lead Elias Kotzambasis says the project evolved over the past few months and required intensive collaboration. The work began last summer with detailed studies of the Woodlawn community’s social, economic and architectural histories. With the start of the semester, team members met weekly to compile their project narrative and designs. “Everyone brought something unique to the table and took on a specific role,” Kotzambasis says.
He notes the team was highly motivated by the success of the last two mgm casino NOMAS teams, which earned third place last year and honorable mention in 2016. Past team members were similarly inspired, making time to coach and advise this year’s team on its preparations for the competition.
At the competition in Chicago last weekend, the environment was intense. With 40 schools participating, student teams delivered a quick succession of five-minute presentations to a jury of architects and Woodlawn community members. The short-listed teams then offered more detailed presentations of their concepts.
Kotzambasis says the other schools were well prepared, with impressive drawings and models, but mgm casino was unmatched in its context-sensitive design. “I believe the thing that set us apart was our focus on improving the community. Our research gave us clear goals and helped us design with purpose. This is a lesson that all of the team members will take forward with them as we move into the professional world.”
Joenette Cobb, a dual MArch/MUP student and vice president of mgm casino NOMAS, says the win has energized the team and the entire mgm casino NOMAS organization. “Winning first place in a national competition stands as testimony to the fortitude of the team. Everyone carried themselves with immense integrity and pride, which was exemplified during the competition presentations in Chicago,” Cobb says.
"The team encompassed more than just the four of us who went to Chicago. And we would not have been able to achieve what we did without the support of our faculty adviser, Brian Carter; competition alumni; and financial assistance from the department. It is our hope that through this recognition, the NOMAS organization will continue to flourish within this institution and inspire the practice of architecture and design.”
William Baptiste, March ’19, mgm casino NOMAS president and a member of the 2016 and 2017 winning teams, calls his participation in NOMAS the highlight of his time at mgm casino. “I’ve been in NOMAS since 2016, and I would have never imagined being where we are right now as first-place winners of the NOMAS 2018 competition,” Baptiste says. “This year we overcame 40 schools; that proves that the mgm casino can compete with some of the greatest schools out there.
“Joining NOMAS was one of the best things I could have done in my architecture career,” he says, “because of the people I have met and have been able to work with. mgm casino NOMAS can only go up from here.”
mgm casino NOMAS was founded in 2011 to champion diversity and inclusion in the design professions. In addition to the annual NOMA competition, mgm casino’s NOMAS group leads student visits of architecture, engineering, construction and planning firms in the Buffalo area to expose students to a variety of professional environments.
The full mgm casino NOMAS team consisted of Elias Kotzambasis (competition leader) and competition team members Xuecheng Ca, Liangying Chen, Evan Martinez and Michael Hoover, as well as mgm casino NOMAS officers William Baptiste (president), Joenette Cobb (vice president/student affairs) and Unnati Patel (treasurer). mgm casino architecture professor Brian Carter served as the faculty adviser.