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Awards/Jury

Awards

ENYA Prize: $5,000
Second place: $2,000
Third place: $1,000
Student: $1,000

The ENYA prize winner will also receive a piece of artwork created by an emerging New York City artist. In addition, the ENYA Prize winners will be invited to return as a juror for the 2012 ideas competition.

Jury

The seven-person jury will represent a cross-section of perspectives on design, architecture, preservation, planning, and landscape design. They will choose four winners, several honorable mentions, and a number of select entries for display in the competition exhibition at the Center for Architecture in Fall 2010.

ENYA is proud to announce the 2010 Jury:

Joshua David, Co-Founder and Chief Development Officer

Joshua David

Joshua David is a co-founder of Friends of the High Line and assumes primary responsibility for the organization's fundraising efforts, as well as overseeing public communications. Joshua is a member of the Advisory Council of Transportation Alternatives, a New York City-based non-profit that advocates on behalf of the city's cyclists, pedestrians, and transit-users. A longtime resident of Chelsea, he served on Manhattan Community Board No. 4 as the co-chair of their transportation committee. He is also a member of the steering committee of the Greater Gansevoort Street Improvement Project, which worked to expand and improve pedestrian facilities in the Meatpacking District. Before founding Friends of the High Line with Robert Hammond in 1999, Joshua was a freelance magazine writer and freelance editor for Gourmet, Fortune, Travel + Leisure, Wallpaper, and others.

Craig Dykers, AIA, NAL

Craig Edward Dykers was born in Frankfurt, Germany and has lived extensively in both Europe and North America. He received a Bachelor of Science in Architecture at the University of Texas in Austin after initial studies in medicine and art. Craig worked in both Texas and California before co-founding the architecture, landscape, and interior design companies Snøhetta arkitektur landskap AS in Oslo, Norway in 1989 and Snøhetta Inc. in New York City in 2004. He has served as co-designer of many prominent projects, including the Alexandria Library in Egypt, the National Opera in Oslo, Norway, and the National September 11 Memorial Museum and Pavilion at the World Trade Center in New York City. Other projects include the Lillehammer Winter Olympics Art Museum in Norway and the Norwegian Embassy in Berlin. Active professionally and academically, Craig is a member of the Norwegian Architecture Association (NAL) and the American Institute of Architects (AIA), and is a Fellow in the Royal Society of Arts in England. He has also served as a Diploma Adjudicator at the Architectural College in Oslo and as a Distinguished Professor at City College in New York City. He has lectured extensively throughout Europe, Asia, and the Americas. In addition, Craig has been commissioned to create installation art projects in public spaces, many focused on the notions of context, nature, and human nature.

Sangmok Kim, AIA LEED AP

Sangmok Kim

Sangmok Kim is a principal and a co-founder of N.E.E.D., a multidisciplinary design practice based in New York and Seoul that focuses on exploring the sublime relationships between architecture and landscape. Led by two partners, Sangmok Kim and Sungwoo Kim, their first internationally acclaimed project was ‘FishWORKS’, which won the First Place Emerging New York Architects Prize in 2008. Since then the winning projects have ranged from Seoul Performing Arts Center, Wonji Municipal Crematorium, Yongsan US Military Base Regeneration and Wirye New City Masterplan among many others.

He holds a Bachelor of Science in Architecture from Seoul National University in Korea, and a Master of Architecture from Columbia University with Honor Award for Excellence in Design.

Rosa Naparstek

Peter Ferko

Rosa Naparstek is a multi-disciplinary artist (fusion arts) whose work explores the "ordering of things," how we attach meaning to random juxtapositions of objects, and the "order of things," looking at the emotional roots of the world we create personally and politically. She is interested in the connection between art ( the aesthetic experience) and its power for personal/political transformation. She presents her work in conjunction with community building circles to allow participants to explore their own feelings and deepen connections with each other. She is an attorney and calls herself an activist, although not in the usual sense of the term. She is founder and co-director of Artists Unite, a member of The International Society of Artists, Kid's Guernica Project and on the organizing committee of the New York Metropolitan Martin Luther King International Artists for Peace and World Harmony (IAPWH) Initiative.

Laura Napier

Laura Napier is an artist living in the Bronx who works with photography, video, surveillance, and performance. She experiments with influencing passerby on the street through her own behavior, and has notified the public precisely when and where she is photographing. She is now conducting tours to apartments where she used to live. Sheʼs recently shown at the Bronx Blue Bedroom Project, the Bronx River Art Center, The Contemporary Arts Center in Las Vegas, PS122 Gallery in New York, and vertexList in Brooklyn. She is also Creative Industries Associate at The Bronx Council on the Arts and is assisting with the International Residency Program at The Bronx Museum of the Arts. She studied at Cooper Union and later earned an MFA from Bard College.

Hilary Sample, AIA

Hilary Sample is an Assistant Professor at Yale University and has previously taught at the University of Toronto, Northeastern University, and SUNY Buffalo, where she was awarded the Reyner Banham Teaching Fellowship. She is an architect and founding principal of MOS, an interdisciplinary architecture and design practice based in New Haven. Projects designed in her office have been showcased in numerous publications, including Architectural Record, Architect, A+U, Wallpaper, Surface, Space Korea, Mark, AV Proyectos, The New York Times, and exhibited at the Venice Biennale, SMOCA, MoMA and the Arts Institute in Chicago, and has received numerous awards, most recently a Design Award from Progressive Architecture, and New York City Architectural League Emerging Voices. Current work includes a Villa in Ordos, Inner Mongolia, and the public art installation “Afterparty” PS1/MoMA in Long Island City. Ms. Sample was also a project architect with the Office for Metropolitan Architecture in Rotterdam, and Skidmore, Owings and Merrill in New York City. She was a visiting scholar at the CCA in Montreal. Her research has been published in Praxis: Journal of Writing Building, 306090 and Verb. She is currently completing the book Sick City: A Global Investigation into Urbanism, Infrastructure and Disease. Ms. Sample received a B.Arch. from Syracuse University and an M.Arch. from Princeton University.

Kazys Varnelis, Ph.D.

Kazys Varnelis

Kazys Varnelis is the Director of the Network Architecture Lab at the Columbia University Graduate School of Architecture, Planning, and Preservation. In addition to directing the Netlab and conducting research, he is on the architecture faculty at Columbia and teaches studios and seminars in history, theory, and research. Varnelis is a co-founder of the conceptual architecture/media group AUDC, which published Blue Monday: Absurd Realities and Natural Histories in 2007 and has exhibited widely in places such as High Desert Test Sites. He is editor of the Infrastructural City. Networked Ecologies in Los Angeles, Networked Publics and The Philip Johnson Tapes: Interviews with Robert A. M. Stern, all published in 2008. He has also worked with the Center for Land Use Interpretation, for which he produced the pamphlet Points of Interest in the Owens Valley.

From 1996 to 2003 he taught at the Southern California Institute of Architecture where he was coordinator of the program in the History and Theory of Architecture and Cities. In 2004 he became a founding member of the faculty of the School of Architecture at the University of Limerick, Ireland where he continues to teach and is on the advisory board. He has also taught in the Environmental Design program at the Art Center College of Design in Pasadena, the Public Art Studies program at the University of Southern California, the Department of Architecture at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the Department of Architecture at the University of Pennsylvania.

William Prince, Jury Moderator

William Prince

William Prince is principal and a co-founder of PARK, an experimental multi-disciplinary studio that provides an integrated approach to architecture, design and communications in diverse range of media and over multiple scales.

Will was a project architect for the Office for Metropolitan Architecture in Rotterdam, Rockwell Group in New York and has worked in the offices of Bernard Tschumi and Rogers Marvel. He served as an assistant curator in Department of Architecture and Design at the Wexner Center for the Arts projects included the traveling exhibition Evidence: Photography and Site and Fabrications: Full Scale, the Wexner Center component of the Fabrications exhibition also staged at the Museum of Modern Art, New York, Museum of Contemporary Art, Barcelona and the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art.

Will studied architecture and comparative literature at the Ohio State University and received a Master of Architecture with Distinction from the Graduate School of Design, Harvard University winning the SOM Foundation Traveling Fellowship. (www.parkoffice.net)