Interior design students honored at Las Vegas architecture competition
One of the highest awards the Interior and
Spatial Design MA program of the University of Pécs has received was awarded to
master's students participating in the international Buildner Architecture
Competition.
The “Las Vegas Affordable Housing Challenge” competition
called for projects that create new ways to reduce housing prices. The
designers were asked to present a flexible, innovative, pilot-phase concept for
affordable housing in Las Vegas. One team of students from the Faculty of
Engineering and Information Technology of the University of Pécs, MA in
Interior and Spatial Design, received an honorable mention, and the projects of
three teams were among the top twenty.
The participants in the competition (https://architecturecompetitions.com/lasvegaschallenge/) were asked to provide solutions to the city's housing crisis - to design spaces of various sizes to accommodate families, single individuals, and couples in supported housing in the most creative way possible. The panel of judges were looking for projects that would break away from typical ideas of housing, design, and the community while also focusing on sustainability and affordability. “Participation in the competition was integrated into the semester coursework of first-year Interior and Spatial Design MA students, with the aim of testing themselves in an international competition where they could compete against peers from other universities or even practitioners in their profession. The call for applications is compatible with the curriculum of our semester, which is devoted to residential interior design.
“Our student community is mainly international and is a very diverse group from all over the world. They will certainly face many of the challenges of the competition during their careers, given that climate change, sustainability and the energy crisis require innovative solutions, so this assignment is modelled on a real-life situation,” says Dr Ágnes Borsos, Interim Head of the Department of Interior, Applied and Creative Design.
Students who participated in the competition
spent a semester in a workshop-style classroom environment developing their
design proposal while attending lectures on sustainable architecture. The Las
Vegas Affordable Housing Challenge Architecture Competition Honorable Mention
(https://architecturecompetitions.com/lvah-2-hon-win) was awarded to a team of
international architects and interior designers consisting of Gantumur
Bujinlkham, Lujain Ahmad Mohamada-men and Sara Ardalan Hussein. “When we first
worked as a team, the differences in cultural backgrounds, design approaches
and ideas helped us better understand the architectural challenge. As
designers, we first look at the problem on a large scale, as a community issue,
and try to find solutions on a smaller, individual scale. Our job as architects
is to create safe and comfortable living conditions for members of the society
so that they can live happily. Participating in competitions is a great
opportunity to step out of our comfort zone; the challenge broadens our
horizons and develops our creative flair,” said the students summarizing their
experience of the competition.
“We spend a significant amount of our time in buildings and interiors, so interior designers strive to make the surrounding space as functional as possible. At the border of architecture and interior design, the Interior and Spatial Design MA program in Pécs emphasizes human-centered design in planning and constructing spaces. Students develop a concept from a wide range of perspectives in which the details of the interior create the depth of the space, aiming to make the interior enjoyable and comfortable. At Faculty of Engineering and Information Technology, the interior design-related work of the research team and its application in education provides recent and up-to-date knowledge, with a strong emphasis on spatial organization, optimal use of space and functionality. The faculty lecturers always strive to bring real-life projects to the classroom, which will provide students with valuable experience in their future careers.
“The significant presence of international
students with the intercultural dialogue brings an interesting and effective
diversity to the education, a kind of innovation potential,” says Professor Gabriella
Medvegy, Dean of the Faculty of Engineering and Information Technology of the
University of Pécs.