The 2016 Jury of Fellows from the American Institute of Architects (AIA) elevated 149 AIA members to its prestigious College of Fellows, an honor awarded to members who have made significant contributions to the profession. The 2016 Fellows will be honored at an investiture ceremony at the AIA Convention in Philadelphia in May.
The Fellowship program was developed to elevate those architects who have made a significant contribution to architecture and society and who have achieved a standard of excellence in the profession. Election to fellowship not only recognizes the achievements of architects as individuals, but also their significant contribution to architecture and society on a national level.
2016 Jury of Fellows
Diane Georgopulos, FAIA, Chair, Massachusetts Housing Finance Agency; Steve Crane, FAIA, VCBO; Marleen Kay Davis, FAIA, University of Tennessee; Mary Katherine (Mary Kay) Lanzillotta, FAIA, Hartman Cox Architects; David Messersmith, FAIA, University of Texas; Karen V. Nichols, FAIA, Michael Graves & Associates and Donald T. Yoshino, FAIA, Yoshino Architecture, PA.
Out of a total AIA membership of nearly 88,000, there are fewer than 3,200 distinguished with the honor of fellowship and honorary fellowship. The elevation to fellowship is conferred on architects with at least 10 years of membership in the AIA in one or more of the following nomination categories:
- Promoted the aesthetic, scientific, and practical efficiency of the profession
- Advanced the science and art of planning and building by advancing the standards of architectural education, training and practice
- Coordinated the building industry and the profession of architecture through leadership in the AIA or other related professional organizations
- Advanced the living standards of people through an improved environment
- Made the profession of ever-increasing service to society
Included in the list below are the newly elevated members, their component affiliation and category for which they were elevated.
2016 Fellows
Included in the list below are the newly elevated members, their component affiliation and category for which they were elevated. You can follow this link to view a more detailed list that includes images.
Name |
Category |
Chapter |
Richard H. Abramson |
Category Five |
AIA Los Angeles |
Mehrnoush Arsanjani |
Category Two |
AIA San Francisco |
Karl Alan Backus |
Category One |
AIA San Francisco |
Hans Baldauf |
Category Two |
AIA San Francisco |
John Barbour |
Category Two |
AIA Minneapolis |
William J. Bates |
Category Three |
AIA Pittsburgh |
Douglas C. Bencks |
Category Four |
AIA New Hampshire |
Douglas A. Benson |
Category Three |
AIA Portland |
Luis Carlos Bernardo |
Category Two |
AIA Baltimore |
Charles Besjak |
Category Two |
AIA New York |
Donald R. Blair |
Category Two |
AIA New York |
Barbara Bouza |
Category Two |
AIA Los Angeles |
Robert A. Bracamonte |
Category Two |
AIA San Francisco |
James A. Brady |
Category Two |
AIA Austin |
Jeffrey Brown |
Category Two |
AIA Houston |
Mary Buchanan Brush |
Category Two |
AIA Chicago |
Michael Joseph Buono |
Category Two |
AIA Springfield |
John S. Burcher |
Category Two |
AIA Chicago |
Tamara Elizabeth Lapham Burns |
Category One |
AIA Huron Valley |
Jane E. Cameron |
Category Two |
AIA Chicago |
Polly Carpenter |
Category Five |
Boston Society of Architects |
Larry S. Cash |
Category Two |
AIA Alaska |
Margaret O'Donoghue Castillo |
Category Three |
AIA New York |
Heister Clymer Cease Jr. |
Category Five |
AIA Triangle |
Jeanine G. Centuori |
Category Five |
AIA Los Angeles |
Sean Chuan-Sheng Chiao |
Category Two |
AIA Hong Kong |
Annie Chu |
Category One |
AIA Los Angeles |
Yolanda Cole |
Category Two |
AIA | DC |
Gianne P. Conard |
Category Four |
Boston Society of Architects |
Lawrence Holdren Connolly |
Category Two |
AIA Austin |
Ernesto Cragnolino |
Category One |
AIA Austin |
Jeffrey Daniels |
Category Two |
AIA Los Angeles |
Joel Davy |
Category One |
AIA North Dakota |
Roberto C. de Leon Jr. |
Category One |
AIA Central Kentucky |
Jack DeBartolo III |
Category One |
AIA Phoenix Metro |
Gilbert Delgado |
Category Four |
AIA Southern New York |
Ellen Bailey Dickson |
Category Two |
AIA Chicago |
David Dimond |
Category Two |
AIA Minneapolis |
Kathleen A. Dorgan |
Category Five |
AIA Connecticut |
Nicole M. Dosso |
Category Two |
AIA New York |
William Edward Dugger III |
Category Two |
AIA Treasure Coast |
Christopher S. Dunlavey |
Category Four |
AIA | DC |
Blakely Carr Dunn |
Category Three |
AIA Arkansas |
Philip Durham |
Category One |
AIA St. Louis |
David Eisen |
Category One |
Boston Society of Architects |
Cassandra D. Ensberg |
Category Five |
AIA Santa Barbara |
Martin J. Finio |
Category One |
AIA New York |
James D. French |
Category One |
AIA Kansas City |
Hsinming Fung |
Category One |
AIA Los Angeles |
R. Hunter Gee |
Category One |
AIA Middle Tennessee |
Ruth M. Gless |
Category Two |
AIA Columbus |
Manuel G. Gonzalez |
Category Two |
AIA Los Angeles |
Emily A. Grandstaff-Rice |
Category Three |
Boston Society of Architects |
Charles H. Griffin |
Category Two |
AIA Houston |
Douglas C. Hanna |
Category Four |
AIA Detroit |
Anne Hicks Harney |
Category Two |
AIA Baltimore |
Robert Paul Harris |
Category Four |
AIA | DC |
Kelly Hayes-McAlonie |
Category Five |
AIA Buffalo/WNY |
Jonathan Herz |
Category Four |
AIA | DC |
Paul C. Hutton |
Category Two |
AIA Denver |
Steven Imrich |
Category Two |
Boston Society of Architects |
Meral Iskir |
Category Two |
AIA | DC |
Thomas S. Ito |
Category Two |
AIA Los Angeles |
Christof Jantzen |
Category One |
AIA Los Angeles |
James Jennings |
Category One |
AIA San Francisco |
Lamar A. Johnson |
Category Five |
AIA Chicago |
Margo P. Jones |
Category Three |
AIA Western Massachusetts |
Duane L. Jonlin |
Category Four |
AIA Seattle |
Larry Kearns |
Category Two |
AIA Chicago |
Dan Kirby |
Category Five |
AIA Orlando |
Ned S. Kirschbaum |
Category Two |
AIA Denver |
Lester Korzilius |
Category Three |
AIA London | UK |
Ann Kosmal |
Category Four |
AIA Northern Virginia |
Alexander P. Lamis |
Category Two |
AIA New York |
Aric J. Lasher |
Category One |
AIA Chicago |
Bradley Leathley |
Category Two |
AIA Seattle |
R. Steven Lewis * |
Category Three |
AIA Pasadena & Foothill |
Rebecca J. Lewis |
Category Two |
AIA Northern Minnesota |
Philip S. LiBassi |
Category Two |
AIA Cleveland |
Anne-Marie Lubenau |
Category Five |
Boston Society of Architects |
Jennifer Luce |
Category One |
AIA San Diego |
Dean Marchetto |
Category Two |
Architects League of Northern N.J. |
Glenn E. Mason |
Category One |
AIA Honolulu |
Paula Burns McEvoy |
Category Two |
AIA Atlanta |
Bettina Mehnert |
Category Two |
AIA Honolulu |
Mark R. Miller |
Category Two |
AIA San Francisco |
Amy Miller Dowell |
Category Four |
AIA Portland |
Naomi O. Miroglio |
Category One |
AIA San Francisco |
Victor A. Mirontschuk |
Category Two |
AIA New York |
David D. Montalba |
Category One |
AIA Los Angeles |
Anthony Mosellie |
Category Two |
AIA Connecticut |
Jeffrey Murphy |
Category Two |
AIA New York |
F. Jeffrey Murray |
Category Two |
AIA Pittsburgh |
Kirsten R. Murray |
Category Two |
AIA Seattle |
William Murray |
Category Two |
AIA Los Angeles |
Stuart Narofsky |
Category One |
AIA Long Island |
Sarah Nettleton |
Category Two |
AIA Minneapolis |
Andrew G. Nielsen |
Category Two |
AIA Denver |
David M. Oakland |
Category Two |
AIA Central Virginia |
James Mary O'Connor |
Category One |
AIA Los Angeles |
William S. Otwell |
Category One |
AIA Grand Canyon |
Irvin A. Pearce |
Category Three |
AIA Triangle |
Frederick Perpall |
Category Five |
AIA Dallas |
John Scott Poole |
Category Two |
AIA Eastern Tennessee |
David M. Powell |
Category One |
AIA Middle Tennessee |
Jay Raskin |
Category Five |
AIA Portland |
Kevin Ratigan |
Category Two |
AIA Orlando |
Phillip A. Reed |
Category Five |
AIA Austin |
Linda Reeder |
Category Two |
AIA Connecticut |
Glenn Rescalvo |
Category One |
AIA San Francisco |
David Brent Richards |
Category Two |
AIA Detroit |
Henry Frank Ricks, Jr. |
Category Two |
AIA Memphis |
Mark Ripple |
Category Two |
AIA New Orleans |
David Mark Riz |
Category One |
AIA Philadelphia |
Percy 'Rebel' Roberts III |
Category Two |
AIA Chicago |
Ann Merideth Rolland |
Category Two |
AIA New York |
Peter Rose |
Category One |
Boston Society of Architects |
William Ryall |
Category One |
AIA New York |
William Q. Sabatini |
Category One |
AIA Albuquerque |
Michael M. Samuelian |
Category Two |
AIA New York |
Michael Schnoering |
Category Two |
AIA Central New Jersey |
David J. Segmiller |
Category Two |
AIA Charlotte |
Kimberly Sheppard |
Category One |
AIA New York |
Scott Simons |
Category One |
AIA Maine |
James J. Slade |
Category One |
AIA New York |
Ed Soltero |
Category Four |
AIA Phoenix Metro |
Jeffrey C. Stouffer |
Category Two |
AIA Dallas |
Max Wilson Strang |
Category One |
AIA Miami |
Joseph A. Stypka |
Category Two |
AIA Chicago |
Gail M. Sullivan |
Category Two |
Boston Society of Architects |
Allen Swerdlowe |
Category Five |
AIA New York |
Robert P. Theel |
Category Four |
AIA Chicago |
Douglas Ashley Tilden |
Category Two |
AIA New York |
Bryce A. Turner |
Category Two |
AIA Baltimore |
Susan Doreen Turner |
Category Two |
AIA Chicago |
Ronald Jan van der Veen |
Category Two |
AIA Seattle |
James Voelzke |
Category Two |
AIA | DC |
Dennis Simmons Ward |
Category Three |
AIA Grand Strand |
Daniel Watch |
Category Two |
AIA Atlanta |
Gregory T. Waugh |
Category Two |
AIA New York |
Don Weinreich |
Category Two |
AIA New York |
Terry L. Welker |
Category Five |
AIA Dayton |
R. Craig Williams |
Category Five |
AIA Dallas |
Gary Wolf |
Category One |
Boston Society of Architects |
Dan Wood |
Category One |
AIA New York |
Thomas W. Wurtz |
Category Four |
AIA Dallas |
(Charles) Al York |
Category One |
AIA Austin |
Liz Harriss York |
Category Four |
AIA Atlanta |
Alek Zarifian |
Category One |
AIA Pasadena & Foothill |
* By virtue of receiving the Whitney M. Young Jr. Award, Mr. Lewis was automatically elevated to Fellowship
2016 Honorary Fellows
The 2016 Jury of Fellows in conjunction with the 2015 Jury of Honorary Fellows also elevated eight individuals to become Honorary Fellows of the Institute. Honorary Fellowship was developed as the international counterpart to the Fellowship program. It recognizes the achievements foreign architects as individuals, but also elevates before the global public and the profession, model architects who have significantly contributed to the profession on an international level.
Name |
Primary Location |
Firm |
Hayder Ahmed Ali |
Sudan |
Hayder A. Ali Architects & Building Consultants |
Louisa Hutton |
Berlin |
Sauerbruch Hutton |
Don Kasian |
Vancouver, British Columbia |
Kasian Architecture Interior Design and Planning LTD |
Teodoro Fernández Larrañaga |
Santiago, Chile |
Teodoro Fernández Arquitectos Compañía Limitada |
John McAslan |
London, UK |
John McAslan + Partners |
Reiulf Ramstad |
Oslo, Norway |
Reiulf Ramstad Arkitekter AS |
Yoshihiko Sano, JIA |
Osaka, Japan |
Yasui Architects & Engineers, Inc. |
Denise Scott Brown* |
Philadelphia |
VSBA Architects and Planners |
Gonzalo Mardones Viviani |
Santiago, Chile |
Gonzalo Mardones Arquitecto |
* By virtue of receiving the AIA Gold Medal, Denise Scott Brown was automatically elevated to Honorary Fellowship
Jury of Honorary Fellows
George Miller, FAIA, Pei Cobb Freed & Partners Architects, LLP; Diane Legge Kemp, FAIA, RTKL Asia Ltd.; Steve Crane, FAIA, VCBO; Marleen Kay Davis, FAIA, University of Tennessee; Diane Georgopulos, FAIA, Massachusetts Housing Finance Agency; Mary Katherine (Mary Kay) Lanzillotta, FAIA, Hartman Cox Architects; David Messersmith, FAIA, University of Texas; Karen V. Nichols, FAIA, Michael Graves & Associates and Donald T. Yoshino, FAIA, Yoshino Architecture, PA.
Related Stories
Office Buildings | May 20, 2024
10 spaces that are no longer optional to create a great workplace
Amenities are no longer optional. The new role of the office is not only a place to get work done, but to provide a mix of work experiences for employees.
Mass Timber | May 17, 2024
Charlotte's new multifamily mid-rise will feature exposed mass timber
Construction recently kicked off for Oxbow, a multifamily community in Charlotte’s The Mill District. The $97.8 million project, consisting of 389 rental units and 14,300 sf of commercial space, sits on 4.3 acres that formerly housed four commercial buildings. The street-level retail is designed for boutiques, coffee shops, and other neighborhood services.
Construction Costs | May 16, 2024
New download: BD+C's May 2024 Market Intelligence Report
Building Design+Construction's monthly Market Intelligence Report offers a snapshot of the health of the U.S. building construction industry, including the commercial, multifamily, institutional, and industrial building sectors. This report tracks the latest metrics related to construction spending, demand for design services, contractor backlogs, and material price trends.
K-12 Schools | May 15, 2024
A new Alabama high school supports hands-on, collaborative, and diverse learning
In Gulf Shores, a city on Alabama’s Gulf Coast, a new $137 million high school broke ground in late April and is expected to open in the fall of 2026. Designed by DLR Group and Goodwyn Mills Cawood, the 287,000-sf Gulf Shores High School will offer cutting-edge facilities and hands-on learning opportunities.
Adaptive Reuse | May 15, 2024
Modular adaptive reuse of parking structure grants future flexibility
The shift away from excessive parking requirements aligns with a broader movement, encouraging development of more sustainable and affordable housing.
Affordable Housing | May 14, 2024
Brooklyn's colorful new affordable housing project includes retail, public spaces
A new affordable housing development located in the fastest growing section of Brooklyn, N.Y., where over half the population lives below the poverty line, transformed a long vacant lot into a community asset. The Van Sinderen Plaza project consists of a newly constructed pair of seven-story buildings totaling 193,665 sf, including 130 affordable units.
K-12 Schools | May 13, 2024
S.M.A.R.T. campus combines 3 schools on one site
From the start of the design process for Santa Clara Unified School District’s new preK-12 campus, discussions moved beyond brick-and-mortar to focus on envisioning the future of education in Silicon Valley.
University Buildings | May 10, 2024
UNC Chapel Hill’s new medical education building offers seminar rooms and midsize classrooms—and notably, no lecture halls
The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill has unveiled a new medical education building, Roper Hall. Designed by The S/L/A/M Collaborative (SLAM) and Flad Architects, the UNC School of Medicine’s new building intends to train new generations of physicians through dynamic and active modes of learning.
Sustainability | May 10, 2024
Perkins&Will’s first ESG report discloses operational performance data across key metrics
Perkins&Will recently released its first ESG report that discloses the firm’s operational performance data across key metrics and assesses its strengths and opportunities.
MFPRO+ News | May 10, 2024
HUD strengthens flood protection rules for new and rebuilt residential buildings
The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) issued more stringent flood protection requirements for new and rebuilt homes that are developed with, or financed with, federal funds. The rule strengthens standards by increasing elevations and flood-proofing requirements of new properties in areas at risk of flooding.