UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — Josh Conroy, a third-year master of architecture student in the Department of Architecture, Stuckeman School, at the Penn State College of Arts and Architecture, was named the winner of the Department of Architecture’s 2024 Corbelletti Design Charrette.
More than 210 posters were submitted for the competition this year, which marked the 35th year of the architecture charrette, in which students were asked to address the ongoing and worsening issues of climate change and environmental destruction due to “human intervention” rather than natural disasters. As such, students were challenged to design an “Escape Extinction Empowerment Enclave” (E.E.E.E. Building) that is to “act as a research hub, scientific facility and information center that embodies a comprehensive assessment of the ongoing extinction phenomenon.” They were also encouraged to take a hybrid approach to the project, using hand-drawn elements as well as computer-aided components.
According to Conroy, his poster serves as a commentary on the possibility of humanities’ future self-destruction. The composition, he said, is produced as a series of fragmented rooms and artworks that centered on the E.E.E.E. Building prompt.
“The theme I worked with was primarily dystopian, including depictions of natural disasters, warning messages and many hidden references to historical events and artistic/literary works,” Conroy said.
Conroy used several digital tools to create his design, including Adobe Illustrator for the background, Midjourney to create the images and Adobe Photoshop for the text and clipart, as well as to stitch together the images to create perspectival spaces.
James Wines, retired Penn State architecture professor and founder and owner of the New York-based design firm SITE, served as the visiting architect, lecturer and juror for the competition. Joining him on the jury were architecture alumnus Alex Donahue of Michael Graves Architecture and Design and Mehrdad Hadighi, Stuckeman Professor of Advanced Studies and professor of architecture.