2026 Steedman Fellowship Competition

 

 

Image courtesy Neeraj Bhatia

 

100th Anniversary Competition Celebrates Legacy of Fumihiko Maki; Award Raised to $100,000

 

Sponsors: Sam Fox School, Washington University in St. Louis with St. Louis AIA
Type: Open, International, one-stage
Fee: $75
Eligibility: Architects with a degree during the past eight(8) years
Timetable:
1 November 2025 – Submission deadline
Jury: 
• Neeraj Bhatia, (Jury chair) Co-Founder, The Open Workshop; Associate Professor, California College of the Arts; Co-Director, The Urban Works Agency
• Patty Heyda, Professor, WashU Sam Fox School
• Nahyun Hwang, Founding Principal, N H D M; Adjunct Associate Professor, Columbia University
•Jack Self, Architect; Editor-in-Chief, Real Review, London
• Peter Tao, Founding Principal, Tao + Lee Associates, St. Louis


Challenge:
How can architecture gather a collective in an increasingly pluralistic society? How do rapidly changing technologies and methods of communication, as well as the growing heterogeneity of institutions, affect how people assemble?

 

In his influential manifesto, “Investigations in Collective Form” (1964), Fumihiko Maki (1928-2024) argued that collective form emerges when buildings come together to produce something larger than the sum of their parts. But what does collective form mean today? How do we assemble, produce new forums, engage overlooked subjects (both human and non-human), and provide a venue for design to have increased political agency?

 

These are the questions posed by “Collective Form/Forums.” The biennial research competition — organized by the Sam Fox School of Design & Visual Arts at Washington University in St. Louis, in concert with AIA St. Louis — invites early-career architects from around the world to investigate and reimagine the fundamental systems, facilities and services that underlie contemporary life.
This year’s theme, developed by jury chair, acclaimed architect and urbanist Neeraj Bhatia, invites participants to grapple with Maki’s legacy, the state of regional cultures in a globalized world, and the role of collective form today.

 

“For Maki, collective form emerged when buildings came together to produce something larger than the sum of their parts,” Bhatia wrote in his call for proposals. “While today many of these same challenges exist, the notion of collective form has also expanded to consider how we assemble, produce new forums, engage overlooked subjects (both human and non-human), and provide a venue for design to have increased political agency.”

For more information, go to:

https://samfoxschool.washu.edu/the-school/news/1143-sam-fox-school-aia-st-louis-announce-steedman-fellowship-theme