RAMSA Prize

2023 RAMSA Prize

The RAMSA Prize is a $7,000 grant to fund a two-week-long research and travel fellowship exploring a location’s sense of place. Proposals can include architectural research or design projects and may focus on a wide range of topics such as regional traditions, public health, infrastructure, housing equity, civic engagement, or environmental studies. Recipients will complete their travel in the spring following the announcement of the award and present their research to the firm in fall 2024.

Now in its eighth year, the RAMSA Prize is awarded annually by the partners of Robert A.M. Stern Architects to design staff to engage in targeted, in-depth research into a city, town, or place, in a way that can meaningfully inform design work. In addition, the prize allows staff to pursue personal interests as an extension of the firm’s research-based design principles.

The prize is administered by RAMSA Research. Email prize@ramsa.com with any questions.

2022 Prize Recipients – Avani Agarwal and Daniela Déu

Avani Agarwal and Daniela Déu traveled to Portugal to study the architectural styles and urban settings of five neighborhoods in Lisbon. Their research included an analysis of the relationships between public and private spaces, street hierarchy, massing techniques, fenestration details, and materiality. 

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2021 Prize Recipients – Alp Demiroglu and MG Lewis

Migration to the Magic City: Early Modernisms in an Ever-Expanding Miami

Alp Demiroglu and MG Lewis traveled to Miami Beach to study art deco architecture. They documented architectural landmarks through photography and on-site sketching, and met with local historians and viewed archival collections to better understand historical influences.

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2020 Prize Recipients – Amanda Iglesias and Christopher Tritt

Renaissance: Architecture and Placemaking in Central Harlem

Amanda Iglesias and Christopher Tritt studied Harlem landmarks to better understand the challenges and triumphs of Black placemaking in the United States. Their research included a week-long series of walks through Harlem focusing on three interconnected themes for the buildings: religion, culture, and people.

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2019 Prize Recipients – Justin Lai and Ron Ostezan

Argentina Between the Wars: Housing as Style, Not Typology

Justin Lai and Ron Ostezan traveled to the Argentine cities of Buenos Aires, Rosario, and Mar del Plata to study the architectural styles of residential buildings completed between 1920 and 1940.

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2019 Prize Recipients – Brenna Decker and Caitlin B. Getman

Governed by Hierarchy: Japan’s Samurai Districts

Brenna Decker and Caitlin B. Getman traveled throughout southern Japan to catalogue and analyze six preserved samurai districts.

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2018 Prize Recipients – Kristen Gates and Thomas Nye

Harmony of the Whole: Cities Beautiful in 20th Century India

Kristen Gates and Thomas Nye’s research focused on Sir Edwin Lutyens’s early 20th-century work for Imperial New Delhi and Le Corbusier’s mid-20th-century designs for Chandigarh—two chronologically and geographically adjacent examples of an architect developing the master plan for a new city and designing everything from public and institutional buildings, monuments, residences, down to the scale of furniture.

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2017 Prize Recipients – Robert Cannavino and Mark Santrach

“Just” Housing: Dutch Social Housing from 1915–1930

Robert Cannavino and Mark Santrach’s research focused on early-20th-century social housing in Amsterdam that originated from the National Housing Act of 1902. The completion of entire neighborhoods during a small window of time between the First and Second World Wars aimed to combat the increasing overpopulation and deterioration of the city, and would promote the planning, funding, and standardization of Dutch housing for decades. “The Dutch created rich urban fabrics with just social housing,” wrote Cannavino and Santrach. “Despite lacking grand civic buildings and the benefit of incremental growth, the new neighborhoods espoused a clear hierarchy of forms, a rich network of public spaces, and a degree of picturesque monumentality.”

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2016 Prize Recipients – Robert Moldafsky and Javier Perez

Understanding Regionalism: The Creation of Place in the Spanish Colonies

Robert Moldafsky and Javier Perez traveled to cities in central Mexico and port cities in the Caribbean and Central America to study Spanish Colonial architecture. Each location was selected for its unique climate, local materials, and regional differences. Moldafsky and Perez studied “how these sets of stimuli created new variations in Spanish architectural character across New Spain.”

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