Condia + Ornelas Traveling Prize Recipients
Jacob Shreve and Meredith Park (2024)
The Condia + Ornelas Traveling Fellowship panel has announced Jacob Shreve and Meredith Park as the recipients of the Condia + Ornelas Traveling Prize. Both Shreve and Park, fifth-year graduate students in the architecture department at Kansas State University's College of Architecture, Planning & Design, were selected for their outstanding proposals and commitment to exploring architectural and cultural significance on a global scale.
Yvette Fabela (2023)
The Condia + Ornelas Traveling Prize panel has awarded the Condia + Ornelas Traveling Prize to Haneen Abu-Sherbi. Abu-Sherbi is a fifth-year graduate student from Wichita in the architecture department at Kansas State University's College of Architecture, Planning & Design.
Abu-Sherbi plans to use the prize to travel through Egypt, where she will have the opportunity to observe differences within the urban structure, learn about current Egyptian cities through post-digital drawing methods and investigate the elements of a dense, timeless region.
Haneen Abu-Sherbi (2022)
The Condia + Ornelas Traveling Prize panel has awarded the Condia + Ornelas Traveling Prize to Haneen Abu-Sherbi. Abu-Sherbi is a fifth-year graduate student from Wichita in the architecture department at Kansas State University's College of Architecture, Planning & Design.
Abu-Sherbi plans to use the prize to travel through Egypt, where she will have the opportunity to observe differences within the urban structure, learn about current Egyptian cities through post-digital drawing methods and investigate the elements of a dense, timeless region.
Talisa Hernandez (2021)
The Condia + Ornelas Traveling Prize panel has awarded the inaugural Condia + Ornelas Traveling Prize to Talisa Hernandez. Hernandez is a fifth-year graduate student from Wichita in the architecture department of Kansas State University's College of Architecture, Planning & Design.
Hernandez plans to use the prize to travel through Italy to document the variation in aesthetic and sensory experience of a range of Italian cities across the peninsula and to interpret and represent those observations through the medium of a digitized architectural capriccio. When this will happen is to be determined due to COVID-19 restrictions, but ideally, the travel would take place toward the end of this summer and into the fall.