The award ceremony for the seventh Hublot Design Prize, a showcase of work by eight emerging designers chosen by a jury including Hans Ulrich Obrist, Philippe Tardivel, Alice Rawsthorn and former winner Samuel Ross (pictured above, left to right), took place at the Serpentine Gallery in London on Monday. The prize’s ambition, like many industry gongs, is to raise the profile of those doing outstanding work and give them grant money to continue. So it was heartening to see that one of Hublot’s laureates in 2022, US architect Maya Bird-Murphy, is also working to raise the profile of design itself.
Bird-Murphy, who received the Pierre Keller award (the runner-up prize with a £10,000 grant) at the ceremony, has been running Chicago-based Mobile Makers since 2017. The non-profit organisation offers free and accessible design programming, teaching architecture and construction to young people in a country that doesn’t have strong architectural education pathways built into its formal curriculum.
“When we started, it was about creating career pathways for children to become architects,” says Bird-Murphy. “Now it’s more broad: it’s about giving kids life skills. For example, a teenager who comes through Mobile Makers and can now work a bandsaw can get a job in a carpenters’ workshop. Others might just realise that design is fun.”
This shift in ambition is a reminder that raising the profile of design and educating young people about architecture, especially in cities and countries without a strong design heritage, can have a far-reaching impact beyond simply enticing people to work in the profession. It can also help create jobs in adjacent industries and, through an element of fun, shape engaged citizens who are knowledgeable about the effects of design.
With this in mind, here’s hoping that Bird-Murphy continues to spread the word and do good work. Her Hublot nod should also be a reminder for all of us: the more we all talk about design, the better, stronger and more diverse our built environment can become.