The SOM Foundation supports individuals with the highest aspirations to enhance the design of the built environment.
Hao Chang
Reclaiming the Negative Space. © Hao Chang.
Lu Ming
Axonometric drawing of the inner part of the city wall in the waterfront area. © Lu Ming.
Zhang Nan
Scene of the transformation of the space under the viaduct in the Discover Eco-corridors project. © Zhang Nan.
Miro’s Chicago, Chicago, 1981. Photograph by Hedrich Blessing Photographers. © Successió Miró / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / ADAGP, Paris 2025.
Pablo Castillo Luna
A Tent for Lovers, A Garden for Pollinators, 2022. © Pablo Castillo Luna.
Rebecca Henig
Coral Rubble at Moore Reef after MARRS star installation. Courtesy of Mars Incorporated and GBR Biology.
Aurélie Frolet
Jillian Maxcy-Brown
Emily McGlohn
The Rural Studio cluster system demonstration site is in Newbern, a rural Black Belt Alabama town. © Tim Hursley.
Dingliang Yang
Jennifer Yoos
Maura Rockcastle
Ross Altheimer
Roger Cummings
Daniel Carlson
Changó Cummings
Mapping of the “Soft-Urban Riverfront” along the Mississippi River in the Twin Cities, highlighting Pig’s Eye as a crucial site with a history of pollution, rich Indigenous heritage, and ecological significance. © Dingliang Yang and Michael Keller.
Map of Clew Bay in County Mayo. © Helen McFadden.
Steve Larkin
Helen McFadden
“Glitched Systems” is a product of manipulating established architectural works, reinterpreted through the theme of “glitch.” © Ferras Coulibaly.
Kalamazoo Post Office Branch. © Erin Kurtycz.
Treehouse—Consequences of Your Actions. © Beni Lawson.
“Framing Mobility Through Space.” © Salma Rodriguez.
The SOM Foundation supports individuals with the highest aspirations to enhance the design of the built environment.
Call for Applications
Research Prize Applications Now Open. Deadline: November 10, 2025
European Research Prize Applications Now Open. Deadline: November 10, 2025
Robert L. Wesley Award Applications Now Open. Deadline, November 13, 2025
2023 Special Recognition for Architecture, Design, and Urban Design
Toni L. Griffin
Toni L. Griffin, 18th International Architecture Exhibition of La Biennale di Venezia curated by Lesley Lokko. Photography by Matteo de Mayda. Courtesy of La Biennale di Venezia.
Toni L. Griffin, 18th International Architecture Exhibition of La Biennale di Venezia curated by Lesley Lokko. Photography by Matteo de Mayda. Courtesy of La Biennale di Venezia.
Imagining Future Cities: Global and Minnesota Visions, Past and Present examines the enduring pursuit of the Future City, both globally and in Minnesota. The concept of future cities as a means to create more habitable, just, and sustainable places for people to live, work, and play has captivated visionaries across place and time. The exhibition at the Weisman Art Museum in Minneapolis has been supported in part by the SOM Foundation as part of the 2024 Research Prize. Read
The SOM Foundation is pleased to announce the opening of the 2025 Robert L. Wesley Award. The award supports BIPOC undergraduate students enrolled in architecture, landscape architecture, interior architecture, urban design, or engineering programs in the United States. This year, three students will receive a $10,000 award in addition to a yearlong mentorship program that connects the students with leading BIPOC practitioners and educators. The award is named in honor of Robert L. Wesley, the first Black partner at SOM.
The SOM Foundation is pleased to announce the opening of the 2025 European Research Prize. The €20,000 prize will be awarded to a faculty-led interdisciplinary team based in Europe to conduct original research that contributes to this year’s topic, “Exploring the Potential of Mobility Corridors.” The European Research Prize was created in 2021 to cultivate new ideas and meaningful research that addresses the critical issues of our time.
The SOM Foundation is pleased to announce the opening of the 2025 Research Prize. Two $30,000 prizes will be awarded to faculty-led interdisciplinary teams based in the United States to conduct original research that contributes to this year’s topic, “Exploring the Potential of Mobility Corridors.” The Research Prize was created in 2018 to cultivate new ideas and meaningful research that addresses the critical issues of our time.