Students Sentenced: Architecture and Design for Imprisoned Rights

Kate Bormann // Adviser: Michael Stanczak

Students Sentenced: Architecture and Design for Imprisoned Rights

The US correctional system is the largest and most pervasive social control system in the world; its cyclical nature displaces millions of lives each year. This thesis project confronts mass incarceration in America by using architecture and design to improve the incarcerated experience. These designs promote a more rehabilitative environment and enable human connections using architectural fluidity, spatial flexibility, natural light, and material texture to provide relief from inmates’ relentless world of confinement and cultivate an environment that instills hope for a productive life after prison.

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Combating Racism in the Built Environment

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Scent as Scene: Alleviating Loneliness Through Spatial Experience Informed by Scents