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With Option Studios, Students Explore and Shape the Future of Design

Students and faculty of studio review gathered around tv to watch donor remarks

To enable students to deeply engage with challenges related to infrastructure, the workforce, climate, and beyond, firsthand experience is invaluable. The GSD is grateful to have the backing of donors who understand the critical importance of option studios and the transformative experiences they offer.

For many GSD students, option studios—with unmatched real-world experiences that inspire, engage, and challenge—are an essential component of their design education. On-the-ground connections with local leaders in cities around the globe help students understand a project’s context and explore design decisions in a way that’s impossible within the walls of a classroom. To provide access for students and empower faculty as they lead immersive lessons, the GSD depends on generous supporters who are similarly committed to design-driven investigations. The school was thrilled to receive several gifts to help fund impactful option studios.


In the spring of 2022, Koji Yanai, Vice President of Uniqlo and Senior Executive Officer of Fast Retailing, joined Rahul Mehrotra MAUD ’87, John T. Dunlop Professor in Housing and Urbanization, for a joint presentation of THE TOKYO TOILET project and the Sanitation Infrastructure Initiative. Following that collaboration, Yanai made a generous gift to establish the Koji Yanai Innovative Infrastructure Initiative Fund to explore issues of infrastructure, public health, water supply, and sanitation in cities around the world.

The first studio in the series was a Fall 2024 Studio, “FLUSH: Waste and Intimacy in Berlin’s Civic Realm.” Led by Chris Reed AB ’91 and Laila Seewang, the studio empowered students to explore issues around Berlin’s water supply and sewage systems and how intimate spaces—such as public toilets, showers, and pools—are connected with these larger urban systems.

Students visiting sewage field
Students in “FLUSH” studio gathered at the standpipe of the former sewage fields in Grossbeeren, Germany where early sewage systems dumped the city’s waste in extensive landscape fields for processing. Photo credit: Chris Reed.

“The course includes students from urban design, landscape, and architecture, so in Berlin, they can operate on three different sites, at three different scales,” Seewang said. “We designed the course so that they could work on the scale of public toilets and showers at commuter intersections in Berlin—a historical project they can revisit today—or on the river itself and the stormwater overflows that dump raw sewage into the river and thwart attempts to use it as a bathing space.”

Through my experience with THE TOKYO TOILET project, I gained a deeper understanding of the importance of public sanitation and recognized the potential for new developments in public infrastructure. I beleive that this studio will provide GSD students with the opportunity to research and design innovative infrastructure solutions that will positively impact communities and society in the near future.

Koji Yanai
Vice President of Uniqlo and Senior Executive Officer of Fast Retailing

In addition, the GSD is thankful for generous contributions from four Harvard alumni—Arthur Huang MArch ’04, Danny Chiu MBA ’95, Henry Ho AB ’95, and Charlie Chang MDes ’09, who made a gift in memory of Arthur’s father, Morton Huang, a passionate advocate for architecture in Taiwan.

The Fall 2024 studio “Taipei Little Big” was led by Professor in Residence of Architecture Ron Witte. The group traveled to downtown Taipei to focus on how urban densification requires the reinvention of public life. Witte and the students also met with the donors to gain personal insights and toured Arthur’s recycling facility to better understand environmental issues in Taiwan.

Because of their history, and maybe just who they are (!), the Taiwanese have a special outlook and are hardwired to think forward. They believe in evolving their cities in a way that I find refreshing, courageous, and provocative. The Taipei studio was the perfect context to understand how we can make a better world, and we were fortunate in this case to have a group of donors who really have faith in the possibilities of architecture. They weren’t just providing support, but cultural context as well.

Ron Witte
Professor in Residence of Architecture
Student presenting during final review
Student presentations for “Taipei Little Big” during the studio review. Photo credit: Justin Knight.

GSD option studio explorations are going well beyond infrastructure. To explore the future of the workplace, Pasona Group Chairman and CEO Yasuyuki Nambu made a gift to establish the Nambu Family Design Studio Fund. In these studios, students will investigate the future of the workplace in the United States, Japan, and other countries. Since the nature of work is rapidly evolving alongside societal and structural shifts across the globe, this on-the-ground perspective opens up new possibilities in how students approach these issues. The inaugural studio, led by Professor of Practice in Architecture George Legendre, “The Future of Work I: Awaji-Shima,” is currently underway.

top image is a map of the studio site and bottom image is a landscape with buildings in the distance.
Map and photo of studio site for “The Future of Work I: Awaji-Shima.

As a result of these significant contributions, students can fully participate in a central part of what the GSD offers. At the same time, these donations allow the School to engage instructors who represent both academia and practice, thereby adding depth to the education of future designers. To shape a healthier, safer, and more just world, students need to be able to witness the possibilities—opportunities that exist thanks to option studio support.

For information on funding studios at the GSD, please contact the Development and Alumni Relations Office.

Published February 2025.