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The Daily Hub

A roundup of ideas and projects from around the Institute

  • Yimeng Zhang, MS Packaging, Identities, and Systems Design ’25, was interviewed in Canvas Rebel. “Many of my ideas come in flashes of inspiration—sometimes within a day or two—but the real challenge lies in prototyping, refining, and modifying them repeatedly. The final product must be visually compelling, practical, and, most importantly, cost-effective.”

  • Kurt Thomas, BPS Construction Management ’29, has been named the 2025–2026 Rookie of the Year in the Atlantic East Men’s Basketball league. Thomas led the Cannoneers and all AEC rookies in scoring, with 13.2 points per game, and he also delivered 24 blocks over the course of the season. 

  • In Kansas City interviewed Jason Chen, BID ’21, about his career journey. “Studying the history of industrial design gave a great background for the work I do now. It’s about finding the context with the owner and the spirit of the house or apartment. I think a good interior always takes into consideration the time and place the home was built, including what kind of objects might have been living in it.”

  • In 2027–28, Pratt will form a new, NYC-centric DIII conference with neighbors at Baruch, Brooklyn College, CCNY, Hunter, John Jay, Lehman, Medgar Evers, and York. Additional expansion is expected.

  • Tomokazu Matsuyama, MFA Communications Design ’04, will have a new light installation on display in Times Square beginning April 1. Morning Again features 96 massive LED screens that will “pulse with Matsuyama’s vibrant, cross-cultural aesthetic,” every night in April for three minutes, according to Hypebeast.

  • Illya Azaroff, MArch ’97, president of the American Institute of Architects (AIA), joined Architectural Record’s DESIGN:ED podcast to discuss “disaster mitigation, global action through architecture, and the role of the AIA within the design community.” “As a profession, we should be looking at ourselves in the mirror and recognizing the agency and leadership that we already have and embody that in our work—whether you’re a sole practitioner or a large firm—because [climate-vulnerable] communities need us.”

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