Credit: Juan Manuel McGrath, Iwan Baan
Credit: Juan Manuel McGrath, Iwan Baan

The Mies Crown Hall Americas Prize (MCHAP), from the College of Architecture at Illinois Institute of Technology, in Chicago, recently announced its 2025 finalists.

This edition of the biennial Americas Prize honors the best work of architecture completed in North, Central, or South America between June 2022 and December 2023.

The jury began its review of hundreds of anonymously nominated projects in the spring of 2024.

The MCHAP 2025 Jury includes:

  • Maurice Cox (Jury Chair), past planning director, City of Chicago
  • Giovanna Borasi, director and chief curator, Canadian Centre for Architecture, Montreal
  • Gregg Pasquarelli, founding principal, SHoP Architects, New York
  • Mauricio Rocha, founder, Taller | Mauricio Rocha, Mexico City, and 2023 Americas Prize winner for the renovation of the Museo Anahuacalli
  • Sofia von Ellrichshausen, founding partner, 2 Pezo von Ellrichshausen, Concepción, Chile, and 2014 Prize for Emerging Practice winner for the Poli House

The Finalists

Credit: Juan Manuel McGrath, Iwan Baan
Credit: Juan Manuel McGrath, Iwan Baan

Project: Centro de Investigación Mar de Cortés, Mazatlán, Mexico

Architecture: Tatiana Bilbao ESTUDIO

Jury Statement: “The gran acuario Mazatlán is activating an underutilized park and lagoon of a seaside resort town. A massive series of walls conceptualized as a discovered ‘ruin’ inhabited by birds, fishes, plants and water. This arrangement sets up a series of beautifully composed mise en-scene one point perspective view corridors, replete with dramatic oculi allowing light to frame the water displays. A non-prescriptive circulation pattern allows the visitor to wander and discover, easily moving between moody indoor spaces, glowing tanks of water holding the aquatic species, and outdoor gardens open to the sky. The mechanical complexity of such a program is deftly concealed to allow for a fluid and effortless experience of the exhibition space. A building that is driven by the spectacle of a captured nature, it amazes and delights the public as it connects to the surrounding park landscape and paves the way for an elevated public architecture for the city as a whole.”

Credit: Javier Agustin Rojas
Credit: Javier Agustin Rojas

Project: Clínica Veterinaria Guayaquil, Buenos Aires, Argentina

Architecture: adamo-faiden

Jury Statement: “Despite the synthetic decisions and sharp material palette, this subtraction within a preexisting house is in no way reductive. All the opposite, the generous volume of air adds to a wide range of readings of the new piece: a serene and ventilated waiting room, stimulating the interaction of all its users, a passage to the hidden plaza that draws the sidewalk into the backyard, a temple-like city lantern radiating at night. It is the ultimate political project, making the city one small piece at a time, on a tight plot, recycling its structure, taking a normal program and elevating it to improve everyday life for humans and nonhumans alike.”

Credit: Rafael Gamo
Credit: Rafael Gamo

Project: Ecoparque Bacalar, Bacalar, Mexico

Architecture: Colectivo C733

Jury Statement: “A mangrove, a square and a promenade; a strong idea that transcends its materiality. Rarely does a line materialized into a pasarell do so many things at once. This linear topography, slightly tilted to give each of its corners a different height, and hence experience, manages to combine a healthy ecosystem with an open-air museum, public space for swimming, and walking, jogging while offering the users a new opportunity and perspective on recreation and learning. Paradoxically, this protective perimeter preserves nature while also allowing thousands of people to enjoy a highly fragile yet mainly privatized shoreline, heightening consciousness of this unique endangered ecosystem and becoming part of the signature identity of Bacalar.”

Credit: James Brittain
Credit: James Brittain

Project: Pumphouse, Winnipeg, Canada

Architecture: 5468796 Architecture

Jury Statement: “A plot that had no future, pushing zoning and regulatory envelope, the project builds a contemporary new way of living within the memory of an industrial archaeology. A series of smart strategies allow to maximize the identity of the Pumphouse, the new residential use, views and private and shared spaces in this complex urban plot. The abandoned pump house seems to extend its precise and rigorous material language beyond its original enclosure. The small domestic interiors expand into shared spaces and circulation that animate the block in all directions. These units are elevated making ways for the use of alleys and a series of pockets of communal activities.”

Credit: Timothy Hursley
Credit: Timothy Hursley

Project: Thaden School, Bentonville, Ark.

Architecture: Eskew Dumez Ripple, Marlon Blackwell Architects, and Andropogon Associates

Jury Statement: “The powerful interpretation of a new academic pedagogical mission of youth learning while doing is matched by an equally powerful campus. Steeped in the rural culture of its place, the barn, the porch and the long and low farm buildings of Arkansas are assembled to create a new type of public space keeping in scale with the surrounding fabric. The design of five academic buildings loosely scattered within a garden with different characters, successfully creates an environment of constant indoor/outdoor porosity. Students and the general public richly gather and co-mingle under outward-facing porches, covered passageways that shelter outdoor activities and framed views, encouraging the movement through spaces with a strong community orientation. Within the comfort of containment, this campus masterfully composed, allows for natural flows of people, wildlife and weather.”

The authors of the winning project will be announced at a symposium on Monday, May 5 at IIT along with the MCHAP Award, the MCHAP Chair in IIT’s College of Architecture, and $50,000 to fund research and a publication.