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Arts & Culture

Architecture Professor Featured in Cooper Hewitt Triennial

Thursday, January 16, 2025, By Ellen Mbuqe
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facultyresearchSchool of Architecture

A 黑料不打烊 professor in the is a featured architect in the exhibition 鈥淢aking Home鈥擲mithsonian Design Triennial鈥 at the Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum, in New York City.

Lori Brown portrait

Lori Brown

Distinguished Professor Lori Brown and her collaborators, Trish Cafferky and Dr. Yashica Robinson, are included in this year鈥檚 Design Triennial with their installation 鈥.

The work is one of 25 site-specific, newly commissioned installations at Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum, home to the exhibition 鈥.鈥 The exhibition explores design鈥檚 role in shaping the physical and emotional realities of home across the U.S., U.S. territories and tribal nations.

The installation, featuring Brown鈥檚 work, centers on the efforts of obstetrician-gynecologist Dr. Robinson to create a new and expanded network of home health care services and alternatives to hospital births. This work reveals ongoing inequities in the state鈥攔esulting from economics, racial injustice, public policy and distance from health care facilities.

鈥淏irthing in Alabama: Design of Reproduction鈥 extends two decades of research, advocacy and activism focusing on reproductive health care by Brown. The installation provides a platform to question where and how architecture contributes to a wide and diverse public and to examine questions of how law and policy shape spaces of birthing access across geographic boundaries and spatial conditions.

For 鈥淏irthing in Alabama,鈥 Brown and a team of architectural researchers mapped the legacy of laws and building and zoning codes to contextualize these challenges and present designed alternatives to alleviate their impact.

An exhibition on display at the Smithsonian.

Lori A. Brown, Trish Cafferky, and Dr. Yashica Robinson’s “Birthing in Alabama: Designing Spaces for Reproduction鈥 exhibition, which delves into a history of birth in Alabama to better understand the various systems that affected the ability of caregivers to provide access to safe and affordable reproductive healthcare. (Photo courtesy of Elliot Goldstein with the Smithsonian Institution)

The installation shows the complicated history of maternity care and access from 1865-2024 and the high rates of maternal mortality for pregnant Black women during this time period. It includes excerpts from Brown’s interviews, bringing the voices of those on the frontline working to expand birthing access across Alabama into the gallery experience.

Brown is an internationally recognized scholar and educator whose research focuses on the relationships between architecture, social justice and gender. She is the co-founder of, a nonprofit dedicated to gender equity in architecture.

Brown鈥檚 research has focused on the physical structures of abortion clinics and how the debate has shaped access to reproductive health care. She is the author of 鈥,鈥 and many articles including 鈥溾 that discusses the call for design ideas for what was the sole remaining abortion clinic in Mississippi.

The exhibition is on view now until the summer of 2025 and is installed throughout the Andrew and Louise Carnegie Museum. Each floor is organized on themes of home: 鈥淕oing Home,鈥 鈥淪eeking Home鈥 and 鈥淏uilding Home.鈥

鈥淕oing Home鈥 examines how people shape and are shaped by domestic spaces; 鈥淪eeking Home鈥 addresses a range of institutional, experimental and utopian contexts that challenge conventional definitions of home; and 鈥淏uilding Home鈥 presents alternatives to the single-family concept of home.

Brown and her co-collaborators are featured in the 鈥淪eeking Home鈥 section. Installation of the exhibition was supported by the New York Council on the Arts and additional support from the 黑料不打烊 Office of Academic Affairs; Office of Undergraduate Research and Creative Engagement and the School of Architecture.

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Ellen Mbuqe

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