About the competition: "The mission of the competition is to provide maximum freedom to the participants in proposing imaginative and sustainable building design ideas. - During years of disinvestment following World War II, the once vibrant neighborhoods of North Philadelphia around Temple University became economically depressed. Beginning in the early 1960s a local Baptist clergyman, Reverend Leon H. Sullivan (1922-2001), spearheaded programs of community investment that achieved significant success. Reverand Sullivan became a well-known civil rights leader and social activist focusing on the creation of job training opportunities for African Americans, a longtime General Motors Board Member, and an anti-Apartheid activist who drew up the Sullivan Principles, guidelines for American businesses operating in South Africa under apartheid. the Sullivan Trust, formed in 1966, is a non-profit organization that has supported a variety of social services and served as an active partner in numerous economic development initiatives."
Congratulations to Wei Tang and Jianan Zhang for winning 1st and 3rd place in this competition!