Emily Pilloton-Lam
Emily Pilloton-Lam is an American architectural designer, builder, educator, and author[1] known for her work as the founder and executive director of the non-profit organization, Girls Garage (formerly Project H Design).[2] Her work was profiled in the award-winning documentary film, If You Build It.[2] Early life and educationPilloton-Lam was born in 1981, and grew up in Chicago, Illinois and Marin County, California.[3] Her father was born in France, while her mother was born outside of Chicago to immigrant parents from Qingdao and Hong Kong.[4] From a young age, she remembers building structures out of a Quadro set, which she attributes to her early interest in design.[3] She attended UC Berkeley in Berkeley, California, graduating in 2003 with a Bachelor of Arts degree in architecture.[1] She completed her master's degree in architecture, interior architecture, and designed objects at The School of the Art Institute of Chicago, graduating in 2005.[1] Project H DesignAfter graduation, Pilloton-Lam founded the nonprofit Project H Design, which centered around design initiatives that address Humanity, Habitats, Health, and Happiness.[5] It sought to promote design education and community-building.[5][6]
Project H Design contained a program called Studio H, a design/build program for high school students that simultaneously provided college credits and allowed students to engage with full-scale projects for their community.[5][7] Based out of Bertie County, North Carolina, one of the poorest counties in the state,[8][9] Studio H was integrated into local high school curriculums as a means of redefining and reinventing vocational training for the 21st century.[10][6] Studio H started with ideas of design literacy paired with building projects that would contribute to the students' local community.[10] It used the design/build framework as a means of teaching critical thinking and creative skills that could support the students' future goals regardless of what kind of career or education they sought out after highschool.[10] In 2013, the documentary If You Build It was created to document a year in the life of Studio H, focusing specifically on the Windsor Farmers Market project that sought to address the area's contradicting context as a food desert with rich agricultural legacy.[11] Completed projects
Girls GarageIn 2013, Pilloton-Lam moved the organization to Berkeley, California, under the new name Girls Garage, and shifted the mandate to specifically address the gender gap in the architecture and construction industries.[15][1][16] Under this new name, the organization also moved away from the model of integrating workshops into high school curriculum, to create after-school and summer programming for girls and gender-diverse youth ages 9–18.[15][17] Girls Garage became the first dedicated design and building work space for girls in the United States with its 5000-square-foot workshop in West Berkeley.[15][17][16] Since 2013, Girls Garage has built 171 projects.[18] Proceeds from Pilloton-Lam's 2020 book, Girls Garage: How to Use Any Tool, Tackle Any Project, and Build the World You Want to See, also support the non-profit.[17] TeachingIn addition to her role as an educator in Project H/Girls Garage, Pilloton-Lam has also held several teaching positions at post-secondary institutions, including as a visiting professor at the University of California, Davis starting in 2015, as a lecturer at the College of Environmental Design at the University of California, Berkeley between 2016 and 2020, and at Stanford University in 2023.[1] Writing
Awards and honorsAlong with features and interviews in a variety of news media sources, Pilloton-Lam has been recognized for her contributions to design literacy and community-building with the following awards and honors:[1]
Personal lifePilloton-Lam currently lives with her family in Berkeley, California. In 2021, she published an essay on her decision to hyphenate her last name to include her mother's maiden name, Lam.[4] She expressed that this decision was made to honor her Chinese lineage saying,
References
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