黑料不打烊

Skip to main content
  • Home
  • About
  • Faculty Experts
  • For The Media
  • 鈥機use Conversations Podcast
  • Topics
    • Alumni
    • Events
    • Faculty
    • Students
    • All Topics
  • Contact
  • Submit
Campus & Community
  • All News
  • Arts & Culture
  • Business & Economy
  • Campus & Community
  • Health & Society
  • Media, Law & Policy
  • STEM
  • Veterans
  • University Statements
  • 黑料不打烊 Impact
  • |
  • The Peel
Sections
  • All News
  • Arts & Culture
  • Business & Economy
  • Campus & Community
  • Health & Society
  • Media, Law & Policy
  • STEM
  • Veterans
  • University Statements
  • 黑料不打烊 Impact
  • |
  • The Peel
  • Home
  • About
  • Faculty Experts
  • For The Media
  • 鈥機use Conversations Podcast
  • Topics
    • Alumni
    • Events
    • Faculty
    • Students
    • All Topics
  • Contact
  • Submit
Campus & Community

Architecture Alumni Selected to Design 10th Anniversary Ragdale Ring

Monday, April 18, 2022, By Julie Sharkey
Share
alumniSchool of Architecture

A team of School of Architecture alumni made up of Ahnaf Chowdhury ’19, (B.Arch.), Anuradha Desai ’19 (B.Arch.), Amelia Gan ’19 (B.Arch.) and Marda Zenawi ’19 (B.Arch.), recently won the 2022 Ragdale Ring competition for their proposal, “Echo,” a design exemplifying the rich historical significance of the landscape surrounding the Ragdale campus.

View of the Ragdale Ring.

Specific views into the stage are curated through openings between the reed walls. As they grow,
the reeds create dynamic relationships with sunlight and line-of-sight.

Hosted by artist residency nonprofit, , the annual competition, now celebrating its 10th anniversary, provides artists, architects and designers with the unique opportunity to devise and construct a performance venue and gathering place on Ragdale’s grounds.

Each year Ragdale invites architects to reinterpret the open-air Ragdale Ring theater鈥攄esigned in 1912 by architect Howard Van Doren Shaw for the work of his playwright wife, Frances鈥攖hrough interventions that explore intersections of architecture, sculpture, landscape design, public art and performance disciplines.

Responding to “Roots,” this year’s competition theme, a jury of architects and artists selected “Echo,” a proposal designed by the + team of Chowdhury, Desai, Gan and Zenawi, as the winner for the 2022 performance season.

By embracing the evident temporal qualities of the competition, 鈥淓cho鈥� revisits the first Ragdale Ring鈥攁 proposition of nature.

“Shaw’s keen pursuit of landscaping crafted his garden into an enduring forum for the arts, an echo itself of the outdoor theatre at the Villa Ginanneschi-Gori. This typology is perhaps, at its most primordial鈥攖he echo of a meadow,鈥� says the team.聽 鈥淲e propose to explore the layering of these echoes and their underlying sensibilities.”

View of Ragdale Ring

Benches are integrated into the reed walls creating shaded seating along the enclosure of the project.

At the heart of the design is a round stage, a soil mound supported by compressed earth blocks reinforced with seeds and sealed with gold paint, mirroring the limestone lip of Shaw’s stage. Surrounding the stage is a deconstructed ellipse of reed walls, a nod to the planted tunnels in both Shaw’s design and at the Villa Ginanneschi-Gori, that invite slippage through and around the site. Low impact and sustainable, the enclosure’s plants鈥攁n assortment of native reeds and wildflowers鈥攁re recoverable at summer’s end, allowing the installation to enter a circular economy.

“The exploration of sustainable building methods and designed decay responded to the transitory quality of the project,” notes the team. “The mulch, soil, plants, bricks and flowers will all be re-sold, with minimal invasion to the site.”

Within the reed walls are nooks with simple, gold-painted benches that create seating along the design’s enclosure; a “meta-echo” audio system that allows music, sound and poetry to emerge from the plants; and colored, spherical ground lights, which act as a re-imagined version of the original Japanese paper lanterns displayed throughout Shaw’s theater.

Curated elements from 鈥淓cho鈥� will be staged at both the Chicago Cultural Center and the Chicago History Museum, two off-campus venues where Ragdale performances will take place this season.

“The Ragdale Foundation allows designers to test ideas and experiment on the field as opposed to operating as a commissioned project,” says the team. “We look forward to further collaborative explorations of context, tools and agency on the Ragdale campus and engagement with its community.”

[sic] + fieldtrip was awarded a production grant to construct the temporary installation of “Echo,” as well as a design-build studio residency for a team of up to ten individuals at the creative community in Lake Forest, Ill.

鈥淲e are very proud of these recent alumni who, like many young architects, have started their own firms and are collaborating with other small firms,” says Michael Speaks, dean of the School of Architecture. “Each of them is also either working for larger firms or is studying at the graduate level. Individually and collectively, they are creating new, collaborative models of practice and shaping the future of architecture. And the brilliant results speak for themselves.鈥�

view of Ragdale Ring at night

The original paper lanterns are reimagined as spherical ground lights.

Summer 2022 performances at Ragdale that integrate “Echo” are set to kick off on June 18. The final event in the Ragdale Ring series is scheduled for August 13.

For more information about the Ragdale Ring competition and this summer鈥檚 performance season, visit the .

  • Author

Julie Sharkey

  • Recent
  • Falk College Sport Analytics Students Win Multiple National Competitions
    Friday, May 16, 2025, By Cathleen O'Hare
  • Physics Professor Honored for Efforts to Improve Learning, Retention
    Friday, May 16, 2025, By Sean Grogan
  • Historian Offers Insight on Papal Transition and Legacy
    Friday, May 16, 2025, By Keith Kobland
  • Live Like Liam Foundation Establishes Endowed Scholarship for InclusiveU
    Tuesday, May 13, 2025, By Cecelia Dain
  • ECS Team Takes First Place in American Society of Civil Engineers Competition
    Tuesday, May 13, 2025, By Kwami Maranga

More In Campus & Community

Falk College Sport Analytics Students Win Multiple National Competitions

鈥淚 think the Rolls-Royce of Falk College, undoubtedly, is the analytics program,鈥� said David Falk, benefactor of the Falk College of Sport and Human Dynamics, to a room of senior sport analytics students and their families during their capstone poster…

Auxiliary Services Announces Vending Services Transition

Auxiliary Services has announced a new service approach for campus vending services. In the initial phase of the transition, which began May 12, Servomation, a Central New York-based vending services company, assumed operation of all existing campus vending equipment. Snacks…

Live Like Liam Foundation Establishes Endowed Scholarship for InclusiveU

黑料不打烊 has received a $100,000 endowed scholarship from the Live Like Liam Foundation in support of the School of Education鈥檚 InclusiveU program. This meaningful gift will expand access to the University鈥檚 flagship program for students with intellectual and developmental…

Dara Drake 鈥�23 Named the University鈥檚 First Knight-Hennessy Scholar

Alumna Dara Drake 鈥�23 has been named as a 2025 Knight-Hennessy Scholar, the first from 黑料不打烊. Knight-Hennessy Scholars is a multidisciplinary, multicultural graduate scholarship program at Stanford University. Each Knight-Hennessy scholar receives up to three years of financial support…

Years of Growth Fueled Women鈥檚 Club Ice Hockey Team to Success

The trajectory of the 黑料不打烊 women鈥檚 club ice hockey team is what Hollywood makes movies about. “When I joined [in Fall 2021] there were only six other people on the team,鈥� says Amanda Wheeler, a senior at SUNY College…

Subscribe to SU Today

If you need help with your subscription, contact sunews@syr.edu.

Connect With Us

For the Media

Find an Expert
© 2025 黑料不打烊. All Rights Reserved.