The Rudy Bruner Award for Urban Excellence (RBA) was established in 1986 by Cambridge, Massachusetts architect Simeon Bruner. The award is named after Simeon Bruner's late father, Rudy Bruner, founder of the Bruner Foundation. According to the Bruner Foundation, the RBA was created to increase understanding of the role of architecture in the urban environment and promote discussion of what constitutes urban excellence. The award seeks to identify and honor places, rather than people, that address economic and social concerns along with urban design.

Description

According to the Bruner Foundation, the award is intended to be a platform for the discussion of issues related to urban architecture, planning and revitalization. It has been recognized by the United States Conference of Mayors, The United States Department of Housing and Urban Development, and the Environmental Design Research Association.

The biennial award recognizes one Gold Medal and four silver medal winners each cycle. Each medalist is documented with a detailed case study published online and in a book by the Bruner Foundation. The gold medal winner receives $50,000 and the four silver medalists each receive $10,000 which must be used to benefit the project. These winners are chosen by a diverse committee of professionals involved in design and development. These committee members include architects, landscape architects, planners, developers, community organizers, financiers, and the mayor of a major metropolitan area.

Criteria and selection process

The selection process involves a study of a project's effect on its urban environment including a detailed application, discussion by selection committee members, and site visits to finalist projects. A selection committee is organized anew for each award cycle.

In order to be eligible for consideration, projects must be:

  • an actual place, not just a plan or a program;
  • completed and in operation for sufficient amount of time to demonstrate success
  • located in the continental US

There are no distinct categories. Projects may include any type that makes a positive contribution to the urban environment. Urban environment is broadly defined to include cities, towns, neighborhoods, counties and/or regions. Previous applicants and honorable mention winners may apply up to three times. Previous winners are not eligible.

Resources

In 1998, the University at Buffalo collaborated with the Bruner Foundation and the Urban Design Project of the School of Architecture and Planning to create a , making data gathered in reference to past winners of the Rudy Bruner Award for Urban Excellence accessible to the public. The goal of this archive is to allow public "access to award winning and fully documented urban design case studies as a resource for architecture students and practitioners as they study precedents in urban design." The Digital Archive is managed by the UB Institutional Repository.

The Bruner Foundation has published fifteen books containing detailed case studies of award-winning projects.

List of winners

2019 Gold Medal

Crosstown Concourse, Memphis, Tennessee

2017 Gold Medal

SteelStacks Arts and Cultural Campus, Bethlehem, Pennsylvania

2017 Silver Medals

La Kretz Innovation Campus + Arts District Park, Los Angeles

Bruce C. Bolling Municipal Building, Boston

Iberville Offsite Rehabs I & II, New Orleans

Chicago’s Riverwalk, Chicago

2015 Gold Medal

Miller's Court, Baltimore

2015 Silver Medals

Falls Park on the Reedy, Greenville, South Carolina

Grand Rapids Downtown Market, Grand Rapids, Michigan

Quixote Village, Olympia, Washington

Uptown District, Cleveland

2013 Gold Medal

Inspiration Kitchens--Garfield Park, cago,

2013 Silver Medals

Congo Street Initiative, Dallas

Louisville Waterfront Park, Louisville, Kentucky

The Steel Yard, Providence, Rhode Island

Via Verde, Bronx, New York City

2011 Gold Medal:

The Bridge Homeless Assistance Center, Dallas

2011 Silver Medals:

Brooklyn Bridge Park, Brooklyn, New York City

Phoenix Civic Space Park, Phoenix

Gary Comer Youth Center/Gary Comer College Prep, Chicago

The Santa Fe Railyard Redevelopment, Santa Fe, New Mexico

2009 Gold Medal:

Inner-City Arts, Los Angeles

2009 Silver Medals:

Hunts Point Riverside Park, Bronx, New York City

Millennium Park, Chicago

St. Joseph Rebuild Center, New Orleans

The Community Chalkboard and Podium, Charlottesville, Virginia

2007 Gold Medal:

Children’s Museum of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh

2007 Silver Medals:

Artists for Humanity Epicenter, Boston

Crossroads Project and Marsupial Bridge, Milwaukee, Wisconsin

High Point Redevelopment Project, Seattle

LA Design Center, Los Angeles

Columbus Circle Public Plaza, New York City

2005 Gold Medal:

Portland Streetcar Project, Portland, Oregon

2005 Silver Medals:

Lower Town Artist Relocation Program, Paducah, Kentucky

Heidelberg Project, Detroit

Fruitvale Village, Oakland, California

Downtown Silver Spring, Maryland

2003 Gold Medal:

Camino Nuevo Charter Academy, Los Angeles

2003 Silver Medals:

Bridgemarket, New York City

Colorado Court Housing, Santa Monica, California

Red Hook Community Justice Center, Brooklyn, New York City

Providence River Relocation, Providence, Rhode Island

2001 Gold Medal:

The Village of Arts and Humanities, Philadelphia

2001 Silver Medals:

Swan’s Marketplace (10th Street Market), Oakland, California

South Platte River Greenway, Denver

New Jersey Performing Arts Center, Newark, New Jersey

Lower East Side Tenement Museum, New York City

1999 Gold Medal:

Yerba Buena Gardens, San Francisco, California

1999 Silver Medals:

ARTScorps LA, Los Angeles

National AIDS Memorial Grove, San Francisco

Parkside Historic Preservation Corporation, Philadelphia

Portland Public Market, Portland, Maine

1997 Gold Medal:

The Times Square, New York City

1997 Silver Medals:

Cleveland Historic Warehouse District, Cleveland

Project Row Houses, Houston

Center in the Square, Roanoke, Virginia

Hismen Hin-nu (Sun Gate) Terrace, Oakland, California

1995 Winner:

Maya Angelou Community Initiative, Portland, Oregon

1995 Finalists:

Campus Circle, Milwaukee, Wisconsin

Dudley Street Neighborhood Initiative, Boston

Greenpoint Manufacturing and Design Center, Brooklyn, New York City

Harlem Meer, New York City

Lowertown, Saint Paul, Minnesota

1993 Co-winners:

Harbor Point (Columbia Point), Boston

New Community Corporation, Newark, New Jersey

1993 Finalists:

Betts-Longworth Historic District, Cincinnati

Beyond Homelessness, San Francisco

The Park at Post Office Square, Boston

1991 Winner:

Greenmarket, New York City

1991 Finalists:

Brooklyn-Queens Greenway, Brooklyn and Queens, New York City

Ocean Drive Improvement Project, Miami Beach, Florida

Roslindale Village Main Street, Boston

West Clinton Action Plan, Portland, Oregon

1989 Co-winners:

Tenant Interim Leasing Program, New York City

Downtown Plan, Portland, Oregon

1989 Finalists:

Southwest Corridor Project, Boston

Stowe Recreation Path, Stowe, Vermont

Radial Reuse Project, Lincoln, Nebraska

Cabrillo Village, Saticoy, California

1987 Winner:

Pike Place Market, Seattle

1987 Finalists:

Casa Rita, South Bronx, New York

Quality Hill, Kansas City, Missouri

Fairmount Health Center, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

List of publications

Source:

, Richard Wener, PhD; Jay Farbstein, FAIA, PhD; Anne-Marie Lubenau, AIA; and Robert Shibley, FAIA, FAICP; Edited by Elizabeth Chesla, MA

, Richard Wener, PhD; Jay Farbstein, FAIA, PhD; Anne-Marie Lubenau, AIA; and Robert Shibley, FAIA, AICP

, Robert Shibley, AIA, AICP, with Brandy Brooks, Director, Rudy Bruner Award, Jay Farbstein, PhD, FAIA, and Richard Wener, PhD, Bruner Foundation, 2011.

, Jay Farbstein, PhD, FAIA, with Emily Axelrod, MCP, Robert Shibley, AIA, AICP, and Richard Wener, PhD, Bruner Foundation, 2009.

, Richard Wener, PhD, with Emily Axelrod, MCP, Jay Farbstein, PhD, FAIA, and Robert Shibley, AIA, AICP, Bruner Foundation, 2007.

, Robert Shibley with Emily Axelrod, Jay Farbstein, FAIA, and Richard Wener, PhD, Bruner Foundation, 2005.

, Jay Farbstein with Emily Axelrod, Robert Shibley and Richard Wener, Bruner Foundation, 2003.

, Richard Wener with Emily Axelrod, Jay Farbstein and Polly Welch, Bruner Foundation, 2002.

, Robert G. Shibley with Emily Axelrod, Jay Farbstein, and Richard Wener, Bruner Foundation, 1999.

, Emily Axelrod, Jay Farbstein and Richard Wener, Bruner Foundation, 1998.

, Jay Farbstein and Richard Wener, Bruner Foundation, 1996.

, Jay Farbstein and Richard Wener, Bruner Foundation, 1993.

, Jay Farbstein and Richard Wener, Bruner Foundation, 1992.

, Neal R. Peirce and Robert Guskind, Center for Urban Policy Research, Rutgers University, 1993.

, Philip Langdon with Robert Shibley and Polly Welch, Van Nostrand Reinhold, 1990.