Emily Abruzzo
Emily Abruzzo is a partner in Abruzzo Bodziak Architects (ABA), a New York and Connecticut-based practice with experience ranging from civic and cultural projects to homes and exhibitions, new construction to historic preservation.
ABA has been recognized with Architectural Record’s Design Vanguard award, the Architectural League Prize for Young Architects and Designers, Curbed’s Groundbreaker award, and AIA New Practices New York, and it is included in the New York City Department of Design & Construction’s Design Excellence Program.
The office’s work has been featured in international publications such as Architectural Record, Interior Design, Wired, Fast Company, FRAME, Domus, PIN-UP, Baumeister, and Cultured, and has been exhibited by institutions such as Japan Foundation, Storefront for Art and Architecture, The Boston Society of Architects, and as part of the New Museum Festival of Ideas with the Audi Urban Future Initiative.
Abruzzo is a founding editor and publisher of the book series 306090, and a MacDowell Fellow. She received a BA from Columbia University and an MArch from Princeton University, where she also received a Certificate in Media and Modernity and was a Fellow at the Center for Arts and Cultural Policy Studies.
At Yale, Emily has led a series of design courses that explore how architects can serve local communities and expand an understanding of civic space. In 2017, Abruzzo was selected by the graduating students to be awarded the Professor King-lui Wu Teaching Award.
MArch Princeton University