When
the thousands of people heading to Washington, D.C. this fall to visit
the National Museum of African American History and Culture, some might
not know that a Black woman helped design the sprawling structure. Zena Howard
took her dreams of becoming an architect as a young girl and is now
responsible for bringing forth which might become one of the most
significant halls of Black history of culture of all time.
In
a recent profile, Howard shared that when she was around seven or eight
years of age, she learned what an architect was by way of watching the
popular The Brady Bunch television series. Howard later entered the
University of Virginia, where she earned a bachelor's in architecture.
Among
Howard's other designs, such as the Anacostia Public Library in
Washington, D.C., and the International Civil Rights Center and Museum,
she appears most proud of her work on the Smithsonian project.
Howard,
one of the few Black women in her profession, works alongside the
American Institute of Architects to promote a gender diversity
imitative. At the firm where she works, Perkins+Wills in Research
Triangle Park in North Carolina, she is part of an inclusion and
diversity committee. She is also a LEED Accredited Professional and is a
member of the National Organization of Minority Architects.
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