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Rachel Hunt, a fourth-year interior architecture student in the College of Architecture and Design, was recently named Highly Commended in the International 2017 Undergraduate Awards.

Rachel Hunt
Rachel Hunt

The Undergraduate Awards, sometimes called the “junior Nobel Prize,” is the world’s largest international academic awards program that recognizes exceptional research, creative activity, and original work of college students in the sciences, humanities, business, and creative arts.

Hunt’s work focused on bioluminescent organisms and the way in which they produce light to set a schedule and react to their environment. Her portfolio submission, Herbaria, applied lighting techniques pulled from her research to help employees tune to the natural circadian rhythm to improve productivity at work.

“I looked at behaviors, reactions to environmental conditions, migration, scheduling, and how light played a role in all of these,” Hunt said. When the time came to design, she used the context and analysis of her research to inform the design of the space.

Rachel Hunt, a Highly Commended award winner in the Undergraduate Awards, researched how bioluminescence in nature can improve efficiency for people in work spaces.

As a Highly Commended winner, Hunt will travel to Dublin, Ireland, in November to attend The Undergraduate Awards Global Summit and accept her award from Michael Higgins, president of Ireland.

While in Ireland, she will present her work to other students as well as the professional jury, including Derek McGarry, National College of Art and Design; Marc O’Riain, Cork Institute of Technology; and Professor Lloyd Scott, Dublin Institute of Technology. Hunt also will attend lectures, workshops and debates, and collaborate with students from across cultures and disciplines.

Rachel Hunt, a Highly Commended award winner in the Undergraduate Awards, researched how bioluminescence in nature can improve efficiency for people in work spaces.

This is the first year The Undergraduate Awards included a category for architecture and design. UT students submitted 13 of the 85 submissions in the architecture and design category—more than any other institution in the United States and Canada. Overall, this year UA received a record 6,432 entries representing 299 institutions, 47 countries, and 117 different nationalities.

Only the top 10 percent of students are awarded Highly Commended with additional Regional and Global winners in each category. In addition to Hunt, two other UT students were honored, one with a Regional award and another, Alexandra Brito, with a Global award.

CONTACT:

Amanda Johnson (865-974-6401, amandajohnson@utk.edu)

Tyra Haag (865-974-5460, tyra.haag@tennessee.edu)