Philip Freelon founded The Freelon Group in 1990. Since then, The Freelon Group has expanded to a sixty-member architectural firm located in the Research Triangle Park area of North Carolina. The Freelon Group offers specialized design expertise in the areas of Museum/Cultural Center, Higher Education and Science/Technology facilities. The firm has received over twenty-five regional, state and local AIA design awards including AIA North Carolina’s Outstanding Firm Award in 2001. Between 2006 and 2007, Freelon's designs were honored with seven AIA North Carolina design awards in those two years. In 2008, The Freelon Group was recognized by Contract Magazine as The Designer of the Year.
In March 2014, The Freelon Group announced a planned acquisition by the global architectural design firm Perkins + Will.[6] Following the close of the transaction, Freelon joined Perkins + Will’s board of directors and became the managing and design director of the firm’s North Carolina practice.[7]
Awards and recognition
Designer of the Year in Contract magazine, 2008[8]
First prize in the PPG Furniture Design Competition[8]
AIA Thomas Jefferson Award for public architecture, 2009[8]
Fellow of the American Institute of Architects[11]
Kea Distinguished Professor of Architecture at the University of Maryland, 2013[12]
Legacy
Freelon's papers are housed at North Carolina State University Libraries' Special Collections Research Center.[8] In honor of his contributions to the architectural field, the Harvard Graduate School of Design created the Phil Freelon Fellowship Fund. The fund "will provide financial aid to students attending the GSD with the intent to expand academic opportunities for African American and other under-represented architecture and design students."[13] In 2017, inaugural the Phil Freelon Fellowship was awarded to Aria Griffin.[14]
In 2016, Freelon was diagnosed with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.[16] He died on July 9, 2019, in Durham, North Carolina at the age of 66.[17] Freelon's end-of-life care and terminal struggle with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis was documented on the Independent Lens documentary Matter of Mind: My ALS which originally premiered May 1st, 2023 on PBS.[18]
References
^Thomas E. Luebke, ed., Civic Art: A Centennial History of the U.S. Commission of Fine Arts (Washington, D.C.: U.S. Commission of Fine Arts, 2013): Appendix B, p. 544.