Home Community Kamryon Johnson wins Michael Ford’s annual $10,000 Hip Hop Architecture Scholarship

Kamryon Johnson wins Michael Ford’s annual $10,000 Hip Hop Architecture Scholarship

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Kamryon Johnson wins Michael Ford’s annual $10,000 Hip Hop Architecture Scholarship
Kamryon Johnson, this year’s scholarship recipient, pictured in between Michael and Gail Ford (Photo provided.)

According to the National Council of Architectural Registration Boards, less than 0.5 percent of licensed architects in the U.S. are African American women. In an overwhelmingly white industry, Michael Ford — also known as The Hip Hop Architect — and his organization have been working for years to change those numbers. Recently, they presented Michael Ford’s annual $10,000 Hip Hop Architecture Scholarship to Kamryon Johnson, a sophomore at the University of Detroit Mercy’s School of Architecture and Community Development.

“This scholarship is not just an investment in Kamryon’s future — it’s an investment in the future of our communities and the profession of architecture,” Ford said during the Dec. 30 scholarship presentation.

Johnson maintains a 3.6 GPA at the University of Detroit Mercy while serving her university as a residential advisor (RA), and being an active member of the National Organization of Minority Architects (NOMA), recently attending her first NOMA National Conference.

“Kamryon, a Detroit native and student at the University of Detroit Mercy — Michael Ford’s alma mater — made this a truly full-circle moment,” shares N’dia Jones, chief of staff at BrandNu Design Studio, in an interview with Madison365. “She had been deeply involved with our Hip Hop Architecture Camps and participated in multiple internships with us. In fact, she was interning with us the very week she found out she had won, which made the experience even more special.”

Michael Ford, founder of BrandNu Design Studio

The scholarship, funded by Michigan Central, was the result of a national search to support emerging talent in architecture. Johnson first discovered her passion for the profession at age 13 through Ford’s Hip Hop Architecture Camp.

Ford is committed to transforming the narrative for African Americans in architecture, who currently make up less than 2 percent of licensed architects in the United States.

“That percentage is very, very low for African Americans in the architectural field and for African American women, it’s even lower,” Jones says. “It’s incredibly impactful for younger African American women to see Kamyron receiving this scholarship — it helps open their eyes to the possibilities within the field of architecture.”

Ford is the founder of BrandNu Design Studio, a full-service architecture and design firm that has offices in Madison, Dallas, and New York. “Michael is back home in Detroit often, but we also have a project in Milwaukee where we have been working on the Bronzeville Center for the Arts,” Jones says. Ford was the lead architect for The Hip Hop Museum in The Bronx, New York. “We’re thrilled about some of our recent projects, including the newly announced Memphis Hip Hop Museum, where Michael will serve as the lead architect.”

Jones was part of the team that determined this scholarship winner and was really impressed by the resume of Johnson, who participated in the 2018 Hip Hop Architecture Camp at MOCAD in Detroit and went on to become the valedictorian of her high school class and received the prestigious Bergmeyer Design Hip Hop Architecture Travel Scholarship and Internship, representing the Hip Hop Architecture Camp in Boston for a week.

“It was a hard process to choose a winner. The amount of students that we had apply for this scholarship was amazing and many of them had 3.5 GPAs and higher. And so many of them were sitting on boards and had been to conferences and things like that,” Jones remembers. “So it was a difficult process in choosing, but, ultimately, we can only pick one. And so Kamryon really just exemplified all of the things that we were looking for in a student to receive the scholarship.”

The scholarship presentation, hosted by Ford at Pequeno Restaurant in Detroit, was an energetic party and a complete surprise for Johnson. (Video footage of the event was captured by Kardiak Films below.)

The presentation was attended by the Detroit City Council president, mayoral candidate Mary Sheffield and Asia Williams, the 2024/25 Hip Hop Architecture Fellow and adjunct professor at the University of Detroit-Mercy.

“I think that day was very special for her. It was a surprise. She had no idea; she thought she was going to get tacos,” Jones smiles. “And so they had everything set up for her including family and friends. It was just amazing.

Kamryon is an exceptionally bright student and the valedictorian of her high school — truly an inspiring story,” she adds. “It’s incredible for Michael [Ford] to have the opportunity to award her this scholarship.”

The journey for Johnson, who also gained valuable experience through the Hip Hop Architecture Camp’s internship program with BrandNu Design Studio, is proof that Hip Hop can inspire youth to explore careers in architecture and design.   

“I think this scholarship is super impactful and I know for Michael it’s always a full-circle moment to be able to do things like this. For Michael growing up in Detroit, and then pursuing architecture himself, it’s great to see someone else, also a young person out of Detroit, who is really hungry for the profession and really ready to shine,” Jones says. “Kamryon also participated in the NOMA Conference, which is huge for someone her age to be going into those rooms and really putting herself out there to meet new people and to introduce herself as a future architect.”

Ford has made it his goal to increase the diversity in architecture. 

“I think Michael is a big reason that things are shifting and changing the trajectory of who has exposure to architecture,” Jones says. “Overall, the scholarship will really help students finish strong in school, and in being able to pay for academics, books, and whatever it is that they might need to succeed, so that we can change that number and those percentages. We really want to inspire the younger generations and even the older generations to see the possibilities of Black people in architecture.”

The next Michael Ford’s $10,000 Hip Hop Architecture Scholarship Giveaway will take place in May 2025. Jones encourages people to stay tuned on their website, The Hip Hop Architecture Camp, for upcoming details on applications and requirements.

“Our goal is to introduce architecture to the communities we work with — students who might not have access to architecture programs otherwise,” Jones explains. “These programs provide them with opportunities to explore the field while also opening doors to internships and scholarships.”