2019

James Rodney Youngson, 2019

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During a career spanning more than sixty years, James Rodney Youngson designed and developed a significant body of custom residences and multi-family buildings, each uniquely varied, aesthetically considered, and specific to each site. Typically serving simultaneously in the roles of developer, architect, interior designer, landscape architect, occasionally owner (and even contractor), Rod could assure his refined, sophisticated attention to scale, proportions, and materials remained consistent throughout every project.  His exacting attention to details, whether structural or finished, and his enduring search for unique and high-quality materials, led to an exceptional level of construction quality not often seen in residential work - and non-existent in spec homes.   

Projects included small condo buildings, large apartment complexes, and many single-family homes located throughout the United States, Fiji, and the French Riviera. His work has received several San Diego AIA Honor awards, and has been included in prestigious publications including Architectural Digest, Sunset, The New York Times, Los Angeles Times Home Magazine, and Luxe.

In Rod’s own words, “As a residential architect who also does interiors, I feel the architecture must be right before the interiors can be successful. The client’s budget, needs, and lifestyle, as well as the neighborhood and site itself direct the design. There must be a strong point-of-view. There should be drama and romance but never ostentation. I strive for simplicity, quality, beautiful detailing, and perfect proportions. A good design should not be trendy or dated, but timeless.

Philip Bona, 2019

Through an impressive career spanning more than four decades, Philip Bona has participated in a broad range of architectural endeavors. It is Phil’s voice that has been loudest amongst architects in pursuit of a solution to California’s housing affordability crisis through his efforts in the “Housing the Next One Million” (HN1M) campaign, perhaps the most visible and comprehensive attempt yet to find solutions to California’s housing shortage. Phil helped start the San Mateo County Chapter of the AIA in 1983. Over the next 23 years, he served in practically every position available in the San Mateo chapter as well as on a myriad of committees. From 1983 to 1999 Phil led urban design charettes that became a part of “Housing the Next One Million".”

Phil was hired in 2009 by San Diego’s Centre City Development Corporation. (CCDC). While at CCDC he led the Downtown Education Task Force.

Phil served as president of San Diego’s AIA chapter, was on the AIACC board on thee occasions, and is now part of the national AIA strategic council. Through 2021 he is chairing the New Urban Agenda Task Force. Recently, he has been focused on resilience, regenerative design, and housing post-disaster. It is through such work that he believes architectures future may lie. His has been an exemplary lifetime of commitment to the betterment of the architectural profession and the communities it serves.