The Happy Healthy Home Show recently invited Gibbs College alumnus Don Ruggles as an inaugural guest. Don joined the show’s host Odile Smith in their shared passion for making wellness in the home (and all built surroundings) a priority.
A practicing architect and founder of Ruggles Mabe Studio, Don has spent his 50-plus year career trying to answer the question, “What is beauty?” Since the early 2000s, he’s spoken with and read the works of fellow architects, scientists, neurologists, and other experts, and participated in symposiums and conferences around the globe to discuss the impact of beauty on humankind.
Don has also published the book, Beauty, Neuroscience & Architecture: Timeless Patterns & Their Impact on Our Well-Being, which investigates how timeless forms and patterns in design affect our health and well-being. The book was made into a full-length documentary in 2020 titled, Built Beautiful, An Architecture & Neuroscience Love Story with Narration by Martha Stewart. It suggests a new, urgent effort is needed to refocus the direction of design to include the quality of beauty as a fundamental, overarching theme in two of humankind’s most important fields — the built and artistic environments.
The Happy Healthy Home Show’s premier was held on May 14 and featured conversations with twenty-one different specialists including academics, bestselling authors, and design experts. The interviews are focused on the following topics that, together, lead to creating a space of wellness in our homes:
• Scientific – neuroscience & design psychology
• Nature – biomimicry & biophilic design
• Interior Design – light/applied color psychology
• Energy – fengshui & crystals
• Sustainability – trail blazer manufacturers
• Communication/Storytelling
Connecting the dots between these areas of focus, Happy Healthy Home Show viewers will see that to create a place of wellness for the user, several aspects must be taken into consideration as must the individuality of the final user.
During Don’s conversation with Odile Smith on the Happy Health Home Show, he shared his thoughts on the responsibility of architects and other designers to create spaces with health and well-being in mind. To watch the interview, visit the show's webpage.
A team of Construction Science and Architecture students from the Gibbs College of Architecture made their mark on the national stage this week, earning third place out of 37 universities competing at the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) Student Competition, held during the International Builders' Show in Orlando, February 16-18, 2026.
The American Institute of Architects (AIA) has elevated Gary Armbruster, FAIA, ALEP to its prestigious College of Fellows—AIA’s highest membership honor—for his exceptional work and sustained contributions to architecture and society. Fellowship recognizes architects who have achieved a standard of excellence in the profession and made a significant impact at a national level. Members elevated to this distinction carry the FAIA designation after their name.
Students from the Spring 2026 Graduate 4 Architecture Design Studio, led by Professor Amy Leveno, exhibited their work at the School of Visual Arts. The exhibition, titled Reimagining the OU School of Visual Arts, featured drawings, models, and animations developed throughout the semester's studio project. The show was hosted in The Spotlight, a creative gallery space located on the first floor of the Fred Jones Art Center, and ran from January 20–30, 2026.