Saraí Berenice Huamán Santillán
Saraí Huamán is a Peruvian designer whose work integrates architecture and urban design through research and practice. She is a current Preceptor at PAYETTE in Boston as part of the B.Arch. program at Rice University, where she earned a B.A. in Architecture with minors in Environmental Studies and Sociology, and was honored with the Distinction in Research and Creative Work Award, among other academic distinctions.
As a recipient of the John T. Mitchell Traveling Fellowship, she co-authored Scandinavian Urban Experience, a study based in Oslo, Stockholm, and Copenhagen on how public spaces and mobility systems shape patterns of social interaction and spatial appropriation. As a Community Bridges Fellow at the Kinder Institute for Urban Research, she partnered with LINK Houston to evaluate and design multimodal transportation strategies advancing equitable and sustainable mobility.
Huamán served as editorial advisor for PLAT Journal, supported by a Graham Foundation Grant, and led Rice NOMAS, the Anti-Racism Collective (ARC), and RISE LATAM, curating lectures, publications, and events. She has participated in design workshops in Lima, Mexico City, Barcelona, and Paris, and holds certification in Social-Behavioral-Educational (SBE) research ethics for human subjects research.
Recent projects include her senior thesis Between Fish and Fishing at the William Ward Watkin Studio, which investigates cultural and ecological tensions at Pyramid Lake, Nevada, proposing design strategies that mediate between environmental stewardship and cultural heritage.
Born and raised in Lima, Peru, she is based between her hometown and the United States.
Selected Recognitions
Distinction in Research and Creative Work, Rice University (2025)
Nunnelee Preceptorship Fund (2025)
From Plantation to Pavilion: Weaving Ecologies in the Plantationocene, Biennale di Venezia (2025)
Rice Global Paris Travel Award: Urban Sustainability (2024)
The Barcelona Global Workshop: Building Ecologies – The Five Elements, Rice Architecture (2024)
John T. Mitchell Traveling Fellowship, Rice Architecture (2024)
Community Bridges Fellowship, Kinder Institute for Urban Research (2023–2024)
Best Site Analysis and Presentation, AIA Student Design Charette, Houston (2023)
Montrose Complex, Rice Architecture Homecoming Exhibition (2022)
“Urban Nodes: Bike the Block and Activate Civic Life” by Saraí Huamán, Near Northside, Houston, TX (2023)