Evys piña
University of Texas at Austin Graduating May 2027
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University of Texas at Austin Graduating May 2027
469-955-3738
University of Texas at Austin - Austin, Texas
August 2023 - Present
School of Architecture (UTSOA)
B.S. in Interior Design, Minor in Media Studies, Class of 2027
Dallas College - Dallas, Texas
August 2019 - May 2023
Associate of Science, Early College High School, Class of 2023
Adobe Creative - Illustrator, Photoshop, and InDesign
Physical - Sketching, Drafting, and Model Making
Fabrication - 3D Printing and Laser Cutting
Modeling - Revit, Rhino 3D, and Enscape Craft - Crochet, Sewing, and Embroidery
Undergraduate Architecture Student Council - Mentor
August 2023 - Present
• Guided first-year students through academic and studio challenges while contributing feedback to shape council programming and strengthen community within the architecture cohort.
Ampersand - IIDA/ASID Liaison
August 2023 - Present
• Coordinated between professionals, student members, and faculty while promoting associations as major student opportunities, strengthening engagement and industry visibility within the program.
Macy’s Starbucks - Barista - Part Time
August 2025 - Present
• Trained in Starbucks standards and adapted quickly to a fast-paced grand-opening environment, ensuring high-quality beverages, efficient service, and smooth team operations.
Freelance - Textile Designer - Part Time
May 2025 - Present
• Designed and crocheted custom textile products while managing market sales, client orders, and inventory, and developing original patterns through experimentation with color, texture, and form.
Julie Myrtille Bakery - General Manager - Part Time
August 2023 - March 2025
• Solely managed weekend bakery operations, handling baking, sales, inventory, cleaning, staffing coordination, and transactions, while consistently exceeding sales targets.
Bare Construction LLC - Administrative Intern - Part Time
May 2022 - August 2023
• Managed front desk operations, directing inquiries, coordinating appointments, maintaining calendars, and handling administrative tasks such as filing, data entry, and preparing documents.
IIDA/ASID/NKBA Student Chapter - Student Liaison
August 2023 - Present
• Acted as a bridge between student members and professional networks, organizing and promoting participation in design expos and industry events to strengthen engagement.
IIDA SHIFT, 2025-26
IIDA Student Mentorship, 2024-25
IIDA Student Design Expo, 2023-25
Textile and Tile Design Workshop Winner, 2024
Brooklyn Botanic Gardens Pollinator Lounge Publication, 2024
synaptic studios
Fall 2025 - Design Studio V
Student Housing

Fall 2024 - Design Studio III
Hospitality
Pollinator Lounge
Spring 2024 - Design Studio II
Park Exhibit and Publication


crafted commerce
Spring 2025 - Design Studio IV
Informal Retail
crochet design
2020 - Present - Freelance
Creative Commisions


Fall 2025
Austin, Texas
Academic Design Studio V
Synaptic Studios reimagines student living as a network of interconnected pockets shaped by curvature, translucency, and adaptive poche. Instead of separating domestic and academic life into rigid compartments, the project uses curved acrylic screens and mirrored geometries to choreograph movement and form soft thresholds between studying, resting, gathering, and making. These arcs guide residents through gradients of semi-private and communal space, encouraging everyday encounters that build shared culture while still providing moments of retreat.
Central to this living system is a redefinition of poche as spine, skin, and boning. The spine organizes circulation and anchors each curved module; the skin mediates privacy, daylight, and acoustic softness; and the boning nests storage and functional surfaces directly into the wall thickness. Through sliding panels, folds, and offsets, residents can expand or contract their personal territories as their needs shift throughout the day.
This project offers a new model of student housing built from gradients rather than boundaries, using curvature and operable surfaces to flex between solitude and social connection. The architecture becomes a catalyst for community, an environment where the rhythms of living and learning are guided by the soft pull of form and the synaptic exchange of student life.


This diagram traces how a design student moves through the day, shifting between focus, rest, and collaboration. Each zone responds to a different state of energy, showing how space adapts to routine and behavior.
This diagram traces how a design student moves through the day, shifting between focus, rest, and collaboration. Each zone responds to a different state of energy, showing how space adapts to routine and behavior.
Observation












Third Floor Axon

First Floor Axon




First Floor Plan

First Floor Circulation


Third Floor Plan


Floor Dining
Fall 2024
Austin, Texas
Academic Design Studio III
The House of Medici reimagines the campus coffee shop as a neighborhood living room, a place where students can gather, linger, and build community through comfort and familiarity. Rooted in Medici’s artisanal identity, the design blends industrial Austin accents with warm textures and soft material palettes to create a domestic atmosphere that feels both curated and lived-in. Modular seating, textile-based privacy strategies, and gentle spatial thresholds shape a series of “living rooms” that support study, conversation, and casual interaction while preserving an overall sense of openness and connection.
Functional issues with the original site motivated a redesign that prioritizes improved lighting, clearer circulation paths, and more controlled acoustics, ensuring that the space supports both the social rhythms of a campus cafe and the intimacy of a neighborhood living room. The resulting proposal unites home-like comfort with purposeful functionality, crafting an environment that strengthens Medici’s evolving identity while truly serving the needs of students.












Physical Model - “Living Room”


Physical Model - “Library”

Physical Model - Vertical Circulation

Physical Model - “Living Room”

Spring 2024
Brooklyn Botanic Garden, NYC
Academic Design Studio II
The Pollinator Lounge is designed as a shared habitat within the Brooklyn Botanic Garden, bringing attention to the importance of winged species through rest and observation. Tiered seating creates a moment of isolated attention, allowing occupants to nest within plant, insect, and bird life without disruption. By framing insects as neighbors rather than pests, the project celebrates plant–pollinator relationships and proposes opportunities for seclusion, education, and play within Oak Circle for a range of species and users.
The project was exhibited at BBG from May to October 2024 and contributed to a collaborative publication process with students from the University at Buffalo. Guided by exhibition designers, the studio fabricated live, on-site pollinator habitats, evolving from real habitat studies to speculative design proposals. The exhibition attracted hundreds of visitors and was recognized in Time Out’s Top 25 Best Things to Do in NYC in Summer 2024, underscoring the role of design in urban ecological advocacy.








Realized Habitat Exhibition

Realized Habitat Exhibition

Realized Habitat Exhibition
Transverse Section
Transverse Section
















Physical Model - Circulation
Physical Model - Human Cocooning

Physical Model - Tiered Attention





Cascading Growth
Spring 2025
Austin, Texas
Academic Design Studio IV
This project reimagines an East Austin site as a hybrid workshop and retail environment that amplifies the neighborhood’s legacy of labor, minority culture, and craft-based industry. Surrounded by concrete and oil warehouses, the design embraces the area’s industrial character rather than smoothing it over. Exposed concrete, salvaged warehouse fragments, and visible systems of assembly shape a space that acts as both a living ruin and a material study, reflecting the texture and honesty of East Austin’s built environment.
Across the interior, craft and commerce operate as a single ecosystem. Pottery, woodworking, stained glass, painting, and other hands-on practices unfold in open, adaptable workspaces that blur the line between creator and consumer. Rollaway workstations and flexible layouts allow the environment to shift between making, teaching, retail, and gathering, turning the act of shopping into a collaborative, process-driven experience grounded in the neighborhood’s DIY ethos.
The reuse of broken concrete pieces, exposed rebar, and metal remnants from nearby warehouse sites ties the project directly back to its surroundings, symbolically and physically piecing together fragments of East Austin. In doing so, the design reconstructs a fractured industrial landscape into a place of shared making, cultural continuity, and collective authorship.


Surrounding Context Axon
Site Context Plan















Lounge to Workshop Relationship




Section
Section


Free - Standing Kiosk in use
Floor - to - Ceiling Kiosk in use

2020 - Present
Process Thinking
Textile Commisions
The work of crochet design in architectural interior design infuses a unique touch that is hand-made and expresses detailed, textured patterns in both functional and decorative elements. Its versatility allows it to be fitted into so many purposes: wall hangings, soft furnishings, or bespoke lighting fittings. I incorporate crochet into interiors, fusing delicate organic forms with modern materiality such as metal, wood, or glass, creating a contrast to the traditional artisan craftsmanship in opposition to modern design. This combination brings coziness, texture, and hospitality to the interior, where one really wishes to touch and feast their eyes upon.














