A few of designer C Jacob Payne’s tasks current new, futuristic merchandise — similar to zero-gravity footwear for astronauts, and electronic-embedded ceramics — utilizing technological instruments and processes of digital fabrication, materials innovation, and interactive interfaces. Different tasks journey again in time to previous centuries, contemplating the problem of preserving and reconstructing Black architectural heritage.
Payne graduated from Yale College with a bachelor’s diploma in structure and environmental research, after which labored briefly at structure companies in New York and Los Angeles. He determined to pursue knowledgeable diploma as a way to turn out to be a licensed architect and to check out several types of design. He started the MIT Grasp of Structure (MArch) program in 2023, and is aiming to graduate in January 2027.
“I’ve particularly valued the tutorial freedom to make my very own path,” says Payne. “Though the MArch program requires sure courses every semester, I’ve been capable of finding a solution to tailor the diploma in a manner that actually displays my pursuits.”
Payne says he appreciates how his experiences in this system have allowed him to work on design tasks at a wide range of scales — from the smaller scale in industrial and product design courses, to the bigger scale in courses within the Division of City Research and Planning. He’s a collaborator on the Design Intelligence Lab and has served as a educating assistant in MIT’s structure wooden store, serving to college students to carry collectively digital design methods with hands-on fabrication. Payne says he values the off-campus alternatives he has had, together with working at a furnishings and product design firm in Barcelona via MISTI and spending a summer time working on the expertise design agency 2×4 in New York.
Rediscovering the structure of the previous
By his graduate courses, Payne turned particularly fascinated by analysis into several types of vernacular structure in America, particularly within the American South. Throughout his second semester, he took the category 4.182 (Brick x Brick: Drawing a Explicit Survey), taught by Assistant Professor Carrie Norman, director of the structure division’s undergraduate main and minor applications. As a part of the curriculum, the category traveled to Tuskegee College to analysis the historical past and works of Robert R. Taylor, the primary Black graduate of MIT (in 1892) and in addition the primary licensed Black architect in America.
Following the category, Payne continued engaged on fashions and drawings reconstructing some essential Tuskegee structure. He created fashions of Taylor’s authentic 1896 Tuskegee College Chapel, misplaced to fireside in 1957, and the next chapel constructed as a substitute in 1969, designed by Paul Rudolph in collaboration with Tuskegee College. He additionally produced a set of speculative drawings reconstructing Taylor’s 1896 chapel, utilizing the very sparse remaining archival supplies (together with a number of pictures and one drawing), the requirements of the Historic American Buildings Survey, and inferred particulars.
“A variety of the work was determining how we are able to higher perceive and reconstruct historic areas with very restricted info,” says Payne. “I believe it’s essential to not deal with the previous as one thing static or fastened — as a result of there’s a lot that we don’t know, that has been unexplored.”
Payne obtained the 2025-26 L. Dennis Shapiro (1955) Graduate Fellowship within the Historical past of African American Expertise of Know-how. He’s at present wanting into completely different typologies of structure that had been within the American South, with a specific concentrate on “juke joints,” buildings that happened through the Jim Crow period. These had been supposed as secret social areas for Black folks to congregate, dance, sing, and play blues music — at a time once they had been typically barred from many institutions. Since there’s little or no documentation nonetheless remaining to make use of on this analysis, Payne says, the problem is figuring out which present methods of structure and design can be utilized to higher perceive and visualize these areas.
“As his advisor, I’ve watched Jacob develop a physique of labor that treats architectural illustration as each document and restore, recovering misplaced and missed Black-built traditions as important expressions of Black spatial company,” says Norman. “By drawings, fashions, and speculative reconstructions, he expands the instruments of the self-discipline to have interaction histories of cultural id and heritage.”
Incorporating AI to design for the longer term
Whereas a lot of Payne’s analysis is rooted previously, he’s additionally fascinated by synthetic intelligence and its implications for future improvements. Final spring, he took the category 4.154 (Area Structure) and discovered methods to design for the actual challenges of working in house. Alongside along with his staff, he designed a footwear system for astronauts that might anchor to spacecraft buildings with a mechanical, rotating sole, and inflatable bladders across the ankle for assist.
As well as, Payne took a category about massive language objects taught by affiliate professor of the follow Marcelo Coelho, director of the Design Intelligence Lab. “Designing merchandise that combine massive language fashions includes desirous about how folks can work together with AI within the bodily world,” says Payne. “We’re ready create new experiences that problem the ways in which folks take into consideration how AI will look sooner or later.”
For the category, Payne and his staff labored on a challenge utilizing AI within the kitchen, creating a countertop machine referred to as the Kitchen Cosmo. A digicam on the high scans the substances positioned in entrance of it. The person can enter info similar to how many individuals might be consuming the meal and the way a lot time is obtainable to arrange the meal, and the machine prints out a recipe.
Payne additionally labored on a challenge with Coelho for the Venice Biennale: a lamp that used geopolymers — a extra sustainable different to concrete or different castable supplies. As a result of this ceramic materials doesn’t should be fired in a kiln to harden, it might probably have electronics embedded inside it. Payne now continues to work on AI analysis and product design within the Design Intelligence Lab.
“Jacob is an distinctive designer who deeply embodies MIT’s ‘mens et manus’ [‘mind and hand’] ethos by approaching product and interplay design with an thrilling mixture of mental rigor and high-quality, hands-on making,” says Coelho. “He’s equally comfy pondering conceptually concerning the cultural implications of synthetic intelligence and dealing on the technical and craft detailing wanted to carry his concepts to life.”
