ANJELICA S. GALLEGOS
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Anjelica S. Gallegos (Jicarilla Apache Nation | Pueblo of Santa Ana) pushes boundaries of design thought and practice in sensitive environments, including the Southwest, Arctic, and New England coast. Gallegos serves as an architectural designer in the Government Studio at Page Southerland Page.
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Anjelica is a co-founder and Director of the Indigenous Society of Architecture, Planning, and Design, with work featured in Architectural Digest, Metropolis Magazine, and more. She is a Fulcrum Fund recipient, the Regional Regranting Program of The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, and has presented her research at the Society of Architectural Historians International Conference.
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Gallegos designs systematic programming that elevates Indigenous history, practices, and knowledge while advancing connection-building and reciprocity in the broader architecture field. Her research and built work focuses on Indigeneity in architecture including site memory, policy and architecture intersections, like the Federal Indian boarding school system, and sustainable design principle application.
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She graduated with a Bachelor of Science (Cum Laude) in Architecture and a minor in Photography from the University of Colorado Denver. Gallegos graduated with her Master of Architecture degree from Yale School of Architecture as the Alpha Rho Chi Medal recipient.

Core Project Member

Institutional Partner

Consultant and Subject Matter Expert

Administrative and Support Staff
Involvement
Anjelica S. Gallegos is the project lead for the PILAT initiative. In 2023, she advanced the Page Indigenous Land Acknowledgement Tool (PILAT) initiative and LANDFRAME, supported by the Page Foundation and Page, now Stantec. As the originator, Gallegos remains committed to strengthen the mission and growth of the project with partners and communities to create an effective tool with an enduring architectural legacy.
​Time Frame
2023 - Ongoing​