LPA design director Matthew Porreca inducted into AIA college of fellows


Porreca’s advocacy for wellness-focused design and carbon neutrality earns AIA’s highest honor.

LPA design director Matthew Porreca has been elevated to the prestigious College of Fellows of the American Institute of Architects (AIA), an honor recognizing architects who have made significant contributions to the profession and society. Porreca is the sixth LPA leader honored with Fellow status.

Matthew Porreca

Based in LPA’s San Diego studio, Porreca was selected for his decades-long commitment to innovation, sustainability and integrating health and wellness strategies into higher education, commercial, mixed use, healthcare and housing projects. His work prioritizes passive design strategies as a foundation for high-performance buildings, demonstrating that sustainability and design excellence are inseparable.

Porreca’s leadership in net-zero, all-electric design has been instrumental in shaping LPA’s portfolio and developing the “we-don’t-do-this-alone” culture. The American Institute of Architects recently recognized LPA with the 2025 AIA Architecture Firm Award, the highest national honor given to an architectural practice, hailing the firm as “a trailblazer in sustainable, high-performance design.”

As design director, Porreca leads integrated, research-driven teams focused on designing around performance, wellness, community and experience on every project, regardless of scale or budget. His projects include downtown San Diego’s first LEED Platinum and net zero energy office building (Makers Quarters); the first net-zero community college project in California designed to achieve Living Building Petal certification (Palomar College M+O); the largest naturally ventilated building in Southern California (Pacific Center Research and Development); and, most recently, the largest steel modular project on the West Coast (El Cerrito Permanent Supportive Housing). He has championed all-electric buildings at institutions such as UC Berkeley and UC San Diego, helping to lead major campus-wide shifts toward decarbonization.

Earlier in his career, Porreca contributed to a series of landmark projects that shaped his approach as a design architect, working alongside masters in the field. In Kansas City, he worked with Moshe Safdie on the design of a world-class performing arts venue, recognized for its iconic form and acoustical excellence (Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts), and with Steven Holl on an expansion of a major art museum that redefined the integration of contemporary and historic architecture (Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art). His research collaboration with the Salk Institute for Biological Studies furthered his focus on designing environments that support human health, a theme that continues to inform his work today.

Porreca’s work has been recognized with 75 design awards in the last decade, including 28 AIA component awards and 12 national and international honors.

Porreca’s leadership extends to initiatives such as the San Diego Green Building Council’s Living Building Collaborative and the AIA Los Angeles Living Building Collaborative. He is a frequent speaker at national and regional conferences, sharing insights on the intersection of sustainability and design.

For more information, visit lpadesignstudios.com.



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