B.Arch., Tulane University; M.Arch., Princeton University
Professor Andrews joined the USC Architecture faculty after teaching at the University of Virginia, Syracuse University and Clemson University, where he was the Robert Mills Professor. He has been principal in Andrews/ Le Blanc Architects since 1993. His architectural projects include competitions, commercial buildings and residential designs. Among his award winning designs are a Baton Rouge Cemetery that won the Boston Society of Architects prize for un-built work in 1999 and his Pensacola houses that won an ACSA Award for Excellence in Design in 1997. His work has been published in Architecture, The Japan Architect, L.A. Architect, and Modulus 23: Towards a Civil Architecture in America. Exhibitions of his work have been held at several universities, ACSA national conventions, and cities across the United States and in Canada. Professor Andrews won a Skidmore Owings and Merrill Traveling Fellowship in 1988 and was an Alternate for the Rome Prize in 1991. While at Tulane, he won the AIA Gold Medal for Design Excellence, was elected to Tau Sigma Delta (honorary architectural fraternity), named valedictorian of his class, and won the Best Thesis Award.