NEW YORK, NY.- Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum announced the winners of the 2023 National Design Awards, recognizing design innovation and impact in 10 categories. Now in their 24th year, the National Design Awards bring national recognition to the ways in which design enriches everyday life. Award recipients are selected by a multidisciplinary jury of practitioners, educators and leaders from a wide range of design fields. The winners will be honored at an Awards celebration Thursday, Oct. 5 at Cooper Hewitt.
This years National Design Award recipients are:
 Seymour Chwast, Design Visionary 
 Biocement Tiles by Biomason, Climate Action 
 Beatriz Lozano, Emerging Designer 
 nARCHITECTS, Architecture 
 Arem Duplessis, Communication Design 
 Clement Mok, Digital Design 
 Naeem Khan, Fashion Design 
 The Archers, Interior Design 
 Kongjian Yu, Landscape Architecture 
 Atlason, Product Design
This years National Design Award winners are a highly diverse groupfrom a handcraft-focused fashion designer to one of the early pioneers of digital designbut they share many common traits: a highly rigorous process to their discipline, a truly collaborative approach and putting people front and center in their practice, said Dung Ngo, chair of the National Design Awards jury. These are design core values worth celebrating. 
My gratitude goes to this years stellar jury for their thoughtful selection of the 2023 National Design Award winners, said Maria Nicanor, director of the museum. This years cohort, a diverse group of designers across disciplines, are not only charting new pathways in their respective fields, but also integrating sustainable, socially responsible and people-centered practices in their work in a moment of profound global complexity.
Established in 2000 as a project of the White House Millennium Council, the National Design Awards are accompanied annually by National Design Week, which takes place this year Oct. 28. Cooper Hewitt will offer free admission to museum visitors during National Design Week to make design accessible to all.