Elsie Owusu was born in Ghana and in November 1953 moved with her parents to the UK, where her father was a diplomat in London. She attended
Streatham and Clapham High School in London. She has been working as an architect since 1986, founding her own architectural practice, Elsie Owusu Architects (EOA), of which she remains principal. EOA has worked with artist
Sir Peter Blake on the low energy house, 60 Aden Grove, that was assembled in three days. As executive architect for this project, EOA has also designed houses and apartments for the Ujima Housing Association. EOA is currently working in partnership with Symbiotica and NS Design Consultants on the living space of UK/Nigerian artist
Yinka Shonibare. Owusu was a partner for 10 years with Fielden+Mawson, where she was co-lead architect for the
UK Supreme Court and the master planning team for London's
Green Park Station. As a conservation architect, she has also worked on public transport and regeneration projects in Ghana and Nigeria. In 2015, she was one of 12 to be named a "RIBA role models" in support of inclusivity and diversity. She has been a board member of organisations including
Arts Council England, the
National Trust of England, and the UK Supreme Court Arts Trust, as well as being a trustee of the Council of the
Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA) and of the
Architectural Association. In 2017, to mark the 25th anniversary of the
murder of Stephen Lawrence, who had hoped to become an architect, Owusu launched, with the
Stephen Lawrence Charitable Trust, the RIBA+25 campaign to boost diversity in architecture, a profession that was reported by ''
Architects' Journal'' in 2015 to be "one of the least diverse in the UK, with 94 percent of architects defined as white", and only 4,000 of RIBA's 27,000 chartered architects being women. Owusu has spoken out about issues around institutional racism and sexism within the architectural industry. In 2024, Owusu's forthcoming first book entitled,
The World that Jack Built, was acquired by
Faber & Faber for publication in 2027. ==Awards==