Alongside his work at 4TheVille, Williams is a senior project manager at Penn Services, a construction contractor. While his schedule is demanding, he makes both jobs work.
“I definitely think I work two full-time jobs,” Williams says. “I make it happen because both matter to me equally. There is tension, something I don’t always enjoy. But one sustains my quality of life and my family’s quality of life. I have two sons and a wife, and providing for them is important. But just as important to me is using tools like design thinking, cultural heritage tourism and smart land use to protect the dignity of historic Black communities.”
Williams continues to serve in an advisory capacity to the city’s Office of Recovery in the wake of last spring’s tornado. He also volunteers with the Urban Land Institute, The City of St. Louis Planning Commission, Sumner High School and more. At WashU, he partners with the Gephardt Institute and recently welcomed Katie Plum, AB ’25, to the 4TheVille organization. Plum graduated with a degree in architecture last spring.
“Aaron is so hard-working,” Plum says. “The Sam Fox School is unique in that it offers connections to different community organizations for community-engaged design. He is a ‘people-first’ person and sees that there’s more than just architecture as a solution to a neighborhood’s problems.”
For Williams, civic engagement is necessary not just for moral reasons, but also as a way to get critical work done.
“If you really want to move the needle, you have to know who’s who and the way things are trending, and you can only do that by being civically engaged,” Williams says. “I believe WashU has a responsibility to be civically engaged and to make its talent available to assist with pressing challenges and opportunities in our region.”