Afterimages
Radical Re-use, built matter as finite resource
Scripting Islands / Storying the Ocean
Civic Futures
Everything Must Scale
Beyond: Climate Change, Artificial Intelligence, and New Ways of Living
City, Hall
*DE-territorialize
Disabling Modernities
Not Elsewhere Now: Choreographies of the Im/possible
What if…
Practicing Uncertainty
Capitalocene Energetic Landscapes
Non-human Centered
LIMINAL DOMAINS: no longer<>not yet
Layered Urbanism, Buenos Aires
Towards Reparation Architecture
Makergraph
The House of Liberation: a Dark Room for Ernest Cole.
Eoys therodina studios online aa6
1
Afterimages
This studio foregrounded restitution—linking Western museums to their imperial foundations—as starting points to articulate the intersections of architecture, heritage, and migration. In recent years, global debates with tremendous cultural and political consequences have been brewing over the vast collections of looted African artifacts dispersed across European and North American museums. These debates, augmented by scholarly and artistic interventions are calling attention to critical questions: What can the museum become when it ceases to be an afterimage of coloniality? How can this moment of protests, strikes, and direct actions at museums, be used as counterpoints to the ossification of Western art institutions? The Humboldt Forum in Berlin served as the primary site for the studio’s analysis and intervention.
Measured Displacement
This project reimagines restitution in the context of the newly reconstructed Humboldt Forum, loc...
On restitution and unbuilding

The site stands on unreliable earth. The Humboldt Forum and the structures that pre-date it, a...

Detoxifying the Museum
Our research into the Humboldt Forum centers around the intersection of chemical and cultural tox...
2
Radical Re-use, built matter as finite resource
The need to build more housing in recent years is in direct conflict with growing awareness of the construction industry’s excessive contribution to pollution and waste. The modernist value of producing more and better housing, coupled with ideas of equity, health and social responsibility were at the core of architecture education for at least a century, yet there was littel environmental concern. This studio investigates how architects can find a way to remedy these conflicting issues in viewing built matter as a finite resource, the same way oil, gas or gold are regarded. In this framework, the studio explored possible new ways of using this resource in turning anything into housing.
3
Scripting Islands / Storying the Ocean
While islands have experienced and continue to be subject to violence, erasure, and extraction, they have also been sites of resistance and continued struggles for liberation. This studio considered the geographic and narrative tropes of “islandness” and their oceans, seas, rivers, and lakes, to articulate a spatial lexicon of their fluctuating tides and deployed architecture as a narrative tool to rescript, reconstruct, revise, and speculate a spatial intervention. The studio broadly investigated ‘island narrations’ and the ‘narration of islands’ the ways in which they had been conceptually and correspondingly spatially constructed through historical processes of imperialism and colonialism and how they were/could be rescripting themselves in the face of global imbalance. Cabo Verde is an island where historical context, natural resources, geographic, political, and other alliances provided a layered site where students considered the prompts of the studio.
Mediating Ecologies
The Galapagos islands and the ocean around them have become a controlled territory, with institut...
Negotiating Boundaries: Designing the Voids in Atlantic Maritime Trade for Cultural Empowerment in Cape Verdean Diaspora Community
Departing from the port of Mindelo, a container is a diaspora. While it has to migrate following ...
MADE OF FIRE: Metamorphosis on the Uncertain Palimpsest

Chã das Caldeiras is a settlement located in the caldera of the only active volcano, Pico do F...

4
Civic Futures
Civic space has always been one of the most contested areas of economic and social control; where access, time, ownership, fear, violence, safety, and surveillance normalize, racialize, and entangle public space through disempowering populations. The Civic is defined by access; to time and space, to information, to public transportation, to education, to culture, to technology, and to justice. Access affords participation between people and the environment. While in the West, the civic contract was guided by hierarchical socio-political systems of control, access, exclusion, and allowances, many early West African societies, such as those found in the Iron Age Kirikongo Village, reflect complex egalitarian structures of community or village communalism. Studying Accra, Ghana, as an initial site, this studio engaged with reconnection to a civic layer of the city, where the friction of existing structures, and the potential of civic programs–beyond reductive ontologies of public space–can trigger a new common.
Verbal Agreements
Where do we get agency, and how do we give agency? The ideas presented in this work are meant to ...
Building Hope

A growing number of children in Ghana are victims of trafficking, and the situation is rapidly...

HUB
Can energy dictate the space? Or can energy become the space? HUB is a proposal to create, expand...
Sub-Silo
Through strata of inhabitation, formal tension is materialized into spaces for production and the...
5
Everything Must Scale

Everything Must Scale has been a working title organizing a series of six design studios that have explored a realm where architectural design is enacted at scale – in the economic sense of the term where commodities or services or even architecture are replicated over entire territories and as construction blocks of commerce and social organization.

This studio returned to a program previously engaged in two prior studios: the future of the “truck stop” in an era of electrification and new forms of advanced transportation.

The studio asked each designer to seek new boundaries between what we call High and Low in design. This included asking about the use, structure, commodities, and devices and even signage and imagined scale and capital investment. Is a technologically advanced new truck and truck stop High or Low art — or are these terms newly obsolete?

BEYOND THE TRUCK
The new truck stop: rethinking the role and relationship between human and machine using a series...
TUBE - Spectacle of Automation

It is anticipated that by the year 2050, auto-piloting will be widely applied and replace huma...

Pilot Flying J Branding Study

Pilot Flying J is one of the marquee travel center companies in the US. Their client base is n...

Truck Stop: Truck, Stop

Truck Stop: Truck, Stop is a visionary project aiming at reducing traffic congestion and accid...

Future Truck Stop: Intertwined Energy and Activities
This project aims to transform current truck stops from fuel-based to electricity-based systems, ...
Stop. To Heal
My vision is to establish a series of small-scale truck stops situated strategically between larg...
6
Beyond: Climate Change, Artificial Intelligence, and New Ways of Living
Is there any way to dramatically reduce the total amount of carbon in all buildings, while dramatically increasing the number of buildings, and keeping global temperature rise to 1.5 degrees Celsius, in order to avoid irreversible catastrophe? Important work is underway, but it is insufficient. Moving to a renewable energy grid and reducing the embodied carbon in building materials are essential, but these initiatives are too slow. Overall, there is a critical need for stronger levers, fundamental change, and a different approach to architecture. This is the territory of Beyond—a design studio that focused on climate change, artificial intelligence, and new ways of living. The studio traveled to the village of Kamikatsu, Japan, for an immersive low-carbon living experience. In parallel, students investigated the emerging field of “generative artificial intelligence.” Through immersion, technology, and new forms of thinking and creation, we will challenge business as usual and move beyond the status quo in utilizing and critiquing new text-to-image and text-to-text tools that may enable new possibilities.
Eco-Oyster

Oyster reefs bring multiple benefits to coastal cities, not only resisting the impact of risin...

Beyond farming-A vertical farm and pasture system for future

As global warming intensifies, we must keep global temperature rise to 1.5 degrees celsius.To ...

Architecture Beyond the tap

Architecture Beyond the Tap is a project that aims to rethink architecture with water for clim...

Neighborhood Density Patch V.2050

In this project, computational and generative design methodologies are employed to effectively...

RURALISM: Climate Conscious Living Beyond The Urban

Our project aims to mitigate the impacts of climate change by creating a scalable and sustaina...

Sacred Scarcities
Water agreements between Native reservations and their non-reservation surroundings incite politi...
7
City, Hall
This studio reimagined the centers of municipal government in New York City, aligned with visions of a more inclusive, equitable, and sustainable city. Students were tasked with redesigning either City Hall in Manhattan, or one of the Borough Halls in the Bronx, Brooklyn, Queens, or Staten Island. While embracing the layered realities of these sites and contemporary issues about spaces of governance, the interventions were encouraged to be acupunctural, transformative, or even assume an alternate or future reality. The studio considered scales ranging from the city these buildings serve down to their most constituent element–the hall–and further down to smaller architectural elements. Within this scalar spectrum, the studio investigated the potential for systemic yet heterogeneous spatial, social, and political practices. The studio traveled to Japan, with a focus on civic buildings and urban spaces, to study a series of models for rethinking the spaces of governance.
Brooklyn Borough Hall: (re) Inventing Layers

As the most populous borough in New York City, Brooklyn settled back in 1634. By 1848 Brooklyn...

Sixth Borough City Hall

Although efforts to restore the Hudson River waterways have seen recent success through projec...

Bronx Borough Hall
The Bronx is the only borough without a designated building for a borough hall, as it is currentl...
8
*DE-territorialize
This joint studio between M.S. Real Estate Development and M.Arch was grounded on the premise that a multidisciplinary approach to development will yield more inclusive and more imaginative cities. The future developer ߎ architect will not be restricted to one profession or the other, but will be non-binary. Interrogating traditional methods of decision-making and entering a realm of the arbitrage of economic value to community over production cost were fundamental to this studio. The studio began by exploring a selection of urban archi-types that generated questions of land use and zoning, contradictions in regulations, and opportunities for intervention. Students analyzed the former Public School 64, a storied East Village icon, through press articles, reports, interviews, and first-hand accounts. Focused on interactions between the human body and the urban body, the studio crossed lines of transportation, adaptation, and configuration to project a future reality of what it means to inhabit the city. Students were expected to respond to five pillars of development: equity, advocacy, adaptability, variability, sustainability. Additionally, the studio provided a foundational understanding of financial modeling and real estate pro forma.
From SOIL to AIR - A Study of Ecologies in Building 64

From the start of the semester we approached Building 64 with a reverence for the land on whic...

F( r )yer
F( r )yer is a sustainable manufacturing and co-living project that revolutionizes the way we thi...
THE BIRTH, RESICE

The project is to develop a landmark building in East Village that has remained empty for 25 y...

9
Disabling Modernities

Disability often appears as a threat to modernization, and the character of a modern city’s buildings and spaces expunge those qualities associated with it: Transparency confronts darkness, smoothness overcomes occlusions, and solidity stands against frailty. Contemporary strategies to improve disabled “access” within cities cannot fully confront the above biases, as they often sublimate impairment within modernist aesthetics. To enrich architectural and urban physiology, this studio explored more critical approaches to impairment while being cognizant of disabled demands for more accessible spaces.

Our explorations of disablement, architecture, and urban modernity were situated within a city central to their historical inter-relationship: The Mitteleuropean capital of Vienna, Austria. Vienna is the origin site of medicalized and hygienic visions of modern architecture and planning, and it is a city that now houses one of the largest percentages of disabled people of any European capital.

Our work in Vienna was divided into two phases: In the first part of the semester teams of students developed urban plans for three different sites in Vienna that are currently under study by the city government. After traveling to Vienna and reviewing their plans with city officials, students developed more individual projects within their urban designs.

PostSportsplatz Reimagined

PostSportsplatz Reimagined is a project that aims to transform a single-use, high-impact sport...

10
Not Elsewhere Now: Choreographies of the Im/possible
This studio examined the various flows, migrations, movements, and displacements of human, non-human beings, and sentient beings at the convergence of colonialism and modernity. However, rather than perpetuate the lens of crisis and abjection within these conditions, the studio examined these conditions as sites of cultural production, transmutation, and liberation. Taking the 35th Bienal De São Paulo as an intellectual prompt, the studio studied and engaged specific artistic practices that transmutate the material, spatial, temporal forms of coloniality and their psychic forms of nihilistic enclosure to produce “spatial choreographies of im/possibility and liberation.” This studio sought to reclaim embodied knowledge systems to make a collective set of proposals that are epistemic and result in new definitions and new kinds of architecture. The studio traveled to Salvador de Bahia, Brazil where sites were selected in Salvador and Ilha de Itaparica. Conceived as a thesis studio, students conducted independent research and defined their own design strategies and actions within the context of the prompt and the spatial and cultural context of Bahia.
NO-STOP FOREST
The NO-STOP FOREST project proposes a new relationship between nature and humans in the Amazon re...
11
What if…
What if there could be “new ground” in New York City? This studio examined designing structures that transition from water to land. Students speculated on ways in which strategies and designs for new public programs, together with a new ferry terminal at this key urban interface of watery land in NYC. The studio analyzed the Anable Basin, Long Island City, and its extended context on the East River. Students designed prototypes for programs at the ferry terminal, including schools and workspaces, to demonstrate how a new life can be scripted on and at the water’s edge. Proposals for an expanded site condition were used to distribute, strategize, and test prototypes on the land’s edge and at the body of water adjacent to the Basin. The aim of the studio was to explore and reimagine that architecture and its role in shaping this essential watery public infrastructure now and in the future.
Botanical Hub
New York City has a strong land transportation system. Especially in Manhattan, the combination o...
12
Practicing Uncertainty
“The Institutions We Need: Decolonizing the Museums of New York’‘ was the second edition of the research project that set out to review, rethink, and redesign the contemporary museum in response to current concerns. The studio took the position that the new museum needs a new architecture, and that without a new architecture, it will be impossible to talk about a new generation of cultural institutions.The studio questioned how architecture can transform the theoretical discourse that institutions have embraced when they declare themselves to be transparent, inclusive, anti-colonialist, anti-machist, anti-racist and eco-friendly into a physical reality. Students studied four museums: The Museum of Modern Art, the MET Cloisters, The American Museum of Natural History, and the Brooklyn Museum, and traveled to a series of locations in Spain for further research.
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Capitalocene Energetic Landscapes

The promise of renewable energy that ensures the viability of capitalism beyond fossil fuels is based on a double myth: On the one hand, the apparent inexhaustibility of its natural sources, and on the other, the lack of agency of the “natural environment” understood as a mere background for human activities. But the reality is different. Neither the intensive (and extensive) plantation of soybeans for biofuels or the extraction of silicon for the manufacture of photovoltaic panels is renewable, nor the alteration of human and non-human ecosystems produced by the construction of hydroelectric dams, wind farms, or solar thermal power plants is insignificant.

The post-oil future will make the massive installation of renewable infrastructures essential, hence the need to study its social, political, and ecological implications while we still have time.

The studio proposes the intervention in a renewable energy infrastructure based on socio-environmental justice parameters.

The project focuses on studying the renewable energy infrastructures of the Capitalocene, not only from the point of view of “sustainable” energy-monetary profitability but also as possible sources of socio-natural imbalance and environmental injustice in the ecosystem where they are inserted.

INFECTIOUS BORDERS: Recovering the forest through the Red Cockaded Woodpecker and the Red Heart Fungus

This project aims to explore the complex relationship between the ecosystem, humans, and non-h...

Haunted Landscapes and the New Autochthonous
The heart of Venezuela’s electricity system is built on the Guri reservoir, providing 70% of its ...
Common Currents

By addressing the environmental, social, and ethical implications of hydropower dams, Common C...

In Chile, the Salar de Atacama hosts intensive lithium mines that support 30% of the global li...

Multiscalar Post-natural Marine Landscapes
The project challenges and pushes back on the oceanic ecological injustices of renewable offshore...
Hacking the Steam - Strategies for Repurposing Geothermal Steam Power / Waste and Mitigating Barriers in Olkaria
Our project focuses on the controversy of the Geothermal Power Plants in Olkaria, Kenya and a des...
14
Non-human Centered
For over four centuries, elephants and the Kui people have lived side by side in Ta Klang Village, Surin Province, bordering Cambodia in northeastern Thailand. This national forest spanning over 1,200 acres is home to more than 200 elephants. The ancient practice of elephants keeping is part of the Kui culture rooted in the familial bond between people and elephants from birth to death. This studio based itself on the belief that coexistence between humans and other beings is worth studying, and the Ta Klang Village provided an example to show that humans do not always have to be the center. Students traveled to Ta Klang Village to investigate the site, its relationship with non-humans, and envision proposals.
Meditation Forest
Historically elephants in Thailand have been used for various purposes, such as labor, warfare, a...
Brimmed with Memories: Reinterpreting Archive for Elephants
Located in Ta Klang Village, Surin, Thailand, the project centers on the strong bonding relations...
Elephant Temple
The Elephant Temple draws from the traditional layout of the Thai “wat” while also qu...
Sole to Soul

This project acknowledges the importance of foot care to the well-being of elephants and respo...

Forest-to-Farm-to-Table: A Co-Being Foodscape

In Ban Taklang elephant village, the lives of elephants and their mahouts (handlers) are enmes...

15
LIMINAL DOMAINS: no longer<>not yet
Engaging the transformative agency of the liminal, this studio aimed to look beyond anthropocentrism and other structures that impede personal and planetary healing, to (re)define legacy to facilitate a future that is continually informed by the bodies that inhabit it. Students identified territories of investigation that resonated with personal priorities and values and defined a topic of research. The semester was spent developing a critical thesis on life and death that informed each project’s position in a polyphonic world, where the urban commons is reimagined as instrumental to synergistic networks of repair. The studio strategized and evidenced architecture’s responsibility and capacity to contribute to a more civil future; negotiating the temporal and spatial entanglements of humans with one another, with other species, and with the delicate ecosystems of our time. Students traveled to Iceland for fieldwork and research, and projects were developed in dialogue with Columbia GSAPP DeathLAB.
Atypical Monument

New York, a waterfront island city, faces intensifying storms and rising sea levels, and its o...

Overpass: a Cemetery of the Distant
Overpass re-establishes a relationship between land and life. Due to the rapid development of the...
Towards a Bird City
The entangled environment of birds and cities possesses opportunities for a new collective urban ...
Archive (of a) Collective (Future)

The Archive of a Collective Future resists the erosion of collective cultural memory and pract...

16
Layered Urbanism, Buenos Aires

Our studio is called Layered Urbanism because it is centered on the premise that cities exist as sites of constant and overlapping change. The building our studio will consider was built in 1962 and replaced a majestic building built in the 1800s as the city’s central market of Buenos Aires, which in turn was built over a colonial monastery.

Most global cities face urban inadequacy, hosting empty buildings for long periods of time in a slow process of natural decay. In our case, Edificio Mercado del Plata, a large building of approximately half a million square feet, 11 stories above ground, three underground, lies unused in the center of Buenos Aires. This presents an opportunity to consider a new life by redefining the value of this place within the larger city.

The building is too big to be ignored and not loved enough to be restored. What to do, then? Demolish it and build a new one? Demolish it partially? Restore it fully? Let it be an art site? Let it become a ruin on its own? The symbolism of an unused building in the city’s center cannot remain. It is untenable.

Neuro Node
Looking at recent education in Buenos Aires, we noticed that the IT industry and related educatio...
Museum of Learning
Edificio Del Plata is an abandoned municipal building in central Buenos Aires. Given the publicit...
Vertical Gardens
This adaptive reuse project addresses the diverse needs of a rapidly growing and densifying Bueno...
Buenos Aires Projections and Voids

The Edificio Mercado del Plata is adapted for reuse through the concept of creating openings a...

17
Towards Reparation Architecture
This studio questioned the practices that underpin architecture’s ethics, politics and ideologies, probing at the subjacent colonial and racialized structures that sustain them. At the same time, the studio adopted an on-the-ground, situated approach in which theory follows practice, to design alternatives and rethink the relationships between architecture and its inherent social-political dimension. To do so, the studio suggested an approximation between architecture and questions/sites of repair, reparation, restoration, and reconstruction. The studio positions itself in relation to a three-fold historic event that, as we will collectively discuss, disrupts and re-defines contemporary spatial conditions: 1) The anti-racist and anti-colonial protests that erupted across the urban world in 2019 and 2020; 2) The simultaneous eruption of the COVID pandemic in 2020, which exposed the deep inequalities that structure contemporary urbanization; 3) The fact that climate change is the not a future to come but the everyday present. The studio was structured as a thesis studio and visited Brazil for research purposes.
Post War - Adaptive Reuse of Military Installations
In the current constructed environment, which already has many buildings that are either obsolete...
Anti-New Clark City

Anti-New Clark City is a documentation, analysis, and campaign project of the displacement of ...

From Sacrifice Zones to Equitopia: a pathway to justice
This project seeks to explore methods for transitioning sacrifice zones into territories of repai...
Ideological state apparatus- A shitty subaltern story

Toilets are technologies of power. They are not neutral, utilitarian architectures, rather the...

18
Makergraph
The MAKERGRAPH studio centered on thinking-by-making; on material culture as an expression of our culture; on craft and digital craft; and on material practice—from weaving to welding. The studio was designed to serve students in their final semester seeking personal educational (or post-educational) experience as they transition out of architecture school. The studio adopted a thesis-like sensibility into a committed sequence of highly structured, iterative, cumulative assignments. In parallel and mutual influence with those assignments, students created a visual, material, and verbal archive/feed of preoccupations and reflections from life experiences within and beyond the design world. Proceeding week by week, by making objects, the studio made a road trip through the Sonora desert of North-West Mexico and Baja California.
19
The House of Liberation: a Dark Room for Ernest Cole.
This studio closely reviewed the vast research archive and images of Ernest Cole, the photographer from South Africa who lived in exile in New York City from 1966 until his passing in 1990. Ernest Cole arrived in New York City at the age of 26 with the view of publishing a photographic exposé on the cruelty of racial capitalism and its consequences on black people’s lives under apartheid. This exposé was published in 1968 as ‘The House of Bondage’ and banned in South Africa immediately, and reads like an architectural monograph of apartheid, visuals supported by precise and cutting descriptions in the accompanying essays and captions by Cole. Students were tasked to develop a space or a series of spaces in which to engage with this particular work of liberation and made a week-long trip to South Africa to further develop their research through site observance, cooking, and listening.
Sights of Freedom: Malombo and the Sounds of Resistance

This studio drew inspiration from Ernest Cole’s House of Bondage, which exposes the brutality ...

in-between joy

“WHAT THAT QUILT KNOWS ABOUT ME” “My whole life is in that quilt… my hopes and fears, my joys ...

Carving Memory
I have focused on the role of architecture as an object that records experiences and emotions. Ha...