Columbia GSAPP
Columbia University Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation
#ColumbiaGSAPP

Congratulations GSAPP Class of 2026 on reaching this milestone after semesters of rigorous experimentation, and critical inquiry across architecture, urbanism, preservation, real estate, computation, curatorial practice, and beyond.
The GSAPP End of Year Show, featuring work from across all programs at the School, is on view in Avery Hall and online through June 1: https://www.arch.columbia.edu/eoys-2026/
Photos by Hatnim Lee
Congratulations GSAPP Class of 2026 on reaching this milestone after semesters of rigorous experimentation, and critical inquiry across architecture, urbanism, preservation, real estate, computation, curatorial practice, and beyond.
The GSAPP End of Year Show, featuring work from across all programs at the School, is on view in Avery Hall and online through June 1: https://www.arch.columbia.edu/eoys-2026/
Photos by Hatnim Lee

Congratulations GSAPP Class of 2026 on reaching this milestone after semesters of rigorous experimentation, and critical inquiry across architecture, urbanism, preservation, real estate, computation, curatorial practice, and beyond.
The GSAPP End of Year Show, featuring work from across all programs at the School, is on view in Avery Hall and online through June 1: https://www.arch.columbia.edu/eoys-2026/
Photos by Hatnim Lee

Congratulations GSAPP Class of 2026 on reaching this milestone after semesters of rigorous experimentation, and critical inquiry across architecture, urbanism, preservation, real estate, computation, curatorial practice, and beyond.
The GSAPP End of Year Show, featuring work from across all programs at the School, is on view in Avery Hall and online through June 1: https://www.arch.columbia.edu/eoys-2026/
Photos by Hatnim Lee
Congratulations GSAPP Class of 2026 on reaching this milestone after semesters of rigorous experimentation, and critical inquiry across architecture, urbanism, preservation, real estate, computation, curatorial practice, and beyond.
The GSAPP End of Year Show, featuring work from across all programs at the School, is on view in Avery Hall and online through June 1: https://www.arch.columbia.edu/eoys-2026/
Photos by Hatnim Lee
Congratulations GSAPP Class of 2026 on reaching this milestone after semesters of rigorous experimentation, and critical inquiry across architecture, urbanism, preservation, real estate, computation, curatorial practice, and beyond.
The GSAPP End of Year Show, featuring work from across all programs at the School, is on view in Avery Hall and online through June 1: https://www.arch.columbia.edu/eoys-2026/
Photos by Hatnim Lee

Congratulations GSAPP Class of 2026 on reaching this milestone after semesters of rigorous experimentation, and critical inquiry across architecture, urbanism, preservation, real estate, computation, curatorial practice, and beyond.
The GSAPP End of Year Show, featuring work from across all programs at the School, is on view in Avery Hall and online through June 1: https://www.arch.columbia.edu/eoys-2026/
Photos by Hatnim Lee

Congratulations GSAPP Class of 2026 on reaching this milestone after semesters of rigorous experimentation, and critical inquiry across architecture, urbanism, preservation, real estate, computation, curatorial practice, and beyond.
The GSAPP End of Year Show, featuring work from across all programs at the School, is on view in Avery Hall and online through June 1: https://www.arch.columbia.edu/eoys-2026/
Photos by Hatnim Lee
Congratulations GSAPP Class of 2026 on reaching this milestone after semesters of rigorous experimentation, and critical inquiry across architecture, urbanism, preservation, real estate, computation, curatorial practice, and beyond.
The GSAPP End of Year Show, featuring work from across all programs at the School, is on view in Avery Hall and online through June 1: https://www.arch.columbia.edu/eoys-2026/
Photos by Hatnim Lee

Congratulations GSAPP Class of 2026 on reaching this milestone after semesters of rigorous experimentation, and critical inquiry across architecture, urbanism, preservation, real estate, computation, curatorial practice, and beyond.
The GSAPP End of Year Show, featuring work from across all programs at the School, is on view in Avery Hall and online through June 1: https://www.arch.columbia.edu/eoys-2026/
Photos by Hatnim Lee

Congratulations GSAPP Class of 2026 on reaching this milestone after semesters of rigorous experimentation, and critical inquiry across architecture, urbanism, preservation, real estate, computation, curatorial practice, and beyond.
The GSAPP End of Year Show, featuring work from across all programs at the School, is on view in Avery Hall and online through June 1: https://www.arch.columbia.edu/eoys-2026/
Photos by Hatnim Lee

Congratulations GSAPP Class of 2026 on reaching this milestone after semesters of rigorous experimentation, and critical inquiry across architecture, urbanism, preservation, real estate, computation, curatorial practice, and beyond.
The GSAPP End of Year Show, featuring work from across all programs at the School, is on view in Avery Hall and online through June 1: https://www.arch.columbia.edu/eoys-2026/
Photos by Hatnim Lee

Congratulations GSAPP Class of 2026 on reaching this milestone after semesters of rigorous experimentation, and critical inquiry across architecture, urbanism, preservation, real estate, computation, curatorial practice, and beyond.
The GSAPP End of Year Show, featuring work from across all programs at the School, is on view in Avery Hall and online through June 1: https://www.arch.columbia.edu/eoys-2026/
Photos by Hatnim Lee

Congratulations GSAPP Class of 2026 on reaching this milestone after semesters of rigorous experimentation, and critical inquiry across architecture, urbanism, preservation, real estate, computation, curatorial practice, and beyond.
The GSAPP End of Year Show, featuring work from across all programs at the School, is on view in Avery Hall and online through June 1: https://www.arch.columbia.edu/eoys-2026/
Photos by Hatnim Lee

Congratulations GSAPP Class of 2026 on reaching this milestone after semesters of rigorous experimentation, and critical inquiry across architecture, urbanism, preservation, real estate, computation, curatorial practice, and beyond.
The GSAPP End of Year Show, featuring work from across all programs at the School, is on view in Avery Hall and online through June 1: https://www.arch.columbia.edu/eoys-2026/
Photos by Hatnim Lee
GSAPP End of Year Show 2026
Avery Hall
May 16 - June 1
Blooming through more than 1,000 student work from across all GSAPP programs, this year’s End of Year Show continues the School’s tradition of displaying works that push the boundaries of the fields of architecture, urbanism, preservation, and real estate.
The exhibition extends both physically and digitally, launching as an online platform on the same day.
The End of Year Show opens on Saturday, May 16 in alignment with GSAPP graduation and university Commencement and will be on view through June 1. More at the link in bio.
Graphic design by @studiovanonna
Student work sampled from Haoyu Hu, Runhe Song, and Ziqian Xu; Heeryung Yu; Ziteng Wang; and Jonah Johnson and Jagger Udy.

GSAPP End of Year Show 2026
Avery Hall
May 16 - June 1
Blooming through more than 1,000 student work from across all GSAPP programs, this year’s End of Year Show continues the School’s tradition of displaying works that push the boundaries of the fields of architecture, urbanism, preservation, and real estate.
The exhibition extends both physically and digitally, launching as an online platform on the same day.
The End of Year Show opens on Saturday, May 16 in alignment with GSAPP graduation and university Commencement and will be on view through June 1. More at the link in bio.
Graphic design by @studiovanonna
Student work sampled from Haoyu Hu, Runhe Song, and Ziqian Xu; Heeryung Yu; Ziteng Wang; and Jonah Johnson and Jagger Udy.

Columbia GSAPP is pleased to announce the appointment of Neeraj Bhatia as Director of the M.S. in Architecture and Urban Design program and Associate Professor, effective July 2026.
“GSAPP’s Urban Design program has pioneered an ecological approach to the urban, and serves as a critical arena for testing and anticipating how the world operates,” highlights Dean Andrés Jaque. “Neeraj brings a rare ability to articulate design experimentation with climate, housing, spatial justice, governance, and the politics that organize collective life, while also ensuring that these investigations percolate beyond exhibitions and academic discourse into built realities, policy, and decision-making.”
Bhatia is one of the world’s leading voices in urban design today, particularly at the intersection of climate and housing urgencies. This appointment marks a significant moment for the program and reaffirms the School’s continued commitment to engaging territorial realities and infrastructural ecologies at the intersection of architecture and urbanism.
Bhatia succeeds Kate Orff following her transformative tenure as Director of the M.S. in Architecture and Urban Design program since 2015. A globally leading voice in landscape architecture and climate urbanism, Orff will continue to focus on the GSAPP Earth Studio and her strategic role in bridging the School's design strategy and action-oriented impulse with the scientific strengths of the Columbia Climate School.
We are thrilled to welcome Neeraj Bhatia to Columbia GSAPP.

Columbia GSAPP is pleased to announce the appointment of Neeraj Bhatia as Director of the M.S. in Architecture and Urban Design program and Associate Professor, effective July 2026.
“GSAPP’s Urban Design program has pioneered an ecological approach to the urban, and serves as a critical arena for testing and anticipating how the world operates,” highlights Dean Andrés Jaque. “Neeraj brings a rare ability to articulate design experimentation with climate, housing, spatial justice, governance, and the politics that organize collective life, while also ensuring that these investigations percolate beyond exhibitions and academic discourse into built realities, policy, and decision-making.”
Bhatia is one of the world’s leading voices in urban design today, particularly at the intersection of climate and housing urgencies. This appointment marks a significant moment for the program and reaffirms the School’s continued commitment to engaging territorial realities and infrastructural ecologies at the intersection of architecture and urbanism.
Bhatia succeeds Kate Orff following her transformative tenure as Director of the M.S. in Architecture and Urban Design program since 2015. A globally leading voice in landscape architecture and climate urbanism, Orff will continue to focus on the GSAPP Earth Studio and her strategic role in bridging the School's design strategy and action-oriented impulse with the scientific strengths of the Columbia Climate School.
We are thrilled to welcome Neeraj Bhatia to Columbia GSAPP.

Columbia GSAPP is pleased to announce the appointment of Neeraj Bhatia as Director of the M.S. in Architecture and Urban Design program and Associate Professor, effective July 2026.
“GSAPP’s Urban Design program has pioneered an ecological approach to the urban, and serves as a critical arena for testing and anticipating how the world operates,” highlights Dean Andrés Jaque. “Neeraj brings a rare ability to articulate design experimentation with climate, housing, spatial justice, governance, and the politics that organize collective life, while also ensuring that these investigations percolate beyond exhibitions and academic discourse into built realities, policy, and decision-making.”
Bhatia is one of the world’s leading voices in urban design today, particularly at the intersection of climate and housing urgencies. This appointment marks a significant moment for the program and reaffirms the School’s continued commitment to engaging territorial realities and infrastructural ecologies at the intersection of architecture and urbanism.
Bhatia succeeds Kate Orff following her transformative tenure as Director of the M.S. in Architecture and Urban Design program since 2015. A globally leading voice in landscape architecture and climate urbanism, Orff will continue to focus on the GSAPP Earth Studio and her strategic role in bridging the School's design strategy and action-oriented impulse with the scientific strengths of the Columbia Climate School.
We are thrilled to welcome Neeraj Bhatia to Columbia GSAPP.

Columbia GSAPP is pleased to announce the appointment of Neeraj Bhatia as Director of the M.S. in Architecture and Urban Design program and Associate Professor, effective July 2026.
“GSAPP’s Urban Design program has pioneered an ecological approach to the urban, and serves as a critical arena for testing and anticipating how the world operates,” highlights Dean Andrés Jaque. “Neeraj brings a rare ability to articulate design experimentation with climate, housing, spatial justice, governance, and the politics that organize collective life, while also ensuring that these investigations percolate beyond exhibitions and academic discourse into built realities, policy, and decision-making.”
Bhatia is one of the world’s leading voices in urban design today, particularly at the intersection of climate and housing urgencies. This appointment marks a significant moment for the program and reaffirms the School’s continued commitment to engaging territorial realities and infrastructural ecologies at the intersection of architecture and urbanism.
Bhatia succeeds Kate Orff following her transformative tenure as Director of the M.S. in Architecture and Urban Design program since 2015. A globally leading voice in landscape architecture and climate urbanism, Orff will continue to focus on the GSAPP Earth Studio and her strategic role in bridging the School's design strategy and action-oriented impulse with the scientific strengths of the Columbia Climate School.
We are thrilled to welcome Neeraj Bhatia to Columbia GSAPP.

Columbia GSAPP is pleased to announce the appointment of Neeraj Bhatia as Director of the M.S. in Architecture and Urban Design program and Associate Professor, effective July 2026.
“GSAPP’s Urban Design program has pioneered an ecological approach to the urban, and serves as a critical arena for testing and anticipating how the world operates,” highlights Dean Andrés Jaque. “Neeraj brings a rare ability to articulate design experimentation with climate, housing, spatial justice, governance, and the politics that organize collective life, while also ensuring that these investigations percolate beyond exhibitions and academic discourse into built realities, policy, and decision-making.”
Bhatia is one of the world’s leading voices in urban design today, particularly at the intersection of climate and housing urgencies. This appointment marks a significant moment for the program and reaffirms the School’s continued commitment to engaging territorial realities and infrastructural ecologies at the intersection of architecture and urbanism.
Bhatia succeeds Kate Orff following her transformative tenure as Director of the M.S. in Architecture and Urban Design program since 2015. A globally leading voice in landscape architecture and climate urbanism, Orff will continue to focus on the GSAPP Earth Studio and her strategic role in bridging the School's design strategy and action-oriented impulse with the scientific strengths of the Columbia Climate School.
We are thrilled to welcome Neeraj Bhatia to Columbia GSAPP.

Columbia GSAPP is pleased to announce the appointment of Neeraj Bhatia as Director of the M.S. in Architecture and Urban Design program and Associate Professor, effective July 2026.
“GSAPP’s Urban Design program has pioneered an ecological approach to the urban, and serves as a critical arena for testing and anticipating how the world operates,” highlights Dean Andrés Jaque. “Neeraj brings a rare ability to articulate design experimentation with climate, housing, spatial justice, governance, and the politics that organize collective life, while also ensuring that these investigations percolate beyond exhibitions and academic discourse into built realities, policy, and decision-making.”
Bhatia is one of the world’s leading voices in urban design today, particularly at the intersection of climate and housing urgencies. This appointment marks a significant moment for the program and reaffirms the School’s continued commitment to engaging territorial realities and infrastructural ecologies at the intersection of architecture and urbanism.
Bhatia succeeds Kate Orff following her transformative tenure as Director of the M.S. in Architecture and Urban Design program since 2015. A globally leading voice in landscape architecture and climate urbanism, Orff will continue to focus on the GSAPP Earth Studio and her strategic role in bridging the School's design strategy and action-oriented impulse with the scientific strengths of the Columbia Climate School.
We are thrilled to welcome Neeraj Bhatia to Columbia GSAPP.

Columbia GSAPP is pleased to announce the appointment of Neeraj Bhatia as Director of the M.S. in Architecture and Urban Design program and Associate Professor, effective July 2026.
“GSAPP’s Urban Design program has pioneered an ecological approach to the urban, and serves as a critical arena for testing and anticipating how the world operates,” highlights Dean Andrés Jaque. “Neeraj brings a rare ability to articulate design experimentation with climate, housing, spatial justice, governance, and the politics that organize collective life, while also ensuring that these investigations percolate beyond exhibitions and academic discourse into built realities, policy, and decision-making.”
Bhatia is one of the world’s leading voices in urban design today, particularly at the intersection of climate and housing urgencies. This appointment marks a significant moment for the program and reaffirms the School’s continued commitment to engaging territorial realities and infrastructural ecologies at the intersection of architecture and urbanism.
Bhatia succeeds Kate Orff following her transformative tenure as Director of the M.S. in Architecture and Urban Design program since 2015. A globally leading voice in landscape architecture and climate urbanism, Orff will continue to focus on the GSAPP Earth Studio and her strategic role in bridging the School's design strategy and action-oriented impulse with the scientific strengths of the Columbia Climate School.
We are thrilled to welcome Neeraj Bhatia to Columbia GSAPP.

Spring faculty highlight: ATEYA KHORAKIWALA, Assistant Professor | Ph.D. Colloquium
ATEYA KHORAKIWALA is an architectural historian and Assistant Professor of Architecture at Columbia GSAPP. Her research focuses on India’s development decades and the aesthetics and materiality of its postcolonial infrastructure and ecological and political landscapes. Her current book project, Famine Landscapes, is an infrastructural and architectural history set in India’s postcolonial countryside.
Khorakiwala’s essays and articles have appeared in e-flux Architecture, Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle East (CSSAAME), and Grey Room. She received her Ph.D. from Harvard University and was trained as an architect at KRVIA in Mumbai, India.
This semester Khorakiwala is teaching Ph.D Colloqium and Questions in Architectural History II. Her teaching focuses on the spatial and bodily politics of food; on architectural histories of technocracy and development; and on colonial and postcolonial histories of nature and the environment.
Spring faculty highlight: ATEYA KHORAKIWALA, Assistant Professor | Ph.D. Colloquium
ATEYA KHORAKIWALA is an architectural historian and Assistant Professor of Architecture at Columbia GSAPP. Her research focuses on India’s development decades and the aesthetics and materiality of its postcolonial infrastructure and ecological and political landscapes. Her current book project, Famine Landscapes, is an infrastructural and architectural history set in India’s postcolonial countryside.
Khorakiwala’s essays and articles have appeared in e-flux Architecture, Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle East (CSSAAME), and Grey Room. She received her Ph.D. from Harvard University and was trained as an architect at KRVIA in Mumbai, India.
This semester Khorakiwala is teaching Ph.D Colloqium and Questions in Architectural History II. Her teaching focuses on the spatial and bodily politics of food; on architectural histories of technocracy and development; and on colonial and postcolonial histories of nature and the environment.
Spring faculty highlight: ATEYA KHORAKIWALA, Assistant Professor | Ph.D. Colloquium
ATEYA KHORAKIWALA is an architectural historian and Assistant Professor of Architecture at Columbia GSAPP. Her research focuses on India’s development decades and the aesthetics and materiality of its postcolonial infrastructure and ecological and political landscapes. Her current book project, Famine Landscapes, is an infrastructural and architectural history set in India’s postcolonial countryside.
Khorakiwala’s essays and articles have appeared in e-flux Architecture, Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle East (CSSAAME), and Grey Room. She received her Ph.D. from Harvard University and was trained as an architect at KRVIA in Mumbai, India.
This semester Khorakiwala is teaching Ph.D Colloqium and Questions in Architectural History II. Her teaching focuses on the spatial and bodily politics of food; on architectural histories of technocracy and development; and on colonial and postcolonial histories of nature and the environment.

Spring faculty highlight: ATEYA KHORAKIWALA, Assistant Professor | Ph.D. Colloquium
ATEYA KHORAKIWALA is an architectural historian and Assistant Professor of Architecture at Columbia GSAPP. Her research focuses on India’s development decades and the aesthetics and materiality of its postcolonial infrastructure and ecological and political landscapes. Her current book project, Famine Landscapes, is an infrastructural and architectural history set in India’s postcolonial countryside.
Khorakiwala’s essays and articles have appeared in e-flux Architecture, Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle East (CSSAAME), and Grey Room. She received her Ph.D. from Harvard University and was trained as an architect at KRVIA in Mumbai, India.
This semester Khorakiwala is teaching Ph.D Colloqium and Questions in Architectural History II. Her teaching focuses on the spatial and bodily politics of food; on architectural histories of technocracy and development; and on colonial and postcolonial histories of nature and the environment.

Spring faculty highlight: ATEYA KHORAKIWALA, Assistant Professor | Ph.D. Colloquium
ATEYA KHORAKIWALA is an architectural historian and Assistant Professor of Architecture at Columbia GSAPP. Her research focuses on India’s development decades and the aesthetics and materiality of its postcolonial infrastructure and ecological and political landscapes. Her current book project, Famine Landscapes, is an infrastructural and architectural history set in India’s postcolonial countryside.
Khorakiwala’s essays and articles have appeared in e-flux Architecture, Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle East (CSSAAME), and Grey Room. She received her Ph.D. from Harvard University and was trained as an architect at KRVIA in Mumbai, India.
This semester Khorakiwala is teaching Ph.D Colloqium and Questions in Architectural History II. Her teaching focuses on the spatial and bodily politics of food; on architectural histories of technocracy and development; and on colonial and postcolonial histories of nature and the environment.

CRAFT YARD is a layered infrastructural condition embedded within the industrial fabric of Long Island City. Operating around and beneath the expressway and the Montauk Cutoff, it repositions existing infrastructure as an active ground for living, making, and collective life. The project preserves its informality while threading housing and communal programs through its residual spaces.
Housing is introduced as an elevated addition above active warehouses, remaining legible as an infrastructural extension rather than a hybridized object. This separation preserves ongoing production while creating shared circulation, platforms, and social programs within scaffolded roofs and underused structures.
Through layered circulation and strategic detachment, the project constructs a framework where industry and domestic life coexist without subsumption, allowing collective life to emerge in the space between.
Project by Vincent Zhang @vincentpuzhang and I Lok U @ilok_u for Advanced Studio V (Fall 2025), led by Ricardo Flores @ricardo_flores_arch, Eva Prats @eva_prats_arch @floresyprats, and Pimchid Chariyacharoen.
View more #GSAPPStudentWork at the link in bio.

CRAFT YARD is a layered infrastructural condition embedded within the industrial fabric of Long Island City. Operating around and beneath the expressway and the Montauk Cutoff, it repositions existing infrastructure as an active ground for living, making, and collective life. The project preserves its informality while threading housing and communal programs through its residual spaces.
Housing is introduced as an elevated addition above active warehouses, remaining legible as an infrastructural extension rather than a hybridized object. This separation preserves ongoing production while creating shared circulation, platforms, and social programs within scaffolded roofs and underused structures.
Through layered circulation and strategic detachment, the project constructs a framework where industry and domestic life coexist without subsumption, allowing collective life to emerge in the space between.
Project by Vincent Zhang @vincentpuzhang and I Lok U @ilok_u for Advanced Studio V (Fall 2025), led by Ricardo Flores @ricardo_flores_arch, Eva Prats @eva_prats_arch @floresyprats, and Pimchid Chariyacharoen.
View more #GSAPPStudentWork at the link in bio.

CRAFT YARD is a layered infrastructural condition embedded within the industrial fabric of Long Island City. Operating around and beneath the expressway and the Montauk Cutoff, it repositions existing infrastructure as an active ground for living, making, and collective life. The project preserves its informality while threading housing and communal programs through its residual spaces.
Housing is introduced as an elevated addition above active warehouses, remaining legible as an infrastructural extension rather than a hybridized object. This separation preserves ongoing production while creating shared circulation, platforms, and social programs within scaffolded roofs and underused structures.
Through layered circulation and strategic detachment, the project constructs a framework where industry and domestic life coexist without subsumption, allowing collective life to emerge in the space between.
Project by Vincent Zhang @vincentpuzhang and I Lok U @ilok_u for Advanced Studio V (Fall 2025), led by Ricardo Flores @ricardo_flores_arch, Eva Prats @eva_prats_arch @floresyprats, and Pimchid Chariyacharoen.
View more #GSAPPStudentWork at the link in bio.

CRAFT YARD is a layered infrastructural condition embedded within the industrial fabric of Long Island City. Operating around and beneath the expressway and the Montauk Cutoff, it repositions existing infrastructure as an active ground for living, making, and collective life. The project preserves its informality while threading housing and communal programs through its residual spaces.
Housing is introduced as an elevated addition above active warehouses, remaining legible as an infrastructural extension rather than a hybridized object. This separation preserves ongoing production while creating shared circulation, platforms, and social programs within scaffolded roofs and underused structures.
Through layered circulation and strategic detachment, the project constructs a framework where industry and domestic life coexist without subsumption, allowing collective life to emerge in the space between.
Project by Vincent Zhang @vincentpuzhang and I Lok U @ilok_u for Advanced Studio V (Fall 2025), led by Ricardo Flores @ricardo_flores_arch, Eva Prats @eva_prats_arch @floresyprats, and Pimchid Chariyacharoen.
View more #GSAPPStudentWork at the link in bio.

CRAFT YARD is a layered infrastructural condition embedded within the industrial fabric of Long Island City. Operating around and beneath the expressway and the Montauk Cutoff, it repositions existing infrastructure as an active ground for living, making, and collective life. The project preserves its informality while threading housing and communal programs through its residual spaces.
Housing is introduced as an elevated addition above active warehouses, remaining legible as an infrastructural extension rather than a hybridized object. This separation preserves ongoing production while creating shared circulation, platforms, and social programs within scaffolded roofs and underused structures.
Through layered circulation and strategic detachment, the project constructs a framework where industry and domestic life coexist without subsumption, allowing collective life to emerge in the space between.
Project by Vincent Zhang @vincentpuzhang and I Lok U @ilok_u for Advanced Studio V (Fall 2025), led by Ricardo Flores @ricardo_flores_arch, Eva Prats @eva_prats_arch @floresyprats, and Pimchid Chariyacharoen.
View more #GSAPPStudentWork at the link in bio.

CRAFT YARD is a layered infrastructural condition embedded within the industrial fabric of Long Island City. Operating around and beneath the expressway and the Montauk Cutoff, it repositions existing infrastructure as an active ground for living, making, and collective life. The project preserves its informality while threading housing and communal programs through its residual spaces.
Housing is introduced as an elevated addition above active warehouses, remaining legible as an infrastructural extension rather than a hybridized object. This separation preserves ongoing production while creating shared circulation, platforms, and social programs within scaffolded roofs and underused structures.
Through layered circulation and strategic detachment, the project constructs a framework where industry and domestic life coexist without subsumption, allowing collective life to emerge in the space between.
Project by Vincent Zhang @vincentpuzhang and I Lok U @ilok_u for Advanced Studio V (Fall 2025), led by Ricardo Flores @ricardo_flores_arch, Eva Prats @eva_prats_arch @floresyprats, and Pimchid Chariyacharoen.
View more #GSAPPStudentWork at the link in bio.

CRAFT YARD is a layered infrastructural condition embedded within the industrial fabric of Long Island City. Operating around and beneath the expressway and the Montauk Cutoff, it repositions existing infrastructure as an active ground for living, making, and collective life. The project preserves its informality while threading housing and communal programs through its residual spaces.
Housing is introduced as an elevated addition above active warehouses, remaining legible as an infrastructural extension rather than a hybridized object. This separation preserves ongoing production while creating shared circulation, platforms, and social programs within scaffolded roofs and underused structures.
Through layered circulation and strategic detachment, the project constructs a framework where industry and domestic life coexist without subsumption, allowing collective life to emerge in the space between.
Project by Vincent Zhang @vincentpuzhang and I Lok U @ilok_u for Advanced Studio V (Fall 2025), led by Ricardo Flores @ricardo_flores_arch, Eva Prats @eva_prats_arch @floresyprats, and Pimchid Chariyacharoen.
View more #GSAPPStudentWork at the link in bio.

CRAFT YARD is a layered infrastructural condition embedded within the industrial fabric of Long Island City. Operating around and beneath the expressway and the Montauk Cutoff, it repositions existing infrastructure as an active ground for living, making, and collective life. The project preserves its informality while threading housing and communal programs through its residual spaces.
Housing is introduced as an elevated addition above active warehouses, remaining legible as an infrastructural extension rather than a hybridized object. This separation preserves ongoing production while creating shared circulation, platforms, and social programs within scaffolded roofs and underused structures.
Through layered circulation and strategic detachment, the project constructs a framework where industry and domestic life coexist without subsumption, allowing collective life to emerge in the space between.
Project by Vincent Zhang @vincentpuzhang and I Lok U @ilok_u for Advanced Studio V (Fall 2025), led by Ricardo Flores @ricardo_flores_arch, Eva Prats @eva_prats_arch @floresyprats, and Pimchid Chariyacharoen.
View more #GSAPPStudentWork at the link in bio.

CRAFT YARD is a layered infrastructural condition embedded within the industrial fabric of Long Island City. Operating around and beneath the expressway and the Montauk Cutoff, it repositions existing infrastructure as an active ground for living, making, and collective life. The project preserves its informality while threading housing and communal programs through its residual spaces.
Housing is introduced as an elevated addition above active warehouses, remaining legible as an infrastructural extension rather than a hybridized object. This separation preserves ongoing production while creating shared circulation, platforms, and social programs within scaffolded roofs and underused structures.
Through layered circulation and strategic detachment, the project constructs a framework where industry and domestic life coexist without subsumption, allowing collective life to emerge in the space between.
Project by Vincent Zhang @vincentpuzhang and I Lok U @ilok_u for Advanced Studio V (Fall 2025), led by Ricardo Flores @ricardo_flores_arch, Eva Prats @eva_prats_arch @floresyprats, and Pimchid Chariyacharoen.
View more #GSAPPStudentWork at the link in bio.

CRAFT YARD is a layered infrastructural condition embedded within the industrial fabric of Long Island City. Operating around and beneath the expressway and the Montauk Cutoff, it repositions existing infrastructure as an active ground for living, making, and collective life. The project preserves its informality while threading housing and communal programs through its residual spaces.
Housing is introduced as an elevated addition above active warehouses, remaining legible as an infrastructural extension rather than a hybridized object. This separation preserves ongoing production while creating shared circulation, platforms, and social programs within scaffolded roofs and underused structures.
Through layered circulation and strategic detachment, the project constructs a framework where industry and domestic life coexist without subsumption, allowing collective life to emerge in the space between.
Project by Vincent Zhang @vincentpuzhang and I Lok U @ilok_u for Advanced Studio V (Fall 2025), led by Ricardo Flores @ricardo_flores_arch, Eva Prats @eva_prats_arch @floresyprats, and Pimchid Chariyacharoen.
View more #GSAPPStudentWork at the link in bio.

CRAFT YARD is a layered infrastructural condition embedded within the industrial fabric of Long Island City. Operating around and beneath the expressway and the Montauk Cutoff, it repositions existing infrastructure as an active ground for living, making, and collective life. The project preserves its informality while threading housing and communal programs through its residual spaces.
Housing is introduced as an elevated addition above active warehouses, remaining legible as an infrastructural extension rather than a hybridized object. This separation preserves ongoing production while creating shared circulation, platforms, and social programs within scaffolded roofs and underused structures.
Through layered circulation and strategic detachment, the project constructs a framework where industry and domestic life coexist without subsumption, allowing collective life to emerge in the space between.
Project by Vincent Zhang @vincentpuzhang and I Lok U @ilok_u for Advanced Studio V (Fall 2025), led by Ricardo Flores @ricardo_flores_arch, Eva Prats @eva_prats_arch @floresyprats, and Pimchid Chariyacharoen.
View more #GSAPPStudentWork at the link in bio.

CRAFT YARD is a layered infrastructural condition embedded within the industrial fabric of Long Island City. Operating around and beneath the expressway and the Montauk Cutoff, it repositions existing infrastructure as an active ground for living, making, and collective life. The project preserves its informality while threading housing and communal programs through its residual spaces.
Housing is introduced as an elevated addition above active warehouses, remaining legible as an infrastructural extension rather than a hybridized object. This separation preserves ongoing production while creating shared circulation, platforms, and social programs within scaffolded roofs and underused structures.
Through layered circulation and strategic detachment, the project constructs a framework where industry and domestic life coexist without subsumption, allowing collective life to emerge in the space between.
Project by Vincent Zhang @vincentpuzhang and I Lok U @ilok_u for Advanced Studio V (Fall 2025), led by Ricardo Flores @ricardo_flores_arch, Eva Prats @eva_prats_arch @floresyprats, and Pimchid Chariyacharoen.
View more #GSAPPStudentWork at the link in bio.

CRAFT YARD is a layered infrastructural condition embedded within the industrial fabric of Long Island City. Operating around and beneath the expressway and the Montauk Cutoff, it repositions existing infrastructure as an active ground for living, making, and collective life. The project preserves its informality while threading housing and communal programs through its residual spaces.
Housing is introduced as an elevated addition above active warehouses, remaining legible as an infrastructural extension rather than a hybridized object. This separation preserves ongoing production while creating shared circulation, platforms, and social programs within scaffolded roofs and underused structures.
Through layered circulation and strategic detachment, the project constructs a framework where industry and domestic life coexist without subsumption, allowing collective life to emerge in the space between.
Project by Vincent Zhang @vincentpuzhang and I Lok U @ilok_u for Advanced Studio V (Fall 2025), led by Ricardo Flores @ricardo_flores_arch, Eva Prats @eva_prats_arch @floresyprats, and Pimchid Chariyacharoen.
View more #GSAPPStudentWork at the link in bio.

CRAFT YARD is a layered infrastructural condition embedded within the industrial fabric of Long Island City. Operating around and beneath the expressway and the Montauk Cutoff, it repositions existing infrastructure as an active ground for living, making, and collective life. The project preserves its informality while threading housing and communal programs through its residual spaces.
Housing is introduced as an elevated addition above active warehouses, remaining legible as an infrastructural extension rather than a hybridized object. This separation preserves ongoing production while creating shared circulation, platforms, and social programs within scaffolded roofs and underused structures.
Through layered circulation and strategic detachment, the project constructs a framework where industry and domestic life coexist without subsumption, allowing collective life to emerge in the space between.
Project by Vincent Zhang @vincentpuzhang and I Lok U @ilok_u for Advanced Studio V (Fall 2025), led by Ricardo Flores @ricardo_flores_arch, Eva Prats @eva_prats_arch @floresyprats, and Pimchid Chariyacharoen.
View more #GSAPPStudentWork at the link in bio.

CRAFT YARD is a layered infrastructural condition embedded within the industrial fabric of Long Island City. Operating around and beneath the expressway and the Montauk Cutoff, it repositions existing infrastructure as an active ground for living, making, and collective life. The project preserves its informality while threading housing and communal programs through its residual spaces.
Housing is introduced as an elevated addition above active warehouses, remaining legible as an infrastructural extension rather than a hybridized object. This separation preserves ongoing production while creating shared circulation, platforms, and social programs within scaffolded roofs and underused structures.
Through layered circulation and strategic detachment, the project constructs a framework where industry and domestic life coexist without subsumption, allowing collective life to emerge in the space between.
Project by Vincent Zhang @vincentpuzhang and I Lok U @ilok_u for Advanced Studio V (Fall 2025), led by Ricardo Flores @ricardo_flores_arch, Eva Prats @eva_prats_arch @floresyprats, and Pimchid Chariyacharoen.
View more #GSAPPStudentWork at the link in bio.

CRAFT YARD is a layered infrastructural condition embedded within the industrial fabric of Long Island City. Operating around and beneath the expressway and the Montauk Cutoff, it repositions existing infrastructure as an active ground for living, making, and collective life. The project preserves its informality while threading housing and communal programs through its residual spaces.
Housing is introduced as an elevated addition above active warehouses, remaining legible as an infrastructural extension rather than a hybridized object. This separation preserves ongoing production while creating shared circulation, platforms, and social programs within scaffolded roofs and underused structures.
Through layered circulation and strategic detachment, the project constructs a framework where industry and domestic life coexist without subsumption, allowing collective life to emerge in the space between.
Project by Vincent Zhang @vincentpuzhang and I Lok U @ilok_u for Advanced Studio V (Fall 2025), led by Ricardo Flores @ricardo_flores_arch, Eva Prats @eva_prats_arch @floresyprats, and Pimchid Chariyacharoen.
View more #GSAPPStudentWork at the link in bio.

CRAFT YARD is a layered infrastructural condition embedded within the industrial fabric of Long Island City. Operating around and beneath the expressway and the Montauk Cutoff, it repositions existing infrastructure as an active ground for living, making, and collective life. The project preserves its informality while threading housing and communal programs through its residual spaces.
Housing is introduced as an elevated addition above active warehouses, remaining legible as an infrastructural extension rather than a hybridized object. This separation preserves ongoing production while creating shared circulation, platforms, and social programs within scaffolded roofs and underused structures.
Through layered circulation and strategic detachment, the project constructs a framework where industry and domestic life coexist without subsumption, allowing collective life to emerge in the space between.
Project by Vincent Zhang @vincentpuzhang and I Lok U @ilok_u for Advanced Studio V (Fall 2025), led by Ricardo Flores @ricardo_flores_arch, Eva Prats @eva_prats_arch @floresyprats, and Pimchid Chariyacharoen.
View more #GSAPPStudentWork at the link in bio.

CRAFT YARD is a layered infrastructural condition embedded within the industrial fabric of Long Island City. Operating around and beneath the expressway and the Montauk Cutoff, it repositions existing infrastructure as an active ground for living, making, and collective life. The project preserves its informality while threading housing and communal programs through its residual spaces.
Housing is introduced as an elevated addition above active warehouses, remaining legible as an infrastructural extension rather than a hybridized object. This separation preserves ongoing production while creating shared circulation, platforms, and social programs within scaffolded roofs and underused structures.
Through layered circulation and strategic detachment, the project constructs a framework where industry and domestic life coexist without subsumption, allowing collective life to emerge in the space between.
Project by Vincent Zhang @vincentpuzhang and I Lok U @ilok_u for Advanced Studio V (Fall 2025), led by Ricardo Flores @ricardo_flores_arch, Eva Prats @eva_prats_arch @floresyprats, and Pimchid Chariyacharoen.
View more #GSAPPStudentWork at the link in bio.

Scenes from GSAPP’s inaugural Architecture Review Summit.
Students and instructors from Advanced Studios VI in conversation with Lucia Allais, David Benjamin, Håvard Breivik-Khan, Johnny Chiu, Christopher Gardner, James Heard, Kian Hosseinnia, Stella Ioannidou, Ziad Jamaleddine, Ateya Khorakiwala, Reinhold Martin, James Nanasca, Amelyn Ng, Phuongminh Nguyen, Alessandro Orsini, Lasse Rau, Lidia Ratoi, Lindy Roy, Mahdi Sabbagh, Regina Teng, Dimitra Tsachrelia Holl, Anthony Vanky, Adam Vosburgh, Michael Wang, Mark Wigley, among others.
The half-day laboratory of exchange served as the culminating moment of the reviews, bringing all projects into a shared setting where students presented their work, compared approaches, and situated the studios’ investigations in dialogue with critics across studios and disciplines from GSAPP and beyond.
The Review summit is organized by the Directors and Associate Directors of M.Arch and AAD programs: Lydia Kallipoliti @lydiakallipoliti, Marc Tsurumaki @ltlarchitects, Xiaoxi Chen @xiaoxi_projecting, and Darwin Eng @applefied_darwin.
Photography by Vincent Zhang @vincentpuzhang

Scenes from GSAPP’s inaugural Architecture Review Summit.
Students and instructors from Advanced Studios VI in conversation with Lucia Allais, David Benjamin, Håvard Breivik-Khan, Johnny Chiu, Christopher Gardner, James Heard, Kian Hosseinnia, Stella Ioannidou, Ziad Jamaleddine, Ateya Khorakiwala, Reinhold Martin, James Nanasca, Amelyn Ng, Phuongminh Nguyen, Alessandro Orsini, Lasse Rau, Lidia Ratoi, Lindy Roy, Mahdi Sabbagh, Regina Teng, Dimitra Tsachrelia Holl, Anthony Vanky, Adam Vosburgh, Michael Wang, Mark Wigley, among others.
The half-day laboratory of exchange served as the culminating moment of the reviews, bringing all projects into a shared setting where students presented their work, compared approaches, and situated the studios’ investigations in dialogue with critics across studios and disciplines from GSAPP and beyond.
The Review summit is organized by the Directors and Associate Directors of M.Arch and AAD programs: Lydia Kallipoliti @lydiakallipoliti, Marc Tsurumaki @ltlarchitects, Xiaoxi Chen @xiaoxi_projecting, and Darwin Eng @applefied_darwin.
Photography by Vincent Zhang @vincentpuzhang
Scenes from GSAPP’s inaugural Architecture Review Summit.
Students and instructors from Advanced Studios VI in conversation with Lucia Allais, David Benjamin, Håvard Breivik-Khan, Johnny Chiu, Christopher Gardner, James Heard, Kian Hosseinnia, Stella Ioannidou, Ziad Jamaleddine, Ateya Khorakiwala, Reinhold Martin, James Nanasca, Amelyn Ng, Phuongminh Nguyen, Alessandro Orsini, Lasse Rau, Lidia Ratoi, Lindy Roy, Mahdi Sabbagh, Regina Teng, Dimitra Tsachrelia Holl, Anthony Vanky, Adam Vosburgh, Michael Wang, Mark Wigley, among others.
The half-day laboratory of exchange served as the culminating moment of the reviews, bringing all projects into a shared setting where students presented their work, compared approaches, and situated the studios’ investigations in dialogue with critics across studios and disciplines from GSAPP and beyond.
The Review summit is organized by the Directors and Associate Directors of M.Arch and AAD programs: Lydia Kallipoliti @lydiakallipoliti, Marc Tsurumaki @ltlarchitects, Xiaoxi Chen @xiaoxi_projecting, and Darwin Eng @applefied_darwin.
Photography by Vincent Zhang @vincentpuzhang

Scenes from GSAPP’s inaugural Architecture Review Summit.
Students and instructors from Advanced Studios VI in conversation with Lucia Allais, David Benjamin, Håvard Breivik-Khan, Johnny Chiu, Christopher Gardner, James Heard, Kian Hosseinnia, Stella Ioannidou, Ziad Jamaleddine, Ateya Khorakiwala, Reinhold Martin, James Nanasca, Amelyn Ng, Phuongminh Nguyen, Alessandro Orsini, Lasse Rau, Lidia Ratoi, Lindy Roy, Mahdi Sabbagh, Regina Teng, Dimitra Tsachrelia Holl, Anthony Vanky, Adam Vosburgh, Michael Wang, Mark Wigley, among others.
The half-day laboratory of exchange served as the culminating moment of the reviews, bringing all projects into a shared setting where students presented their work, compared approaches, and situated the studios’ investigations in dialogue with critics across studios and disciplines from GSAPP and beyond.
The Review summit is organized by the Directors and Associate Directors of M.Arch and AAD programs: Lydia Kallipoliti @lydiakallipoliti, Marc Tsurumaki @ltlarchitects, Xiaoxi Chen @xiaoxi_projecting, and Darwin Eng @applefied_darwin.
Photography by Vincent Zhang @vincentpuzhang

Scenes from GSAPP’s inaugural Architecture Review Summit.
Students and instructors from Advanced Studios VI in conversation with Lucia Allais, David Benjamin, Håvard Breivik-Khan, Johnny Chiu, Christopher Gardner, James Heard, Kian Hosseinnia, Stella Ioannidou, Ziad Jamaleddine, Ateya Khorakiwala, Reinhold Martin, James Nanasca, Amelyn Ng, Phuongminh Nguyen, Alessandro Orsini, Lasse Rau, Lidia Ratoi, Lindy Roy, Mahdi Sabbagh, Regina Teng, Dimitra Tsachrelia Holl, Anthony Vanky, Adam Vosburgh, Michael Wang, Mark Wigley, among others.
The half-day laboratory of exchange served as the culminating moment of the reviews, bringing all projects into a shared setting where students presented their work, compared approaches, and situated the studios’ investigations in dialogue with critics across studios and disciplines from GSAPP and beyond.
The Review summit is organized by the Directors and Associate Directors of M.Arch and AAD programs: Lydia Kallipoliti @lydiakallipoliti, Marc Tsurumaki @ltlarchitects, Xiaoxi Chen @xiaoxi_projecting, and Darwin Eng @applefied_darwin.
Photography by Vincent Zhang @vincentpuzhang

Scenes from GSAPP’s inaugural Architecture Review Summit.
Students and instructors from Advanced Studios VI in conversation with Lucia Allais, David Benjamin, Håvard Breivik-Khan, Johnny Chiu, Christopher Gardner, James Heard, Kian Hosseinnia, Stella Ioannidou, Ziad Jamaleddine, Ateya Khorakiwala, Reinhold Martin, James Nanasca, Amelyn Ng, Phuongminh Nguyen, Alessandro Orsini, Lasse Rau, Lidia Ratoi, Lindy Roy, Mahdi Sabbagh, Regina Teng, Dimitra Tsachrelia Holl, Anthony Vanky, Adam Vosburgh, Michael Wang, Mark Wigley, among others.
The half-day laboratory of exchange served as the culminating moment of the reviews, bringing all projects into a shared setting where students presented their work, compared approaches, and situated the studios’ investigations in dialogue with critics across studios and disciplines from GSAPP and beyond.
The Review summit is organized by the Directors and Associate Directors of M.Arch and AAD programs: Lydia Kallipoliti @lydiakallipoliti, Marc Tsurumaki @ltlarchitects, Xiaoxi Chen @xiaoxi_projecting, and Darwin Eng @applefied_darwin.
Photography by Vincent Zhang @vincentpuzhang

Scenes from GSAPP’s inaugural Architecture Review Summit.
Students and instructors from Advanced Studios VI in conversation with Lucia Allais, David Benjamin, Håvard Breivik-Khan, Johnny Chiu, Christopher Gardner, James Heard, Kian Hosseinnia, Stella Ioannidou, Ziad Jamaleddine, Ateya Khorakiwala, Reinhold Martin, James Nanasca, Amelyn Ng, Phuongminh Nguyen, Alessandro Orsini, Lasse Rau, Lidia Ratoi, Lindy Roy, Mahdi Sabbagh, Regina Teng, Dimitra Tsachrelia Holl, Anthony Vanky, Adam Vosburgh, Michael Wang, Mark Wigley, among others.
The half-day laboratory of exchange served as the culminating moment of the reviews, bringing all projects into a shared setting where students presented their work, compared approaches, and situated the studios’ investigations in dialogue with critics across studios and disciplines from GSAPP and beyond.
The Review summit is organized by the Directors and Associate Directors of M.Arch and AAD programs: Lydia Kallipoliti @lydiakallipoliti, Marc Tsurumaki @ltlarchitects, Xiaoxi Chen @xiaoxi_projecting, and Darwin Eng @applefied_darwin.
Photography by Vincent Zhang @vincentpuzhang

Scenes from GSAPP’s inaugural Architecture Review Summit.
Students and instructors from Advanced Studios VI in conversation with Lucia Allais, David Benjamin, Håvard Breivik-Khan, Johnny Chiu, Christopher Gardner, James Heard, Kian Hosseinnia, Stella Ioannidou, Ziad Jamaleddine, Ateya Khorakiwala, Reinhold Martin, James Nanasca, Amelyn Ng, Phuongminh Nguyen, Alessandro Orsini, Lasse Rau, Lidia Ratoi, Lindy Roy, Mahdi Sabbagh, Regina Teng, Dimitra Tsachrelia Holl, Anthony Vanky, Adam Vosburgh, Michael Wang, Mark Wigley, among others.
The half-day laboratory of exchange served as the culminating moment of the reviews, bringing all projects into a shared setting where students presented their work, compared approaches, and situated the studios’ investigations in dialogue with critics across studios and disciplines from GSAPP and beyond.
The Review summit is organized by the Directors and Associate Directors of M.Arch and AAD programs: Lydia Kallipoliti @lydiakallipoliti, Marc Tsurumaki @ltlarchitects, Xiaoxi Chen @xiaoxi_projecting, and Darwin Eng @applefied_darwin.
Photography by Vincent Zhang @vincentpuzhang

Scenes from GSAPP’s inaugural Architecture Review Summit.
Students and instructors from Advanced Studios VI in conversation with Lucia Allais, David Benjamin, Håvard Breivik-Khan, Johnny Chiu, Christopher Gardner, James Heard, Kian Hosseinnia, Stella Ioannidou, Ziad Jamaleddine, Ateya Khorakiwala, Reinhold Martin, James Nanasca, Amelyn Ng, Phuongminh Nguyen, Alessandro Orsini, Lasse Rau, Lidia Ratoi, Lindy Roy, Mahdi Sabbagh, Regina Teng, Dimitra Tsachrelia Holl, Anthony Vanky, Adam Vosburgh, Michael Wang, Mark Wigley, among others.
The half-day laboratory of exchange served as the culminating moment of the reviews, bringing all projects into a shared setting where students presented their work, compared approaches, and situated the studios’ investigations in dialogue with critics across studios and disciplines from GSAPP and beyond.
The Review summit is organized by the Directors and Associate Directors of M.Arch and AAD programs: Lydia Kallipoliti @lydiakallipoliti, Marc Tsurumaki @ltlarchitects, Xiaoxi Chen @xiaoxi_projecting, and Darwin Eng @applefied_darwin.
Photography by Vincent Zhang @vincentpuzhang
Final Reviews models, drawings, and films from Advanced VI studios and CDP Colloquium III, led by Catherine Griffiths @catherine_griffiths + Ziv Schneider, Hilary Sample @mmmosarchitects, Ala Tannir @ala.tannir + Nadia Christidi, and Mark Wasiuta.
Student Works:
1. Bernardo Malatesta @buhnardo and Keenan Bellisari @thekeenanbellisari
2. Ellie Madsen @ellie.madsen
3. Mika Yassur @m.ika_
4. Hilary Kusama @hilarykusuma
5. Jana Marinovic @jana__marinovic
Photography by Amy Suzuki @foamymontage, with Jes Zhang @jes_mingjia.

Final Reviews models, drawings, and films from Advanced VI studios and CDP Colloquium III, led by Catherine Griffiths @catherine_griffiths + Ziv Schneider, Hilary Sample @mmmosarchitects, Ala Tannir @ala.tannir + Nadia Christidi, and Mark Wasiuta.
Student Works:
1. Bernardo Malatesta @buhnardo and Keenan Bellisari @thekeenanbellisari
2. Ellie Madsen @ellie.madsen
3. Mika Yassur @m.ika_
4. Hilary Kusama @hilarykusuma
5. Jana Marinovic @jana__marinovic
Photography by Amy Suzuki @foamymontage, with Jes Zhang @jes_mingjia.

Final Reviews models, drawings, and films from Advanced VI studios and CDP Colloquium III, led by Catherine Griffiths @catherine_griffiths + Ziv Schneider, Hilary Sample @mmmosarchitects, Ala Tannir @ala.tannir + Nadia Christidi, and Mark Wasiuta.
Student Works:
1. Bernardo Malatesta @buhnardo and Keenan Bellisari @thekeenanbellisari
2. Ellie Madsen @ellie.madsen
3. Mika Yassur @m.ika_
4. Hilary Kusama @hilarykusuma
5. Jana Marinovic @jana__marinovic
Photography by Amy Suzuki @foamymontage, with Jes Zhang @jes_mingjia.
Final Reviews models, drawings, and films from Advanced VI studios and CDP Colloquium III, led by Catherine Griffiths @catherine_griffiths + Ziv Schneider, Hilary Sample @mmmosarchitects, Ala Tannir @ala.tannir + Nadia Christidi, and Mark Wasiuta.
Student Works:
1. Bernardo Malatesta @buhnardo and Keenan Bellisari @thekeenanbellisari
2. Ellie Madsen @ellie.madsen
3. Mika Yassur @m.ika_
4. Hilary Kusama @hilarykusuma
5. Jana Marinovic @jana__marinovic
Photography by Amy Suzuki @foamymontage, with Jes Zhang @jes_mingjia.

Final Reviews models, drawings, and films from Advanced VI studios and CDP Colloquium III, led by Catherine Griffiths @catherine_griffiths + Ziv Schneider, Hilary Sample @mmmosarchitects, Ala Tannir @ala.tannir + Nadia Christidi, and Mark Wasiuta.
Student Works:
1. Bernardo Malatesta @buhnardo and Keenan Bellisari @thekeenanbellisari
2. Ellie Madsen @ellie.madsen
3. Mika Yassur @m.ika_
4. Hilary Kusama @hilarykusuma
5. Jana Marinovic @jana__marinovic
Photography by Amy Suzuki @foamymontage, with Jes Zhang @jes_mingjia.

Final Reviews models, drawings, and films from architecture studios and CDP Colloquium III, led by Catherine Griffiths @catherine_griffiths + Ziv Schneider, Nahyun Hwang @nahyun.hwang @nhdm_arch, Christoph a. Kumpusch @c_kumpusch, Jing Liu @solidobjectives + Alessandra Cianchetta, Michalis Raftopoulos @architectureresearchathens + Alejandro Marin, Galia Solomonoff @solomonoffarchitecture, and Marc Tsurumaki @ltlarchitects.
Student Works:
1. Minjae Kim @man.duu_oo, Hyunyoung Kim @hyunyoungkimmm, Danielle Min @danielle_min_
2. Steven Dela Cruz Duncan @helloiamstevenduncan
3. Zach Poncher @zach_poncher
4. Adv VI final reviews, photo by Tony Tu @wu_chi_tung_
5. Angela Che Jin Lee @Che_charl_an
6. Annie An @anniea0430 + Liberty Chapman @_lchapman_
7. Siyuan Yao @s.a.y_y
Photography by Amy Suzuki, with Jes Zhang @jes_mingjia.
Final Reviews models, drawings, and films from architecture studios and CDP Colloquium III, led by Catherine Griffiths @catherine_griffiths + Ziv Schneider, Nahyun Hwang @nahyun.hwang @nhdm_arch, Christoph a. Kumpusch @c_kumpusch, Jing Liu @solidobjectives + Alessandra Cianchetta, Michalis Raftopoulos @architectureresearchathens + Alejandro Marin, Galia Solomonoff @solomonoffarchitecture, and Marc Tsurumaki @ltlarchitects.
Student Works:
1. Minjae Kim @man.duu_oo, Hyunyoung Kim @hyunyoungkimmm, Danielle Min @danielle_min_
2. Steven Dela Cruz Duncan @helloiamstevenduncan
3. Zach Poncher @zach_poncher
4. Adv VI final reviews, photo by Tony Tu @wu_chi_tung_
5. Angela Che Jin Lee @Che_charl_an
6. Annie An @anniea0430 + Liberty Chapman @_lchapman_
7. Siyuan Yao @s.a.y_y
Photography by Amy Suzuki, with Jes Zhang @jes_mingjia.

Final Reviews models, drawings, and films from architecture studios and CDP Colloquium III, led by Catherine Griffiths @catherine_griffiths + Ziv Schneider, Nahyun Hwang @nahyun.hwang @nhdm_arch, Christoph a. Kumpusch @c_kumpusch, Jing Liu @solidobjectives + Alessandra Cianchetta, Michalis Raftopoulos @architectureresearchathens + Alejandro Marin, Galia Solomonoff @solomonoffarchitecture, and Marc Tsurumaki @ltlarchitects.
Student Works:
1. Minjae Kim @man.duu_oo, Hyunyoung Kim @hyunyoungkimmm, Danielle Min @danielle_min_
2. Steven Dela Cruz Duncan @helloiamstevenduncan
3. Zach Poncher @zach_poncher
4. Adv VI final reviews, photo by Tony Tu @wu_chi_tung_
5. Angela Che Jin Lee @Che_charl_an
6. Annie An @anniea0430 + Liberty Chapman @_lchapman_
7. Siyuan Yao @s.a.y_y
Photography by Amy Suzuki, with Jes Zhang @jes_mingjia.

Final Reviews models, drawings, and films from architecture studios and CDP Colloquium III, led by Catherine Griffiths @catherine_griffiths + Ziv Schneider, Nahyun Hwang @nahyun.hwang @nhdm_arch, Christoph a. Kumpusch @c_kumpusch, Jing Liu @solidobjectives + Alessandra Cianchetta, Michalis Raftopoulos @architectureresearchathens + Alejandro Marin, Galia Solomonoff @solomonoffarchitecture, and Marc Tsurumaki @ltlarchitects.
Student Works:
1. Minjae Kim @man.duu_oo, Hyunyoung Kim @hyunyoungkimmm, Danielle Min @danielle_min_
2. Steven Dela Cruz Duncan @helloiamstevenduncan
3. Zach Poncher @zach_poncher
4. Adv VI final reviews, photo by Tony Tu @wu_chi_tung_
5. Angela Che Jin Lee @Che_charl_an
6. Annie An @anniea0430 + Liberty Chapman @_lchapman_
7. Siyuan Yao @s.a.y_y
Photography by Amy Suzuki, with Jes Zhang @jes_mingjia.

Final Reviews models, drawings, and films from architecture studios and CDP Colloquium III, led by Catherine Griffiths @catherine_griffiths + Ziv Schneider, Nahyun Hwang @nahyun.hwang @nhdm_arch, Christoph a. Kumpusch @c_kumpusch, Jing Liu @solidobjectives + Alessandra Cianchetta, Michalis Raftopoulos @architectureresearchathens + Alejandro Marin, Galia Solomonoff @solomonoffarchitecture, and Marc Tsurumaki @ltlarchitects.
Student Works:
1. Minjae Kim @man.duu_oo, Hyunyoung Kim @hyunyoungkimmm, Danielle Min @danielle_min_
2. Steven Dela Cruz Duncan @helloiamstevenduncan
3. Zach Poncher @zach_poncher
4. Adv VI final reviews, photo by Tony Tu @wu_chi_tung_
5. Angela Che Jin Lee @Che_charl_an
6. Annie An @anniea0430 + Liberty Chapman @_lchapman_
7. Siyuan Yao @s.a.y_y
Photography by Amy Suzuki, with Jes Zhang @jes_mingjia.

Final Reviews models, drawings, and films from architecture studios and CDP Colloquium III, led by Catherine Griffiths @catherine_griffiths + Ziv Schneider, Nahyun Hwang @nahyun.hwang @nhdm_arch, Christoph a. Kumpusch @c_kumpusch, Jing Liu @solidobjectives + Alessandra Cianchetta, Michalis Raftopoulos @architectureresearchathens + Alejandro Marin, Galia Solomonoff @solomonoffarchitecture, and Marc Tsurumaki @ltlarchitects.
Student Works:
1. Minjae Kim @man.duu_oo, Hyunyoung Kim @hyunyoungkimmm, Danielle Min @danielle_min_
2. Steven Dela Cruz Duncan @helloiamstevenduncan
3. Zach Poncher @zach_poncher
4. Adv VI final reviews, photo by Tony Tu @wu_chi_tung_
5. Angela Che Jin Lee @Che_charl_an
6. Annie An @anniea0430 + Liberty Chapman @_lchapman_
7. Siyuan Yao @s.a.y_y
Photography by Amy Suzuki, with Jes Zhang @jes_mingjia.

Final Reviews models, drawings, and films from architecture studios and CDP Colloquium III, led by Catherine Griffiths @catherine_griffiths + Ziv Schneider, Nahyun Hwang @nahyun.hwang @nhdm_arch, Christoph a. Kumpusch @c_kumpusch, Jing Liu @solidobjectives + Alessandra Cianchetta, Michalis Raftopoulos @architectureresearchathens + Alejandro Marin, Galia Solomonoff @solomonoffarchitecture, and Marc Tsurumaki @ltlarchitects.
Student Works:
1. Minjae Kim @man.duu_oo, Hyunyoung Kim @hyunyoungkimmm, Danielle Min @danielle_min_
2. Steven Dela Cruz Duncan @helloiamstevenduncan
3. Zach Poncher @zach_poncher
4. Adv VI final reviews, photo by Tony Tu @wu_chi_tung_
5. Angela Che Jin Lee @Che_charl_an
6. Annie An @anniea0430 + Liberty Chapman @_lchapman_
7. Siyuan Yao @s.a.y_y
Photography by Amy Suzuki, with Jes Zhang @jes_mingjia.

Final Reviews models, drawings, and videos from architecture studios and electives, led by Håvard Breivik-Khan @havard.breivik.khan, Juan Herreros @estudioherreros & Aistyara Shaning @aistyaracharmita, Lydia Kallipoliti @lydiakallipoliti, Robert Marino, Zachary Mulitauaopele, and Alessandro Orsini @orsiniale.
Student Works:
1. Brandi Reed
2. Kelsey Wang @wyeslek
3. Yuka Imada @yukarch_
4. Andrew Seungho Yang @ynsnho_lin, Guan-Yo Siao @kenny_siao, and Yoon Ah Kim @luna2175
5. Wei Li @weili7711
6. Ben Spears @ben.be.jammin + Annie An @anniea0430
Photography by Amy Suzuki, with Jes Zhang @jes_mingjia.
Final Reviews models, drawings, and videos from architecture studios and electives, led by Håvard Breivik-Khan @havard.breivik.khan, Juan Herreros @estudioherreros & Aistyara Shaning @aistyaracharmita, Lydia Kallipoliti @lydiakallipoliti, Robert Marino, Zachary Mulitauaopele, and Alessandro Orsini @orsiniale.
Student Works:
1. Brandi Reed
2. Kelsey Wang @wyeslek
3. Yuka Imada @yukarch_
4. Andrew Seungho Yang @ynsnho_lin, Guan-Yo Siao @kenny_siao, and Yoon Ah Kim @luna2175
5. Wei Li @weili7711
6. Ben Spears @ben.be.jammin + Annie An @anniea0430
Photography by Amy Suzuki, with Jes Zhang @jes_mingjia.

Final Reviews models, drawings, and videos from architecture studios and electives, led by Håvard Breivik-Khan @havard.breivik.khan, Juan Herreros @estudioherreros & Aistyara Shaning @aistyaracharmita, Lydia Kallipoliti @lydiakallipoliti, Robert Marino, Zachary Mulitauaopele, and Alessandro Orsini @orsiniale.
Student Works:
1. Brandi Reed
2. Kelsey Wang @wyeslek
3. Yuka Imada @yukarch_
4. Andrew Seungho Yang @ynsnho_lin, Guan-Yo Siao @kenny_siao, and Yoon Ah Kim @luna2175
5. Wei Li @weili7711
6. Ben Spears @ben.be.jammin + Annie An @anniea0430
Photography by Amy Suzuki, with Jes Zhang @jes_mingjia.

Final Reviews models, drawings, and videos from architecture studios and electives, led by Håvard Breivik-Khan @havard.breivik.khan, Juan Herreros @estudioherreros & Aistyara Shaning @aistyaracharmita, Lydia Kallipoliti @lydiakallipoliti, Robert Marino, Zachary Mulitauaopele, and Alessandro Orsini @orsiniale.
Student Works:
1. Brandi Reed
2. Kelsey Wang @wyeslek
3. Yuka Imada @yukarch_
4. Andrew Seungho Yang @ynsnho_lin, Guan-Yo Siao @kenny_siao, and Yoon Ah Kim @luna2175
5. Wei Li @weili7711
6. Ben Spears @ben.be.jammin + Annie An @anniea0430
Photography by Amy Suzuki, with Jes Zhang @jes_mingjia.

Final Reviews models, drawings, and videos from architecture studios and electives, led by Håvard Breivik-Khan @havard.breivik.khan, Juan Herreros @estudioherreros & Aistyara Shaning @aistyaracharmita, Lydia Kallipoliti @lydiakallipoliti, Robert Marino, Zachary Mulitauaopele, and Alessandro Orsini @orsiniale.
Student Works:
1. Brandi Reed
2. Kelsey Wang @wyeslek
3. Yuka Imada @yukarch_
4. Andrew Seungho Yang @ynsnho_lin, Guan-Yo Siao @kenny_siao, and Yoon Ah Kim @luna2175
5. Wei Li @weili7711
6. Ben Spears @ben.be.jammin + Annie An @anniea0430
Photography by Amy Suzuki, with Jes Zhang @jes_mingjia.

Final Reviews models, drawings, and videos from architecture studios and electives, led by Håvard Breivik-Khan @havard.breivik.khan, Juan Herreros @estudioherreros & Aistyara Shaning @aistyaracharmita, Lydia Kallipoliti @lydiakallipoliti, Robert Marino, Zachary Mulitauaopele, and Alessandro Orsini @orsiniale.
Student Works:
1. Brandi Reed
2. Kelsey Wang @wyeslek
3. Yuka Imada @yukarch_
4. Andrew Seungho Yang @ynsnho_lin, Guan-Yo Siao @kenny_siao, and Yoon Ah Kim @luna2175
5. Wei Li @weili7711
6. Ben Spears @ben.be.jammin + Annie An @anniea0430
Photography by Amy Suzuki, with Jes Zhang @jes_mingjia.
For the concluding lecture of GSAPP’s Spring 2026 lecture series, Jacques Herzog @herzogdemeuron spoke with Dean Andres Jaque @andres_jaque about Astor Place Hotel, and using architecture’s physicality for the benefit of New York City.
Curated by Bart-Jan Polman @bartjanpolman with Jean Im @im.y.jean, the GSAPP Spring Lecture Series brought together a range of voices across the discipline. This lecture, along with a selection of events from the semester, is available to stream on GSAPP’s YouTube channel.
Photo + Video by Hatnim Lee @hatnimlee and Stephanie Keith @steffikeith.
INTERWOVEN rethinks how architecture can support community health through culturally grounded, bottom-up practices.
By bridging immigrant herbal traditions, communal care, and institutional healthcare, the project aims to cultivate an environment where culture and wellness co-evolve and where the building acts as an operational mediator rather than a prescriptive container.
The facade and structure of the existing brick factories are retained, and the one-level flat-roof distribution building keeps its column grid and reuses facade material. Interlaced spaces support flexibility, collaboration, and chance encounters—herb drying overlaps with communal cooking, circulation merges with learning pockets, and climatic gradients create sensory shifts.
Project by Yake Wang @yake.w and Hongan Nan @hongan.nan for Advanced Studio V (Fall 2025), led by Phu Hoang @moduarchitecture.
View more #GSAPPStudentWork at the link in bio.

INTERWOVEN rethinks how architecture can support community health through culturally grounded, bottom-up practices.
By bridging immigrant herbal traditions, communal care, and institutional healthcare, the project aims to cultivate an environment where culture and wellness co-evolve and where the building acts as an operational mediator rather than a prescriptive container.
The facade and structure of the existing brick factories are retained, and the one-level flat-roof distribution building keeps its column grid and reuses facade material. Interlaced spaces support flexibility, collaboration, and chance encounters—herb drying overlaps with communal cooking, circulation merges with learning pockets, and climatic gradients create sensory shifts.
Project by Yake Wang @yake.w and Hongan Nan @hongan.nan for Advanced Studio V (Fall 2025), led by Phu Hoang @moduarchitecture.
View more #GSAPPStudentWork at the link in bio.

INTERWOVEN rethinks how architecture can support community health through culturally grounded, bottom-up practices.
By bridging immigrant herbal traditions, communal care, and institutional healthcare, the project aims to cultivate an environment where culture and wellness co-evolve and where the building acts as an operational mediator rather than a prescriptive container.
The facade and structure of the existing brick factories are retained, and the one-level flat-roof distribution building keeps its column grid and reuses facade material. Interlaced spaces support flexibility, collaboration, and chance encounters—herb drying overlaps with communal cooking, circulation merges with learning pockets, and climatic gradients create sensory shifts.
Project by Yake Wang @yake.w and Hongan Nan @hongan.nan for Advanced Studio V (Fall 2025), led by Phu Hoang @moduarchitecture.
View more #GSAPPStudentWork at the link in bio.

INTERWOVEN rethinks how architecture can support community health through culturally grounded, bottom-up practices.
By bridging immigrant herbal traditions, communal care, and institutional healthcare, the project aims to cultivate an environment where culture and wellness co-evolve and where the building acts as an operational mediator rather than a prescriptive container.
The facade and structure of the existing brick factories are retained, and the one-level flat-roof distribution building keeps its column grid and reuses facade material. Interlaced spaces support flexibility, collaboration, and chance encounters—herb drying overlaps with communal cooking, circulation merges with learning pockets, and climatic gradients create sensory shifts.
Project by Yake Wang @yake.w and Hongan Nan @hongan.nan for Advanced Studio V (Fall 2025), led by Phu Hoang @moduarchitecture.
View more #GSAPPStudentWork at the link in bio.

INTERWOVEN rethinks how architecture can support community health through culturally grounded, bottom-up practices.
By bridging immigrant herbal traditions, communal care, and institutional healthcare, the project aims to cultivate an environment where culture and wellness co-evolve and where the building acts as an operational mediator rather than a prescriptive container.
The facade and structure of the existing brick factories are retained, and the one-level flat-roof distribution building keeps its column grid and reuses facade material. Interlaced spaces support flexibility, collaboration, and chance encounters—herb drying overlaps with communal cooking, circulation merges with learning pockets, and climatic gradients create sensory shifts.
Project by Yake Wang @yake.w and Hongan Nan @hongan.nan for Advanced Studio V (Fall 2025), led by Phu Hoang @moduarchitecture.
View more #GSAPPStudentWork at the link in bio.

INTERWOVEN rethinks how architecture can support community health through culturally grounded, bottom-up practices.
By bridging immigrant herbal traditions, communal care, and institutional healthcare, the project aims to cultivate an environment where culture and wellness co-evolve and where the building acts as an operational mediator rather than a prescriptive container.
The facade and structure of the existing brick factories are retained, and the one-level flat-roof distribution building keeps its column grid and reuses facade material. Interlaced spaces support flexibility, collaboration, and chance encounters—herb drying overlaps with communal cooking, circulation merges with learning pockets, and climatic gradients create sensory shifts.
Project by Yake Wang @yake.w and Hongan Nan @hongan.nan for Advanced Studio V (Fall 2025), led by Phu Hoang @moduarchitecture.
View more #GSAPPStudentWork at the link in bio.

INTERWOVEN rethinks how architecture can support community health through culturally grounded, bottom-up practices.
By bridging immigrant herbal traditions, communal care, and institutional healthcare, the project aims to cultivate an environment where culture and wellness co-evolve and where the building acts as an operational mediator rather than a prescriptive container.
The facade and structure of the existing brick factories are retained, and the one-level flat-roof distribution building keeps its column grid and reuses facade material. Interlaced spaces support flexibility, collaboration, and chance encounters—herb drying overlaps with communal cooking, circulation merges with learning pockets, and climatic gradients create sensory shifts.
Project by Yake Wang @yake.w and Hongan Nan @hongan.nan for Advanced Studio V (Fall 2025), led by Phu Hoang @moduarchitecture.
View more #GSAPPStudentWork at the link in bio.
INTERWOVEN rethinks how architecture can support community health through culturally grounded, bottom-up practices.
By bridging immigrant herbal traditions, communal care, and institutional healthcare, the project aims to cultivate an environment where culture and wellness co-evolve and where the building acts as an operational mediator rather than a prescriptive container.
The facade and structure of the existing brick factories are retained, and the one-level flat-roof distribution building keeps its column grid and reuses facade material. Interlaced spaces support flexibility, collaboration, and chance encounters—herb drying overlaps with communal cooking, circulation merges with learning pockets, and climatic gradients create sensory shifts.
Project by Yake Wang @yake.w and Hongan Nan @hongan.nan for Advanced Studio V (Fall 2025), led by Phu Hoang @moduarchitecture.
View more #GSAPPStudentWork at the link in bio.

INTERWOVEN rethinks how architecture can support community health through culturally grounded, bottom-up practices.
By bridging immigrant herbal traditions, communal care, and institutional healthcare, the project aims to cultivate an environment where culture and wellness co-evolve and where the building acts as an operational mediator rather than a prescriptive container.
The facade and structure of the existing brick factories are retained, and the one-level flat-roof distribution building keeps its column grid and reuses facade material. Interlaced spaces support flexibility, collaboration, and chance encounters—herb drying overlaps with communal cooking, circulation merges with learning pockets, and climatic gradients create sensory shifts.
Project by Yake Wang @yake.w and Hongan Nan @hongan.nan for Advanced Studio V (Fall 2025), led by Phu Hoang @moduarchitecture.
View more #GSAPPStudentWork at the link in bio.
The Instagram Story Viewer is an easy tool that lets you secretly watch and save Instagram stories, videos, photos, or IGTV. With this service, you can download content and enjoy it offline whenever you like. If you find something interesting on Instagram that you’d like to check out later or want to view stories while staying anonymous, our Viewer is perfect for you. Anonstories offers an excellent solution for keeping your identity hidden. Instagram first launched the Stories feature in August 2023, which was quickly adopted by other platforms due to its engaging, time-sensitive format. Stories let users share quick updates, whether photos, videos, or selfies, enhanced with text, emojis, or filters, and are visible for only 24 hours. This limited time frame creates high engagement compared to regular posts. In today’s world, Stories are one of the most popular ways to connect and communicate on social media. However, when you view a Story, the creator can see your name in their viewer list, which may be a privacy concern. What if you wish to browse Stories without being noticed? Here’s where Anonstories becomes useful. It allows you to watch public Instagram content without revealing your identity. Simply enter the username of the profile you’re curious about, and the tool will display their latest Stories. Features of Anonstories Viewer: - Anonymous Browsing: Watch Stories without showing up on the viewer list. - No Account Needed: View public content without signing up for an Instagram account. - Content Download: Save any Stories content directly to your device for offline use. - View Highlights: Access Instagram Highlights, even beyond the 24-hour window. - Repost Monitoring: Track the reposts or engagement levels on Stories for personal profiles. Limitations: - This tool works only with public accounts; private accounts remain inaccessible. Benefits: - Privacy-Friendly: Watch any Instagram content without being noticed. - Simple and Easy: No app installation or registration required. - Exclusive Tools: Download and manage content in ways Instagram doesn’t offer.
Keep track of Instagram updates discreetly while protecting your privacy and staying anonymous.
View profiles and photos anonymously with ease using the Private Profile Viewer.
This free tool allows you to view Instagram Stories anonymously, ensuring your activity remains hidden from the story uploader.
Anonstories lets users view Instagram stories without alerting the creator.
Works seamlessly on iOS, Android, Windows, macOS, and modern browsers like Chrome and Safari.
Prioritizes secure, anonymous browsing without requiring login credentials.
Users can view public stories by simply entering a username—no account needed.
Downloads photos (JPEG) and videos (MP4) with ease.
The service is free to use.
Content from private accounts can only be accessed by followers.
Files are for personal or educational use only and must comply with copyright rules.
Enter a public username to view or download stories. The service generates direct links for saving content locally.