Architecture and the Right to Heal, Resettler Nationalism in the Aftermath of Conflict and Disaster
ea369@cornell.edu
253 E. Sibley Hall, Ithaca, NY 14850
This book explores architecture’s role in healing after conflicts and disasters by discussing buildings and spaces in relation to transitional justice and energy transition. It locates spaces of political and ecological harm, and makes a call to repurpose them as healing places where violence and violations are confronted and accountability and reparations are instituted.
Esra Akcan is a Professor and the Director of Graduate Studies in the Department of Architecture, and a board member at the Institute for Comparative Modernities at Cornell University. She completed her architecture degree at the Middle East Technical University in Turkey, and her Ph.D. and postdoctoral degrees at Columbia University in New York. She taught at UI-Chicago, Humboldt University in Berlin, Columbia University, New School, and Pratt Institute in New York, and METU in Ankara.
Purchase the book with a 30% using the code: E25AKCRN
link: Duke University Press
© 2025 Duke University Press. All rights reserved
#forced displacement
Purchase the book with a 30% using the code: E25AKCRN
link: Duke University Press
© 2025 Duke University Press. All rights reserved
#forced displacement
Designing for endless fire
Christopher Hawthorne in discussion with Joseph G. Allen, Dana Cuff, Frank Frievalt, Michael Maltzan, Margot McDonald, and Arthi Varma
Photo © Pacific Palisades, June 2025. Photo Iwan Baan.
Harvard Design Magazine
48 Quincy Street
Gund Hall
Cambridge, MA 02138
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link: Harvard Design Magazine
© 2025 President and Fellows of Harvard College.
#climate change
Ecological Aesthetics and Architectural Autonomy: Oswald Mathias Ungers’s Designs for Solar Housing
Cornelia Escher and Lars Fischer
Photo Oswald Mathias Ungers, Hotel Berlin, Berlin/ Berlijn, axonometric drawing/ axonometrie (1977)
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link: OASE, Journal for Architecture
© 2025 OASE
#ecology&spaces