Announcing the GSD’s Spring 2026 Public Programs

An animation that says Public Programs Spring 2026 in multiple languages

The Harvard Graduate School of Design (GSD) announces its spring 2026 public programs and exhibitions, a series that challenges the politics of environmentalism, computation, and urban infrastructure.
 
Curated by Jungyoon Kim and presented with the Korea Institute at Harvard University, the exhibition Designers of Mountain and Water: Alternative Landscapes for a Changing Climate, on view in the Druker Design Gallery through May 15, features 58 projects by landscape architects at the forefront of their field in East and Southeast Asia. Participating designers join scholars and researchers for a conference on February 5 & 6, co-organized by Korea Institute director Nicholas Harkness, to discuss how to balance the social, cultural, and ecological aspects of landscape architecture while addressing the reality of climate change. 
 
The pressing need to confront that reality motivates interdisciplinary public programs this season. Longtime activist and writer Bill McKibben argues in his lecture “A Fresh Start for Our Cities” (March 26) that abundant renewable energy from the sun holds the potential to transform the built environment, powering the development of sustainable urban centers for all. Philosopher Nancy Fraser, in her role as Senior Loeb Scholar, offers a challenging assessment of the class politics embedded in green movements with her public talk “Against the Environmentalism of the Rich” (April 15). Wheelwright Prize winner Marina Otero Verzier outlines a radical vision for sustainable computation in “Feral Clouds” (March 9), a lecture based on her research into the environmental impacts of digital infrastructure and the politics of data center design. 

Film still showing exhaust fans of data center.
Marina Otero Verzier and Donostia International Physics Center, “Computational Compost,” film still, 2023.

As cities adapt to changing climates, questions of how urban space is shared and who has access to city life have become urgent. Kenzie Bok, a lifelong Bostonian, former city council member, and current CEO of the Boston Housing Authority, discusses the history and future of public housing in the struggle to design more equitable and just cities (March 5). Legal scholarDeborah N. Archer, in “Transportation, Infrastructure, and Race in American Cities” (April 14), investigates how the historical design of transit systems has intensified racial inequality.Chatpong Chuenrudeemol, founder of Chat Architects, highlights the ingenuity of unauthorized, vernacular buildings in responding to local urban challenges in his lecture “Bangkok Bastards” (March 31). 

Photo of floating structure with red fabric.
Chat Architects, Angsila Oyster Scaffolding Pavilion. Photo: W Workspace

This season’s program features visiting faculty members in public dialogue about the core issues that define their practices. Architects Fabrizio Barozzi and Alberto Veiga explore how contemporary architecture can grow from what already exists (February 12). Xaveer De Geyter, who is teaching a studio on interfaith spaces, draws on lessons from his career in his lecture on March 12. 

Concluding the program of public lectures, Jacques Herzog, in conversation with Grace La (April 21), outlines a vision for architecture today based on nearly five decades of practice. 

The GSD’s art director, Chad Kloepfer, and Willis Kingery, graphic design consultant, designed the visual identity of the fall 2025 and spring 2026 public programs to represent the linguistic diversity of the GSD. Students at the Harvard Graduate School of Design come from more than 60 countries and speak at least 56 languages. The spring 2026 poster is translated into 34 of those languages, reflecting the GSD’s cultural diversity and internationality.
 
The complete schedule of public programs appears below and can be viewed on Harvard GSD’s events calendar. All events will be livestreamed unless otherwise noted. 

January 20–May 15, 2026  
Designers of Mountain and Water: Alternative Landscapes for a Changing Climate, exhibition, Druker Design Gallery 

February 4, 6:30pm 
Mayors Imagining the Just City: Volume 6, panel discussion 

February 5–6 
Designers of Mountain and Water: Alternative Landscapes for a Changing Climate, conference 

February 12, 6:30pm 
Alberto Veiga and Fabrizio Barozzi, “Permanence and Transformation,” John Portman Lecture 

February 17, 6:30pm 
Anthony Dunne and Fiona Raby, “Unreal by Design,” lecture 

March 4, 6:30pm 
Zak Kyes, “Identity Crisis,” lecture 

March 5, 6:30pm 
Kenzie Bok, “The Past, Present, and Future of Public Housing,” John T. Dunlop Lecture 

March 9, 6:30pm 
Marina Otero Verzier, “Feral Clouds,” Wheelwright Prize Lecture 

March 10, 12:00pm 
Marina Otero Verzier with Kate Crawford, conversation 

March 12, 6:30pm 
Xaveer De Geyter, “Selected Work,” lecture 

March 26, 6:30pm 
Bill McKibben, “A Fresh Start for Our Cities,” open house lecture 

March 31, 6:30pm  
Chatpong Chuenrudeemol, “Bangkok Bastards,” lecture 

April 7, 6:30pm 
Kate Orff, “Throughlines,” lecture 

April 10, 1pm 
Living Together by Design: Housing to Connect Generations, symposium 

April 14, 6:30pm 
Deborah N. Archer “Transportation, Infrastructure, and Race in American Cities,” Jaqueline Tyrwhitt Urban Design Lecture 

April 15, 6:30pm 
Nancy Fraser, “Against the Environmentalism of the Rich,” Senior Loeb Scholar Lecture 

April 16, 6:30pm 
Michael Wang, lecture 

April 21, 6:30pm 
Jacques Herzog in Conversation with Grace La, John Hejduk Soundings Lecture 

April 24–25 
Cambridge Talks: Surfacing, symposium