Designing Climate-Ready Cities Powered by Visionary Philanthropy

Dan Stubbergaard points to a model in front of students and reviewers
Dan Stubbergaard with students and reviewers during the spring 2025 final review for "City as Resource."

Forward-looking donors are investing in ideas that help cities adapt, endure, and thrive.

Cities are heating faster than the planet itself. They absorb more heat, suffer more frequent floods, and strain infrastructure designed for another era. Incremental fixes no longer suffice. The built environment must adapt quickly—and that demands research, experimentation, and innovation that is practice-ready. At the GSD, forward-looking donors empower faculty, fellows, and students to take on this challenge now.

The Experimental Fellowship Program: Sustainable Practice Meets Design Technology 

Launched in summer 2025, the Experimental Fellowship—Harvard GSD program demonstrates how philanthropy accelerates impact. Supported by the Experimental Foundation , a Berlin-based nonprofit organization founded in 2022 by architect Prof. Regine Leibinger (MArch ’91), the fellowship invites two postdoctoral scholars to the GSD for one year to conduct practice-oriented research on healthy, low-carbon material systems for buildings, landscapes, and cities.

Each Experimental Fellow joins the Laboratory for Design Technologies (LDT), the School’s collaborative platform for exploring design’s frontiers at the intersection of technology and the built environment. Under the direction of Academic Dean and Kumagai Professor of Architectural Technology Martin Bechthold (DDes ’01), the fellows have access to advanced fabrication facilities, data-rich city models, and interdisciplinary mentorship across the GSD and Harvard.

Prof. Martin Bechthold in the trays
Prof. Martin Bechthold

What distinguishes this fellowship is its intent and time frame. Each project must yield tangible outcomes—physical prototypes, pilot applications, and publications or exhibitions—within a single year. This structure ensures that experimental ideas course through Gund Hall and rapidly evolve into tools and materials that can inform professional practice and policy alike.

“At the GSD, we are particularly interested in knowledge that is consequential for practice,” says Bechthold of the fellowship’s goal. “We acknowledge that faculty and students must engage in research, discourse, and learning that advance innovations on topics including, but not limited to, material solutions.”

Through initiatives like this, the Experimental Foundation fosters projects that aim to discover new territories in the field of architecture with the goal of changing how and with what we build. The program’s model of reciprocal collaboration links academia, philanthropy, and industry. Each fellowship culminates in a publicly shared body of research intended to advance low-carbon construction worldwide, thereby expanding the reach of sustainable design far beyond campus.

The Experimental Fellowship is really about bridging the gap between research, practice, and industry. It’s more important than ever to create space for experimentation. This fellowship collaboration with the Harvard GSD is deeply rooted in the shared recognition for fostering timely and meaningful intervention through education into building realities.

Regine Leibinger
Color headshot of Regine Leibinger
Regine Leibinger (MArch ’91) co-founded the architectural practice Barkow Leibinger with Frank Barkow, served as a design critic in architecture at the GSD from 2022 to 2025, and is currently a member of the Dean’s Council.

Through visionary support, the Experimental Fellowship—Harvard GSD positions the School as a testing ground for the next generation of climate-conscious design, transforming philanthropic investment into global change.

a student stands in front of room and receives applause from a row of reviewers
Regine Leibinger (seated left) led the fall 2024 studio, “REVISITING THE EXISTING: Resources from Sites of Speculation.”

Colman Family Faculty Support Fund Fuels Faculty Excellence  

Thanks to the generosity of Bridget Colman, a dedicated Dean’s Council member, and Mark M. Colman (AB ’83, MBA ’87), the Colman Family Faculty Support Fund is providing flexible support to faculty. This funding is fueling innovation, fostering collaboration, and promoting professional growth across all disciplines. Through the generosity of the Colman family, faculty members are being equipped to pursue bold ideas and help shape the future of design education.

A woman holds up a wine glass at a podium for a toast with a table of people in front of her
Bridget Colman leads a toast at the 2019 Fellowship Dinner.
Four people standing and smiling
The Colman family: Allegra Colman (AB ’21), Bridget Colman, Mark M. Colman (AB ’83, MBA ’87), and Mia Colman (AB ’23).

A Donor-Enabled Research Ecosystem

These two new funds are part of a larger ecosystem of donor-supported faculty research that positions the GSD as a hub for innovation. In 2024–2025, the following funds supported foward-focused initiatives: 

Together, these projects reveal how donor support turns seemingly abstract urgent issues into tangible research outcomes: tools, installations, and insights that extend far beyond Gund Hall. At the GSD, philanthropy transforms curiosity into practical, world-changing knowledge. 

Studios as Climate Laboratories

Philanthropy also fuels the School’s pedagogical core. Donor gifts for option studios enable students in urban design, landscape architecture, and architecture to test climate as the design brief itself. 

Each of these studios turned Gund Hall into a test bed, where real-time data, research, and industry critique informed design speculation—and where donors made it possible for students to wrestle with climate and urban crises in tangible, immediate ways.

Impact Beyond Gund Hall

Across the GSD’s design disciplines, from urban planning to landscape design and architecture, the GSD’s climate work is propelled by donors who believe the future can—and must—be designed differently. Their support affirms a core conviction of the GSD community: cities can thrive on a warming planet, and visionary philanthropy makes that future possible today.