Designers of Mountain and Water: Alternative Landscapes for a Changing Climate
About this Event
The Sinographic compound (山水), denoting “mountain and water,” is widely shared across many Asian contexts, with different regional traditions and approaches. As shanshui in China, sansui in Japan, and sansu in Korea, the term has historically referred to creative artistic and philosophical visions of the natural world, combining the vital elements of a fully dynamic landscape. With climate change underway, what contemporary elements and dimensions of nature are necessary for designing and building sustainable spaces for human habitation and flourishing? Contemporary landscape architects from Northeast and Southeast Asia are trying to answer this question by rethinking the relation between social and natural forms. Their aim is to design habitable futures at the intersection of the two.
This conference will feature leading landscape architects and scholars from China, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, Singapore, and Thailand, as well as Australia and the US, to discuss the perspectives, histories, politics, and the most compelling projects of sustainable design in the Asian context.
This conference accompanies the exhibition Designers of Mountain and Water, which will be on display in the Druker Design Gallery from January 20 to April 4, 2026. Curated by Jungyoon Kim, Associate Professor in Practice of Landscape Architecture at the GSD, the exhibition features more than 45 works of landscape architecture by 23 practices in Asia.
Livestream
A livestream window will be added here on the day of the event.
Schedule
All events will be held in Gund Hall’s Piper Auditorium unless otherwise noted.
Thursday, February 5, 2025
WELCOME REMARKS
• Sarah M. Whiting, Dean and Josep Lluís Sert Professor of Architecture, Harvard GSD
• Gary Hilderbrand, Chair of the Department of Landscape Architecture, Peter Louis Hornbeck Professor in Practice of Landscape Architecture, Harvard GSD
• Jungyoon Kim, Associate Professor in Practice of Landscape Architecture, Harvard GSD
• Nicholas Harkness, Director, Korea Institute, Modern Korean Economy and Society Professor of Anthropology, Harvard University
Marisa Chearavanont, Founder and Chairman of Khao Yai Art Forest and Bangkok Kunsthalle, Chef Cares Foundation; Special Advisor to Senior Chairman of CP Group
Friday, February 6, 2025
SPEAKERS
• Jinah Kim, George P. Bickford Professor of Indian and South Asian Art and Professor of South Asian Studies, Harvard University
• Yukio Lippit, Jeffrey T. Chambers and Andrea Okamura Professor of History of Art and Architecture, Harvard University
• Eugene Wang, Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Professor of Asian Art; Founding Director of Harvard FAS CAMLab, Harvard University
MODERATOR
• Nicholas Harkness, Modern Korean Economy and Society Professor of Anthropology; Director of the Harvard Korea Institute, Harvard University
SPEAKERS
• Youngmin Kim, Professor of Landscape Architecture, University of Seoul, Republic of Korea.
• Kotchakorn Voraakhom, Chairwoman of the Climate Change Working Group (IFLA World), CEO and Founder of Landprocess, Bangkok, Thailand
• Heike Rahmann, Senior Lecturer, RMIT University, Melbourne, Australia, and Director of the Technology and Innovation Working Program, IFLA World
MODERATOR
• Jillian Walliss, Associate Professor in Landscape Architecture, Melbourne School of Design, University of Melbourne, Australia, and Co-Director of the Ethics, Equity and Social Justice Group, IFLA World
SPEAKERS
• Chisa Toda, Partner, studio on site, Tokyo, Japan
• Yu Han Goh, Director, Salad Dressing, Malaysia/Singapore
• Myeong-Jun Lee, Associate Professor, Hankyong National University, Republic of Korea
MODERATOR
• Jungyoon Kim, Associate Professor in Practice of Landscape Architecture, GSD, Harvard University; Founding Principal, PARKKIM, Republic of Korea & Boston
SPEAKERS
• Yoonjin Park, Founding Principal, PARKKIM, Seoul, Republic of Korea
• Dong Wang, Head of the Ecological City Studio, Turenscape, Beijing, China
• Shunsaku Miyagi, Founding Partner of PLACEMEDIA, Tokyo and Kyoto, Japan
MODERATOR
• Gary Hilderbrand, Chair of the Department of Landscape Architecture, Peter Louis Hornbeck Professor in Practice of Landscape Architecture, Harvard University; Founding principal of Reed Hilderbrand
Keynote
Marisa Chearavanont is a philanthropist, social entrepreneur, and cultural patron whose leadership spans contemporary art, gastronomy, education, and innovation. She is the founder and chairwoman of Khao Yai Art Forest and Bangkok Kunsthalle, pioneering a new approach to contemporary art as a catalyst for cultural and ecological renewal, community engagement, and human well-being.
A dedicated supporter of the arts, Mrs. Chearavanont’s long-standing vision is to advance Thai contemporary art on the global stage and to champion art as a medium of healing. She has contributed her expertise to advisory councils of leading institutions, including Tate Modern, the New Museum, the DIA Art Foundation, M+ Museum, and the Bangkok Art and Culture Centre. Mrs. Chearavanont previously founded and continues to chair the BUILD Foundation, which provides educational access and infrastructure for underserved communities, and the Chef Cares Foundation, which promotes compassion through gastronomy. She also serves as Special Advisor to the Senior Chairman of the Charoen Pokphand Group.

Speakers
Cultures of Nature
9:00 a.m. – 10:30 a.m., Friday, February 6, 2026, Piper Auditorium
Speakers

Jinah Kim is the George P. Bickford Professor of Indian and South Asian Art in the Department of History of Art & Architecture. She teaches courses on the art and architecture of South and Southeast Asia. She received her B.A. in Archaeology and Art History from Seoul National University, and her M.A. and Ph.D. in History of Art from the University of California, Berkeley. She is a recipient of a few prestigious fellowships and grants, such as an NEH-Digital Advancement Grant, a Getty-NEH post-doctoral fellowship, a Mellon Fellowship for Assistant Professors at the Institute of Advanced Study (Member in the School of Historical Studies), a research grant from Asian Cultural Council (Ford Foundation Fellow), and a Junior Fellowship from the American Institute of Indian Studies. At Harvard, Professor Kim has been leading the Arts program at the Lakshmi Mittal and Family South Asia Institute since 2018. In 2021-2022, she is the Johnson-Kulukundis Family Faculty Advisor in the Arts at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study.

Yukio Lippit is Professor of History of Art and Architecture, Harvard University. Lippit specializes in the history of Japanese art. His book Painting of the Realm: The Kano House of Painters in Seventeenth-Century Japan (2012) was awarded the Charles Rufus Morey Book Award by the College Art Association and the John Whitney Hall Book Prize by the Association of Asian Studies. Other books include Sesson Shukei: A Zen Monk-Painter in Medieval Japan (2022), The Artist in Edo (2018), Irresolution: The Paintings of Yoshiaki Shimizu (2017), Japanese Zen Buddhism and the Impossible Painting (2016), Sōtatsu: Making Waves (2016), The Thinking Hand: Tools and Traditions of the Japanese Carpenter (2013), Kenzo Tange: Architecture for the World (2012), Colorful Realm: Japanese Bird-and-Flower Paintings by Itō Jakuchū (1716-1800) (2012), and Awakenings: Zen Figure Painting in Medieval Japan (2007).

Eugene Wang is the Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Professor of Asian Art at Harvard University, where he holds positions in History of Art and Architecture, Archaeology, Study of Religion, TDM (Theater, Dance, and Medium), and Inner Asia and Altaic Studies. A 2005 Guggenheim Fellow, he is the art history editor of the Encyclopedia of Buddhism (2004). His research covers Asian Buddhist art as well as Chinese art history. His book, Shaping the Lotus Sutra: Buddhist Visual Culture in Medieval China (2005), on art of worldmaking, received the Sakamoto Nichijin Academic Achievement Award from Japan. He was recently twice recognized by the FAS Dean’s Fund for Promising Scholarship. He is the founding director of Harvard CAMLab dedicated to turning cultural-historical knowledge into sensorial experience. The exhibition he curated in 2024, Mawangdui: Art of Life, at the Hunan Museum, designed and produced by his team, won the2025 iF Design Award from Germany.

Nicholas Harkness is the Modern Korean Economy and Society Professor of Anthropology at Harvard University and Director of the Harvard Korea Institute. He specializes in the ethnographic study of communication and sociocultural semiosis (sign-processes). His research in South Korea has resulted in publications on various topics, including voice, language, music, religion, ritual, kinship, liquor, and the city of Seoul. His first book, Songs of Seoul: An Ethnography of Voice and Voicing in Christian South Korea (University of California Press, 2014), was awarded the Edward Sapir Book Prize by the Society for Linguistic Anthropology (Co-Winner, 2014, American Anthropological Association). Harkness’s second book is titled Glossolalia and the Problem of Language (University of Chicago Press, 2021). A number of his papers have been devoted to developing an anthropological approach to “qualia.” These papers incorporate the innovations of contemporary semiotics into the ethnographic theorization of sensuous social life.
The Work of Mountain and Water
10:45 a.m. – 12:10 p.m., Friday, February 6, 2026, Piper Auditorium
Speakers

Youngmin Kim is a Professor in the Department of Landscape Architecture at the University of Seoul and the Design Director at VRION, a landscape architecture firm based in Korea. He studied architecture and landscape architecture at Seoul National University and earned his MLA from the Harvard University Graduate School of Design. Before joining the University of Seoul, he practiced with the SWA Group, an internationally renowned landscape architecture firm in the United States and taught as a lecturer at the University of Southern California. He is also the author, editor, and translator of several books on landscape design and urbanism. Professor Kim has led major urban design and landscape projects in Korea, including the Paris Park Renovation, Gwanghwamun Square Renovation, and the Administrative City Central Plaza. His current research and practice focus on developing landscape-based solutions and strategies to mitigate the effects of climate change across multiple scales, with an emphasis on establishing quantitative methods to evaluate their effectiveness.

A leading voice in global climate resilience design, Thai landscape architect Kotchakorn Voraakhom uses design to combat the climate crisis in Southeast Asia’s dense urban context. She is the visionary behind LANDPROCESS and the Porous City Network, organizations dedicated to creating porous, water-absorbing public spaces that help cities adapt to extreme weather with vulnerable communities. Her transformative work includes Bangkok’s first climate-adaptive park, Chulalongkorn Centenary Park; the Thammasat Urban Rooftop Farm, Asia’s largest organic rooftop farm; the innovative Chao Phraya Sky Park; and the transformation of Thailand’s largest government complex with nature-based solutions.
Her global recognition includes a UN Climate Action Award, a spot on the TIME 100 Next list, and features in BBC 100 Women and Bloomberg Green 30. As a TED Fellow and one of the 15 Global Commission of World Economic Forum on Nature Positive Cities, she shares her expertise on landscape architecture for urban adaptability widely. Voraakhom holds a master’s from Harvard University and an honorary doctorate from the Norwegian University of Life Sciences. Her dedication reshapes urban landscapes to address both ecological survival and human dignity.

Heike Rahmann is a senior lecturer in landscape architecture at RMIT University. Her research and teaching focus on innovative design techniques and contemporary urbanism, combining theory, technology, and urban ecology. She explores these themes through critical writing and creative practice. Through her work, she has established strong partnerships with industry, community, and government bodies in Australia and Asia, especially in Japan, Korea, and Singapore. Heike has published widely, including three co-authored books: Tokyo Void: Possibilities in Absence (Jovis, 2014), Landscape Architecture and Digital Technologies (Routledge, 2016), and The Big Asian Book of Landscape Architecture (Jovis, 2020). For her most recent work, Landscape Architects as Changemakers (in collaboration with Jillian Walliss), she produced films and a bilateral exhibition that explores award-winning design practices in Australia and Japan. This research provides a deeper understanding of how landscape architects operate within their own contexts to achieve outcomes that positively contribute to environmental, economic, and cultural futures.

Jillian Walliss is an Associate Professor of Landscape Architecture and Associate Dean of Engagement at the Melbourne School of Design. She co-authored the book Landscape Architecture and Digital Technologies: Reconceptualising Design and Making (Routledge, 2015) with Dr. Heike Rahmann. This collaboration continued with the co-edited The Big Asian Book of Landscape Architecture (Jovis,2020), which is considered the first book to present a comprehensive account of contemporary Asian landscape architecture. Mixing theory, critical reflections, and design projects, it offers fresh perspectives for a discipline that has been dominated by North American and European influences. Jillian actively contributes to the broader design community, continually advancing the discourse on the cultural and technological dimensions of landscape architecture. She has curated several influential exhibitions, including Landscape Architects as Change Makers (2023) and The Square + The Park festival (2019), both of which examine the role of landscape architects in shaping public spaces and addressing cultural and ecological challenges.
Aesthetics of Sustainability
1:30 p.m. – 2:55 p.m., Friday, February 6, 2026, Piper Auditorium
Speakers

Chisa Toda is a co-founder ofstudio on site, a landscape architecture firm located in Tokyo, Japan. With over 30 years of experience, she has contributed to a diverse range of projects, spanning from intimate urban parks to large-scale regional restoration projects. Her portfolio includes award-winning works such as Shinagawa Central Garden, Nagano Prefectural Art Museum/Joyama Park, Tama New Town Regeneration, YKK Kurobe Center Park, and others. In her practice, Chisa focuses on creating spaces that address the challenges of global climate change while revitalizing the natural environment. She seeks to portray the aesthetics of nature by embodying the distinct features of each site, fostering environments that enhance the significance of nature in people’s lives. Chisa has taught at Tama Art University, Keio University, and Kanto Gakuin University in Japan. She received an MLA from Harvard University and a BA from Tokyo Zokei University.

Goh Yu Han is the Director of Design at Salad Dressing. She is a Malaysian-born landscape architect with a background in the arts and has been associated with the practice since its inception. Yu Han’s design philosophy is driven by her intrinsic interest in art history and Eastern literature. As a polymath, she inhabits the definition of a generalist and flirts with concepts of a post-humanist-driven ecology through her work. She believes that any inequality in this period of time will be the main value change, from slavery, to the fight against sexism, to the current ecological struggle against speciesism.

Myeong-Jun Lee is Associate Professor of Landscape Architecture at Hankyong National University. He received his PhD from Seoul National University. His research deals with the history, theory, and pedagogy of landscape design, with broader interests in landscape and visual culture. Early on, he examined how Western modes of representing landscape were introduced to Korea in the early twentieth century (“Nature as Spectacle: Photographic Representations of Nature in Early Twentieth-Century Korea,” History of Photography, 2015). He later analyzed shifts in ecological design thinking for urban parks in Seoul (“Ecological Design Strategies and Theory for Urban Parks in Seoul, 1990s–Present,” Land, 2021) and published on landscape pedagogy (Landscape Research, 2022). His more recent studies include “Design history: Constructing a Korean identity in New Gwanghwamun Square” (Habitat International, 2023) and “Trends and Issues of Garden City Municipal Projects in Korea” (Journal of the Korean Institute of Landscape Architecture, 2024, in Korean). He is also the author of Representing Landscape Architecture, a monograph in Korean on the history of design drawing (Hansoop, 2021), developed from his doctoral dissertation and later translated into Chinese by Southeast University Press.

Jungyoon Kim, Associate Professor in Practice of Landscape Architecture at the GSD, is a practicing landscape architect, registered in the Netherlands and in the state of Massachusetts. She found PARKKIM with Yoonjin Park in Rotterdam, upon their winning of the Taiwan Chichi Earthquake Memorial Design Competition (2004), and relocated to Seoul, Korea (2006). PARKKIM has completed projects of diverse scales and natures, ranging from corporate landscapes to civic venues. Current ongoing projects include the Suseongmot Lake Floating Stage in Daegu, Korea, for which PARKKIM won the international invited competition in 2024 and is scheduled for completion in 2026.
Beyond Sansu, Sansui, Shanshui
3:15 p.m. – 4:40 p.m., Friday, February 6, 2026, Piper Auditorium
Speakers

Yoonjin Park is the Founding principal of PARKKIM. He published a book, ‘Alternative Nature (2016)’, co-authored with Jungyoon Kim, the compilation of articles published by the two practicing landscape architects in various media since 2001. The term ‘alternative nature’ was first presented in their essay ‘Gangnam Alternative Nature: the experience of nature without parks’, published in the book ‘Asian Alterity (ed. William Lim, Singapore: 2007)’, rethinking the concept of ‘what is natural?’ within the context of contemporary East Asian urbanism.
Park has been invited for lectures and colloquiums by international institutions such as Melbourne University, Shih-Chien University, Harvard University. He received his MLA from the Harvard University Graduate School of Design.

Dong Wang is a Chinese National Registered Urban Planner and Senior Landscape Architect, leading the Eco-city Design Center at TURENSCAPE and serving as Deputy Director of the NbS Innovation Center at Peking University. He specializes in sponge city design, ecological planning, and nature-based solutions, with a portfolio spanning over 100 projects across China, Southeast Asia, the Middle East, and Europe—including internationally acclaimed works such as Benjakitti Forest Park in Bangkok and Beijing’s Ecological Security Pattern Planning. His practice integrates research, policy input, and ecological design, and has been recognized with major awards including the ASLA Honor Award, WAF Landscape of the Year, and the UIA Award. He is a frequent speaker at international forums and contributes to Chinese ecological restoration standards and publications.

Shunsaku Miyagi is a founding partner of PLACEMEDIA , an award-winning landscape and urban design firm based in Tokyo and Kyoto, Japan. He has worked on projects of various scales and locations both domestic and overseas for the past 35 years, ranging from small-scale housing complexes to large-scale urban redevelopment, and even resort development that harmoniously preserves and enhances the value of historic and natural environments. In particular, the highly acclaimed works he has worked on in collaboration with renowned Japanese architects such as Yoshio Taniguchi, Kengo Kuma and others are said to have contributed greatly to acknowledging the status of landscape architects in Japan.
Miyagi holds a Master of Landscape Architecture from Harvard University Graduate School of Design and a PhD in Urban Design Studies from Kyoto University. His extensive academic career includes appointments of Associate Professor in Landscape Architecture at Chiba University and Professor in Urban Design at The University of Tokyo. He is currently teaching an option studio at the GSD, which has fields of study in Japan for the academic year 2025-26.

Gary Hilderbrand, FASLA, FAAR, is the Peter Louis Hornbeck Professor in Practice and Chair of the Department of Landscape Architecture, Harvard Graduate School of Design. He is also principal and founder of Reed Hilderbrand Landscape Architects. Hilderbrand is a fellow and resident of the American Academy in Rome. He received the Design Medal from ASLA in 2017. His widely acclaimed publications include The Miller Garden: Icon of Modernism (Spacemaker Press, 1999) and Visible | Invisible: Landscape Works of Reed Hilderbrand (Metropolis Books, 2013).
Student Workshops
On Thursday, February 5, 2026, from 1:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m., workshops will be held for students in the GSD’s MLA program and six practitioners who are speaking at the conference. The workshops will also feature the following alumni of the MLA program, who will be paired with the practitioners to serve as session leaders for the workshops:
- Jonghyun Baek, Co-Founder and CEO, HEA, Republic of Korea, who will be paired with Yoonjin Park
- Ken Chongsuwat, Design Director, A7; Course Coordinator and Instructor, Chulalongkorn University INDA, Thailand, who will be paired with Kotchakorn Voraakhom
- Esther Kim, Designer, KPF, New York, USA, who will be paired with Shunsaku Miyagi.
- Parawee (Peak) Wachirabuntoon, Senior Designer, Michael Van Valkenburgh Associates Inc, Brooklyn, USA, who will be paired with Yu Han Goh.
- Ryota Sunakawa, MLA’26, Harvard GSD, who will be paired with Chisa Toda.
- Liwei Shen, Designer, Field Operations, who will be paired with Dong Wang.
- Max Robert Louis Piana, Lecturer in Landscape Architecture in Plant Science and Forest Ecology, Harvard GSD
Organizers
Jungyoon Kim, Associate Professor in Practice of Landscape Architecture at the GSD, is a practicing landscape architect, registered in the Netherlands and in the state of Massachusetts. She found PARKKIM with Yoonjin Park in Rotterdam, upon their winning of the Taiwan Chichi Earthquake Memorial Design Competition (2004), and relocated to Seoul, Korea (2006). PARKKIM has completed projects of diverse scales and natures, ranging from corporate landscapes to civic venues. Current ongoing projects include the Suseongmot Lake Floating Stage in Daegu, Korea, for which PARKKIM won the international invited competition in 2024 and is scheduled for completion in 2026.

Nicholas Harkness is the Modern Korean Economy and Society Professor of Anthropology at Harvard University. He specializes in the ethnographic study of communication and sociocultural semiosis (sign-processes). His research in South Korea has resulted in publications on various topics, including voice, language, music, religion, ritual, kinship, liquor, and the city of Seoul. His first book, Songs of Seoul: An Ethnography of Voice and Voicing in Christian South Korea (University of California Press, 2014), was awarded the Edward Sapir Book Prize by the Society for Linguistic Anthropology (Co-Winner, 2014, American Anthropological Association). Harkness’s second book is titled Glossolalia and the Problem of Language (University of Chicago Press, 2021). A number of his papers have been devoted to developing an anthropological approach to “qualia.” These papers incorporate the innovations of contemporary semiotics into the ethnographic theorization of sensuous social life.



Sponsors
This conference and affiliated exhibition are organized by the Graduate School of Design and the Korea Institute, Harvard University. They are also supported by the Harvard University Asia Center, the Southeast Asia Initiative, the Edwin O. Reischauer Institute of Japanese Studies, the Fairbank Center for Chinese Studies, the Harvard-Yenching Institute, the Kim Koo Forum at the Korea Institute, and the Weatherhead Center for International Affairs. The project is also supported by Daniel Urban Kiley Exhibition Fund at the GSD.





Cambridge Talks 2026: Surfacing
In his 1993 essay on “The Topology of Environmentalism,” anthropologist Timothy Ingold critiqued the concept of “the global environment.” The image of dwelling upon a solid globe, on the “surface of the earth,” he wrote, was predicated on a colonial idea of nature as fundamentally separate from human existence, and thus, implicitly, an object of intervention. In framing globe thinking as surface thinking, Ingold reminds us that the very notion of the “earth’s surface” is imbued with normative assumptions about how we relate to the world.
As students of the built environment, we revisit Ingold’s critique to call for the historicization of surface-making or surfacing. After all, the design disciplines are bound up in working upon the surface of the earth and in the physical and discursive production of surfaces more generally. From architectural cladding, street paving, and ground cover to the drawings, plans, and maps that represent them, surfaces mediate and condition our engagement with the world. What would it mean, then, to view surface-making as a unifying (albeit uneven) ground between architecture, landscape architecture, and urban planning? Thinking through the common ground of practice as surfacing may be a way of suturing the baggy concept of “environment” to its social and material dimensions.
Surfacing, as a methodological frame, entails a shift in focus from objects to processes. In the project of uncovering colonialism’s lasting legacies, historian Ann Laura Stoler has called for the study of ‘ruination’ rather than ‘ruins’; similarly, we are less interested in surfaces as such than in historical processes of surface-making and surface-breaking. We invite scholars, therefore, to consider the physical production of surfaces and their role in mediating our relationships with each other and with the environment. In historicizing surfaces as sites of intervention and management, we ask: How are surfaces physically produced? With what materials and what tools? What costs do these practices exact, socially or environmentally? Who builds surfaces, and to whose benefit or detriment? How are surfaces remade over time? What modes of maintenance or preservation are involved in doing so? And what happens when surfaces give way — to friction, mold, burst pipes, erosion, social unrest, or archival irruptions?
We welcome abstracts from doctoral students in architectural, landscape, urban, and environmental history, as well as in geography, the history of science and technology, art history, media studies, comparative literature, and related fields. Paper topics might address:
- Histories of landscape and architectural construction sites
- The geopolitics and/or environmental costs of sourcing and fabricating surface materials
- Histories of representational media as surfaces
- The use of surveying and mapping to document, produce, and manage surfaces
- Social, migration, or labor histories of making, breaking, or maintaining surfaces
- Histories of surface preservation (monuments, properties, landscapes, etc.)
- Alternative or counter-hegemonic practices and processes of surfacing
Date: Friday, April 24 – Saturday, April 25, 2026
Location: Gund Hall 112 Stubbins, 48 Quincy Street, Cambridge, MA, 02138
Submissions: Please submit a 300-word paper abstract, paper title, and 2-page CV via this form . Please direct any questions to [email protected].
- Abstracts are due by Friday, January 2, 2026.
- Authors of accepted papers will be notified by email by the end of January, 2026.
- Participants will be asked to submit a final draft of their paper by April 10, 2026.
About Cambridge Talks
Cambridge Talks is an annual conference organized by students of the PhD Program in Architecture, Landscape Architecture, and Urban Planning at the Harvard University Graduate School of Design, and is generously supported by the GSD’s Advanced Studies programs. Cambridge Talks 2026: Surfacing is organized by PhD students Charlie Gaillard, Anny Li, and Miranda Shugars and advised by Antoine Picon, G. Ware Travelstead Professor of the History of Architecture and Technology and Director of Doctoral Programs. The graphic identity for the conference was designed by Willis Kingery.

