Nicholas de Monchaux (born July 30, 1973) is a designer and author, and currently Professor and Head of Architecture at MIT. [1] He was formerly Professor of Architecture and Urban Design in the College of Environmental Design at the University of California, Berkeley [2] and Director of the Berkeley Center for New Media. [3]
de Monchaux is the author of Spacesuit: Fashioning Apollo, [4] a cultural, physical, and intellectual history of the Apollo A7L spacesuit; the book was winner of the Eugene Emme Astronautical Literature Award [5] and shortlisted for the Author's Club Art Book (Sir Banister Fletcher) Prize. [6] In 2016, he published Local Code: 3,659 Proposals about Data, Design, and the Nature of Cities, [7] which combines several historical essays on urbanism, computing, and complexity with 3,659 designs for micro-scaled ecological interventions in San Francisco, Los Angeles, New York, and Venice. This work earned praise from The New York Times for its "intelligent enquiry and actionable theorizing," [8] and was exhibited at the Biennial of the Americas, [9] the Venice Architecture Biennale, [10] The Lisbon Architecture Triennial, [11] and SFMOMA. [12]
In 2012, de Monchaux was named as one of the "Public Interest Design 100." [13] He is a former fellow of the American Academy in Rome. [14]
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Nicholas de Monchaux (born July 30, 1973) is a designer and author, and currently Professor and Head of Architecture at MIT. [1] He was formerly Professor of Architecture and Urban Design in the College of Environmental Design at the University of California, Berkeley [2] and Director of the Berkeley Center for New Media. [3]
de Monchaux is the author of Spacesuit: Fashioning Apollo, [4] a cultural, physical, and intellectual history of the Apollo A7L spacesuit; the book was winner of the Eugene Emme Astronautical Literature Award [5] and shortlisted for the Author's Club Art Book (Sir Banister Fletcher) Prize. [6] In 2016, he published Local Code: 3,659 Proposals about Data, Design, and the Nature of Cities, [7] which combines several historical essays on urbanism, computing, and complexity with 3,659 designs for micro-scaled ecological interventions in San Francisco, Los Angeles, New York, and Venice. This work earned praise from The New York Times for its "intelligent enquiry and actionable theorizing," [8] and was exhibited at the Biennial of the Americas, [9] the Venice Architecture Biennale, [10] The Lisbon Architecture Triennial, [11] and SFMOMA. [12]
In 2012, de Monchaux was named as one of the "Public Interest Design 100." [13] He is a former fellow of the American Academy in Rome. [14]
{{
cite web}}
: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (
link)
{{
cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (
link)