Press * Publications
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Press * Publications *
“A South Bronx Garden Offers a Place for New York’s Immigrant Communities to Keep Traditions Alive”



One's to Watch: Territorial Empathy. Design can be a force for systemic change, a form of protest against outdated regulations that impede progress.



Women and GIS, Volume 3: Champions of a Sustainable World shares impressive stories of women using geospatial technology to create sustainable solutions for problems the world faces.



This publication represents a snapshot of the cumulative work by Columbia Urban Design faculty and students over several years. What binds this work together is a shared commitment to social justice, and to the frame and scale of urban design as a means to address inequality.


A Garden on Its Way By Melody Stein. Territorial Empathy’s proposal for Bruckner Mott Haven Community Garden is a celebration of the community that has formed and re-formed this green space over the last half century.

‘Interior activism is about being within systems and choosing not to replicate them’
“A Sanctuary Within a Sanctuary City” Territorial Empathy spearheads inclusive and community-driven design with new community garden project in the South Bronx
Interviews Young Architect's Edition
Best of Architecture 2024. Designed by the nonprofit collective Territorial Empathy, this innovative project combines a mutual aid kitchen (housing the beautifully crafted brick oven that gives the project its name) run in partnership with local restaurant La Morada.

Un santuario autosostenible para los inmigrantes en el Bronx: el proyecto de la arquitecta colombiana Zarith Pineda
Rikers Island: Territorial Empathy and Reimagining Civic Engagement
Personal Influences and Lessons
10 arquitectas latinoamericanas que todos deberíamos conocer, En el marco del Día de la Mujer, reconocemos el trabajo de estas arquitectas que están transformando el mundo con su enfoque único, innovador y humano.
Combating Urbicide Using Public Interest Tech
Once a Bus That Transported Incarcerated People Around Rikers, Now a Gorgeous Work of Community Art