Upcoming:
May 9, Haus der Statistik, KO-Markt, Berlin
March 9, De Ceuvel, Amsterdam
March 5, LSA, Utrecht
Past:
CPs: Intermediaries Within Urban Governance
with Lada Hršak, tutor de wallen glossary – literacy of spatial justice
February 11, 19.30 hours, Academy of Architecture Amsterdam
This studio begins with a simple act: learning how to see. The capacity of observation and changing of perspectives serves as the introduction to spatial justice. We situate ourselves in De Wallen, the neighbourhood just outside the Academy doors, and treat it as a living archive. There, across time, power is negotiated in silent alleys, through surveillance cameras, behind drawn curtains, and in moments of agency that rarely make it into official maps. The basic question we address is: Who is excluded, and how? By walking, observing, recording, drawing and rebuilding spatial conditions that facilitate exclusion/protection, students learn to read the city through the perspectives of spatial literacy.
Citizen Professionals Reclaiming Collective Spaces
with Michael Obrist, Professor for Housing and Design, TU Vienna and moderated by Anna Soucek, urban researcher and editor at Radio Ö1.
Thanks to the invitation by Elke Krasny, the Professor for Art and Education at the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna.
January 15, 18 hours, Conference Room, Academy of Fine Arts Vienna
Citizens have become more vocal than ever. However, in times of governmental withdrawal and the privatisation of public goods, how do they claim a seat at the table? Drawing on projects in Amsterdam, Berlin, and Vienna, Karin Christof’s research illustrates how citizens can act and empower themselves in this process, which involves learning to collaborate, becoming intermediaries, and balancing resistance to dominant market logics alongside strategic engagement with existing constellations of power and influence—all in service of the common good. The concept of the Citizen Professional serves as a practical reference for citizens and for anyone involved in shaping public space and architecture. It offers a grounded argument for why such involvement matters.

Michael Obrist is Professor for Housing and Design and Head of the Housing and Design Research Department at TU Vienna. In 2025, he was the co-curator of the Austrian Pavilion “Agency for Better Living” at the Venice Biennale. As one of the five founding partners of feld72 Architects in Vienna, his practice focuses on housing, educational and office buildings, and urbanism, and has received numerous awards as well as participated in biennales worldwide. Obrist made a central contribution to the creation of the interdisciplinary Centre for New Social Housing, jointly initiated by TU Vienna and the International Building Exhibition IBA Vienna 2022. He has co-edited critical publications on housing, including ARCH+ “Agengy for Better Living” and ARCH+ “Vienna.The End of Housing (as a Typology)” with Christina Lenart and Bernadette Krejs, as well as “The Last Grand Tour” (Park Books) with Antonietta Putzu.
Anna Soucek studied art history in London and is co-founder of the “forum für experimentelle architektur”. She is a member of ORTE Lower Austrian Architecture Network and has engaged as an editor at ORF’s Radio Österreich 1 since 2004, moderating and desgining articles for the programs Kulturjournal, Nachtquartier, Kunstradio and Ö1 Kunstsonntag. She also wrote texts for print media such as “Salzburger Nachrichten”, “KON constructive” and “QUER-Magazin: Architecture and Life in Urban Spaces” with a focus on visual art, architecture, urban development and art in public spaces.