Drifting as Agency: Between ice, space and territory in the Arctic Ocean
in Arctic Practices - Design for a Changing World
Writing
forth.

Drifting space and unruly velocities: More-than-human marine spatial planning in the Fram Strait
Spool Journal
Writing
forth.

Viscous oceanscapes: mapping sea ice as a more-than-human material agent
RGS-IBG Annual International Conference, London
Talk
2024

Drifting, Viscosity, Edge
AAVS Terrain Lab, Venice 
Talk
2024

Towards an extended oceanscape: Gateways and more-than-human fluxes in frozen-fluid territories
IfA Conference, Berlin 
Talk
2024

Ribas Piera International Prize for Landscape Education
Collective
Recognition
2023

Honourable mention for best thesis
TerraNoda
Recognition
2023

Fieldnotes from the Barents Sea ice edge
The Norwegian Marine Research Institute
Fieldwork
2023

Honourable mention
Tech4Wildlife
Recognition
2023

Deep time Tromsøya
Atmosphere of the Urban Anthropocene
Exhibit
2022

Re-assessing the Assesment: Impacts of Green Colonialism in Norway
KERB Journal of Landscape Architecture
Writing
2022

A Manual for Future Impact Assesments
Independent / Mondo Books
Writing
2022

Nomination
RIBA President Silver Medal
Recognition
2021

Simultanous spaces
Royal Danish Academy, School of Architecture
Exhibit
2020

Jammerbugten under overfladen
Center for Sustainable Lifeforms
Exhibit
2020

Atlas 2019
Kompas Fellowship
Writing
2019

Landskab
BWERK Gallery
Exhibit
2018

Om at bygge by: Forhandlingens konstruktion
Royal Danish Academy
Writing
2018




Commoning the Wasteland(ed)
 
05–2021
59°49’19.7”N 10°52’08.6”E
MLA studio project
Oslo School of Architecture

Blue green infrastructures for an urban development in Stensrud, Norway.

Nominated for the RIBA President’s Silver Medal.

The project investigates the act of commoning as a way to rehabilitate the wasteland of an old stone deposit and extraction site at Stensrud, the last housing reserve within the Oslo municipality of Norway. The area is characterized by its folded and eroded bedrock landscape with a thin sediment layer – the quarry dramatically alters this condition, folding time and rearranging matter across geological strata.

The scope of the project concentrates on establish­ing the commons as a catalysator for future development, through a reciprocal relationship with the soil and the multispecies inhabitants of the site. Within the structural matrix of the site, two structures are established: the long soil beds and the pollinator patches, with each their distinctive way of emerging from the plan drawing, incrementally rendering the land­scape habitable.


Two artificial natural structures are established: the long soil beds and the pollinator patches, with each their distinctive way of emerging from the plan drawing: the soil beds from the linearity of the spine, stretching out horizontally and the pollination patch from the points of intersection within the grid. The column, provides shelter for natural pollinators, the first inhabitants of the common.