Aniella Sophie Goldinger is a landscape architect and transdisciplinary spatial researcher, based in Berlin. Her research is centered around oceanic hinterlands and the extended urban fabric of the polar territories and works to render visible the interplay between structures of power, ecologies, and more-than-human stakeholders across critical urban theory, mapping and science and technology studies. She is a research and teaching associate at the Institute of Architecture, Technische Universität Berlin and a member of the Architectural Association's Terrain Lab.

She holds a Master’s degree in landscape architecture, specializing in Arctic and sub-Arctic territories, from the Oslo School of Architecture, where her thesis research delved into the material agency and spatio-legality of sea ice in Arctic marine spatial planning, and a BA in architecture from the Royal Danish Academy, School of Architecture.
She participated on the Marine Research Institute's 2023 winter expedition to the Barents Sea and continues to be drawn towards the wet, cold and viscous territories of the polar regions.


Eimear Tynan
Klaus Thymann



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.

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

Atlas 2019
Kompas Fellowship
Writing
2019

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