Biography
Delphine Lewandowski joined the Stuckeman School's Department of Architecture as an assistant professor in the summer of 2025. She is a licensed French architect and researcher who explores the relationships between nature and architecture through a multidisciplinary practice that integrates ecological sciences and environmental ethics. Her objective is to develop architectural responses — both technical and theoretical — to the ongoing biodiversity and climate crises.
Lewandowski completed her doctoral studies at the Paris-Malaquais School of Architecture–PSL and the French National Museum of Natural History, in collaboration with the Paris-based firm ChartierDalix, where she reimagined the wall as “a living, autonomous habitat that hosts biodiversity.” Her contributions have earned several awards, including the International Prize for Ph.D. Dissertation on Cities from the French government.
Her teaching focuses on integrating non-humans into architectural design, advocating for alternative perspectives and an ethics of care in architecture.
Lewandowski has collaborated with various architecture practices and is regularly invited as a guest lecturer and critic at prestigious institutions including the Royal Danish Academy, KU Leuven, and École Spéciale d’Architecture.