Ariane Lourie Harrison, RA, AIA is a Principal and co-founder of Harrison Atelier and a registered architect in New York State. She has been a critic and lecturer at the Yale School of Architecture and Yale College since 2006, and also teaches at the Pratt Institute. Her projects and writing explore the concepts and realities of making architecture for multiple species, from her anthology Architectural Theories of the Environment: Posthuman Territory (Routledge, 2013) to “Feral Architecture,” in Aesthetics Equals Politics (MIT Press, 2019). Harrison Atelier has built several pavilions featuring cladding systems that accommodate multiple species. Currently under construction, the Pollinators Pavilion at Stone House Farm, Livingston, NY is a visitor center/field station that houses and monitors solitary bees with an innovative cladding system (awarded NYCML 2018 and Microsoft’s AI for the Earth grant 2019-20) fabricated in partnership with Lafarge Holcim’s Ductal® Workshop.
Her firm, Harrison Atelier (HAT), is a Brooklyn-based architecture firm co-founded with Seth Harrison. The firm’s central research question, “how can we build for more than one species?” challenges the conventions of a human-centric architecture and proposes cohabitation by multiple species while also seeking a larger role for architecture in environmental activism.