Lecture Topic
Michael Meredith’s lecture will offer a view into a practice shaped by experimentation, humor, and an embrace of the unexpected. Focusing on a selection of recent projects—from buildings and furniture to writing and design speculation—Meredith will examine how architecture can operate across formats and scales and how narrative, collaboration, and constraint contribute to shaping new forms of spatial inquiry.
Speaker Biography
Michael Meredith is a founding partner of MOS, a New York–based architecture studio known for its experimental approach and thoughtful irreverence. Since its early days around an oversize table—part workspace, part testing ground—MOS has embraced architecture as a collaborative process rooted in curiosity, material exploration, and intellectual rigor. The studio’s work includes buildings, installations, furniture, and books, often operating at the intersection of serious research and imaginative exploration. Meredith is also a professor at Princeton University, where he contributes to contemporary architectural discourse through teaching, writing, and practice.
This program is made possible through the generous support of the Betty R. and George F. Pierce Jr., FAIA, Fund; the William B. Coleman Jr. Colloquium Fund for Architecture; and the Wm. W. Caudill Lecture Series Fund.