Shelby Elizabeth Doyle

Under Construction

Home

Design & Research
American Wild
Computation & Construction Lab
Both/And: Fabricating Potentials
Exhibit Columbus - Installation
Exhibit Columbus - Exhibition
Melting - Water Soluble Formwork 
Re-Ordering Architecture
SEKI Collection

AI, Computation, & Feminism

ACADIA Cultural History Project
AI... To Be Determined
Equity in Computing
Future of Generative AI
Gradient: Authorial Asymmetries
Verbatim:  Archives, Access, and
Other Myths

   
Workshops & Residencies

Autodesk Build Space Grant
Architecture Ceramic Assemblies Workshop
Cyborg Sessions
Eventscape - Sikacrete - AIA NYC WIA
Haystack Fab Lab Residency
Haystack Open Studio Residency

Teaching: Research and Outreach

80/35 Pavilion 
Bluestem
Digital Clay
Disrupt/Displace
IM_RU
IM_RU v2.0
Mesophases
Penumbra
Plush

Teaching: Fabrication

Integrated Studio Bachelor of Architecture
Introduction to Digital Fabrication
Introduction to Architectural Robotics
Computation & Weaving: Seminar in Fabricating Tools
Undergraduate Independent Study Projects
Master of Science Thesis Projects

Water

City of Water: Architecture, Infrastructure, & the Floods of Phnom Penh
Losing Ground
Mekong Flux
Mekong Studio & Exhibition
Related Courses
Shifting Foundations
Urban Lab Phnom Penh
Water Curse or Blessing Exhibition
Water, Politics + Art Exhibition

Publications


About



Gradient Interview Feed #2 Inflections
Shelby Doyle with Kathy Velikov






gradient-journal.net/articles/authorial-asymmetries

Gradient is an online platform for architecture and urbanism from the University of Michigan Taubman College. Organized in “feeds” rather than “issues,” the journal aspires to lean in to the potentials of digital media formats, elevating nascent disciplinary conversations at Taubman and beyond. Feeds might be semi-defined topics, compelling misfits, or fragments of latent conversations: dim when first launched, but clarified over time. Each feed will remain active after its launch, welcoming responses and submissions in any format—image, video, text, and more. Conversations will stay active until they resolve themselves, lose relevance, or just fade away into the endless digital ether—the Gradient.