Michele Lamprakos

Michele Lamprakos

Associate Professor
Room 1226

Biography

Trained as an architect and historian, Michele Lamprakos’s career has combined teaching, research, and practice in architecture, preservation, and community development. Her research focuses on two main themes: the lives and layers of buildings and sites; and the entangled histories of Islam and Christianity in the Mediterranean. 

She is author of Building a World Heritage City: Sanaa Yemen, the first work on urban heritage to be recognized by the Society of Architectural Historians’ Spiro Kostof Award (Honorable Mention, 2018). Her forthcoming book, Memento Mauri: the Afterlife of the Great Mosque of Cordoba, explores that building’s changing fabric and meaning as cathedral, historic monument, and symbol of the Islamic past in Spain. Her research has been supported by the National Endowment for the Humanities, the Center for Advanced Study in the Visual Arts, the Graham Foundation, and other institutions.

Lamprakos lectures widely and has co-organized symposia and panels, including “Heritage and the Arab Spring” (Freer Gallery of Art, 2014) which explored the role of cultural heritage in a shifting Middle East. Her courses include “Islam in Africa: architecture and culture”; a two-part sequence on Mediterranean cities; and two thematic seminars: “Adaptation” and Destruction, Memory, Renewal.” She also teaches design studios and directs thesis projects on historically layered sites in the US and abroad. In spring 2025 she will co-teach a Global Studio on Spanish colonial architecture in Tetouan, Morocco with Madrid-based architect and MAPP alumnus, Adam Bresnick.

Before joining MAPP Lamprakos taught for the University of Pennsylvania, Duke University, and the Maryland Institute College of Art. Her professional work has included design and preservation for buildings that range in scale from tobacco warehouses to prewar single-family houses. She has served as Technical Reviewer for the Aga Khan Award for Architecture and as Desk Reviewer for UNESCO.

Photo: J. M. Ayala
Education
Ph.D. in History, Theory and Criticism of Architecture and Art/Aga Khan Program in Islamic Architecture
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
2006
Master of Architecture
University of California, Berkeley
1992
Bachelor of Arts in Near Eastern Studies
Princeton University
1983
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