
We are excited to name Jessica Angima, Amanda Chen, Olivia Fu, Saritha Ramakrishna, Enrique Aureng Silva, and Lucas Vaqueiro as the newest cohort of New City Critics, a fellowship program empowering new, fearless, and diverse voices to challenge how we design and develop our cities.
Our fellows this year – writers, architects, organizers, journalists, artists, a self-professed bureaucracy nerd among them — will be training a critical gaze on New York City over the next nine months. The fellowship supports critics from underrepresented backgrounds through guest lectures and workshops, research guidance, networking and public events, and the production of new critical projects. Through work published on a dedicated vertical on Urban Omnibus, the fellowship encourages a more expansive conversation on the future of cities.
This year’s cohort was selected by committee members Garnette Cadogan, Sukjong Hong, Sam Maldonado, Anjulie Rao and Sabina Sethi Unni. The program will be led by Ming Lin, Program Coordinator at Urban Design Forum, and Mariana Mogilevich, Editor in Chief of Urban Omnibus.
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Jessica Angima
Amanda Chen
Olivia Fu
Saritha Ramakrishna
Enrique Aureng Silva*
Lucas Vaqueiro
*NCC Honorary Fellow actively participates in all program sessions and contributes to publications; this is an unpaid position.
Get to Know the Fellows
For the fellowship Jessica Angima will continue to probe “the process of becoming ‘of’ a place, indigeneity and urban practice, the relationships between land and psychic geography, climate policy and green space, repetition, and walking as a method of placemaking.”
Jessica is currently reading: Atlas of Urban Mythologies by Francesca Cocchiara and Sergios Strigklogiannis, Walking Art Practice: Reflections on Socially Engaged Paths by Ernesto Pujol, Zen Mind, Beginner’s Mind by Shunryu Suzuki
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In her work, Amanda Chen “is interested in desire and public space, individually and together,” and “how the hyperdensity of cities opens up new ways of existing in relation to others but also frequently engenders loneliness and other antisocial feelings or behaviors.”
Amanda is currently reading: Revolution at Point Zero: Housework, Reproduction, and Feminist Struggle by Silvia Federici, Beautiful Losers by Leonard Cohen, and Six Films by Marguerite Duras
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For the fellowship, Olivia Fu will continue being guided by “how things in everyday life and pop culture reveal some collective spirit of democracy and autonomy (like the Ratatouille musical on TikTok). Or the opposite, things that seem innocuous on the surface but have an infected root of authoritarianism and/or white Supremacy (like the “Coastal Cowboy” aesthetic that has taken over my hometown).”
Olivia is currently reading: Everything for Everyone: An Oral History of the New York City Commune 2052-2072 by M.E. O’Brien and Eman Abdelhadi, Reconsidering Reparations by Olúfẹ́mi O. Táíwò, In the Shadow of the Ivory Tower: How Universities are Plundering our Cities by Davarian L. Baldwin
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Saritha Ramakrishna is interested in “the absurdities of the American economy as manifested in NYC. I think a lot about American identity and what constitutes a ‘good life,’ how these aspirations assert themselves in space, and the resulting emotional resonances or feelings of alienation. For example, I’ve been haunted by Facetune ads on the train, and huge billboards hawking beef tallow skincare.”
She is currently reading: America by Jean Baudrillard, The Ugly History of Beautiful Things: Essays on Desire and Consumption by Katy Kelleher
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Through the fellowship, Enrique Aureng Silva aspires “to find that middle-ground between creative (literary, even fictional) and critical (knowledgeable, precise, researched and even data-driven) writing.”
Enrique is currently reading: Open City by Teju Cole, Mannahatta by Eric W. Sanderson, Manhattan Transfer by John Dos Passos
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Fascinated by the inner workings of the state, Lucas Vaqueiro hopes to continue his work exploring bureaucracy: “To me, bureaucracy can be more than dysfunctional or a coercive tool; it is also wondrous, absurd, and whimsical.”
He is currently reading: New York Sketches by E.B. White, Language City by Ross Perlin, The Anthropologists by Ayşegül Savaş
About Us
Urban Design Forum connects and inspires New Yorkers to design, build and care for a better city. We are a member-powered organization of 1,000+ civic leaders committed to a more just future for our city. We believe the built environment—our neighborhoods, buildings, public spaces and infrastructure—shapes our city’s health, culture and economy. We bring together New Yorkers of diverse backgrounds and experiences to learn, debate, and design a vibrant city for all.
The Architectural League of New York supports critically transformative work in the allied fields that shape the built environment. As a vital, independent forum, the League stimulates thinking, debate, and action on today’s converging crises of racism, inequity, and climate change, in service of a more livable and just world. The League’s online publication, Urban Omnibus, is dedicated to observing, understanding, and shaping the city. Urban Omnibus raises new questions, illuminates diverse perspectives, and documents creative projects to advance the collective work of citymaking.
Supporters
The 2025–2026 New City Critics program is made possible through the lead support of the Mellon Foundation, with additional support from Critical Minded, the Graham Foundation for Advanced Studies in the Fine Arts, Nat Oppenheimer, Karen Stein, and Calvin Tsao.
We are also grateful to the founding donors of the program: Stella Betts, Joan Copjec, Vincent Chang, Critical Minded, Rosalie Genevro, Mario Gooden, Paul Goldberger, Graham Foundation, Tami Hausman, Mary Margaret Jones, Astrid Lipka & Lyn Rice, Thom Mayne, Zach Mortice & Maria Speiser, Eric Owen Moss, Nat Oppenheimer, Charles H. Revson Foundation, Moshe Safdie, Karen Stein, Calvin Tsao, Mark Willis & Carol Willis, and Siqi Zhu.
Urban Design Forum programs are made possible by the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New York State Legislature.
To learn more about supporting New City Critics, please contact Daniel McPhee, daniel@urbandesignforum.org.
In Memory Of

This program is founded in honor of Michael Sorkin, a longstanding Board Member of the Urban Design Forum and Architectural League. His death in March 2020 was a huge loss to the world of thinking and action in architecture and the shaping of landscapes and cities. He was a spectacularly good writer, fearless and funny, and adept at exposing and explaining the systems of power that create the built environment. We hope to honor one of his most important legacies: his generosity and care in encouraging the development of young thinkers and writers and designers around the world.