Publication

  • New City Critics
    Urban Omnibus, 2025
  • GRANTEE
    Urban Design Forum and the Architectural League of New York
    GRANT YEAR
    2024

“New City Critics program logo,” designed by Manuel Miranda. Courtesy New City Critics

New City Critics is a fellowship program to empower new, fearless, and diverse voices to challenge the ways we understand, design, and develop our cities. The fellowship supports the development of critics from underrepresented backgrounds through guest lectures and workshops, research guidance, networking, and production of new critical projects in Urban Omnibus and other leading publications. The Fellows voice new perspectives on overlooked topics of critical import and expand the public’s understanding of the value of design and planning, in order to activate new, civically engaged audiences for urban criticism. New City Critics was founded in honor of Michael Sorkin (1948–2020): a fierce critic, brilliant urbanist, and significant mentor.

Mariana Mogilevich is editor in chief of Urban Omnibus, a publication of The Architectural League of New York, where she has edited the special series “The Location of Justice" and "Cleaning Up?” and has commissioned hundreds of editorial features from artists, designers, scholars, and writers. Her book The Invention of Public Space: Designing for Inclusion in Lindsay’s New York (University of Minnesota Press, 2020) received a 2021 John Brinckerhoff Jackson Book Prize from the Foundation for Landscape Studies. She has taught at New York University, Princeton University, Pratt Institute, and Cornell, and was an inaugural Princeton Mellon Fellow in Architecture, Urbanism and the Humanities at Princeton University. She has developed exhibitions and other public projects on the urban environment for the National Parks Service, the New-York Historical Society, and Place Matters.  Mogilevich received a bachelor’s in literature from Yale University and a doctorate in the history of architecture and urbanism from Harvard University.

Guillermo Gómez is the director of programs at Urban Design Forum, where he oversees the planning and teams responsible for the Next New York, Public Works, and New City Critics programs. Since 2018, he has led numerous community building initiatives at the Forum, including Good Form, Streets Ahead, Shape Shift, Work Force, Power After the Pandemic, and Care for Hudson Square. Gómez holds a master’s of arts in theories of urban practice from Parsons School of Design.

Garnette Cadogan is a member of the New City Critics Advisory Board. He is the Tunney Lee distinguished lecturer in urbanism at the School of Architecture and Planning at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT).

Dario Calmese is a member of the New City Critics Advisory Board. He made history as the first Black photographer to shoot a cover for Vanity Fair with his portrait of Viola Davis. He hosts the radio series The Institute of Black Imagination.

Sukjong Hong is a member of the New City Critics Advisory Board. She is the editor of Curbed and was previously managing editor and web editor at the Architect’s Newspaper and a reporter-researcher at the New Republic.

Alexandra Lange is a member of the New City Critics Advisory Board. A design critic, she is a columnist for Bloomberg CityLab, and has been a featured writer at Design Observer, an opinion columnist at Dezeen, and the architecture critic for Curbed.

Carolina A. Miranda is a member of the New City Critics Advisory Board. She is a Los Angeles Times columnist covering art, architecture and urban design, along with various other facets of culture in Los Angeles.

Urban Design Forum connects and inspires New Yorkers to design, build and care for a better city. Founded in 1978, Urban Design Forum is a member-powered organization of 1,000+ civic leaders committed to a more just future for New York. Urban Design Forum believes the built environment—our neighborhoods, buildings, public spaces and infrastructure—shapes our city’s health, culture and economy. It brings together New Yorkers of diverse backgrounds and experiences to learn, debate, and design a vibrant city for all. Urban Design Forum envisions a city where every New Yorker can thrive in a healthy neighborhood, with a stable home, dignified workplace, safe commute, lively public spaces and dynamic arts and culture—and believes everyone has a role to play in creating that city.

Founded in 1881, 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.