ANN PENDLETON-JULLIAN is an architect, writer and educator whose work explores the interchange between culture, environment and technology.
From a first short career in astrophysics, Pendleton-Julian has come to see the world through a lens of complexity framed by principles from ecology theory. This, in tandem with a belief that design has the power to take on the complex challenges associated with an emergent highly networked global culture, has led her to work on architecture projects that range in scale and scope from things to systems of action — from a house for the astronomer Carl Sagan, to a seven village ecosystem for craft-based tourism in Guizhou province, China — and in domains outside of architecture including patient centered health, new innovation models for K-12 and higher ed, and human and economic development in marginalized populations.
Pendleton-Julian is currently Distinguished Visiting Professor at Georgetown University, and professor at Ohio State University where she served as Director of the School of Architecture. Prior to Ohio State she was a tenured professor at MIT for fourteen years. She is also a core member of a cross-disciplinary network of global leaders established by the Secretary of Defense to examine questions of emerging interest.
As a writer, she has most recently finished a manuscript, “Design Unbound,” with co-author John Seely Brown, that presents a new tool set for designing within complex systems and on complex problems endemic to the 21st century.