Ivan Shen

Ivan Shen is a SMArchS Urbanism Student at MIT. He is currently a research assistant to Professor Ana Miljački at MIT's Critical Broadcasting Lab. Before coming to MIT, he graduated from Syracuse University with a Bachelor of Architecture as Valedictorian and a Bachelor of Arts in Music History and Cultures, awarded with best thesis award.

Ivan’s research interests encompass architecture, urban studies, and music history. His architecture thesis project, Made in “China”, Remade in Kibera, delves into Chinese-constructed infrastructure projects within informal neighborhoods in Nairobi, challenging conventional perceptions of these transnational projects. Supported by a SOURCE Grant and honored with the Crown Thesis Award, he undertook field trips exceeding 70 days to East Africa's largest informal settlement. His work underscores the resilience and adaptability of these communities amidst extreme poverty and transnational developments, while proposing alternative frameworks for understanding urban growth.

Over the past four years, Ivan has participated in over 25 national and international design competitions, securing more than 15 awards for his work in architectural innovation and urban design. His project, The Domestic Nomad, was awarded first place in both the "Home of the Next Century" international design competition and the School of Architecture’s Integrated Design Studio Prize, Overall Design Award. Additionally, his Farming Depot City received an Honorable Mention in the 2024 eVolo Skyscraper Competition. As the design team chair for Syracuse University’s National Organization of Minority Architecture Students (NOMAS) chapter, he led the team to a first-place victory in the Annual NOMA Student Competition in 2024 and an honorable mention in 2022.

Professionally, Ivan's experience spans nine architectural design and research practices across four continents, including cities such as Shanghai, New York City, Boston, Madrid, and Kigali, Rwanda. He has worked in a diverse range of offices such as Perkins&Will Boston, General Architecture Collaborative, SalazarSequeroMedina, Workshop/APD, Robert Siegel Architects. He has been a researcher at the Interactive Design and Visualization Lab (IDVL) and the Material Archi-Tectonic Research Lab (MATR Lab).

As an aspiring teacher, Ivan has been a teaching assistant to every design studio and most degree-required course spanning architecture representation to building technology at Syracuse Architecture. He was a teaching fellow for Syracuse Architecture's summer architecture workshop. 

In musicology, Ivan focuses on the intersection between political soundscapes and collective urban spaces. Ivan’s distinction capstone project, When Entertainment and Violence Intertwine: Model Operas and Struggle Sessions during China’s Cultural Revolution, examines how performance spaces were repurposed for political and ideological reinforcement. This essay earned him the Abraham Veinus Prize, presented by the Department of Art & Music Histories at Syracuse University for the best undergraduate student paper in musicology.

His academic excellence and community contributions was recognized with the title of Syracuse University Scholar and Senior Class Marshal, making him the first Asian International student and the first architecture student in the university's history to simultaneously receive these two recognitions. 

Projects
The Urban Farming Depot is conceptualized as a radical apparatus for food production and an urban monument. Through provocatively choreographing the food system and public activities between existing skyscrapers in cities, the project attempts to address urban food insecurity in metropolises around the world, using London as a testing site.
Rather than a housing solution, the Domestic Nomad serves as a statement and provocation that challenges the prevailing capitalist market's rigid residential housing models, in which most domestic activities happen in the private and interior. Rethinking household activities, we propose that most domestic programs can take place in a public/communal settings and seasonally outdoor.
In an era of rapid planetary urbanization and geopolitical realignment, what is China’s role in the entangled ecologies of transnational development? This award-winning thesis delves into the transnational frictions between these global forces and local agencies within Kibera, Nairobi—East Africa’s largest informal settlement.
Co-habitat for Refugees and the Volun-Tourist is a provocative response to a current day crisis - the increase of refugees and the neglect to the refugees. Given the strong duality of Tourist / Refugees, this project serves as an attraction for both, a space for short-term stay for both the two groups, maintaining the original function of a refugee facility but also allowing cultural exchange between the two groups. It is conceptualized as a self-sufficient machine, culturally and economically.