Marcelyn Gow is an architect. She is a partner and founding member of the architecture and design collaborative servo, with a special interest in the evolving relationship between architecture and technology, the ways in which new information and fabrication technologies have helped to transform architectural space and architectural practice. Servo has published and exhibited their works widely. She teaches at the UCLA Department of Architecture and Urban Design and is currently conducting doctoral research at the ETH in Zurich on the use of technology in art as it intersects with architecture during the advent of the electronic information age. She received an MSc from the GSAPP, Columbia University, and an AADipl and RIBA II from the Architectural Association in London.
Ulrika Karlsson is an architect and landscape architect. She is a partner and founding member of the international architecture and design collaborative servo, with a special interest in the evolving relationship between architecture and technology, the ways in which new information and fabrication technologies have helped to transform architectural space and architectural practice. Servo has published and exhibited their works widely. Ulrika teaches at the KTH School of Architecture in Stockholm. She has been a PhD candidate at the KTH School of Architecture. She holds an MSc degree from GSAPP, Columbia University, New York and an MLArch from SLU, Alnarp. She is currently engaged in AKAD as a member of the board.
Pablo Miranda is a practitioner and researcher on architecture and digital technology at KTH Architecture, with a special interest in the effects of computation on architectural discourse and practice. His work, carried first at the Interactive Institute and now as a member of Krets and of the VR financed project Auto-poiesis and Design, investigates the possibility and consequences of an architecture that is algorithmically generated rather than designed, programmed instead of drawn.
Daniel Norell is an architect with a special interest in computational design and the production of new and emergent architectural effects. His work has been pursued through practice as well as teaching and academic research and has been exhibited internationally. Currently working for Zaha Hadid Architects in London, he has also recently worked for Greg Lynn FORM, where he gained design experience from projects such as the Guggenheim Biennale Park Pavilion in Abu Dhabi. He holds an M.Arch degree from UCLA in Los Angeles, where he studied on a Fulbright scholarship, and is a graduate of the KTH School of Architecture in Stockholm.
Jonas Runberger is a practicing architect, teacher and researcher with a special interest in collaborative design and fabrication processes supported by new technology. This is pursued through design projects within the Krets research group and as director of ssark medialab, a research & development department within Scheiwiller Svensson arkitektkontor. He is a PhD candidate at the KTH School of Architecture, with the Prototype Development within Architecture research project, and board member of Creative Room for Art and Computing (CRAC), a platform for art and new technology based in Stockholm.