Tami Banh is a Vietnamese architect and landscape architect based in New York City. Her work explores ways of restructuring relationships between people and the environment through design, building, writing, and making. Focused on critical representation, climate resilience, and human / more-than-human cohabitation, her research and practice engage with landscapes at the intersection of ecology, infrastructure, and community resilience.
Tami’s current research project, “Shared Waters, Divided Landscapes,” explores how cultural landscapes, governance frameworks, and ecological practices shape the Mekong River across national boundaries, examining how policies, traditional knowledge, and representations of the river influence its physical and cultural transformations. Through field and archival research, comparative study, and community engagement, the work explores alternative frameworks for understanding and designing within contested and dynamic waterscapes.
Previously, as an Associate at SCAPE Landscape Architecture, Tami has led and supported public landscape infrastructure projects that integrate placemaking, ecological design, and social impact such as Living Breakwaters and Hudson Highlands Fjord Trail. She also served as an Associate Adjunct Professor in the Urban Design program at Columbia University and has worked at SHoP and ZGF Architects. Tami holds a Bachelor of Architecture from the University of Southern California and a Master of Architecture and Master of Landscape Architecture with Distinction from Harvard University’s Graduate School of Design.