Mae-ling Lokko photo by Shannon Straney

Mae-ling Lokko

Assistant Professor

Mae-ling Lokko is an architectural scientist, designer and educator focused on the intersectoral design and research of biobased materials to drive ecological health and generative justice goals. She is an Assistant Professor at Yale School of Architecture where she teaches environmental design and on the history and contemporary design of biobased building technologies. At Yale’s Center for Ecosystems in Architecture, she directs doctoral research on the whole life cycle development, distributed infrastructures design and policy around non-toxic, low-carbon materials.

Given biobased building materials are poised to become part of the rapidly growing 21st century building materials economy, Lokko’s current research and writings aim to understand both the historical patterns, risks and opportunities around biobased material technologies. Her research has been funded by the reARC Institute, Yale’s ASCEND Program, the United Nations Environment Program (UNEP), the SOM Foundation, the British Council, MIT’s Global Architectural History Teaching Collaborative, the Luma Foundation, Housing the Human 2019 and NYSERDA. Her work and writings have been featured in the New York Times, Blueprint, ICON Magazine, eFlux, Blueprint, Wallpaper, MOLD, Frieze Magazine, RIBA Journal, DOMUS, Dezeen, DAMN Magazine, and other global design publications.

Lokko is also the founder of Willow, based in Ghana, aimed at developing academic-community research partnerships to implement and scale demonstration architectural projects. Through public exhibitions, Lokko’s work aims to explore new aesthetics associated with plant-based building material technologies that address deeply seated, social and cultural barriers to their adoption. Her recent work has been exhibited at the Museum of Modern Art, New York; the Nobel Prize Museum, the Museum of the Future, Dubai, Stedelijk Museum, Netherlands; Serralves Foundation, Portugal; Z33 House for Contemporary Art, Design and Architecture, Belgium; Sonsbeek Biennial, Netherlands; Triennale Milano, Italy; and Somerset House, London. Funded by the United Nations Environmental Program and Yale CEA, Willow’s research on both the regional and global biobased building materials industry was published in the key Building Materials and Climate: Constructing a New Future global report.

Lokko previously taught at Cooper Union and Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, where she served as the Director of the Building Sciences Program as well as Assistant Professor at the School of Architecture and Center for Architecture, Science and Ecology (CASE). Lokko holds a Ph.D. and Master of Science in Architectural Science from the Center for Architecture, Science and Ecology, RPI, and a B.A from Tufts University. Lokko currently serves on the Board of Directors for the International Living Future Institute and the Architectural League of New York.

Education
BA, Tufts University
MS, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
PhD, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute

Courses

2021
Fall 2024
Environmental Design
Mae-ling Lokko, Jessica Bristow
2255
Summer 2024
Soil Sisters: Senegal
Mae-ling Lokko
2247
Spring 2024
Soil Sisters
Mae-ling Lokko
2021
Fall 2023
Environmental Design
Mae-ling Lokko, Mohamed Aly Etman
3109
Fall 2023
Field to Building, And Back
Mae-ling Lokko
2255
Summer 2023
Soil Sisters: An Intersectoral Material Framework for Ecological Health
Mae-ling Lokko
2247
Spring 2023
Soil Sisters
Mae-ling Lokko, Anna Dyson
2021
Fall 2022
Environmental Design
Mae-ling Lokko, Mohamed Aly Etman