ABOUT THE JOURNAL
ABOUT
informa is the peer-reviewed journal of the University of Puerto Rico School of Architecture. Initially conceived as an academic magazine from 2001– 2015, it has now been reformatted as a peer-reviewed journal.
informa publishes commissioned features and peer-reviewed articles about architecture, urbanism, and spatial theory. Our ISSN is 2637–7950. Our editorial philosophy allows authors to propose ideas and stances that may not necessarily reflect the ethos of the individual members of the Editorial Board, the School of Architecture, and/or the University of Puerto Rico.
Aims and Scope
informa has been a printed platform for the dissemination of work by professors at the University of Puerto Rico School of Architecture, and for a number of local and international contributors. Since 2001, informa has focused on publishing essays and projects that address, analyze, or reflect on history, design, technology, urbanism, and teaching. The recognition it has received throughout the years and the contributions made to architectural debates, particularly within Latin America, have been an encouragement to expand informa’s discussions.
Today, seeking to reaffirm its relevance in this second generation, the Editorial Board retains informa’s original foundations while simultaneously aiming to broaden its outlook by reconceptualizing the publication into a peer-reviewed journal. In collaborative spirit, responding to the digital realities of the twenty-first century and connecting the journal to a wider audience, informa is conceived as an open-access, online publication. In this way, the journal becomes a vehicle to discuss, teach, learn, and disseminate from within the Caribbean, but in forthright dialogue with a globalized society. This outward projection produces knowledge about architecture and cities which can ultimately inform policies, shift paradigms, and lead to the creation of spaces that are just, inclusive, and democratic. Each issue of informa has, at its core, the publication of research papers. It also consists of any combination of commissioned essays, invited projects, reviews (books, articles and built work), and interviews. It publishes academically rigorous projects, research, and written works that elucidate on relevant and timely topics within contemporary architectural discourse.
Subjects covered include writings about individual architectural designers, historians, and theorists; theoretical texts; spatial theory; architectural history; design theory; urbanism; spatial practices and cultures; interdisciplinary collaborations; place-based art and performance; emerging currents and patterns; pedagogy; visual culture; technology; sustainability; and emerging forms of place-based cultures. To compliment these multi-perspective approaches, we welcome topics that include: citizenship, community, user-participation, dynamic and uncon- ventional research methodologies, ethics, time and ephemerality, history and heritage, structural and material innovations, everyday life, and the politics of space.
Editorial Policy
The journal is published once a year. Material submitted toinforma through our call for papers is subject to peer review using the ‘double-blind’ refereeing process. Submissions should follow the rules and guidelines established by the Chicago Manual of Style. informa will consider articles written in Spanish and English that fall within the categories described in the journal’s aims and scope. All manuscripts are subject to initial appraisal by the Editor-in-Chief, and, if found suitable for further consideration, will then be peer reviewed by independent, anonymous, and expert referees from outside of the University of Puerto Rico. informa considers submissions on the conditions that:
- The manuscript adheres to the journal’s formal and stylistic rules and guidelines, as specified by the Editorial Board on the website.
- The manuscript is framed within architectural design, history, or theory categories, and includes themes that fall within the journal’s scope.
- The manuscript must be the author’s original work.
- The manuscript must be clearly structured, well argued, and its objectives must be addressed in a coherent manner.
- The manuscript does not duplicate any other previously published work, including the author’s previously published work.
- The manuscript is not currently under consideration for peer review, accepted for publication, or published elsewhere.
Submission Guidelines
Authors submitting manuscripts to informa must do so via email to: in.forma@upr.edu
As a bilingual journal, commissioned texts and submitted manuscripts will be published in either Spanish or English, in accordance to the language they were originally written in. Abstracts and keywords will be published in both Spanish and English. Authors must submit their abstract and keywords in both languages. In addition to abiding by the journal’s Editorial Policy, the following formal and thematic specifications must be met for articles to be published in informa:
- The manuscript contains no abusive, defamatory, libelous, obscene, fraudulent, or illegal material.
- Each manuscript’s first page must include a full title and subtitle, if any.
- For the purposes of blind refereeing, the full name of each author with current affiliation, full contact details, and short biographical note (listing affiliation, academic merits, and relevant publications) should be sent as a separate document and not included in the manuscript itself.
- The second page of the manuscript must include an abstract of 150–200 words along with a minimum of 5 and maximum of 10 keywords.
- For research-based manuscripts, the target word count is 4,000–8,000 words.
- For review-based manuscripts (books or creative work), the word count should not exceed 1,000 words.
- Submissions must be formatted according to the latest Chicago Manual of Style.
- The manuscript must be clearly organized, with a logical hierarchy of headings and subheadings, and specifying images with figure numbers.
- Quotations exceeding 40 words must be indented.
- Endnotes should be signaled by superscript numbers in the main text and listed at the end of the text before the references.
- All submissions must be sent as both Word and PDF documents.
- Each author is responsible for obtaining the necessary permissions to reproduce any copyrighted material, including images.
- Authors should include a separate statement confirming that all authors have agreed to the submission and that the article is not currently being considered for publication by any other print or electronic journal.
Due to the broad range of subject matter, authors are also encouraged to separately supply the names of one or more potential referees. Please include those in a “Comments to the editor” document, and if possible, include potential referees’ email addresses.
Access Policy
informa is available online. Our ISSN is 2637–7950. Readers will be able to access, download, print, and copy the articles, as well as share the journal’s links freely. Issues of informa cannot be published, sold, or made available, partially or completely, in other digital or physical platforms that are not the journal’s own.
Ethic’s Code
informa adopts the practices and statements of the Committee on Publication Ethics: COPE. The Editorial Board acknowledges this code of ethics and the submitted manuscripts must conform to it.
Plagierism
The Editorial Board will liase with the School of Architecture’s librarians to examine received manuscripts for plagiarism, as part of the screening process carried out when manuscripts are submitted por publishing. Online tools for the detection of plagiarism will be used. If proof of plagiarism is found, the manuscript will be rejected immediately, and the Editorial Board will communicate with the author for an explanation and the amendment of the plagiarized content. If the author does not respond within a reasonable length of time or does not make the necessary adjustments, they will not be able to submit manuscripts to informa por a period of five (5) years. If the Editorial Board has reason to believe that the manuscript was not drafted or researched in an ethical manner, the journal’s implemented code of ethics (Committee on Publication Ethics [Code of Conduct and Best Practices Guidelines for Journals Editors]) will be reviewed and act accordingly.
Data Conservation
Each issue of informa is stored and preserved digitally on the Google Drive cloud, on the Portal of Academic Journals of the University of Puerto Rico server, the University of Puerto Rico Institutional Repository, and several memory devices and external hard drives.
CHAIR
Regner Ramos, Ph.D.
Associate Professor of Architecture at the School of Architecture, University of Puerto Rico (San Juan, PR)
Dr. Regner Ramos obtained his Bachelors in Environmental Design (2008) and Masters in Architecture (2010) from the University of Puerto Rico School of Architecture. In addition, he holds a PhD in Architecture (2016) from The Bartlett School of Architecture (UCL). He has taught at Central Saint Martins College of Art and Design, London College of Communication, University of Hertfordshire, and Queen Mary University of London. Currently, Regner is a tenured Associate Professor at the UPR School of Architecture, where he teaches courses on architectural design, architectural theory, architectural research, and magazine production in the undergraduate and graduate programs, while also working as Editor-in-Chief of informa journal. His new, two-year research project “Cüirtopia: Mapping a Cultural Memory and Architectural Register of Queer Spaces in Puerto Rico” is funded by FIPI (2020-2022), and his first book, co-edited with Sharif Mowlabocus is called Queer Sites in Global Contexts (Routledge 2020). With his partner Kleanthis Kyriakou, he co-directs their architectural practice Wet-Hard Agency, most recently being awarded Graham Foundation funding for their two-year project, “Coloso: A Factory of Queer, Digital Monuments” (2021-2023). Their project “Spread the Secret” is being shown at the 17th Architecture Venice Biennale, in the Cyprus Pavilion. Ramos’s work is on exhibitions in Germany, Portugal, and Italy this year.
EDITORS-IN-CHIEF
Cruz García & Nathalie Frankowski
Cruz García and Nathalie Frankowski are co-founding partners of WAI Architecture Think Tank, a studio created to contribute to the collective intelligence of architecture by focusing on its understanding and execution from a panoramic approach.
Garcia and Frankowski integrate a wide range of mediums and strategies to their practices, including designing culturally and socially sensible buildings, publishing critical texts and manifestoes, teaching and workshops around the world, innovative research and curatorial projects, film, installations, book design, and children’s installations and publications. Recent projects include their shortlisted design for the National Centre for Contemporary Art (NCCA) in Moscow, the design for a boarding school for student-athletes in Puerto Rico, and the design of several exhibition and research spaces in Beijing. Of growing international interest, their work has been presented in exhibitions and festivals at the Museum of Art, Architecture and Technology (MAAT) in Lisbon, the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in New York, the Vitra Design Museum in Weil am Rhein, the inaugural Chicago Architecture Biennial, Arch+ / Kunst-Werke Institute for Contemporary Art in Berlin, the Chengjian Video and Photography Biennale in Chongqing, the Shenzhen / Hong Kong Urbanism and Architecture Bi-City Biennale, the Wrong Digital Art Biennale and many more.
Their writings, manifestos, and narrative architecture projects have been published worldwide and translated into Spanish, Chinese, Portuguese, Arabic, Russian, German, and more. Recent publications include Pure Hardcore Icons: A Manifesto on Pure Form in Architecture (Artifice Books on Architecture); Shapes, Islands, Texts: A Garcia Frankowski Manifesto (Vibok Works); and the independent zine What About It? Currently they are working on the publication of a manifesto on Narrative Architecture supported by a grant awarded by the Graham Foundation.
EDITORIAL BOARD
Nora Akawi
Assistant Professor of Architecture, The Cooper Union (New York, NY)
Nora Akawi is a Palestinian architect and curator living and working in New York, where she is an assistant professor of architecture at The Cooper Union. She focuses on bordering and ruination as the architectural project of settler colonialism. In recent years, her research has been focused in Palestine, the occupied Golan Heights, and the Canary Islands. Her work draws from and intersects with border studies and archive theory. Prior to joining The Cooper Union, Nora taught at Columbia University’s GSAPP, where she was the director of Studio-X Amman between 2012 and 2020, and the founding director of the Janet Abu-Lughod Library. She curated Al Majhoola Min Al-Ard (this earth’s unknown) at the Biennale d’Architecture d’Orléans (2019), and co-curated Sarāb (2019) a festival of experimental electronic music and performance from the Arab worlds, and Friday Sermon at the Venice Architecture Biennale (2018). She co-edited the books Friday Sermon (2018) and Architecture and Representation: The Arab City (2016). Together with Eduardo Rega Calvo, she is co-founder of the interdisciplinary research and design studio Interim Projects.
Luis Othoniel Rosa, Ph.D.
Associate Professor of Spanish and Ethnic Studies, University of Nebraska
Dr. Luis Othoniel Rosa (Puerto Rico, 1985) is the author of two novels, Otra vez me alejo (2012) and Caja de Fractales (2017), and of the scholarly book, Comienzos para una estética anarquista: Borges con Macedonio (2016). His last novel was translated to English as Down with Gargamel! (2020). The author of many scholarly articles and essays, his research focuses on experimental literature and experimental politics in Latin America. He graduated from the University of Puerto Rico-Río Piedras and received his Ph.D. from Princeton University. He is the founding editor of the online review of books, El Roommate: Colectivo de Lectores.
Ilze Wolff
Wolff Architects (Cape Town, South Africa)
Ilze Wolff is an architect working in Cape Town. She co-directs Wolff Architects with Heinrich Wolff, a practice that is concerned with developing an architecture ofconsequence. In 2007 she co-founded Open House Architecture a research practice that documents the architecture of Southern Africa and in 2016 she co-founded pumflet: art, architecture and stuff, a publication and research platform concerned with the black social imagination. She is the author of ‘Unstitching Rex Trueform, the story of an African factory’, an interdisciplinary study of a modernist garment manufacturing factory in Salt River, Cape Town. Ilze’s main preoccupation as an architect is to reconstruct and seek out spatialities of collective freedom in conditions where this has been historically erased, violated and oppressed. Her belief in the ancient technology of storytelling finds its way in various forms of expression: architectural design, creative non-fiction writing, mothering, loving, film, gardening, teaching and prophetic organising.
DEAN
Mayra Jiménez-Montano, Ph.D. and Anna Georas-Santos, Ph.D.
PUBLISHER
University of Puerto Rico School of Architecture
ART DIRECTION AND GRAPHIC DESIGN
University of Puerto Rico School of Architecture
WEB DEVELOPMENT
University of Puerto Rico School of Architecture
MANAGING EDITOR
Manuel Torregrosa-Cueto
PAST BOARD MEMBERS
Regner Ramos, Ph.D.
Sabina Andron, Ph.D.
Benjamin A. Bross, Ph.D.
Danielle S. Willkens, Ph.D.
Marcela Aragüez, Ph.D.
Lilliana Ramos-Collado, Ph.D.
Silvia Álvarez-Curbelo, Ph.D.
Jorge Lizardi-Pollock, Ph.D.
Eda Díaz-Villalobos, J.D.
Francisco J. Rodríguez, FAIA
Marcos Barinas Uribe
Luis Carranza
Ellen Dunham-Jones
Renata Hejduk
Lars Lerup
Rafael Longoria
Rafael Jackson Martin
Jim Williamson
Darwin J. Marrero
Awilda Rodríguez
Javier Isado
Julio Salcedo
Javier de Jesús, Arq.
Enrique Vivoni-Farage, Ph.D.
Heather Critchfield, Arq.
Dennis Alicea, Ph.D.
Jesús E. Amaral, Arq.
Silvia Arango Jaramillo, Ph.D.
Heidi Figueroa Sarriera, Ph.D.
Antonio García Padilla, Lic.
Irma Rivera Nieves, Ph.D.
Eduardo Luis Rodríguez, Arq.
Alberto Soto, Arq.
Anibal Sepúlveda, Ph.D.
Ruth Verde Zein, Arq.
ADDRESS
Escuela de Arquitectura
11 Avenida Universidad STE 1101
Universidad de Puerto Rico Río Piedras
San Juan, Puerto Rico 00925