Osorno, Emmanuel A.

Visiting Assistant Professor

School or College
School of Architecture

Emmanuel Osorno is an architect, designer, educator and the founder of EOstudio. He is Tulane’s 2021-23 Architecture and Social Innovation Fellow at the School of Architecture. His most recent work aims to recalibrate the public’s view toward building preservation and social services, leveraging the power of images to infiltrate existing forms of media through which buildings circulate and gain value. At Princeton University, he was a research assistant at the c.r.e.A.te Lab, where his work focused on computer vision and robotic operation, and he held teaching assistant positions for multiple design and social innovation studios. Prior to his graduate studies, Osorno practiced for several years at Eric Owen Moss Architects in Culver City, California, where he was involved in the design and construction of renowned projects. His work has been published in ACADIA and Pidgin, and was exhibited in San Francisco; San Luis Obispo, California, and Chicago, and at Princeton. He also contributed to the design and publication of the book L.A. [TEN]: Interviews on Los Angeles Architecture, 1970s-1990s, edited by Stephen Phillips. Osorno holds a post-professional Master of Architecture and a certificate in Media and Modernity from Princeton University and a Bachelor of Architecture from California Polytechnic State University – San Luis Obispo and is a registered architect in the state of California.

eosorno@tulane.edu
Emmanuel A.
Osorno
Visiting Assistant Professor

Biography

Emmanuel Osorno is an architect, designer, educator and the founder of EOstudio. He is Tulane’s 2021-23 Architecture and Social Innovation Fellow at the School of Architecture. His most recent work aims to recalibrate the public’s view toward building preservation and social services, leveraging the power of images to infiltrate existing forms of media through which buildings circulate and gain value. At Princeton University, he was a research assistant at the c.r.e.A.te Lab, where his work focused on computer vision and robotic operation, and he held teaching assistant positions for multiple design and social innovation studios. Prior to his graduate studies, Osorno practiced for several years at Eric Owen Moss Architects in Culver City, California, where he was involved in the design and construction of renowned projects. His work has been published in ACADIA and Pidgin, and was exhibited in San Francisco; San Luis Obispo, California, and Chicago, and at Princeton. He also contributed to the design and publication of the book L.A. [TEN]: Interviews on Los Angeles Architecture, 1970s-1990s, edited by Stephen Phillips. Osorno holds a post-professional Master of Architecture and a certificate in Media and Modernity from Princeton University and a Bachelor of Architecture from California Polytechnic State University – San Luis Obispo and is a registered architect in the state of California.