Nefeli Chatzimina
Founder at ArchitectScripta
Nefeli Chatzimina is an Architect Engineer, Designer and Founder of architectScripta a interdisciplinary architectural platform initiated in New York and based in Athens Greece specializing in experimental design and emerging technologies. Nefeli has worked as an Architect for her professor Bernard Tschumi in New York and holds a Master of Science in Advanced Architectural Design from Columbia University NYC. She has taught Design Studio independently as a Lecturer at the University of Southern California in Los Angeles and has lectured at Universities in the US, India and highly prestigious venues and Museums in Athens Greece. She is currently a PhD Candidate at the National Technical University of Athens where she graduated from. ArchitectScripta built projects have been nominated for international awards, exhibited in galleries and Museums, published in international magazines. Nefeli has conducted International Advanced Design Workshops at the Benaki Museum in Athens and her work has been published and exhibited in galleries, institutions and museums of New York, Los Angeles, London and Athens.
ArchitectScripta built projects focus on the use of experimental Advanced Design techniques and emergent digital manufacturing and fabrication technologies. Their projects have been nominated twice for the Mies van der Rohe Award, by ArchDaily for the Building of the Year Housing category 2023 and has won the BIG SEE Interior Design award 2019. Residential and office projects have been featured as a Cover in Architectural Magazines and the Press. ArchitectScripta projects are available at OpenSea the world’s first and largest web3 marketplace for NFTs today. The next major project of architectScripta in exclusive collaboration with Nexus Properties is at Elliniko area, an innovative luxury residential complex of 3,000m2 for sale at the Athenian Riviera as part of the ‘FLY’ series buildings.
Upcoming speeches
ArchDaily
Presentations by Greek architectural firms nominated for the Building of the Year award by ArchDaily, moderated by Christele Harrouk.
