Buell Postdoctoral Fellow, 2026–28
Frederik Braüner
2026-28 Buell Research and Teaching Fellow
Project: "Building a Modern High North: The Colonial and Transnational Construction of Modernity in the Arctic"
While at the Buell, Braüner will work on his book project, Building a Modern High North: The Colonial and Transnational Construction of Modernity in the Arctic. This work, which builds on Braüner's dissertation, examines how architecture and urban planning functioned as tools of colonial expansion and welfare governance across the Global High North, tracing the transnational collaborations among colonial administrations in Sápmi, the Faroe Islands, Iceland, Nunavut, and Alaska to reveal how colonial legacies of modernity continue to shape contemporary life in this rapidly changing region
Braüner will begin at Columbia on September 1, 2026. As part of the Buell Fellowship, he will join a cohort of fellows at the The Society of Fellows and Heyman Center for the Humanities, as well as the faculty team teaching the GSAPP’s landmark course, “Questions in Architectural History.”
Biography
Frederik Braüner is an architect, editor, and historian of modern and contemporary architecture. His research focuses on the overlapping histories of colonialism, welfare ideologies, and high-modernist spatial practices, particularly in the Arctic and the broader Circumpolar North. Braüner holds a PhD in Architecture with a designated emphasis in European and Scandinavian Studies from the University of California, Berkeley; an MA in Political Architecture from the Royal Danish Academy; and a BA in Art History from the University of Copenhagen. His research has been supported by several awards and fellowships, including from the Danish Ministry of Higher Education and Science, the Arcus Foundation, and the Society of Architectural Historians. Braüner previously worked as an architect and editor for the architectural journals Arkitekten and Room One Thousand. His writing has appeared in academic and popular journals such as Architecture and Culture, Magasin for Bygningskunst og Kultur, and Information.
Image 1: A zoom-in of one of these map-fragments showing the depopulated settlements in the Upernavik region of Greenland. Frederik Braüner, 2026.
Image 2: A photo of a Danish-built housing block in Maniitsoq, Greenland from 1972. Frederik Braüner, 2024.
Image 3: A photo of a Danish-built housing block in Tórshavn, Faroe Islands from 1972. Frederik Braüner, 2024.
Image 4: A drawing of the Norwegian State Housing Directorate’s 1948 blueprint no. 216 for a standardized single-family house in Sápmi. Illustration: Norwegian State Housing Directorate, 1948.