This website uses its own or third-party cookies. By continuing to browse, you consent to the use we make of them. If you wish, you can modify your preferences in your browser.

Carlo Ratti
Torino, ItalyCarlo Ratti is an architect and engineer, and founding partner of the international design and innovation practice Carlo Ratti Associati. Director of the Senseable City Laboratory at MIT, he is a leading voice in the debate on the impact of new technologies on urban life. His work has shown at the Venice Biennale, New York’s MoMA, London’s Science Museum, and Barcelona’s Design Museum, and two of his projects – the Digital Water Pavilion and the Copenhagen Wheel – were hailed by Time Magazine as ‘Best Inventions of the Year’. He also featured in Wired Magazine’s ‘Smart List: 50 people who will change the world’. He is currently co-chair of the World Economic Forum’s Global Future Council on Cities and Urbanization, and special advisor on Urban Innovation to the European Commission.
carloratti.com1 articles by Carlo Ratti
Highlighted topics
- An Aging World
- architecture
- books
- cambio climático
- Changing Direction
- cities
- climate change
- Climate Matters
- conferences
- Connection in a Material World
- construction
- contests
- culture
- Defining Luxury
- design
- Design for Health
- Design for Kids
- education
- Enjoying Everyday Life
- environment
- European Union
- events
- eye on design
- Fit to Sports
- future
- green
- handmade
- health
- housing
- infraestructuras
- infraestructure
- innovation
- landscaping
- Luxury
- nature
- New Concepts for Housing
- On the Coast
- On the Move
- One Ocean
- Our Other Senses
- Outer Space
- Plastic (In)Dependence
- policies
- product design
- public space
- public spaces
- Rebuilding Food Systems
- Renewable Energies
- retail
- Rethinking Tourism
- Small Disruption, Big Impact
- social
- social impact
- Subverting the Rules
- sustainability
- sustainable world
- technology
- The Afterlife of Architecture
- The Doers
- the future
- The Future of Retail
- transport
- updated inspiration
- Urban versus Rural
- urbanism
- views on architecture
- Want More, Use Less