M.S.AAD, Columbia University; M.Arch, Washington State University; B.S. Arch, Thammasat University
Pimchid Chariyacharoen is a Thai architectural designer, researcher, and educator. Her work examines regenerative cycles as a framework for architecture in relation to community. Her research considers how systems of production, exchange, and environment intersect with space, ways of living, and culture, and how these relationships reveal and rethink the invisible layers that shape the built environment.
Pimchid has worked in architectural practice, research, and teaching in Bangkok, Seattle, and New York. She has served as an Adjunct Assistant Professor at Columbia University’s Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation, engaging research-driven approaches to design, adaptive reuse, and representation.
Pimchid received a Bachelor of Science in Architecture from Thammasat University, Thailand, with the King Bhumibol Scholarship for academic excellence, a Master of Architecture from Washington State University, where she was awarded the AIA Henry Adams Medal, and a Master of Science in Advanced Architectural Design from Columbia University’s Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation, where she received the William Kinne Fellows Traveling Prize.