Rosalyne Shieh is an architect based in Cambridge, MA and Kaohsiung, Taiwan, and an assistant professor of architecture at MIT. Shieh’s work engages place at the intersection of material culture, oral history, and postcolonial identity along the migratory axis between Taiwan and the U.S. Architectural projects are processes for thinking-with-site, where design is the extension of and invention from the ordinary and incidental. Previously, Shieh taught at the Yale School of Architecture, The Cooper Union, and the University of Michigan, where she was the 2009-2010 Taubman Fellow in Architecture. She is a MacDowell Fellow, a recipient of the AIA Henry Adams Certificate, a Fulbright Scholar and holds degrees from Berkeley, the Bartlett, and Princeton.