Alex Bozikovic is the Globe and Mail’s architecture critic,
covering architecture and urbanism. He has won a National Magazine
Award and has also written for Architectural Record, Azure, Dwell,
and Toronto Life. Alex is an author of Toronto Architecture: A City
Guide (2017). In 2019, he served as a jury member for the City of
Edmonton’s Missing Middle Design Competition. He currently lives in
Toronto.
Cheryll Case is the founding principal of CP Planning, a
groundbreaking urban planning firm that digs deep into addressing
the urban conditions that affect access to housing, work, and play.
She specializes in designing inclusive conversations that build
relationships between various stakeholders within the non-profit,
private, and public sectors. To facilitate conversation, Cheryll
uses research, data analysis, and storytelling to describe
community relationships with land. Since graduating from Ryerson
University’s Bachelor of Urban and Regional Planning program in
2017, Cheryll has been a driving force in public discourse about
community planning and belonging. She currently lives in
Toronto.
John Lorinc is an award-winning journalist who has contributed to
Toronto Life, The Globe and Mail, National Post, Saturday Night,
Report on Business, and Quill & Quire, among other publications,
and was the editor of The Ward Uncovered: The Archaeology of
Everyday Life (Coach House Books, 2018) and The Ward: The Life and
Loss of Toronto's First Immigrant Neighbourhood (Coach House Books,
2015). He has written extensively on amalgamation, education,
sprawl, and other city issues. He is the recipient of two National
Magazine Awards for his coverage of urban affairs. He currently
lives in Toronto. Annabel Vaughan is an Architect and Project
Manager at era Architects Inc. Her recent interest lies in the
intersection between architecture as a spatial practice reflected
in a single built work and the broader role of architecture as an
agent for cultural production in the city. She writes, teaches and
participates regularly in discussions concerning the role that
architecture and public art can play as agents of political change
in the city. Her professional work includes small-scale landscape
architecture insertions, civic and residential building design,
urban design and research, performance art lectures, and curatorial
projects. She currently lives in Toronto.
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