Daniella Camarena is an architect, urban designer, and researcher. Her practice questions the 
role of architecture in the environment, both built and otherwise. She continuously explores 
the interrelation between theory and practice, aiming to dissipate the boundaries of architecture 
as a traditional discipline. She is actively involved in developing research-based analysis and 
designing and constructing various forms for inhabiting space. Her focus includes learning how 
to design in and with coastal communities understanding the diverse weather phenomena to be 
considered per specific location while aiming to integrate buildings into their context, their 
related ecologies, and histories.


Daniella holds a degree in architecture from Universidad de Guadalajara (2015) with exchange
studies at L’Ecole Supérieure d’Architecture de Normandie (2013) and a Post-Master in 
Architecture and Urban Design from The Berlage Center for Advanced Studies in Architecture 
and Urban Design (2021). She participated in the Bauhaus Lab 2023: Not a Penguin Pool: 
Echoes of More-than-Human Entanglements.  She has been awarded the 2025 Young Creators
Architecture Fellowship of the National Fund for Culture and the Arts in Mexico for the 
development of her architectural and research project “Desde el giro: narrativas costeras 
y marinas de huracán a tifón”























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