Claire
Gorman
Hanly



Claire Gorman Hanly is an American computer scientist and environmental designer. Her research and practice focus on the implementation of deep learning-based computer vision methods in built and natural environments, with applications in regenerative agriculture, remote sensing of hydrology, and cultural landscape preservation. 

Claire’s work ranges geographically across glaciers and caves, river deltas and grain supply-sheds, Arctic wilderness and subtropical cities. It ranges methodologically across scientific research, creative curation, and speculative tool-building. She has collaborated with technology companies, research labs, and the US National Park Service as well as her most recent role in co-curating the 19th International Architecture Exhibition at La Biennale di Venezia.

Claire is currently pursuing two Master’s degrees at MIT: an MCP in Environmental Planning, and an MS in Computer Science. Her Bachelor’s degree is in Computer Science and Architecture, from Yale University.


clairego@mit.edu
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Urban Lab: NOLA


Graphic novel articulating a “parafictional” account of the city of New Orleans, Louisiana, for an urban studies studio focused on historical, spatial, and environmental research and the creative narration thereof. Work advances a vision of New Orleans focused on the liminality and blurry boundaries between cultures, classes, water, and land. 

Skills:
Graphic Design
Field Research
Writing (creative)

For Yale ARCH.362 Urban Lab: City Making, taught by Prof. Anthony Acciavatti
2018