One Architecture & Urbanism (ONE)’s cover photo
One Architecture & Urbanism (ONE)

One Architecture & Urbanism (ONE)

Architecture and Planning

New York City, NY 5,891 followers

New York and Amsterdam-based design and planning firm specializing in large-scale resilience planning and infrastructure

About us

One Architecture, founded in Amsterdam in 1995, is an award-winning firm that designs buildings, infrastructures and urban environments. ONE works around the globe, using design to help cities, regions and countries with their long-term spatial and infrastructure planning. Our New York office, One Architecture & Urbanism (ONE), was established in 2015 to focus on planning and resilient design. ONE is interested in process as much as in projects. Over the years, this interest has resulted in an open, collaborative, practice in which issues such as finance, organization, technology, culture and policy/politics form an active part of any work we do.

Website
https://onearchitecture.nl
Industry
Architecture and Planning
Company size
11-50 employees
Headquarters
New York City, NY
Type
Privately Held
Founded
1995
Specialties
Urbanism , Resilience , Urban Planning, Urban Design, Community Engagement, Climate Change, Resilient Cities, Ideas, Smart Cities, and Sustainability

Locations

Employees at One Architecture & Urbanism (ONE)

Updates

  • ONE's Nature-based Solutions director Friso Klapwijk attended Waterproof 2026 in The Hague, a conference bringing together water professionals, researchers and policymakers on water security and climate adaptation. Two themes from the day connect directly to ONE's ongoing projects and commitment. Philip S.J. Minderhoud (Wageningen University & Research / Deltares) highlighted groundwater extraction as a primary driver of land subsidence in vulnerable coastal deltas and the risk of adaptation strategies that address symptoms rather than underlying causes. This dynamic is central to the challenges ONE is working on in Indonesia, where land subsidence driven by groundwater extraction significantly impacts coastal flooding risk and shapes the conditions for integrated coastal protection and adaptation. Partners for Water seeks to bring solutions, not as engineering implementations, but with considerable emphasis on community voices. The conference specified the value of creating space for the emotions that water challenges inevitably bring. Water insecurity shapes livelihoods in profound ways, and so do the improvements that follow. In ONE's projects along the coast, this is a familiar reality. Spatial adaptation processes require room for mourning, for what is lost, what is changing and evolving, but also for what communities are asked to leave behind. This needs to be combined with the collective work of building towards environmental resilience. #Waterproof2026#WaterSecurity#ClimateAdaptation#CoastalResilience#NatureBasedSolutions

    View organization page for Partners for Water

    8,733 followers

    At Waterproof 2026 in The Hague, three recurring themes kept surfacing throughout the roundtable sessions: 💧 Climate adaptation is accelerating faster than governance systems 💧 Water innovation is often limited not by technology, but by implementation 💧 And real progress depends on trust, local knowledge and long-term collaboration In theme 1 – Water for Climate Action – Philip Minderhoud (Wageningen University & Research / Deltares) showed how sea-level rise risks are often underestimated because land subsidence remains poorly understood or ignored. His presentation, filled with striking examples from the Philippines and Mekong Delta, demonstrated how quickly climate risks can escalate when local realities are overlooked. One of the central arguments in his keynote was that adaptation strategies often focus on symptoms rather than underlying causes: “Policy must address drivers and not just symptoms.” In theme 2 – Enabling Environment: from policy to practice – Neha Mungekar Ph.D. (IHE Delft Institute for Water Education) shifted the focus away from technology itself towards institutions, participation and human relationships. Her keynote challenged many assumptions about governance: “Participation without discomfort becomes theatre.” She argued that sustainability alone is not enough if issues of justice and inequality remain unaddressed, and that meaningful participation requires space for discomfort, conflict and difficult conversations. As she put it: “People are not resistant to sustainability. Sometimes they are grieving.” Theme 3 – Water Security Innovations – opened with a keynote by Dorien Lugt (HKV lijn in water), focusing on the persistent gap between technological innovation and operational reality. Advanced AI systems, flood forecasting tools and satellite technologies already exist, yet many solutions fail due to unstable internet connections, limited maintenance capacity, fragmented governance or weak local ownership. A central theme was the risk of starting with technologies, frameworks or funding structures first, and only afterwards searching for a problem they might solve. “Are we solving a real problem – or fitting a problem to an existing solution?” At the end of the day, Tracy Metz reflected on one of the most memorable lessons she had heard during the conference: “You don’t need to be an expert, you need to be human.” At the close of the conference, Liliane Geerling handed the collected ideas and outcomes from the participants’ roundtable discussions to Jaap Slootmaker, Director-General for Water and Soil at the Ministerie van Infrastructuur en Waterstaat. With so many ideas generated throughout the day, there was a clear sense that the conversations had only just begun. 📸 Feike Faase #Waterproof2026 #WaterSecurity #ClimateAdaptation #WaterInnovation #WaterGovernance #NatureBasedSolutions #WaterDiplomacy Hajar Yagkoubi

    • No alternative text description for this image
    • No alternative text description for this image
    • No alternative text description for this image
    • No alternative text description for this image
  • Exciting news! ONE's principal Lot Locher has been invited to co-deliver this year's Vitruvius Lecture, organized by the Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en Koninkrijksrelaties (BZK), Platform Ontwerp NL, and Actieagenda Ruimtelijk Ontwerp. Together with Hans Stegeman, Chief Economist at Triodos Bank, Lot Locher will explore what 'future value' means in a time of great uncertainty, examining what becomes visible when economic logic and design thinking are combined. The lecture asks how we can broaden our understanding of value beyond financial frameworks, towards social, ecological, and spatial meaning. The Vitruvius Lecture, named after the Roman architect who introduced the concept of spatial quality 2,000 years ago, was launched in 2023 as an annual invitation to reimagine the Netherlands of tomorrow. We are honored and proud that Lot Locher will represent ONE on this prominent stage.   More on the Vitruvius values: https://lnkd.in/e95wNvy 🎟️ Tickets https://lnkd.in/euAe647s (via Kunstlinie)

    View organization page for Platform Ontwerp NL

    1,194 followers

    𝐇𝐨𝐞 𝐳𝐢𝐞𝐭 𝐍𝐞𝐝𝐞𝐫𝐥𝐚𝐧𝐝 𝐞𝐫 𝐢𝐧 𝐝𝐞 𝐭𝐨𝐞𝐤𝐨𝐦𝐬𝐭 𝐮𝐢𝐭 𝐞𝐧 𝐡𝐨𝐞 𝐛𝐞𝐩𝐚𝐥𝐞𝐧 𝐰𝐞 𝐰𝐚𝐭 𝐝𝐚𝐚𝐫𝐢𝐧 𝐰𝐚𝐚𝐫𝐝𝐞𝐯𝐨𝐥 𝐢𝐬? Dat is de centrale vraag van de Vitruvius Lezing 2026 op de Dag van de Ontwerpkracht (30 juni in Almere) waar econoom Hans Stegeman en architect Lot Locher  twee perspectieven samenbrengen in één gezamenlijke denkoefening. 𝑺𝒄𝒉𝒆𝒓𝒑 𝒔𝒕𝒆𝒍𝒍𝒆𝒏 – 𝒕𝒐𝒆𝒌𝒐𝒎𝒔𝒕𝒘𝒂𝒂𝒓𝒅𝒆 𝒅𝒐𝒐𝒓 𝒆𝒆𝒏 𝒆𝒄𝒐𝒏𝒐𝒎𝒊𝒔𝒄𝒉𝒆 𝒆𝒏 𝒐𝒏𝒕𝒘𝒆𝒓𝒑𝒃𝒓𝒊𝒍 Vanuit hun eigen ‘lenzen’ verkennen de hoofdeconoom van Triodos Bank Hans Stegeman en Lot Locher, principal bij One Architecture & Urbanism (ONE), wat toekomstwaarde betekent in een tijd van grote onzekerheden. Wat wordt zichtbaar als we economische logica combineren met ontwerpend denken? Wat is waarde, hoe kunnen we die behouden en ook voor de toekomst garanderen. En hoe verbreden we het begrip waarde voorbij financiële kaders, richting maatschappelijke en ecologische betekenis en ruimtelijke kwaliteit? De lezing biedt geen blauwdruk, maar scherpt het denken. Over waarde, over tijd en over de rol van ontwerp in het vormgeven van een toekomst die niet vastligt, maar wel richting vraagt. Een uitnodiging om anders te kijken en samen beter te zien wat er op het spel staat.  𝐎𝐯𝐞𝐫 𝐝𝐞 𝐕𝐢𝐭𝐫𝐮𝐯𝐢𝐮𝐬𝐥𝐞𝐳𝐢𝐧𝐠 In 2023 lanceerde de DG Ruimtelijke Ordening van het Ministerie van Binnenlandse Zaken en Koninkrijksrelaties de Vitruvius Lezing, vernoemd naar de Romeinse architect die 2000 jaar geleden ‘ruimtelijke kwaliteit’ muntte. Het was de start van een nieuwe traditie: een jaarlijkse lezing als voeding voor een continue dialoog over in welk Nederland we willen leven. Zoals het in de nieuwe Nota Ruimte waardevol is om ver weg te kijken en onze toekomst te verbeelden, zo nodigt BZK, in samenspel met Actieagenda Ruimtelijk Ontwerp en Platform Ontwerp NL, voor de Vitruvius Lezing een prominente ruimtemaker, denker, visionair of ‘top voice’ uit die bereid en in staat is om haar of zijn blik op het Nederland van straks & later op een prikkelende manier te schetsen en met een breed publiek te delen.  Meer informatie over de Vitruviuswaarden: https://lnkd.in/e95wNvyx ___ De 𝐃𝐚𝐠 𝐯𝐚𝐧 𝐝𝐞 𝐎𝐧𝐭𝐰𝐞𝐫𝐩𝐤𝐫𝐚𝐜𝐡𝐭 (DvdO) op 30 juni 2026 in de Kunstlinie in Almere brengt ontwerpers en beleidsmakers samen: architecten, interieurontwerpers, ingenieurs, landschapsontwerpers, stedenbouwkundigen, planologen en andere professionals werkzaam in het ruimtelijk domein. 🎟️ Tickets https://lnkd.in/euAe647s (via Kunstlinie) 🤝 Ledenprijs €30 (BNA, Koninklijke NLingenieurs, BNSP, Federatie Ruimtelijke Kwaliteit, NVTL, Vereniging Deltametropool en BNI) 👉 Niet-leden €100 Platform Ontwerp NL is een samenwerkingsverband van BNA, Koninklijke NLingenieurs, BNSP, Federatie Ruimtelijke Kwaliteit, NVTL, Vereniging Deltametropool en BNI Beroepsvereniging Nederlandse Interieurarchitecten.

  • East River Park's resiliency and connection to Chinatown are two sides of the same coin. Please join us Tuesday, June 9th at 1PM at the The New York Public Library Chatham Square Library (2 doors down from our office!) in Chinatown, Manhattan to hear more about the project from One Architecture & Urbanism (ONE)'s Senior Landscape Designer, Yuting Yan. The talk will be in Mandarin, with Cantonese translation and English speakers notes. All neighbors and park goers more than welcome! (No RSVP required.) 東河岸公園(East River Park)的防洪韌性和華埠的連接密不可分。歡迎大家6月9號(週二)來曼哈頓唐人街的且林廣場圖書館(Chatham Square Library)——就在我們辦公室隔壁。ONE事務所的高級景觀設計師嚴雨婷將為大家詳細介紹這個專案。講座會用普通話進行,現場提供粵語翻譯和英���字幕。不管是社區居民還是公園常客都歡迎來參加!(不用提前報名。) ⏱️ Tuesday, June 9th from 1-2PM 📍Chatham Square Library, 33 E Broadway, New York, NY 10002

    • No alternative text description for this image
  • Join ONE in welcoming our newest team member, Lisan Westerhof! Lisan Westerhof is a landscape designer who combines her interest in climate adaptation with a strong focus on the natural processes that shape landscapes. Her interest sits at the intersection of climate adaptation, ecological restoration, and water management, always grounded in the natural processes that give landscapes their unique character. With her experience on projects from different scales and contexts, Lisan brings both environmental resiliency and links to surrounding ecosystems in her designs. She aims to create functional and resilient landscapes that respond to climate and biodiversity challenges while encouraging exploration and curiosity. At ONE, Lisan joins a new design team working within the NL2120 consortium, where she focuses on identifying strategic guidelines for Nature-based Solutions (NbS) implementation across different study areas, and designing of future visions for landscapes that work with nature. This role requires her experience in blending ecological and spatial design thinking. "Joining ONE is a meaningful opportunity to contribute to inspiring projects and collaborate across disciplines. Looking forward to learning from the team and working together in shaping resilient landscapes."

    • No alternative text description for this image
  • Last Sunday, One Architecture & Urbanism (ONE) was honored to lead a tour of East Side Coastal Resiliency as part of the NYC Department of City Planning’s annual celebration of the city’s 520 miles of waterfront. This year marks the fifth anniversary of the 2021 Comprehensive Waterfront Plan, with 520 Day programming across the five boroughs. With trees growing in and plantings in bloom, the event attracted several dozen participants eager to learn more about the project, a significant portion of which opened almost exactly one year ago. DCP’s Michael L. Marrella kicked things off in Corlears Hook Park, introducing ONE’s Matthijs Bouw, Emily Gordon of MNLA , and Pauline Claramunt Torche, AICP, ENV SP representing NYC Department of Design and Construction’s community relations team. (We were also joined by DCP Director Sideya Sherman.) After Matthijs introduced the project and context as part of the Big U vision, the tour proceeded across the pedestrian bridge to East River Park, with stops at the amphitheater, sports field, Fireboat House, under the bridge, and tennis courts. From specific design details to the broader vision, the tour guides explained the thinking behind the park, emphasizing that ESCR serves not only as physical infrastructure but also as social infrastructure as a community vision. Given the sunny weather, parkgoers—sunbathers, joggers, cyclists, picnickers, and more—showcased just how the community has embraced the park and its varied recreational spaces. As Matthijs noted, with the opening of the rebuilt East River Park, New Yorkers now see ESCR as a spectacular waterfront park as opposed to a first-of-its-kind resilient infrastructure project—but it doesn’t make a difference, because it was designed to be both. Thanks to everyone who joined us on Sunday for the 520 Day tour of East Side Coastal Resiliency!

    • No alternative text description for this image
    • No alternative text description for this image
    • No alternative text description for this image
    • No alternative text description for this image
    • No alternative text description for this image
      +5
  • Among the many events we’re organizing and attending this month, our New York City team took a well-deserved break last Friday with a spring outing to Philadelphia. The city is near and dear to many of our team members as alumni of UPenn, where ONE Founder Matthijs Bouw is Professor of Practice at University of Pennsylvania Stuart Weitzman School of Design. We started the day with a quick coffee stop at the Barnes Foundation en route to Calder Gardens, where we had scheduled a tour of Philly’s newest cultural institution. Our volunteer guide Penny filled us in on many details of the renowned sculptor’s life and times, as well as the backstory of the museum and its site, an oddly shaped, city-owned vacant lot next to the highway. Herzog & de Meuron designed the beautifully restrained, mostly-below-grade building with reflective stainless steel cladding, deferring to Piet Oudolf’s verdant and varied landscape to stunning effect. After lunch, we made our way across Center City to Penn’s Landing, where the Delaware River Waterfront Corporation is undertaking an ambitious highway cap over I-95 to create a new 12-acre park that will directly connect the city to the riverfront. The ONE team had the great privilege of a guided tour led by Karen Thompson, AICP of DRWC, with Jon McCandlish of KieranTimberlake and Jing Fan of Hargreaves Jones Landscape Architecture, all of whom have been involved in the project for years (and in some cases, over a decade). With the retaining walls in place on the site of the former Great Plaza, construction teams have started adding fill to create a gentle slope from the overpass to the river. More impressively, part of a foundation hinted at the pavilion to come, while the partially capped highway gave a sense of the scale of the undertaking. Following the tour of Penn’s Landing, we doubled back to West Philly, where our Geospatial Analyst and Landscape Designer Oliver Atwood hosted happy hour and dinner at his home. (Like true New Yorkers, the rest of the team was astounded by the enviable square footage of the three-story house.) Thanks to Oliver for hosting and to Laura Frances for organizing a wonderful day in Philly, as well as Penny, Karen, Jon, and Jing for showing us around! Justine Shapiro-Kline Youngjin Song Pranav Thole Yuting Yan Mike L. Hassan Saleem Olivia Fiol

    • No alternative text description for this image
    • No alternative text description for this image
    • No alternative text description for this image
    • No alternative text description for this image
    • No alternative text description for this image
      +5
  • Building on years of engagement along the north coast of Java, ONE is excited to continue contributing to coastal resilience and climate adaptation efforts in Indonesia through the newly awarded Invest International climate and coastal resilience project for Demak and Cirebon. Developed together with the Government of Indonesia and consortium partners led by Haskoning, the project focuses on pilot projects in both focus areas that address the growing impacts of climate change and coastal flooding through integrated coastal protection and adaptation strategies. Over the past years, ONE has helped shape conversations around nature-based solutions, coastal protection, spatial adaptation, and community resilience together with local and international partners, including through collaborations with EcoShape and alongside partners involved in Water as Leverage Indonesia. It is encouraging to now see this work move into the next phase: from strategic exploration and visioning toward pre-feasibility and implementation-oriented pilot projects. As part of the consortium, ONE will contribute to stakeholder engagement and alignment, spatial strategies, and integrated landscape approaches that connect coastal protection with long-term adaptation, ecological systems, and local livelihoods. Looking forward to continuing this collaboration with Haskoning, Witteveen+Bos, Rebel, SGS, Diponegoro University, Invest International, and Indonesian stakeholders. #ClimateResilience #CoastalProtection #NatureBasedSolutions #Indonesia #ClimateAdaptation #BuildingWithNature

    View organization page for Haskoning

    213,183 followers

    As part of our ongoing mission of #EnhancingSocietyTogether, we’re delighted to announce a new climate and coastal resilience project with Invest International and the Government of Indonesia. Haskoning will lead an initiative to deliver pilot projects in two focus areas, Cirebon and Demak, to protect the North Java coast against the growing impacts of climate change, alongside partners Witteveen+Bos, Rebel, SGS Nederland, One Architecture & Urbanism (ONE), and Diponegoro University This international collaboration will build on existing work in the region to create a safer future for North Java’s people, communities, environment and infrastructure, while supporting sustainable economic growth. Our team will help develop integrated coastal protection solutions, from feasibility studies and environmental assessments to detailed designs that support future delivery. You can read more here: https://ow.ly/UbGB50YXjby #ClimateResilience #CoastalProtection #Indonesia

    • No alternative text description for this image
  • Last week, ONE hosted a book talk with Julia Watson, whose practice extrapolates possible futures for climate resilience by drawing on time-honored indigenous knowledge. Beyond sharing examples from her most recent book, ‘Lo—TEK Water’ (Taschen 2025), Watson shared many insights and anecdotes from her two decades of experience as a trained architect, designer, and educator, ranging from early memories of the Exxon Valdez oil spill to launching her career in Indonesia to leading co-design projects with indigenous communities around the world. We were thrilled to have a solid turnout of fellow resilience practitioners, who were captivated by Watson’s visually engaging, at times philosophical presentation. In keeping with ONE’s ethos of “Design with Time,” her work connects Ancestral Systems with Regenerative Futures, surfacing nature-based practices and teachings from often remote communities whose traditions are threatened by various external forces. Hence, “TEK,” or Traditional Ecological Knowledge, the namesake of her design practice, which aims to debunk what she characterized as the mythology of technology. Among the many fascinating examples and case studies she shared, Watson highlighted the living bridges of the Khasi people in India, grown over decades from trees planted on opposite banks of a waterway such that their trunks eventually intertwine. (One of these ‘Jingkieng Dieng Jri,’ or living root bridges, is featured on the cover of her first book, ‘Lo—TEK: Design by Radical Indigenism’ (Taschen 2019).) Following the presentation, ONE’s Justine Shapiro-Kline led a conversation about lessons learned, concluding with Watson fielding questions from a curious audience. Thanks to everyone who joined us last week, and to Julia for sharing her work with us!

    • No alternative text description for this image
    • No alternative text description for this image
    • No alternative text description for this image
  • ONE is excited to join the Waterfront Alliance at this year’s Waterfront Conference, where we’ll be participating in multiple sessions throughout the day! On Thursday, May 19, the day-long event will convene resilience leaders at the Museum of Jewish Heritage in New York City, with the shared goal to “provide a roadmap for future-proofing our waterfronts—no matter what challenges lie ahead.” Kicking things off, Matthijs Bouw will speak in the opening plenary, “Future-Proofing Coastal Cities: Global Strategies for Thriving Waterfronts,” with Walter Rodríguez Meyer, PLA, Nayeli Rodriguez, and Charlotte Wood. In the afternoon, catch Justine Shapiro-Kline at “Empathy as Infrastructure: Reimagining Waterfront Design for the Next Century,” a panel discussion with Gonzalo Cruz, ASLA, Mychal Johnson, and Kimberlae Saul, AIA, DBIA, WEDG, moderated by Joseph Sutkowi, WEDG. The majority of ONE’s NYC team is WEDG-certified, reflecting our deep commitment to the Waterfront Alliance’s mission to “lead the way for thriving and resilient waterfronts, shorelines, and coastlines.” We’re honored to have this opportunity to share our expertise with peers and fellow practitioners as we look to future-proof our waterfronts. Learn more at the Waterfront Conference website: https://lnkd.in/esRrRk3Q

    • No alternative text description for this image
  • ONE couldn’t be more thrilled that East Side Coastal Resiliency (ESCR) has received the top prize of the AIA New York | Center for Architecture + ASLA-NY Transportation and Infrastructure Design Excellence Awards! Among the 50+ entries from around the world and over a dozen fellow honorees, ESCR was named the Best in Competition by this year’s jury for the biennial awards program! In a live announcement on Tuesday, May 5, juror Nicholas Pettinati, RLA delivered comments and commendations, noting “transformational infrastructure and resiliency project […] does so much on so many levels in addressing the kind of macro scale, infrastructure, and resiliency needs.” As Deputy Director of Urban Design at the NYC Department of Transportation, Pettinati is intimately familiar with what it takes to get things built in New York City, summarizing the jury’s praise: “This has really pushed the bounds of how we think about and how we deliver infrastructure in New York.” On behalf of our collaborators on the design team, BIG - Bjarke Ingels Group and MNLA, as well as our client NYC Department of Design and Construction, we are truly honored and humbled to receive this award. We’d also like to acknowledge the many collaborators who contributed to realizing this massively ambitious project: AKRF & KS Engineers, P.C., Arcadis, Jacobs, Boomi Environmental LLC, Munoz, HARDESTY & HANOVER CONSTRUCTION SERVICES, LLC, SiteWorks, WESLER-COHEN ASSOCIATES CONSULTING ENGINEERS, Hazen and Sawyer, Pentagram, Hortus Environmental Design, Starr Whitehouse Landscape Architects and Planners, James Lima Planning + Development, and the HNTB-The LiRo Group construction team, as well as agency partners at NYC Mayor's Office of Climate & Environmental Justice, NYC Department of Parks & Recreation, New York City Department of Transportation, NYC Department of Environmental Protection (NYC DEP), New York City Economic Development Corporation, and NYC Department of City Planning. We’d also like to express deep gratitude to the many community partners, without whom this project wouldn’t be the transformational project it became (or even be there at all): East River Alliance, ESCR Community Advisory Group, Fourth Arts Block (FABnyc), Friends of Corlears Hook Park, GOH Productions, Good Old Lower East Side, Inc. (GOLES), L.E.S. Creative People in Action (LESCPIA), The Lower East Side Ecology Center, LES Ready!, Lower East Side Partnership, Manhattan Community Board 3, Moving Culture Projects, NYC Council District 2, and SolarOne. And of course, special thanks to our longtime collaborators at Rebuild by Design, for nurturing this project from the beginning. Learn more and see all of the winners here: https://lnkd.in/epWg5mJb

    • No alternative text description for this image
    • No alternative text description for this image
    • No alternative text description for this image
    • No alternative text description for this image
    • No alternative text description for this image

Similar pages

Browse jobs