Earth Scientist (National Autonomous University of Mexico)
Elena teaches Histories and Theories and Policy Design seminars at the Landscape Urbanism MSc and MArch programme at the Architectural Association. She is a research fellow at the Groundlab Research Residency at the Architectural Association, where she has been conducting semi quantitative and qualitative studies of site-specific projects in Mexico, Chile, Argentina, Paraguay, Uruguay, and the UK in collaboration with the British Geological Survey, the University College of London, and the British Council. She has taught in the Mexico Visiting School at the AA, at the Royal College of Art, and at the National Autonomous University of Mexico. Her work focuses on the verticality of territories, its imaginaries, epistemologies, and disciplinarian tensions in relationship to contemporary design praxis. She also conducts workshops situated in the interstices between soil sciences, collaborative ethnography, its imaginaries and materialities in site specific practices in collaboration with UK Landscape Design institutions.
Her work is also situated alongside community approaches through soil and land management. These collaborations take place within London, South East Wales, and the periphery of Mexico City. The collaborations unfold as cartographies, archives, and other forms of media.
Research & Design
Soil Health Clinic London
Patlachique common lands and ecologies
Architectural Association Landscape Urbanism tutor
Royal College of Art Environmental Architecture studio tutor
Decentralised Water Solutions for Mexico City and its Metropolitan Area
Field Office Workshop 1
Infográficos de campamentos en riesgo en Chile
Just Transition: the (Un)intended consequences of Greening
Writings
Just Transition: Rewiring Carbon-Pollutant Landscapes and Labour into a Community Forestry Framework.
Landscape architecture Insights | The next generation | Part 3 – Our Future Woodlands
Decentralised Water Solutions for Mexico City and its Metropolitan Area
2020-2022
Groundlab, British Geological Survey, Centre for Advanced Spatial Analyisis.
Mexico City’s Metropolitan Area
- The Mexico City Socio-Hydrological Model comprises a Socio-Hydrological Vulnerability Index that integrates the hydrological conditions into the Water Stress and the Adaptive Capacity of Mexico City´s households to face current and future challenges of water supply.
The project analyses the impacts of decentralized sanitation by distributing the Constructed Wetlands (CWs) across the Metropolitan Area; highlighting the areas with most risk and assessing different schemes for optimizing resilience and mitigating the vulnerability of the households.
https://storymaps.arcgis.com/stories/c876b8d526cb41199056d244d6bdb6d9
https://groundlab.aaschool.ac.uk/?ae_global_templates=socio-hydrological-vulnerability