The Michigan-Mellon Project on the Egalitarian Metropolis is an Urban Humanities Initiative organized around a partnership of humanists, architects/urban designers/planners, and community leaders. A collaboration between the University of Michigan’s Taubman College of Architecture & Urban Planning and College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, the Project’s commitment to research and teaching aims to not only model a future for these disciplines, but to also demonstrate how the urban humanities can be effective partners and collaborators in the movement for more inclusive cities.


The Egalitarian Metropolis Project has been made possible through notable contributions by:

Principal Investigators

Matthew Biro, Milton Curry, Angela Dillard, Robert Fishman

Fellows

Missy Albin, Manuel Shvartzberg Carrió, Allen Gillers, Nathan Holmes, Corina Kesler, Nora Krinitsky, Suzanne Lettiere, Anna Mascorella, Austin McCoy, Michael McCulloch, Young-Tack Oh, Julie Pedtke, Paulina Reyes, Salam Rida, Torri Smith, Michael Stauch, Sara Timberlake, Julia Yezbick

Additional contributions made by:

Onyinye Akabogu, Asma Baban, Joe Bauer, Dan Commer, Anne Cong-Huyen, Caitlin Conway, Bailey Flannery, Dan Green, Chelsea Hamm, Gabe Harp, Amanda Harris, Alma Hearin, Maria Laitan, Larissa Larsen, Matthew Lassiter, Yojairo Lomeli, Jonathan Massey, Sheila May, Liz Momblanco, David Porter, Sherry Rennick – 3D Perspective, Anya Sirota, Anne Speigle, Reggie Tiessen, Kathy Velikov, Jessica Wolking, Myles Zhang

The Michigan-Mellon Project on the Egalitarian Metropolis was generously funded by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.