The Architect's Rolodex

COOKFOX Architects

As architects, we’re curious about the built world but especially curious about the people that activate it. We want to have conversations with passionate professionals about why they do what they do. So, we’ve decided to take conversations that have traditionally happened around the harvest table in our studio to a podcast format. Listen as we have regular conversations with design leaders, colleagues, and all-around great humans as we explore more deeply COOKFOX’s ethos of regenerating and elevating the natural and human condition in our urban environment.

Episodes

  1. Full Length Conversation: From Art School to City Planner—Harley Dubois on Designing Black Rock City's Human-Centered Metropolis

    26/11/2025

    Full Length Conversation: From Art School to City Planner—Harley Dubois on Designing Black Rock City's Human-Centered Metropolis

    STOP BUILDING IN CONCRETE! Dive into the ultimate urban design challenge: Black Rock City, the 80,000-person temporary metropolis that pops up in the Nevada desert only to disappear just as quickly. We sit down with the visionary co-founder and Chief Culture Officer, Harley Dubois, who steered this massive, innovative community for decades. Harley unveils the rigorous process of trial-by-error and human-centered design that established the city's unique architectural structure, including its circular shape, calculated street widths, and the specific scale required to activate its central plazas. Learn the unexpected journey of how Harley became the de facto city planner: After graduating from art school and being dropped into the chaotic, artistic Cacophony society, she discovered her true strength was not only painting, but administration, realizing she needed to step in because "stuff wasn't getting done". She details her pivotal shift from artist to city manager—a demanding role covering everything from infrastructure to life safety for over 35 years. Find out why this highly successful pedestrian-only city provides critical lessons in impermanence and civic-mindedness for architects and designers shaping the built world. Harley’s social: ⁠https://www.linkedin.com/in/harley-dubois-82150921/⁠ Burning Man website: ⁠https://burningman.org/⁠ Other links for more info: 8 Ways to Make Your City More Like Burning Man ⁠https://www.governing.com/archive/gov-burning-man-takeaways.html⁠   What Cities Can Learn From Burning Man ⁠https://www.governing.com/archive/gov-burning-man.html⁠   There’s a city in my mind  ⁠https://theconversation.com/theres-a-city-in-my-mind-78337

    1h 52m
  2. Harley Dubois: Architecture of Impermanence – Burning Man's Evolving Design

    22/08/2025

    Harley Dubois: Architecture of Impermanence – Burning Man's Evolving Design

    In this episode of The Architect’s Rolodex we land in the middle of a conversation featuring the incredible Harley Dubois, a co-founder and Chief Culture Officer of Burning Man who has stewarded Burning Man's rich cultural history for decades. Harley, the former city manager for over 10 years, offers a unique perspective on this pedestrian city where circles are better than angles when it comes to bringing people together.The episode explores the unique urban and community design of Black Rock City, Nevada. Each year, this desert region is where a temporary city is built for the music and art event known as Burning Man, one of community, art, self-expression, and self-reliance. Harley explains how the city's circular layout evolved through trial and error, prioritizinghuman interaction and community needs over traditional architectural principles. She highlights the significance of "theme camps" as the core fabric of Burning Man, fostering participation and engagement through a low barrier to entry for creative expression. Finally, the interview touches upon the profound impact of the Temple, a central and iconic part of Burning Man, as a community-driven sacred space for healing and processing emotions. Harley describes how Burning Man's innovative, human-centered approach to temporary urbanism and community building has inspired initiatives beyond the event, including disaster relief efforts. This isn't just a conversation about architecture; it's about how a community works, how serendipitous opportunities are designed into a city, and the profound impact of impermanence and human-centered design. Harley’s social: https://www.linkedin.com/in/harley-dubois-82150921/ Burning Man website: https://burningman.org/ Other links for more info: 8 Ways to Make Your City More Like Burning Man https://www.governing.com/archive/gov-burning-man-takeaways.html   What Cities Can Learn From Burning Man https://www.governing.com/archive/gov-burning-man.html   There’s a city in my mind  https://theconversation.com/theres-a-city-in-my-mind-78337

    32 min

About

As architects, we’re curious about the built world but especially curious about the people that activate it. We want to have conversations with passionate professionals about why they do what they do. So, we’ve decided to take conversations that have traditionally happened around the harvest table in our studio to a podcast format. Listen as we have regular conversations with design leaders, colleagues, and all-around great humans as we explore more deeply COOKFOX’s ethos of regenerating and elevating the natural and human condition in our urban environment.