Kristina Ljubanovic

Class of 2016

Kristina is a journalist and former Munk School of Global Affairs fellow based in Toronto, Canada. She covers architecture, design, art, culture, and urban issues, and has written for The Atlantic CityLab, The Globe and Mail, the National Post, TVO.org, and has appeared on CBC Radio. Kristina is also an exhibition designer at the Art Gallery of Ontario, and core faculty at the Institute Without Boundaries at George Brown College. She received her Master of Architecture from the University of Toronto in 2006.

Clippings

  • 2016
  • The Globe and Mail

Model home

  • 2016
  • The Globe and Mail

Modern makeover

  • 2016
  • Canadian Interiors

Daycare for millennials?

  • 2016
  • The Globe and Mail

It’s a process

  • 2016
  • The Globe and Mail

Slice of life

  • 2016
  • Sinkhole

What’s Old Is New Again

  • 2016
  • The Globe and Mail

Machine made

  • 2016
  • The Globe and Mail

A star is born

  • 2016
  • The Globe and Mail

Space invaders: What to expect from the world of design in 2017

  • 2016
  • Canadian Interiors

The Era of Eras Is Over

  • 2016
  • The Globe and Mail

Habitat at 50

  • 2016
  • CityLab
  • The Atlantic

5 Design Lessons for Boston City Hall From Toronto

  • 2016
  • The Globe and Mail

Concrete Examples

  • 2016
  • CIUT 89.5 FM

TIME ZONES

  • 2016
  • The Globe and Mail

Why it’s time to reimagine public spaces using ‘interior urbanism’

  • 2016
  • CIUT 89.5 FM

TIME ZONES

  • 2016
  • TVO

How Toronto’s unique fusion cuisine is going international

  • 2016
  • Deseret News

How Denmark’s idea for building better communities is catching on across the U.S.

  • 2016
  • TVO

How leading designers want to transform Ontario

  • 2016
  • CBC

Polar Tourism and Citizen Science

  • 2015
  • CBC

Daybreak December 06: Sea Ice Research

  • 2015
  • CBC

Science tourism: All in a Weekend Montreal

  • 2016
  • CBC

Arctic travel with scientific touch: In Town and Out

  • 2016
  • National Post

What I did on my winter vacation, or how ‘citizen science’ is changing polar travel