Matias Echanove is Swiss and Spanish urbanologist with over 20 years of research and practice in Asia, America and Europe. He lived, studied and worked in London, New York, Tokyo, and Mumbai, where he co-founded urbz, together with Rahul Srivastava and Geeta Mehta. 

His academic training in government and economics at London School of Economics, urban planning at Columbia University, and urban information systems at the University of Tokyo, along with his personal and professional engagement with neighborhoods such as Bed-Stuy in Brooklyn NY, Shimokitazawa in Tokyo or Dharavi in Mumbai have largely contributed to shape urbz’ current practice. 

Matias currently lives in his native city of Geneva, where he co-directs urbz Switzerland. He is also co-director at urbz Paris and an active partner at urbz’ offices in Mumbai and Bogota. He leads or coordinates projects in each of these countries, which involves spending too much time on Zoom calls and plane flights. Matias recently fell in love with the city of Cali in Colombia, where urbz works on the development of participatory tools and methodologies at the scale of the city. In Geneva, he works on the landscaping of a park for the International Federation of the Red Cross, among other projects. He is also currently involved in the reprogramming of a massive hospital complex in Nantes; and an improvement plan for a fisherman’s village in the heart of Mumbai.

Matias Echanove is regularly invited to present his work at institutions such as Harvard, Columbia, Berkeley, Princeton, ETHZ, EPFL, Strelka Institute, Max Planck Institute, the World Bank, the Swiss Architecture Museum in Basel, and Urban Age. He has written a large number of articles and opinion pieces in journals such as The New York Times, The Hindu, The Guardian, The Wall Street Journal, Art India, Oxford University Press, Strelka Press (Moscow), Domus (Milan), Tokyo University Press, and The Indian Architect and Builder. He was also interviewed on urban issues  in the New York Times and The Economist. Together with Rahul Srivastava, he is currently writing a book on Homegrown Cities that will be published by Verso in 2026. 

His work with urbz was exhibited at MoMA in New York, MAXXI in Rome, MAK in Vienna, Istanbul Design Biennial, Chicago Architecture Biennial, São Paulo Cultural Center, and Bhau Daji Lad City Museum in Mumbai, among other places. 

Matias Echanove and Rahul Srivastava are Ambassador of Swiss-Indian friendship, an award given in 2017 by Swiss President Doris Leuthard and Indian Minister for Road Transport and Highways Mr. Mansukh L. Mandaviya for contributing innovative ideas in urban planning, and for strengthening the Swiss-Indian relationship.

19.047128, 72.852432

urbz Mumbai, Room 56/AB, 1st Floor, T-Junction, Koliwada, Dharavi, Mumbai, Maharashtra 400017, India

46.1910978, 6.1357955999999

urbz Geneva, 24 Route des Acacias, 1227 Geneva, Switzerland

Articles

A Shared Vision for the ICRC in Geneva

urbz is working with the employees, directorate and assembly of the International Committee of the Red Cross and the Red Cross/Red Crescent Museum to imagine the future of their HQ

Porteous - from squat to cooperative

urbz is helping a cultural squat to formalize it's relationship to the city of Geneva

Anthropology as Urban Practice: Notes from Mumbai’s Sangam Gully

urbz founders Rahul Srivastava and Matias Echanove reflect on community-driven placemaking in the Indian metropolis.

Read on Azure magazine

 

Unmasking prejudice

The waste of a resource that could help India cope

Urban Exodus / Another Journey Home?

How a public health emergency prompted a man-made disaster

One Space Two Places

Based on a multi-year research with the Mobile Lives Forum on the linkages between Mumbai and Konkan villages this essay, first published in the magazine FuturArc, describes an Indian model of urbanization.

Flooding ourselves

Local knowledge may be the best response to natural disaster and bureaucratic inefficiency (The Hindu 17.08.2019)

Why city planners need to add “recognition” to their lexicon

Neighbourhoods such as Paraisópolis in Sao Paulo, Cazuca in Bogota, or Dharavi in Mumbai are generically referred to as slums, even though they represent a more nuanced reality to their inhabitants. (The Hindu 20.07.19)

Kochi workshop / urbz Mumbai

Competition or co-creation?

How design competitions waste time, money and potential. (The Hindu 23.06.19)

Broken nature — reassembling the urban

Connecting humans to each other and the environment is the 21st century’s biggest challenge. (The Hindu 25.05.2019)
 

Works

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