Videos
Designing cities of care | Eva Grigoriadou | TEDxAthens
Modern cities are designed to facilitate capital production while marginalizing other key needs that we have as individuals. Eva Grigoriadou, founder of URBANA, talks about how a feminist perspective can help us rethink and redesign our cities by putting...
Read moreEva Grigoriadou at the documentary “SPLENDID CITY – Athens Urban Stories” | Women and the city
[Watch the full episode here here] The episode follows women’s struggle over time to consolidate their equal position in both public and private sector. A struggle that had to overcome the relentless “father principle”, the expressed hatred and the...
Read moreURBANA at “Kipseli” show (ΕRΤ2)
Is the city designed for all? Eva Grigoriadou welcomes Lila Stambouloglou, from ERT’s show, “Kypseli”, to our office in Halandri and talks about participatory, inclusive, and feminist urban planning, our projects, our vision, while also about the program “Inclusive...
Read moreEva Grigoriadou (URBANA) at “Epikindines” (ERT2)
“Epikindines” (dangerous women) is a documentary series that came to talk about gender inequalities and women’s position today in Greece. – Are boys educated in a different manner than girls? – How can education be more inclusive? – And...
Read moreUrbana.Urbano digital talks
This video showcases discussions from the ‘Urbana.Urbano’ workshops in November 2020. The program’s goal is to examine public spaces in Athens through the prism of gender and everyday life, so as to develop proposals aiming to transform them, making...
Read moreEducational material
Atricles - Interviews
- Interview at OneMan magazine
- Interview at ‘Kipseli’ (ΕRΤ2) TV program
- Interview at popaganda magazine
- Interview at parallaxi magazine
- Interview at ‘K’ magazine of Kathimerini newspaper
- Interview at Efimerida ton Syntakton newspaper
- Interview at monopoli.gr magazine
- Interview at the architectural magazine Archisearch
- Interview at Lifo magazine
- Interview at Kathimerini
- Article in ‘Education & Society’, Avgi