
Nico Alexandroff is a researcher, designer and strategist working across the spatial, political and socio-cultural implications of emerging technology. Trained in architecture at the University of Manchester and the Royal College of Art, he applies spatial thinking as an analytical tool to investigate complex conditions, map evolving systems and build the frameworks and narratives that make them legible and actionable.
He works as a spatial researcher at Border Forensics and is Senior Lecturer on MA Narrative Environments in the Spatial Practices department at Central Saint Martins, University of the Arts London, where he directs research programmes with scientific and institutional partners at the edges of governance, technology and ecological change.
His wider practice spans strategic foresight, speculative design and spatial investigation, with partners including Antikythera, the Swiss Centre for Design and Health, Genomics England, the Strelka Institute and the ICRC Foundation.