University of Michigan Campus Drawing

I created this 26 by 45-inch ink on paper panoramic drawing of the University of Michigan's campus. The image required 300 hours of work 18 months. Prints can be ordered in various custom sizes. Contact me to download source files or to order custom prints mailed to your home address.

All New York City in one drawing

The ink on paper detailed panorama of New York City took 800 hours to complete. The image measures 45 inches high by 79 inches wide (114 cm by 201 cm) and features every neighborhood and key landmark the length of Manhattan island. As my art project created during the pandemic, it serves as a personal keepsake and reflection of my rich memories of New York City. Drawing is shared online in lower resolution. Email me for the full-size file. Custom size prints will be mailed to your home address on request.

Historical Reconstruction of Ford Model T Assembly Line

Based on extensive archival documents, this historically-accurate film showcases the assembly of the 1915 Model T Runabout at Ford's Highland Park factory. This projects represents the first complete visual and cartographic documentation of this manufacturing process from 1908 to 1927. It highlights Ford's innovative yet evolving assembly line techniques, which revolutionized car production, contrasting with previous methods.

Time-Lapse Evolution of Istanbul’s Urban Form: 330 AD to Present

This film project utilizes historical cartography and GIS to create a time-lapse animation of Istanbul’s urban development over millennia. It illustrates three significant periods: Byzantine rule (330AD-1453), Ottoman rule (1453-1923), and modern metropolitan growth (1923-present). The animation visualizes changing coastlines and showcases the evolution of 200 archaeological sites, churches, aqueduct routes, and early Roman roads. Viewers can explore the film with the accompanying soundtrack or pause the map and zoom into a high-resolution map of individual places.

The Berlin Evolution Animation

Abstract: The Berlin Evolution Animation visualizes the development of this city’s street network and infrastructure from 1415 to the present-day, using an overlay of historic maps. The resulting short film presents a series of 17 “cartographic snapshots” of the urban area at intervals of every 30-40 years. This process highlights Berlin's urban development over 600 years, the rapid explosion of industry and population in the nineteenth-century, followed by the destruction and violence of two world wars and then the Cold War on Berlin's urban fabric.

Setting Up Sex Offenders for Failure

This blind peer reviewed article discusses how stringent laws for sex offenders, like Megan’s Law and residency restrictions on where sex offenders may live, inadvertently lead to higher rates of re-arrest and re-conviction. These web of laws ironically increase the crime rate and cause thousands of low-income sex offenders to be re-arrested for crimes unrelated to the abuse of minors. Focusing on New York City, this research highlights issues with the home address requirement and suggests reforms to enhance public safety more effectively than current regulations.

Jersey City: Urban Planning in Historical Perspective

This project was commissioned by the Jersey City Public Library to be used as an educational tool about the history of land use law and city planning, from 1900 to today. The project overlays citywide maps of every building in 1873, 1919, and today - to reveal changing land use patterns. The project also includes a PDF booklet about Jersey City's six master plans, each of which captures the spirit of the city and the governing philosophies of city planners at the time. These documents reveal the city's evolution in response to urban challenges and broader themes in U.S. urban history.

Newark Changing: Mapping neighborhood demolition, 1950s to today

Newark Changing is an interactive visual encyclopedia featuring 2,400 photo comparisons from 1959-68 vs. today. The project illustrates the combined impacts of urban renewal, slum clearance, highway construction, and decades of demolition by neglect. Through a historic map, users can explore dozens of neighborhoods and thousands of demolished homes. This research highlights the devastation faced by communities due to decades of anti-urban policy decisions by the government and anti-black investment decisions by corporations. Visit: NewarkChanging.org/map

The time-lapse history of Manhattan in two minutes

This two-minute time-lapse film illustrates the 400-year transformation of Lower Manhattan from a Dutch village to a modern metropolis, highlighting the impact of new technologies on evolving methods of urban representation. The film draws from seventeenth-century drawings to modern photography, showcasing how each generation perceived and depicted through art the city's growth and the changing world around them.

Interactive time-lapse map about construction of the Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp

This project utilizes georeferenced historical maps and time sliders to document the transformation of the region around the Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp from 1945 to today. The interactive map highlights the selective preservation, demolition, decay, or adaptive reuse of significant camp structures linked to the Holocaust. The project uses interactive time-lapse cartography to inform public understanding of the Holocaust and the landscape of tragedy it produced.

Cathedral of Beauvais: Sublime Visions; Thwarted Ambitions; A Sketch

Created with Stephen Murray and published by Columbia University's Department of Art History & Archaeology. Beauvais Cathedral, the tallest Gothic cathedral in France, began construction in 1225 but was never completed due to major collapses in 1284 and 1573. This animation chronicles its ambitious yet troubled history, showcasing its design intricacies and centuries-long phases of construction, ultimately highlighting the challenges of architectural construction during medieval times.

Abstract of my PhD Dissertation Project at University of Michigan

My future book project titled "Plundering the City" examines how capital and new technologies eroded the quality, density, and variety of small businesses, craft industries, neighborhood institutions, and community groups in what is now the inner-city of Newark, New Jersey. Taking one city as the prism to examine larger urban crises in American culture, this project highlights the spatial and social causes of urban poverty and impoverished social relations in American urban life. Rebuilding social infrastructure requires systemic change and seizing a new means of production. Visit: NewarkChanging.org/map

St. Paul’s Cathedral Dome: a synthesis of engineering and art

This time-lapse construction sequence in film and historical essay analyzes how architect Christopher Wren synthesized engineering and art to create this cathedral. The essay analyzes St. Paul's Cathedral, highlighting its architectural significance through the lens of Eugène-Emmanuel Viollet-le-Duc's thesis-antithesis-synthesis framework. St. Paul's is a blend of advanced engineering and artistic expression reflective of Enlightenment thought, showcasing innovation in design and construction while mirroring cultural shifts in London at the time.

Civil Rights Rebellion in the Essex County Jail

Season 13, Episode 6 of the Abandoned Engineering series for Discovery Channel, explores the old Essex County Jail in Newark, New Jersey. After seeing my research and reading my Master's thesis project, Discovery Channel approached me about co-creating a documentary about this jail, which was streamed in July 2024, both in the U.S. and internationally in 20 languages. Based on featured interviews with me, this documentary commemorates those incarcerated here by highlighting the building’s historical significance and broader themes of injustice.

Newark Changing in Maps: 1889, 1927, 1930

This project overlays historical city-wide fire insurance and tax maps above the contemporary geography to reveal change over time. Detailed maps of building footprints from 1889, 1927, and 1930 reveal different patterns of land use, community life, and walkable streets. Find your building, your workplace, or any site in Newark - and identify who lived there a century ago with the unique tool of this interactive map.

Mapping Manhattan Chinatown’s Public Realm

Pedestrian Observations explores Manhattan's Chinatown's public and private spaces through a detailed panoramic drawing and map of contested land uses. This project was co-published by Myles Zhang with non-profit artist collective City as Living Lab and architect Stephen Fan. The printed folding map highlights the vibrant interactions among diverse community members, while emphasizing the need for better public space management. Inspired by urban theorists, the project seeks to foster conversation about economic development and resilient urban environments. 《行人观察》(Pedestrian Observations)通过一幅详尽的全景绘图及一张描绘土地利用争议的地图,对曼哈顿华埠的公共与私人空间进行了深入探索。该项目由 Myles Zhang 与非营利艺术家团体“城市即活体实验室”(City as Living Lab)及建筑师 Stephen Fan 联合出版。这份印制的折叠地图不仅突显了多元社区成员之间充满活力的互动,同时也强调了加强公共空间管理的必要性。受城市理论家的启发,该项目旨在促进关于经济发展与韧性城市环境的对话与探讨。 Visit: CityasLivingLab.org/chinatown

Here Grows New York City

Here Grows New York is an American urban planning film directed by Myles Zhang and advised by urban historians Kenneth T. Jackson and Gergely Baics. The data visualization uses time-lapse cartography to follow the history of New York City’s infrastructure and street system development from 1609 to the present day. The video quickly went viral, gaining over five million views. The film is used in dozens of architecture and urban planning classes about the history of the urban form.

Columbia University Artwork

This digital portfolio highlights various artistic projects, time-lapse drawings, and models I created of Columbia University's campus, during the time I was a student there. The portfolio features a detailed ink and watercolor campus drawing, a mini model of the campus made from paper, and six time-lapse sequences documenting artistic processes. Featured in multiple publications, these creations are now a personal souvenir of my education at Columbia. Contact me to download source files or to order custom prints mailed to your home address.

Exhibition Design for the Old Essex County Jail

Developed in collaboration with Newark Landmarks and the master’s program in historic preservation at Columbia University’s Graduate School of Architecture, Planning, and Preservation. The abandoned old Essex County Jail in Newark was built in 1837 and is now listed on the National Register of Historic Places. This project transformed revitalization proposals by Columbia University's historic preservation students into an exhibit and website. The exhibit highlight this jail's social history and aimed to foster discussion on incarceration and urban regeneration. Visit: OldEssexCountyJail.org

Virtual Reality Computer Model of Jeremy Bentham’s Panopticon

My master's thesis project at the University of Cambridge explores the architecture and power dynamics of Jeremy Bentham's panopticon. Based on exceptionally detailed and accurate-to-the-inch measurements given in Bentham's 18th-century letters and drawings, this project reconstructs his panopticon in virtual reality. Despite his claims of total oversight, design flaws undermine effective surveillance. The project highlights how Bentham's vision anticipates future technologies that only now - three centuries later - fully realize his original ambitions of total control. As featured by literary magazine Aeon: A World of Ideas

New York Chinatown: time-lapse drawing

This time-lapse of Manhattan Chinatown took sixty hours to complete and measures 26 by 40 inches. The artwork features Chinatown's tenements in the foreground, with Lower Manhattan's skyscrapers towering above. This panoramic map depicts Chinatown's urban core, as bounded by Bowery, Canal Street, and Columbus Park. Drawing is shared online in lower resolution. Email me for the full-size file. Custom size prints will be mailed to your home address on request.

Amiens Cathedral Construction Sequences

Amiens Cathedral is a key subject in the Art Humanities Core Curriculum class that is required of all undergraduates at Columbia University. This research project is now used in the classroom instruction of 1,400 Columbia undergrads each year. This project created with Stephen Murray uses computer models and films to visualize the centuries-long time-lapse construction sequence of Amiens Cathedral. This research highlights the cathedral's role in medieval society: as symbol of civic identity, as economic engine, and as nation-building tool for the future French state. Visit: projects.mcah.columbia.edu/amiens-arthum

Architecture of Redemption?

My master's of architecture thesis at the University of Cambridge. This research explores the contradictions of solitary confinement at Eastern State Penitentiary in Philadelphia. This prison experimented with prolonged solitary confinement in the 1830s to inspire the redemption of inmates. By analyzing Jeremy Bentham's plans for the ideal panopticon prison, architect John Haviland's designs for this specific prison, and visitor accounts of prison's daily operations, my thesis examines the builders' philosophical assumptions about utopia, architecture, and human nature.

Walking in Manhattan

This project features a portfolio gallery of my drawings, watercolors, paintings, and photographs of Manhattan island. The portfolio is divided into ten "walks" over the chapter structure of ten "days." Each "day" features some of my artwork about a different neighborhood of Manhattan: Chinatown, SoHo, East Village, West Village, the High Line, Madison Square, Midtown, Central Park, Riverside Drive, Morningside Heights, Harlem, and Washington Heights.

The Detroit Evolution Animation

Old maps were layered and animated to reveal the scale of Detroit’s transformation from French colonial trading post, to 19th-century boom, to 20th-century decline. Cartography highlights how political policies, technological changes, and the Great Migration accelerated racial segregation and the decline of mass transit. Detroit reflects broader trends seen in American cities. Project developed with historian Robert Fishman for an exhibit and lecture, funded by Egalitarian Metropolis grant from Mellon Foundation.

Envisioning Seneca Village

This collaborative project by Gergely Baics, Meredith Linn, Leah Meisterlin, and Myles Zhang. The project showcases a historically-accurate and archaeologically-informed 3D model of the historic African American community of Seneca Village, which was demolished in 1857 to build Central Park. The project combines digital reconstruction with extensive research, as public-facing tools to commemorate the village's history and legacy. The project was recognized with multiple awards, widespread use in classrooms, and publicity by the Central Park Conservancy. Visit: EnvisioningSenecaVillage.github.io

Time-lapse Animation of Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire

Based on court transcripts, eye witness testimonies, primary sources, and historical maps, this animation reconstructs the workplace conditions and abuses that caused the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire. This fire on 25 March 1911, killed 146 garment workers and represents a turning-point moment in the history of organized labor in America. This project is the first - and only - accurate-to-the-inch virtual reality model of the entire factory floor.

Notre-Dame of Paris Construction Sequence

The project was created with historian Stephen Murray and syndicated by the French state, LeMonde newspaper, as well as the official website and social media channels of Notre-Dame. This time-lapse construction sequence follows the cathedral's gradual evolution from c.1060 to the present, highlighting repeated fires, disasters, and renovation campaigns. Based on detailed site plans and peer-review from experts, the film combines handmade aesthetics with digital precision. Visitors can also explore my VR cathedral model and my video tutorials for creating similar models.

Myles Zhang: Architectural and Urban Historian