
Architecture of Memory
Exploring (Post-) Jewish Spaces in Eastern Europe
Natalia Romik (Author)
Series: Design Research in Architecture
Architecture of Memory explores architectural disappearance, urban remembrance and functional change amid social upheaval. Using archival, architectural and artistic methods, Natalia Romik investigates the spectral architecture of former shtetls – predominantly Jewish towns in Central and Eastern Europe before the Second World War. After the war, these towns were repopulated by people of other nationalities, who reused former Jewish properties. Today, traces of the Jewish populations have nearly vanished from urban reality and public discourse. Romik’s work seeks to discover new ways to develop abandoned shtetl architecture, focusing on Jewish heritage sites like synagogue ruins and ritual baths.
Through an interdisciplinary approach that merges architectural design, contemporary art and Jewish studies, Romik’s experimental research addresses the complex social issues of former shtetls by combining theoretical discussions with artistic performances and architectural interventions. The book documents projects ranging from subtle, mirror-clad interventions – such as the Nomadic Shtetl Archive, JAD, and Hurdy-Gurdy – to practical renovations that transform derelict synagogues and Jewish pre-burial houses into historical museums and cultural centres. These efforts confront the ‘present absence’ of these towns by merging theoretical discourse with archival research, artistic performances and architectural interventions, aimed at investigating the lost Jewish communities’ spectral architecture.
List of figures
Acknowledgements
Introduction
1 The Shtetl
2 Nomadism
3 Walking
4 Mirrors
5 Archives
6 Embedment
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index
DOI: 10.14324/111.9781800088979
Publication date: 27 October 2025
PDF ISBN: 9781800088979
EPUB ISBN: 9781800088986
Paperback ISBN: 9781800088955
Natalia Romik (Author) 
Natalia Romik is a practitioner of architecture, designer, author, public historian and artist. She was awarded a PhD from the Bartlett School of Architecture, UCL and holds a scholarship with the Fondation pour la Meěmoire de la Shoah, Gerda Henkel Foundation. Her work addresses academic research with methods of contemporary art and architecture to explore the (post)Jewish architecture of memory.

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