Adam Thibodeaux is an architect and educator whose teaching and research are centered on the uncovering, preservation, and reclamation of architecture that once sheltered populations marginalized by difference. His practice has focused primarily on buildings that once served as queer gathering spaces whose histories have been masked by a need to assimilate in urban conditions where they were once unwelcome. His work on this subject has included built works, public installations, writing, and grassroots activism. Adam is an NCARB-registered Architect and Assistant Professor in the Department of Architecture at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, holding a Bachelor of Architecture from the University of Texas at Austin and a Post-Professional Master of Architecture from Yale University.
“Thoroughly researched and argued, Deviant Space forms an important consolidation and expansion of the body of thought on the relationship between difference, sex, identity, and place. Thibodeaux constructs a developed description of the queering of space through disuse and reuse, opening new possibilities for other body-based identities.” Aaron Betsky, author of Queer Space and Building Sex.