Bruno Carvalho

An urbanist’s lifelong study of the “rhythm of cities,” from Rio to Cambridge 

Bruno Carvalho stands in front of a city background

Bruno Carvalho

Photograph by Jim Harrison

As a child, urbanist Bruno Carvalho explored his native Rio de Janeiro in search of four things: soccer, books, films, and music. The city bus took Carvalho, now a professor of romance languages and literatures and co-director of the Harvard Mellon Urban Initiative, everywhere he needed to go: to empty fields, sandy beaches, and the Maracanã Stadium for soccer; to Rio’s numerous used bookstores, where he got an “early education in the canon of Brazilian poetry”; and to the “serendipitous social spaces” of video rental stores and record shops. “I sort of became an urbanist without realizing it, learning the rhythms of cities,” he says. Walking the streets of Rio, he would recognize workers in stores and restaurants and know when each profession got off work. The study of cities came into focus for him at Dartmouth College, where he met his architect wife. They began “building-watching” for fun. “We joined forces,” he says, combining her design knowledge with his urban-planning expertise to “try to figure out” new cities: “Every building is a puzzle for us.” Like his hometown of Rio, bordered by rainforest, Carvalho’s recent work lies at the intersection of the urban and the environmental—a natural launching point for his New York Times op-eds denouncing deforestation of the Amazon. Now, when not chasing his three-year-old daughter or putting her to sleep with João Gilberto bossa nova records, he’s working on a book about how people have imagined urban futures since the 1790s. The project requires the kind of synthesis inherent to urban studies (and one he finds continually inspiring), unifying his disparate interests like music, film, and the environment. “They all come together in the city,” he says. “They came together in the city for me as a child, and they still do today.”

Read more articles by Nancy Walecki
Related topics

You might also like

Open Book: A New Nuclear Age

Harvard historian Serhii Plokhy’s latest book looks at the rising danger of a new arms race.

Harvard Symposium Tackles 400 Years of Homelessness in America

Professors explore the history of homelessness in the U.S., from colonial poor laws to today’s housing crisis

The Origins of Europe’s Most Mysterious Languages

A small group of Siberian hunter-gatherers changed the way millions of Europeans speak today.

Most popular

FAS Announces New Endowment for Ph.D. Candidates

A $50 million gift from alumni donors aims to protect research opportunities amid political uncertainty

Martin Nowak Sanctioned for Jeffrey Epstein Involvement

The Faculty of Arts and Sciences announces disciplinary actions.

Harvard Students, Alumni to Compete at the 2026 Olympics

Six Crimson athletes are headed to the XXV Winter Games in Milano Cortina 

Explore More From Current Issue

A man skiing intensely in the snow, with two spectators in the background.

Introductions: Dan Cnossen

A conversation with the former Navy SEAL and gold-medal-winning Paralympic skier

A jubilant graduate shouts into a megaphone, surrounded by a cheering crowd.

For Campus Speech, Civility is a Cultural Practice

A former Harvard College dean reviews Princeton President Christopher Eisgruber’s book Terms of Respect.

Two bare-knuckle boxers fight in a ring, surrounded by onlookers in 19th-century attire.

England’s First Sports Megastar

A collection of illustrations capture a boxer’s triumphant moment.