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Amrit Phull is a principal of Forest Studio, an architectural design practice based in Cambridge, Ontario, a Sessional Lecturer at the University of Waterloo School of Architecture, and Co-Editor-in-Chief of The Site Magazine.


Before founding Forest Studio in Cambridge, Ontario, Amrit was a senior architect at Flying Elephant Studio in Bengaluru and an architectural designer at Brook McIlroy in Toronto, where her work spanned institutional, civic, and community-driven projects across Canada and India. Notable work includes the Azim Premji Foundation School in Rajasthan, the Orillia Waterfront Centre, and the Notre-Place Franco-Ontarian Monument in Queen's Park. She also worked directly with the Cree Nation of Wemindji as a design facilitator, supporting community-led architectural and landscape projects grounded in Indigenous cultural knowledge and land-based relationships.


Amrit is Co-Editor-in-Chief of The Site Magazine, Canada's longest-running independent journal of architecture and urbanism and recipient of the Pierre Vago Journalism Award and multiple National Magazine Awards. Her editorial work has addressed feminisms, vernaculars, healed outcomes, and the politics of architectural knowledge production. She holds an Honours Bachelor of Architectural Studies and a Master of Architecture with Commendation from the University of Waterloo School of Architecture. Amrit is also a performer and instructor in Kathak, a North Indian classical dance form, and performs with the Chhandam Dance Company at M-Do Kathak Toronto.