• IEEE.org
  • IEEE CS Standards
  • Career Center
  • About Us
  • Subscribe to Newsletter

0

IEEE-CS_LogoTM-orange
  • MEMBERSHIP
  • CONFERENCES
  • PUBLICATIONS
  • EDUCATION & CAREER
  • VOLUNTEER
  • ABOUT
  • Join Us
IEEE-CS_LogoTM-orange

0

IEEE Computer Society Logo
Sign up for our newsletter
IEEE COMPUTER SOCIETY
About UsBoard of GovernorsNewslettersPress RoomIEEE Support CenterContact Us
COMPUTING RESOURCES
Career CenterCourses & CertificationsWebinarsPodcastsTech NewsMembership
BUSINESS SOLUTIONS
Corporate PartnershipsConference Sponsorships & ExhibitsAdvertisingRecruitingDigital Library Institutional Subscriptions
DIGITAL LIBRARY
MagazinesJournalsConference ProceedingsVideo LibraryLibrarian Resources
COMMUNITY RESOURCES
GovernanceConference OrganizersAuthorsChaptersCommunities
POLICIES
PrivacyAccessibility StatementIEEE Nondiscrimination PolicyIEEE Ethics ReportingXML Sitemap

Copyright 2026 IEEE - All rights reserved. A public charity, IEEE is the world’s largest technical professional organization dedicated to advancing technology for the benefit of humanity.

  • Home
  • /Digital Library
  • /Magazines
  • /An
  • Home
  • / ...
  • /Magazines
  • /An

Call For Papers: Special Issue on Computing and the Built Environment

IEEE Annals of the History of Computing seeks submissions for this upcoming special issue.

Important Dates

  • Full Manuscripts Due: 18 May 2026 (via submission site)
  • Publication: July-Sept 2026

Call for Papers

What were the material, technical, epistemic, cultural, and political conditions that made the built environment computable? And, conversely, what are the implications of emplacing the history of computing in material and spatial settings – in the built environment?

The Special Issue “Computing and the Built Environment” invites historical scholarship that tackles the co-constitution and entanglements of computing and the built environment. The term “built environment” here refers both to human-made material configurations and to the interdisciplinary field concerned with their design and function. Known as “environmental design,” this field burgeoned in the second half of the 20th century, in proximity to computational concepts and techniques. Environmental design expanded the scope of architecture from objects (buildings) to relationships between humans and the settings they inhabit. Often drawing from cybernetic and information theory, new space-based approaches ushered in the imperative not to just design but to compute the built environment – and with it, the fantasy of environmental computability.

We invite interdisciplinary historical scholarship that examines the relationship between computing and the built environment at the mesoscale of buildings and urban infrastructures.

Potential topics include:

  • Digital electronic computers as built environments;
  • Environmental design’s relationship with systems theory, cybernetics, and electronic computing;
  • Histories of carbon accounting software and quantitative energy models for building and city design;
  • Historical construction of microclimate regulation and “smart” buildings;
  • Infrastructures of climate computing;
  • Neuromorphic computing and the design of “green” cities;
  • Ecocriticism, hardware, and architectural dystopias

The special issue will highlight new thinking about the historical dependencies of computing on the built environment, specifying the roles that computing has played in how designers and architects conceptualize and design the world that surrounds us. At a time when computational models, techniques, and infrastructure are once again invoked to legitimize human-made interventions on an ailing planet, a deeper understanding of these histories is imperative.

Guest Editors

  • David Theodore, McGill University
  • Theodora Vardouli, McGill University
LATEST NEWS
Episode 3 | How IEEE Can Support and Enhance Academia
Episode 3 | How IEEE Can Support and Enhance Academia
Behind the Scenes: How SC Volunteers Power One of the World’s Fastest Growing Conferences and Trade Show
Behind the Scenes: How SC Volunteers Power One of the World’s Fastest Growing Conferences and Trade Show
Computing’s Top 30: Bo Han
Computing’s Top 30: Bo Han
From Clicks to Conversations: How HCI Is Evolving in an AI-First World
From Clicks to Conversations: How HCI Is Evolving in an AI-First World
The AI Adoption Gap: Why Enterprise AI Fails After Deployment
The AI Adoption Gap: Why Enterprise AI Fails After Deployment
Read Next

Episode 3 | How IEEE Can Support and Enhance Academia

Behind the Scenes: How SC Volunteers Power One of the World’s Fastest Growing Conferences and Trade Show

Computing’s Top 30: Bo Han

From Clicks to Conversations: How HCI Is Evolving in an AI-First World

The AI Adoption Gap: Why Enterprise AI Fails After Deployment

Inspiring Tomorrow’s Innovators: IEEE CS Juniors TechXperience Kenya 2026

Parallel Systems, Leadership, and Research Strategy in Computing: an Interview with Jean-Luc Gaudiot

Top HCI Trends in 2026: The Rise of AI Agents and Invisible Interfaces

Get the latest news and technology trends for computing professionals with ComputingEdge
Sign up for our newsletter