Working at the intersection of architecture and neuroscience, Tye Farrow is a world-recognized pioneer tackling how what we create either gives or cause health. With award-winning projects around the globe that enact salutogenic design – design that actively incites health – he is the first Canadian architect to have earned a Master of Neuroscience Applied to Architecture (University of Venice Iuav) and has a Master of Architecture in Urban Design (Harvard University) and a Bachelor of Architecture degree (University of Toronto). In his first book, Constructing Health: How the Built Environment Enhances Your Mind’s Health (University of Toronto Press 2024), Farrow explores the relationship between placemaking, mind health and human performance, at the intersection of neuroscience and architecture.