Ramsey Leung is an architect, researcher, and writer whose work explores architecture as a relational practice – situated between care and infrastructure, materials and ecologies, and publics and common worlds. His work is informed by long-standing engagement with healthcare environments, urban systems, and lived experience with caregiving; themes he develops through design research, writing, and pedagogical engagement.

Ramsey holds Bachelor's and Master's degrees in architecture from the University of Toronto, where he concentrated in environmental studies, forest biomaterials, and urbanism, graduating from the professional program on the RAIC Honour Roll. He also holds a Bachelor of Science in Life Sciences from Queen's University. Prior to architectural practice, he worked internationally with Baylis Medical, collaborating with cardiologists and biomedical engineers on minimally invasive surgical technologies – an experience that continues to shape his critical perspective on hospitals as both technical and human systems.

His research and writing engage material systems, urbanism, and the ethics of technological mediation. He has authored and co-authored peer-reviewed publications on topics including cellulose nanofibre-reinforced concrete, timber gridshell architecture, and the ethical implications of automated modelling and AI in healthcare design. His design work has been recognized through awards and shortlists, including the Jury Prize for the Future of Ontario Place competition (2021), shortlist recognition in the Berlin Affordable Housing Challenge (2022), and an Honourable Mention in the What is Sustainable Architecture? essay competition (2022).

Ramsey is a licensed architect with the Ontario Association of Architects, holds Living Future Accreditation from the International Living Future Institute, and has a Foundations in Public Participation certificate from the International Association for Public Participation (IAP2). He is a regularly invited critic at the University of Toronto, Toronto Metropolitan University, and the University of Waterloo, and is actively involved in civic initiatives related to public space, circularity, and community land stewardship.

Through his consultancy and writing, Ramsey is working at the intersection of architecture, care, and civic systems toward long-term ecological and social transformation.