To celebrate our 2026 Fellowship recipients , we connected with this year’s awardees to learn more about their projects and the unique paths that led them into the field of archaeology. We’re thrilled to introduce Kaylyn Lehmann, one of the two recipients of the prestigious 2026 Harriet and Leon Pomerance Fellowship ! Kaylyn Lehmann (University of British Columbia) Tell us about your project: This project shifts the focus from monumental architecture to the everyday buildings like houses; these were modified continuously to fulfill specific domestic needs. While there is a renewed interest in the domestic spheres of Bronze Age Crete, few have looked at the spatial aspect of domestic life. I am looking at how local ideas of house and home change between settlements in the Neopalatial period on Crete, especially how people structured their space to fit their tasks.…