The African diaspora’s contributions to the Caribbean go beyond their food, music, and religious practices. Its presence—through the labor of enslaved Black people—in the cobblestones, wood, and masonry buildings preserves the colonial history. Even further, it’s present in the morphology and housing architecture of their towns. Despite the growing contributions by noteworthy architects and archeologists, vernacular architecture by the African diaspora is not celebrated and recognized by Caribbeans. Unearthed Structures, presents an opportunity to catalog and archive this ancestral knowledge—reimagining distinct ways of building in the Caribbean region.