Her attention towards history, architectural heritage, environment, climate change and urban transformation in Cameroon and in other African cities have brought Danièle Diwouta-Kotto to realizing the publication Suites architecturales: Kinshasa, Douala, Dakar,[2] published in 2010 as the first volume of the D'architectures & d'Afrique series.
The realization of this publication started in 2003 and is based on a research concerning African colonial buildings and the different ways in which this kind of architecture has been transformed and re-elaborated.
Its canopy in particular, goes back to Jesus Palomino's construction, realized within the Bessengue City workshop, organized by Goddy Leye and ArtBakery art center.
[3] Between 1993 and 1994 her design work is shown at Salon MIC in Paris and Los Angeles; in 1995 she takes part at the collective exhibition Around and Around, promoted by doual'art.
Danièle Diwouta-Kotto is presented in the magazine Revue Noire, in the article number 13 in 1993;[4] in November 2001, she is considered as one of the 100 people who make Cameroon move.