[...] On the one hand, a strong design impulse, born from a real emotional impulse. On the other hand, a desire, a need, as contemporary as possible: to deal with realities that are more distant from architecture, but which are nevertheless fundamental for a successful design. [...]
Read More[...] We must never forget that buildings sometimes carry the name of their creator, but they are always choral works. They are like harmonious music played masterfully by a well-tuned orchestra. [...]
Read More[...] Multipotentiality is the ability to express yourself in different fields and commit in different activities by developing appropriate skills, capable of making improvements and innovations. [...]
Read More[...] Most young architects who leave university, despite having graduated with top marks and in a relatively adequate period of time, find difficulties to fit into the professional environment. [...]
Read More[...] Together, we can optimise our ability to see every possible solution; multidisciplinary design is all about collaboration, being curious and adaptive, combining methods and creating new ones. [...]
Read More[...] By gathering relevant data regarding people’s perception and their behaviour in the urban environment, we will be able to overlay on the traditional urban planning layers the urban identity of a place, through a study of the individual’s experience, introducing a top-bottom-top mechanism and leading to innovation in the urban planning process. [...]
Read More[...] In a world in continuous progress and movement, in continuous evolution, in contact with different realities, multidisciplinarity is the contamination, understood with a positive meaning, of cultures, styles, languages and techniques that leads to exceptional results. [...]
Read More[...] it is necessary to consider a reality that is increasingly taking shape and that today it’s essential to plan constructions and buildings that could be defined as the "future generation’ one": we talk about all energy saving studies, the use of innovative materials and the development of sustainable green architecture. [...]
Read More[...] If we believe in the architect as a social figure and that architecture is a social construct as well as a material one, then we believe in multidisciplinarity. Believing it means being willing to be taken over; questioning one’s field of action or our comfort zone; be willing to get contaminated. [...]
Read More[...] I have learnt how being a multidisciplinary skilled designer does not barely mean knowing how to juggle the architecture and building engineering related subjects, but also and above all, to deepen and be intrigued by a whole vast scenario of disciplines even far from the defined architecture framework. [...]
Read More[...] Artists, collagists, muralists, illustrators, photographers, architects, and students... they all contributed together to our project. They are all voices – coming indeed from different fields – that often do not dialogue but which, in our opinion, help to outline a portrait as multifaceted and complete as possible on our research topics. [...]
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