Now showing at LUMA Arles: David Armstrong, Liu Chuang, Maria Lassnig, Philippe Parreno, and Tony Oursler
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On the occasion of the opening of Le Magasin Électrique, one of the buildings in the Parc des Ateliers that houses LUMA Arles, this roundtable looks back on a singular construction project. Led by Atelier LUMA in collaboration with BC architects & studies and Assemble, the project gave rise to “Lot 8,” an approach to imagining a local, sustainable architecture grounded in the resources of the territory. Conceived as a full-scale prototype, this experimental site brought together numerous local partners and generated training programs, collective workshops, and the exploration of innovative materials and building techniques.
Against this backdrop, the discussion brings together architects, thinkers, researchers, and builders to reflect on what it means to build today, in a world shaped by ecological, social, and cultural change. With Maja Hoffmann, the speakers—Jan Boelen, Joe Halligan, Maria Finders, Laurens Bekemans, Guillaume Habert, and Salima Naji—share perspectives around a central idea: “Every building is a prediction, and every prediction is wrong.” An invitation to think of architecture as a living process, in constant dialogue with the uncertainties and urgencies of our time.
On the occasion of the opening of Le Magasin Électrique, one of the buildings in the Parc des Ateliers that houses LUMA Arles, this roundtable looks back on a singular construction project. Led by Atelier LUMA in collaboration with BC architects & studies and Assemble, the project gave rise to “Lot 8,” an approach to imagining a local, sustainable architecture grounded in the resources of the territory. Conceived as a full-scale prototype, this experimental site brought together numerous local partners and generated training programs, collective workshops, and the exploration of innovative materials and building techniques.
Against this backdrop, the discussion brings together architects, thinkers, researchers, and builders to reflect on what it means to build today, in a world shaped by ecological, social, and cultural change. With Maja Hoffmann, the speakers—Jan Boelen, Joe Halligan, Maria Finders, Laurens Bekemans, Guillaume Habert, and Salima Naji—share perspectives around a central idea: “Every building is a prediction, and every prediction is wrong.” An invitation to think of architecture as a living process, in constant dialogue with the uncertainties and urgencies of our time.
On the occasion of the opening of Le Magasin Électrique, one of the buildings in the Parc des Ateliers that houses LUMA Arles, this roundtable looks back on a singular construction project. Led by Atelier LUMA in collaboration with BC architects & studies and Assemble, the project gave rise to “Lot 8,” an approach to imagining a local, sustainable architecture grounded in the resources of the territory. Conceived as a full-scale prototype, this experimental site brought together numerous local partners and generated training programs, collective workshops, and the exploration of innovative materials and building techniques.
Against this backdrop, the discussion brings together architects, thinkers, researchers, and builders to reflect on what it means to build today, in a world shaped by ecological, social, and cultural change. With Maja Hoffmann, the speakers—Jan Boelen, Joe Halligan, Maria Finders, Laurens Bekemans, Guillaume Habert, and Salima Naji—share perspectives around a central idea: “Every building is a prediction, and every prediction is wrong.” An invitation to think of architecture as a living process, in constant dialogue with the uncertainties and urgencies of our time.
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