3 M E
Identity, Territory, Culture
GRADO
Learning from the local
MATERIA
Blending Integrity with Innovation
BARBAPIÑA Arquitectos
Designing for a sense of belonging
[labor_art:orium]
Architecture rooted in emotion, functionality,
and truth
OBVdS Workshops
Fostering a Dialogue-Driven Adaptability
HW Studio
Designing Spaces with Emotional Depth
MAstudio
Building Authentically, Impacting Lives
JDEstudio
Stories Behind the Structures
TAH
From Constraints
to Opportunities
Inca Hernandez
Shaping a Timeless
Future for Design
TORU Arquitectos
A dynamic duo
blending bold visions
Estudio AMA
Redefining Narrative
Driven spaces
NASO
Designing for Change
and Growth
RA!
Global Influences,
Localised Innovations
MRD
Embracing local context
and community
MANUFACTURA
Reclaiming Design Through
Heritage and Technology
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New Generations is a European platform that investigates the changes in the architectural profession ever since the economic crisis of 2008. We analyse the most innovative emerging practices at the European level, providing a new space for the exchange of knowledge and confrontation, theory, and production.
Since 2013, we have involved more than 3.000 practices from more than 50 countries in our cultural agenda, such as festivals, exhibitions, open calls, video-interviews, workshops, and experimental formats. We aim to offer a unique space where emerging architects could meet, exchange ideas, get inspired, and collaborate.
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Within the cultural agenda of New Generations
Editor in chief Gianpiero Venturini
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With a French degree in Architecture, Clément Lesnoff-Rocard created his workshop Studio in 2015 in his hometown, Paris, although a substantial amount of his design work occurs on site. His work is part of a romantic tradition, opposing rationalism. In each of his projects, he aims to liberate the imagination.
I'm not sure I consider myself a studio, but it all started right after graduation with small projects for friends and family. I felt the urge to confront what I had learnt in theory with a practical ground and on my own terms. At the time, I used to say that I would prefer to design a spoon for myself than a tower for someone else. Now, eight years into my practice, I feel that I am still learning how to walk in different ways: I take pleasure in considering every new project as a totally new experience. I hope to be able to keep this joyful and playful approach as long as possible. So far I have neither designed a spoon nor a tower; they might be two good playgrounds for me to explore.
One day one of my clients suddenly decided that he didn't want to pay to move an existing metal pillar by ten centimetres, as we had painstakingly planned in the project: "A few centimetres won't change a thing in the space," he said. I asked him to visualise the face of a friend, and then move one eye downwards by a centimetre. Of course we ended up moving the column, and the client was more than happy with the decision and its new implantation. Harmony is, in my opinion, the closest relative of beauty, and it is not an art of approximation.
Everything is about how free you want to be in your everyday life. I can't stand being locked up in the office if it's a beautiful day outside and I feel the need to go out for a walk. This simple state of mind has a strong impact on the way I've built my practice, and it's also the reason why my studio is in fact not a studio but more of a one-man-orchestra: someone free of movement carrying all his skills around with him. Safety versus freedom? I'll always pick freedom. Luckily I love my work so much that I rarely feel like I'm working when I'm at it. And as a brand new father, realizing all the time and real work involved in that wonderful process, I actually feel like I'm on holiday when I get to "work". To bring humanity in your projects, you have to stay human, nothing close to a hero.
On my projects, I usually spend around 80 % of the time on the construction sites, drawing on walls, adapting and discussing technical solutions that won't ruin the poetic drive of the initial ideas with the craftsmen. So I'd say that my real studio spaces are the actual construction sites.
Someone once told me this little story and it really marked me:
Three men are busy working on a construction site. When someone comes up and asks them what they are doing, the first worker answers: "I'm stacking stones." The second one replies: "I'm building a wall." And the third one says: "We are building a cathedral."
Whatever your future is, always aim for the cathedral.
Photo by Nora Baldenweg
Photo courtesy of Clément Lesnoff-Rocard
Photos by Simone Bossi