Ložionica Center for Creative Industries and Innovations and the House of e-Government / AKVS architecture

Ložionica's revitalization project transforms Belgrade's historic railway site through adaptive reuse and new structures, offering a unique mix of offices, public spaces, and cultural programs within a challenging urban context. The site represents a few of the remaining industrial heritage mementos of the Belgrade riverfront area, which has been undergoing significant urbanization over the past few decades. This led to the announcement of an open architectural competition in 2021 by the Office for IT and eGovernment of the Republic of Serbia and the national platform Serbia Creates, organized by the Association of Architects of Serbia. The brief asked for a new home for all creative industries to meet under one roof, a multifunctional open public space, and the addition of one new mixed-use office building.

Casa GA / Archiplanstudio

The prefabricated concrete building with a white sheet metal roof renews the tradition of the Po Valley agricultural landscape, historically characterized by the presence of elementary volumes defined by simple Euclidean geometries.

Choreographing Lagos: Dele Adeyemo on Dance, Cosmology, and Spatial Practices

Having thrown a stone today, Eshu kills a bird of yesterday. The Yoruba proverb tells both a story of reparation and of ancestrality by joyfully bending spacetime conventions and accessing subjects from the past with present actions. The saying offers a poetic entry point to broader West African traditions and to the practice of Scottish-Nigerian artist and architect Dele Adeyemo. Named one of the winners of the ArchDaily 2025 Next Practices Awards, Adeyemo's work brings together ecology, spirituality, dance, and territory, examining how embodied cultural practices can generate alternative spatial possibilities within and against the architecture of racial capitalism.

Historical Oberamteistraße Museum / wulf architekten

The historic row of houses at Oberamteistraße 28–32, along with the surviving basement of the "Stone House" that had occupied plot no. 34, but was demolished in 1972, are among the oldest and most interesting buildings in the former free imperial city of Reutlingen. These architectural artifacts date back to the 13th century, when the city of Reutlingen was founded. The ensemble is therefore one of the oldest rows of houses in southern Germany, authentically reflecting the development of building and living culture over the centuries.

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