LARGE URBAN PROJECTS
We approach large-scale urban projects as processes of transforming reality, rather than as mere real estate development exercises. Working at this scale means acknowledging that architecture extends far beyond the question of the object, becoming instead a tool for reading, structuring, and activating territory. For us, the urban project is fundamentally a cultural and political act: it organizes relationships, generates common goods, and shapes ways of inhabiting, working, and living. We conceive the city as a complex system, composed of historical layers, landscapes, networks, uses, and overlapping temporalities. Each site carries its own internal logics—often invisible—which must be interpreted rather than erased. The project emerges from a precise analysis of context—morphological, heritage-related, social, economic, and environmental—and positions itself in critical continuity with what already exists. At the urban scale, our role is not to fix forms, but to construct conditions: conditions for diversity, porosity, reversibility, and intensity of use. We favor open structures capable of evolving over time, accommodating hybrid programs, and adapting to future transformations. Architecture thus becomes an evolving framework, an inhabited infrastructure, rather than a finished object. We position ourselves as partners to the actors who concretely shape the city and its territory—particularly private investors—while assuming a clear responsibility toward public concerns and collective challenges.


















