Magdalena and Montero´s patio house. A history of coexistence in the Mediterranean city of Cordoba.
2024
The casa de vecinos or casa-patio (patio house) is a multi-family patio typology that stems from the Roman domus
ONE THOUSAND AND ONE SONGS
2020
This is a story about formation of a vision on cultural-educational development through music and about its fulfillment.
Frasta School | Repurposing a Rural School Towards a Community Centre for sustainable building cultures
2025
Nestled in the remote Tzoumerka mountains of Epirus, NW Greece, the Frasta School initiative is a transformative project aimed at re
The survival of a printing museum in contemporary times by linking the past with the present.
2024
Beginning at the turn of the nineteenth century in Suffolk and then in Norwich in Norfolk, the Jarrold Printing House became an extremely succ
THE BEAUTY OF RUIN. CASTIELFABIB, FROM PIRANESI TO RUSKIN
2022
The "Castielfabib Cultural Association" has worked during the last 10 years as a promoter of the ancien Conevtn of San Guillermo recovery
House of Bentkovskiy in the village of Bezopasnoe
2019
«Дом И. В. Бентковского в с. Безопасном»
Историю создают происходящие события, а события создаются людьми.
Temple of St. Martyrs Flor and Lavr
2019
Храм святых мучеников Флора и Лавра.
Величаво крестом легла церковь – отрада,
Куполами взметнулась в лазурь к небесам,
И святыней была от велика
From the Love to the Skadar Lake
2022
„From the Love to the Skadar Lake” is a story that is based upon one of the many myths that follows the formation of the biggest lake in South
Lowestoft, Samuel Morton Peto and the Wider European World
2022
Denmark Road, Flensburgh Street and Tonning Street: three closely connected roads near the shopping-centre and railway station of the Suffolk
European Music Trails - The Uniting Power of Music in a Fragile Europe
2020
“European Music Trails” is a story about the uniting power of music in a Europe, that becomes more and more fragile.
The Roman Amphitheater: A Cross-Cultural Community Hub
2023
It all started one summer night. Four people, representing three cultural and environmental associations, and an archaeology professor m










