R.I.P. – REMEMBER ME ✴︎ Get me a good archive, and I will design you a good building. We are always building upon various foundations–other peoples’ projects, built and unbuilt, references from near and far, past memories and half-forgotten dreams. What is there to stay? Tell us about the buildings that are not-to-be-forgotten and the ones you have unearthed from the depths of history. The ones whose spirit deserves to be documented in order to serve us for the future. (Or tell us what you deem is world cultural junk instead.¹) Laid to rest on external hard drives: the beloved projects that never saw the light of the day. Let us offer you a frame to let them go–revisited or not. For in these fragments lies a narrative of risks taken and of lessons learned. Should it be incomplete? Will it be missed? And do not let us talk then about restoration!²  What is to be done with what we find existing–what happened with the yellow lines in your plans? Between a growing portion of land marked as museums, we are negotiating anew how to deal with what is there: are they to be left to the effects of time or to be collaged into new usages and outlooks? Will there be remnants of them, telling about their former wholeness? Protocol 15 will be an ode to the spirit of remembrance, let us honor these architectural apparitions, for they are more than just structures; they are reflections of the human spirit, immortalized in brick and mortar.

¹ OMA, Convention Concerning the Demolition of World Cultural Junk
² John Ruskin, On Restoration

Poster design made of A4 sheets, in collaboration with Béla Machemer, Gerrit Ludwig, Konstantin Wagner and Nora Veismann.