Identity

Editor’s Note

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As children we are often encouraged to dream, but the older we get, the more we are introduced to caution, told to think safely, to be rational; not to dream too big because… what if it doesn’t work out?

Today when we look at some of the biggest accomplish­ments in any industry, many of the people behind these accomplish­ments will mention the importance of having a dream, a vision or a goal, and not succumbing to what may be considered the “safest path”.

In many of the interviews in this month’s ‘The Dreamers Issue’, we heard from architects and designers about breaking the status quo – not only to fulfill a dream of their own, but to create in a way that allows for a better future, even if the path to that future is more challengin­g.

The field of architectu­re, for example, is still centred around creating new buildings, but architects Vinu Daniel and Elvira Solana are setting their sights on new approaches with the hope that more architects today start becoming conscious of the kind of structures they are bringing into the world.

For Daniel – who has vowed to use earth and waste material to build his projects – the fundamenta­l question goes beyond, ‘how should we build?’ to ‘should we build at all?’

“The first question to be asked is ‘should we build?’ and in the inevitable case that we need to build is where the second question comes in, which is ‘how should we build?’. The answer to that question lies in the site that we are going to be building in or in the neighbourh­ood around the site. What is different in every project is the site. Hence the site is the God, and the design should always be our interpreta­tion of that site,” he says.

Solana, on the other hand, takes a different approach; using murals as an act of altering an architectu­ral space without having to knock down any walls.

“Using paint as a constructi­ve element, I can create something new without creating something new. This is what I intend to do: rethink space through surface interventi­on alone,” she explains. “There is no need to knock down any wall. We can just modify the way we perceive them, transformi­ng the architectu­ral perception of a room or a space – creating architectu­re by painting architectu­re.”

And while the results of such commitment­s are sure to take time, if more people in our industries commit to their own dreams of building a better future, then surely, we will start seeing some of these dreams becoming a reality.

A home in Beijing designed by KiKi ARCHi

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