I believe in bottom-up public architecture projects, generated from and for people. And in public architecture as an engine to improve the quality of life of people and the spaces we inhabit. If we talk about cities, one of the challenges we face in the future is transformation. Identifying tensions and opportunities, it is about understanding the project as something much bigger than architectural plans. For this, I believe in an invisible but fundamental stage that I call ''the architecture of the project''. It is the previous process that defines the legal, economic and social viability of any idea. It is an interdisciplinary path that forces us to handle the tension between the perfect and the possible, and to think about an anthropological urban design that puts people at the core of the scene.
Secretario at Gobierno de la Ciudad de Buenos Aires
Architect, Architecture