ensa normandie

"Genealogy of spaces" by Gilles Trégouët

Gilles Trégouët is an architect who graduated from the École nationale d'architecture de Bretagnein 2004. In 2016, he was an associate professor at the
School of Architecture in Barcelona (ETSAB-UPC), and supervised RCR's summer workshop in 2017. He has been working with the Catalan agency RCR since 2005,
, and as such is co-author of the Musée Soulage in Rodez, the Centre de la cuisine d'art in Nègrepelisse, the École du soleil school group in Font Romeu, and the Maison Malecaze in Vieille Toulouse.

Workshop - "Food for thought - thinking through the senses

A rebalancing between artistic and technical components seems necessary to prevent architecture from being confined to a plastic approach with no constructive or social foundation- in short, without any construction of meaning, without content, in short, a sensibility reduced to a fascination for superficial and hollow narcissistic spectacular images. The growing and salutary awareness of the importance of environmental issues is restoring a fundamental place to constructive culture, materials and details. Integrating material and constructive technique as nutritive elements of design seems to me to be one of the best ways of producing architecture. The emphasis will be on a process of architectural creation in perpetual tension between abstraction and embodiment, between the world of ideas and the world of the senses. This implies the development of a mastery of the tools of representation. The subject of the workshop is deliberately simple, in order to go as far as possible in putting into practice and deepening what has been learned, and to be able to integrate the constructive components (structures, materials, details) in order to stimulate the emergence of a singular projecting knowledge. The program will combine a single-family dwelling with a small public hall (approx. 150 m2). The use of this room
will be chosen by the student. For example, it could be a concert hall, a dojo, a dance hall, an exhibition hall, a meditation room, a yoga room, a restaurant... the inhabitant of the dwelling being also the animator of the room.

"What makes a project" by Heleen Hart

Dutch-born Heleen Hart is a graduate of the École Nationale Supérieure d'Architecture et de Paysage in Lille. She spent a year at the Federal University of Fluminense in Rio de Janeiro, then five years in Porto, including a year at the University of Porto's Faculty of Architecture
, where she worked with architect and teacher Adalberto Dias on the transformation of the Afurada industrial site in Vila Nova de Gaia. At the same time, she worked with Carlos Castanheira on projects for individual wooden houses and the Casa da Musica project with the OMA agency. On her return to France, she gained experience in a number of Parisian agencies, then at
Lille with Tank architectes.In 2011, she and Mathieu Berteloot founded the
architecture and urban planning studioHart Berteloot Atelier Architecture Territoire (HBAAT). The studio was created as a multidisciplinary platform
that questions architecture and territory through a global and artistic vision of contemporary creation, drawing
its inspiration from disciplines such as contemporary art, photography, design, graphic design and landscape.

ensa normandie

Workshop - "Transforming the N17 block - Le Havre

Through the study of the N17 block during the reconstruction of the city of Le Havre, the aim of the workshop is to address both theoretical notions and
design a transformation project. The historical approach to the subject of the study focuses on the construction of housing using heavy prefabrication systems (from one to six tons), developed since the fin of the war and particularly during the reconstruction of Le Havre. Block N17 is representative of this research, as it was the first building to be edified by Raymond Camus, who applied industrialization processes involving the prefabrication of load-bearing panels making up each of the walls of a room. The patent obtained in 1948 enabled Ilôt N17 to be built between 1949 and 1950. Ilôt N17 was a seminal project. It was the starting point for a technique that was well received by the public authorities, under the impetus of Adrien Spineta, Director of Construction at the Ministry of Reconstruction and Urban Planning, who visited Le Havre in 1951.

"Self-management and urban growth" by Marion Verdière

Marion Verdière is a researcher at the Center for Research on Architecture and the City (CIAC - PUCP University, Lima, Peru) and an urban architect specializing in the territorial development of marginalized neighborhoods, with over ten years' international experience with various institutions (Mano a Mano Perú, Homogeneos). Through her own agency, OCTAVA, based in Lima, she works with the residents of the communities involved, NGOs and local governments to develop strategies aimed at promoting inclusive urban development
.

Workshop - "Know-how and know-how

The project explores the relationship between public buildings and the city, using the Lycée Galilée in Franqueville-Saint-Pierre as an example. The aim is to identify the issues surrounding the transitional spaces that connect these buildings to the rest of the city, which are seen as project areas to be explored. The relationship between the professional and the user will be at the heart of this workshop, with the aim of devising and testing mechanisms for project communication. Drawing on their architectural skills, but also on the knowledge of users, students will select and transform this knowledge of use into spatial resolution within a complex project. Sessions will be structured around group and individual work, fostering a global understanding of the issues, so that each student can ultimately come up with a committed and thoughtful individual response. The presentation, both to an audience of connoisseurs at ENSA Normandie and to a wider public at the high school, will enable students to put themselves in a professional situation by being able to explain their projects to as many people as possible.

"Yielding architecture and resilience in Japan since 1945" by Ariel Genadt

Ariel Genadt is an architect, a scholar and a lecturer at the University of Pennsylvania Weitzman School of Design. He focuses on the relationships between construction technologies and architectural expression of climate and place.

He also specializes in the architecture of modern
Japan. Genadt was a JSPS Fellow Researcher at the Kengo Kuma Lab, Tokyo University and a visiting scholar at the Fondazione Renzo Piano, Genoa. He has curated the exhibition Critical Abstractions: Modern Architecture in Japan, at the University of Pennsylvania Archives.

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Workshop - Reconsidering naval architectural heritage towards placemaking in Rouen

This English-language workshop invites students to draw inspiration from naval architecture to design a conversion project for an existing building. The site of the project will be the current Musée maritime fluvial et portuaire de Rouen. The project will showcase the museum's collections in a more appropriate setting, expressive of its river context. While the Armada event reminds residents and tourists of the city's maritime past, it remains ephemeral. The aim of this workshop is to re-establish a more lasting presence for the city's maritime heritage. The project will highlight current imperatives in the face of ecological transition, namely to use natural resources and recycle industrial resources in a sustainable way, while creating habitats that generate a sense of belonging to an environment and its cultural heritage. The project will address these objectives by designing a place of exhibition, education and exchange for city dwellers, using elements of the naval architectural vocabulary as formal and structural generators. Work will be carried out in collaboration with the Maritime Museum and its shipbuilding workshop, as well as the ENSA Normandie wood workshop.

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"Inclusive design for all" by Rosalia Ho-Ching Leung

Rosalia Ho-Ching Leung is an architect, community designer, and researcher with architectural training in Hong Kong and France. Founder of Studio Rosalia Leung Ltd, her work focuses on the interconnectedness between the built environment, public participation, and sustainability.
Featured at various awards and exhibitions, such as the Taipei International Design Award, Venice Biennale of Architecture, and Hong Kong Shenzhen Bi-City Biennale of Urbanism/Architecture, she also taught at the University of Hong Kong and HKU Space/Curtin University architecture programme.

Workshop - Planetary participation. From human-centric to human-planet design

In this design studio, we will explore the often overlooked relationship between humans and other species in urban landscapes. With urbanization and climate change as challenges, we will question the conventional human-centric design approach and seek a sustainable path forward.
Starting with observing building details like windows, facades, balconies, and roofs etc, we will closely examine how animals and plants have accommodated human presence in the city center of Rouen. Expanding beyond a narrow humancentric view, we aim to develop design solutions that foster harmonious interactions between humans and nature in urban environments. Students will create prototypes and translate their ideas into an intervention for an existing building. Students will also engage with the community, seeking perspectives and feedback on their designs at selected sites to ensure that their ideas align with community needs and aspirations. The studio challenges students to strive for sustainable architectural designs that embrace the interconnectedness of humans, animals, and the environment in our urban fabric.