Sustainable Development as a Path
The root of our work is always in relation to sustainability. An ideal that we conceive as a path, not an end goal. It’s pointless to create systems and buildings that are ultimately uninhabitable. Hence, we follow the path of sustainability by incorporating design-driven habits to enhance quality of life, not just for users, but for future generations.
In this day and age, we apply the concepts of ECONOMY and DURABILITY. How much does your building cost? How long does it last? How much does it consume? What impact does its construction entail?

Circular Economy
Nature doesn’t recognize the concept of “waste.” What perishes revives in a different form. This underestimated concept has been neglected by a society that has adopted unsustainable ways.
Therefore, the challenge is to generate closed loops that encourage behaviors aimed at reeducating users on how to inhabit a space. Of course, adopting these practices is not just our responsibility as designers; it's something that must be discussed and agreed upon with the client as well.

Productive Architecture
Along this path we are following, which we are entirely convinced and passionate about, lies an ideal beyond: Productive Architecture.
Many generations have passed down the notion that inhabiting implies consumption from a network and discarding what we don’t use without truly knowing how or why we do it. Once we succeed in navigating these hurdles in this analytical and repetitive process, we face a new challenge: not just to stop depending on external services, but to generate them in-house.
Having reached a point of no return, we must move from theory to action, ensuring that our project/formal decisions best meet the program's needs.
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Realizations and projects