For centuries, architecture and gender have been a silent debate, but women have always contributed design strategies that have led to the construction of more inclusive and equitable cities and spaces, precisely because they were based on perspectives rooted in feminism and gender.
- Advanced Urbanism
- Empowering Women
- Inhabiting Landscape
- Meteorological Urbanism
- Constructing Timber
- Educational Habitats
- Urban Greening
- Textile Architecture
- Self-Sufficiency
- Socio-Ecological Design
- Urban Agriculture
- Modular Design
- Vernacular Design
- Negotiating Borders
- Transport Connections
- Unhoused
- Walkable Cities
- Ephemeral Architecture
- Designing for Risk
- Adaptive Reuse
- Algorithmic Design
- Building with Earth
- Dealing with Nature
- Social Inclusion
- Passive Design
- Urban Catalysts
- Watery Territories
- Geographies of Extraction
- Building Living Systems
- Affordable Housing
- Indigenous Practices
- Healthy City
- Degrowth
- Cycling Infrastructure
- Thermodynamic Systems
- Kinetic City
- Multiscale Approach
- Recycling & Upcycling
- New Working Habits
- Addressing Vacancy
- Green Transition
- Heat Emergency
- Collective Housing
- Unspoiled Landscape
- Ecologies of the Envelope
- Food Production
- Construction Ecology
- Megablock Urbanism
- On Site Robotics
- Co-living
- The 15-Minute City
- Biotech Architecture
- Cosentino
- Out of Wood
- Out of Wood empreses
- Emergency Housing
- Smart City
- Soft Infrastructures
- Sourcing Locally
- Lightweight Envelopes
- Emergent Material Ecologies
- Extraterrestrial
- Alternative Domesticity
- Optimized Construction
- Operative Mapping
- Mute Icons
- Post-pandemic Design
- Waste Management
- Biophilic Design
- Designing in Extreme Environments
- Sea Level Rise
- Performative Envelopes
- Architecture and Gender
- Inclusionary & Exclusionary Space
- Agency in Architecture
- Biomimetic Architecture
- Micro Living
- Disassembly Strategies
- De-carbonization
- Racial Justice