Sumários
Session 9
18 Outubro 2023, 15:00 • Marta Sequeira Carneiro
Speed-Dating Workshop
Iscte, ENSA Normandie and Goethe-Universität Frankfurt students
With:
Inês Lobo
João Ventura Trindade
Nuno Grande
Ricardo Agarez
Sérgio Antunes
Susana Raposo
With tutors:
Grupo 1: Paulo Tormenta Pinto, Carsten Ruhl
Grupo 2: Pedro Luz Pinto, Caroline Maniaque
Grupo 3: José Maria Cumbre, Daniela Ortiz dos Santos
Grupo 4: Nuno Sousa Caetano, Ana Brandão
Grupo 5: Paulo Goinhas, Joana Mourão, Eliana Sousa Santos
Grupo 6: Marta Sequeira, Joana Pestana Lages
Session 8
18 Outubro 2023, 10:00 • Marta Sequeira Carneiro
Guided visit to the Living in Lisbon exhibition at the Belém Cultural Centre
Marta Sequeira, Iscte
Presentation of case studies in Lisbon
Iscte students, coordinated by Marta Sequeira
Session 7
17 Outubro 2023, 14:00 • Marta Sequeira Carneiro
Workshop
Iscte, ENSA Normandie and Goethe-Universität Frankfurt students
With tutors:
Group 1: Paulo Tormenta Pinto, Carsten Ruhl
Group 2: Pedro Luz Pinto, Caroline Maniaque
Group 3: José Maria Cumbre, Daniela Ortiz dos Santos
Group 4: Nuno Sousa Caetano, Ana Brandão
Group 5: Paulo Goinhas, Joana Mourão, Eliana Sousa Santos
Group 6: Marta Sequeira, Joana Pestana Lages
Trip to the CCB
Inauguration of the Living in Lisbon exhibition
Since 2014, the price of housing in Portugal has been increasing at more than 6% per year. At the origin of this phenomenon is a combination of two factors: on one hand, an exponential increase in tourist accommodation and foreign investment in the Portuguese real estate market (an escalation not even the Covid-19 pandemic was able to halt); on the other, a continued lack of investment in housing policies. In a country with only 2% of public housing, this crisis has spread to the middle class, and now affects the whole of society. Every Portuguese person is, or knows someone, affected: families on a waiting list, tenants about to be evicted, young people unable to access their first home. Lisbon was the municipality in the country most affected by this problem, infecting the surrounding districts and pushing their inhabitants out of the centre. To oppose this movement, the Portuguese Plano de Recuperação e Resiliência [Recovery and Resilience Plan] (PRR) has allocated 2.7 billion euros to tackle the housing crisis, in order to meet the needs, by 2026, of a total of 26,000 families. But what, in the end, could the role of architecture be in this operation?
Session 6
17 Outubro 2023, 11:00 • Marta Sequeira Carneiro
ENSA Normandie students, coordinated by Caroline Maniaque, ENSA Normandie
Session 5
17 Outubro 2023, 09:00 • Marta Sequeira Carneiro
Presentation of case studies in Germany, Switzerland and Austria
Goethe-Universität Frankfurt students, coordinated by Carsten Ruhl and Daniela Ortiz dos Santos, Goethe-Universität Frankfurt