24 01 Johanna Roth is an architect investigating how space shapes culture, identity, and everyday life. She studied at ETH Zurich, UdK Berlin, and ETSAM Madrid, and worked as Project Leader for five years with Peter Märkli on housing and educational buildings. Since 2020, she has taught at ETH with Jan de Vylder, exploring how we live through spatial re-imaginations. In 2024, she directed the summer school Pulse in Oslo, turning food, tools, and rituals into performative experiments. Through Studio Roth, she develops projects that activate spatial identity across scales and durations. She also cofounded Fuse, a women-owned concept space in Zurich. At IDW Antwerp, she continues this trajectory, transforming the supermarket into a stage for belonging. 02 Marianna Moskal & Bartosz Teodorczyk are Polish architects who studied and practiced abroad, currently based in Antwerp. The theme of be-longing resonates with us deeply: as expats, we experience both longing for what we know and a shifting sense of belonging as we adapt to new places, language, and culture. Educated at TU Delft in the chair of Interiors Buildings Cities, our design methods rely on careful observation, contextual analysis, and critical interpretation. We continue this approach in our work at ono architectuur and HUB architecten in Antwerp. Our projects, both collaborative and individual, have been shown in exhibitions in Poland and abroad (Archiprix 2023, Nieobecność OSSA 2020, Futuwawa 2050). We collaborate with Polish architectural magazine Rzut writing our reflections on a range of topics. We also have experience in designing and building large-scale art installations. Last year we joined IDW as guest critics; this year we would like to continue working with students as tutors, sharing our experiences and perspectives. 03 Jang Hee Lee is a UKregistered architect (ARB) based in London. He graduated from the AA School with a commendation and is beginning a PhD there on the socio-political history of large-scale housing in East Asia. He led the workshop Communal Block: Housing Questions of the Korean Apartment at Kaywon University, examining typological and political aspects of contemporary housing. 03 Ania Trân is an AA graduate and architectural designer based in London. Through the LINA fellowship with the Community Maintenance Club, she co-led a material reuse workshop with Barleti University in Albania. She was a teaching assistant with the collective Rubble for the AA Summer School City Constructs, exploring the life cycles of urban detritus and possibilities of reuse from deconstruction sites. 04 Liza Goncharenko is a Ukrainian architect, urban designer, researcher at the Royal Academy of Fine Arts Antwerp. She holds a MSc in Architecture from KU Leuven and a BArch from Kharkiv National University of Civil Engineering and Architecture. She also studied Urbanism and Landscape Architecture at Lisbon University and completed a course on Heritage Studies in Conflict Zones at IHS Erasmus University Rotterdam. From 2013– 2017, she was Ukraine’s National Contact for the EASA, later tutoring at EASA Tourist (CH) and EASA Rhizome (FI). She co-curated SESAM in Slavutych and was awarded residencies at the Institute for Public Architecture, Art Omi, Irish Architecture Foundation and Hospitalfield. Her work explores architecture, heritage, and landscape, with a focus on Ukraine’s reconstruction. `
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