DESIGN STUDIO
SPRING SEMESTER 2025

At the End of the World: Antikenmuseum Basel

Alexander Cyrus Poulikakos, Mariam Issoufou, Soukaina Laabida, Rami Msallam, Tobia Rapelli, Filippo Santoni

Semester Introduction Video

This studio strives against modern processes of erasure. The celebration of the industrial world, frequently termed as development, is in many ways unsustainable and by no means a universal measure of progress. Unacknowledged exploitations and appropriations promoted by modernism participated (and participate) in the erasure of indigenous and localized identities in the name of capitalist, extractivist and neocolonial values hidden under the guise of universalism. Institutions and architecture have often been agents of their own isolation, neglecting nature, culture and human lives. They have been and are complicit in reinforcing class, racial and cultural segregation. Institutions and disciplines inherit from imperial violence, and continue to reproduce it in hiding their responsibility by the production of ignorance.

The current world order is only possible because of the exploitation, impoverishment and organized underdevelopment of others through global material flows, globalized labour, raw materials extraction and control. Capitalism has had catastrophic consequences on the planet, economies, and people. Capitalistic institutions created further intangible borders establishing the concept of “Global North” and “Global South” that surmounted the geographical frontiers and imposed the control of the first on the latter. These divisions, borders and inequalities are equally active in cities of the “Global North”, through granting uneven access to resources, institutions, health and representation according to gender, race, class and other identities or belongings. Responsibilities for threatening the Global Majority with economic and institutional systems by the Global Minority remain earthed. Part of not being complicit in this cycle is for the Global Minority to consider becoming hyperlocal (local practices, local vulnerabilities).

Imagining architecture, institutions, and our societies “at the end of the World,” proposes to follow Denise Ferreira da Silva at the end of this World, as to refer to worlds in which we work collectively toward the dismantlement and transformation of the world system which perpetuates inequalities, racism and colonial legacies. Imagining at the end of the World also invites us in an epistemological rupture with Eurocentrism, acknowledging, listening to and working with alternative ways of conceiving, designing and experiencing. Imagining at the end of the World goes beyond linear and colonial conceptions of time and history, rejecting the idea that non-imperial and non-colonial ways of thinking and doing never existed, making kin with pasts, presents and futurities.

STUDENT RESEARCH VIDEOS

Architectural Histories and Material Narratives

Intersectional Sustainability

Economic and Juristic Regimes

Affective Heritage, Human Sociology and Public Uses

Urban and Ecological Analysis

Museum Histories and Politics of Objects

PROF. MARIAM ISSOUFOU
ARCHITECTURE HERITAGE & SUSTAINABILITY

ETH Zürich
Department of Architecture
Stefano–Franscini–Platz 5
CH–8093 Zürich
HIL E 47.1