The urgency of this thesis is to question the current village rejuvenation approaches consisting of fast, ‘one-off’ interventions intended to create something new atop an already existing site or conditions.
Those interventions neglect the role of duration since both the site conditions and design interventions may change due to climatic forces and users’ situations.
Therefore, the project envisages there is never a completion date of architectural interventions by architects and users. The thesis challenges the design period by proposing consistent seasonal workshops as a looping cycle in a village.
Through observation of people’s living habits and changing site conditions, architects would constantly alter the design. The project would demonstrate a chronological narrative of a series of micro-interventions showing the cumulative impact on the evolution of a community and preservation of the landscape.