CLIMATIC VILLA - Workshop with École Camondo
© HEAD – Genève, Florian Puech
CLIMATIC VILLA - Workshop with École Camondo
© HEAD – Genève, Florian Puech
CLIMATIC VILLA - Workshop with École Camondo
© HEAD – Genève, Florian Puech
CLIMATIC VILLA - Workshop with École Camondo
© HEAD – Genève, Florian Puech
CLIMATIC VILLA - Workshop with École Camondo
© HEAD – Genève, Florian Puech
CLIMATIC VILLA - Workshop with École Camondo
© HEAD – Genève, Florian Puech
CLIMATIC VILLA - Workshop with École Camondo
© HEAD – Genève, Florian Puech
CLIMATIC VILLA - Workshop with École Camondo
© HEAD – Genève, Florian Puech
CLIMATIC VILLA - Workshop with École Camondo
© HEAD – Genève, Florian Puech
CLIMATIC VILLA - Workshop with École Camondo
© HEAD – Genève, Florian Puech
CLIMATIC VILLA - Workshop with École Camondo
© HEAD – Genève, Florian Puech
CLIMATIC VILLA - Workshop with École Camondo
© HEAD – Genève, Florian Puech
CLIMATIC VILLA - Workshop with École Camondo
© HEAD – Genève, Florian Puech
CLIMATIC VILLA - Workshop with École Camondo
© HEAD – Genève, Florian Puech

CLIMATIC VILLA - Workshop with École Camondo

September 2024

Workshop led by 
MAIA, HEAD – Genève: Leonid Slonimskiy, David Viladomiu Ceballos
École Camondo Mediterranée: Valentin Dubois, Artus Monat
Villa Romaine, Hyères, France

Climatic Villa is a workshop that explores the complexities and contradictions between architectural heritage and the new challenges posed by the global climate crisis. It took place in the unique setting of the historical Villa Romaine, located in the southern French city of Hyères. Once a luxurious private residence dedicated to pleasure and hedonism, Villa Romaine is now a preserved historical monument. However, it is no longer in active use, its future is uncertain, its maintenance is costly and complex, and its heritage status makes it difficult to imagine how it can transform in the future.

This context—both opulent and problematic—created the perfect opportunity for students to reflect on questions of future adaptability, transformation, and the possibility of flexible uses for the Villa in the face of pressing climatic, environmental, and social crises.

The workshop was a collaboration between two schools: HEAD – Genève and École Camondo Méditerranée. Imagining probable dystopian scenarios that society may face in the near future—such as water scarcity, floods, extreme heat, and air pollution—students developed 1:1 scale projects to transform different spaces within the Villa. They strategically reimagined the villa’s main hall, terrace, staircase, maintenance room, garden, and swimming pool into new programmatic typologies, speculating on key questions:

How can preserved monuments adapt to future drastic challenges?

What tools can help heritage buildings adequately respond to climatic and environmental issues?

What new radical habitation scenarios and typologies can heritage buildings catalyze?

HEAD – Genève students:
Matilde Arletti, Martino De Grandis, Maxime Joost, Lina Zoe Laube, Hugo Maia Schmitt, Letizia Milone, Ailyn Pieyre, Célestine Potin, Paul Rigal, Lisa Schober, Kim Sherin Schönauer, Karol Szmigielski, Mariannina Thielemans, Navya Balakrishnan, Emma Canton, Larisa Coman, Cloé Eischen, Kristina Kambolova, Giada Pettenati, David Röder, Célia Tourette, Ana Karina Zepeda Aranda

École Camondo students:
Alison Ango, Laura Bastide, Anahita Bayat Louei, Elsa Blanc, Flora Borderes, Lucile Caille, Brian Cerato, Alicia Ciraolo, Anaïs Coudrier, Louise Defaux, Paloma Delsol, Emilie Deschamps, Pauline Droz-Vincent, Marine Duchier-Lapeyre, Juliane Giordano, Marie Gonzalez, Louis Imperti, Emile Jalon, Maximilien Laurent, Marie Morael, Zena Moret-Bailly, Olivia Porter, Anna Psiuk, Emma Selieye, Lou Six, Mélanie Vente

View all of the school's projects