Studio - HALLE BOSSON
© HEAD – Genève
Studio - HALLE BOSSON
© HEAD – Genève
Studio - HALLE BOSSON
© HEAD – Genève, Roman Lusser
Studio - HALLE BOSSON, Lola Decraene
© HEAD – Genève, Roman Lusser, Lola Decraene
Studio - HALLE BOSSON, Lidia Stanciu
© HEAD – Genève, Roman Lusser, Lidia Stanciu
Studio - HALLE BOSSON, Nina Wallimann
© HEAD – Genève, Roman Lusser, Nina Wallimann
Studio - HALLE BOSSON, Nina Wallimann
© HEAD – Genève, Roman Lusser, Nina Wallimann
Studio - HALLE BOSSON, Nina Wallimann
© HEAD – Genève, Roman Lusser, Nina Wallimann
Studio - HALLE BOSSON, Vega Magaldi
© HEAD – Genève, Roman Lusser, Vega Magaldi
Studio - HALLE BOSSON, Evegeniia Cheseaux
© HEAD – Genève, Roman Lusser, Evegeniia Cheseaux
Studio - HALLE BOSSON, Manon Lebon
© HEAD – Genève, Roman Lusser, Manon Lebon
Studio - HALLE BOSSON, Esther Calame
© HEAD – Genève, Roman Lusser, Esther Calame
Studio - HALLE BOSSON, Kayla Nanton
© HEAD – Genève, Roman Lusser, Kayla Nanton
Studio - HALLE BOSSON, Daniel Pereira
© HEAD – Genève, Roman Lusser, Daniel Pereira
Studio - HALLE BOSSON, Carla Ferey
© HEAD – Genève, Roman Lusser, Carla Ferey

Studio - HALLE BOSSON

January 2026

Studio led by Line Fontana et David Fagart (Fagart & Fontana)
Assisted by Lola Jutzeler

The workshop we have been conducting for the past four semesters explores new architectural practices in the contemporary metropolis, where climate, acceleration, deceleration shape our approaches. We focus on the preservation and transformation of ordinary heritage in order to adapt inherited buildings to the needs of a changing society, with the ambition of creating hybrid spaces that foster new practices and spatialities.

We are working in the Praille-Acacias-Vernet (PAV) area in Geneva, more specifically in the Grosselin district, an industrial territory destined to become the new heart of the city, at the cost of a radical transformation.

In the second semester of 2023/2024, students transformed the Tour Blavignac 10 into the Grand Genève Social Club, a hybrid place combining housing, productive spaces, and activities centered around shared facilities. In 2024/2025, the exploration focused on the industrial site at 12–20 Rue Baylon, questioning the coexistence of housing and work within a productive metropolitan environment. The building’s thickness was treated as a quality, used to create a service-oriented and productive urban infrastructure.

For the first semester of 2025/2026, the workshop focuses on Halle Bosson, Chemin de la Marbrerie 6, conceived as a covered yet open public space, a shared public asset that welcomes social life and embodies urbanity, diversity, and otherness, while offering free and accessible infrastructure.

View all of the school's projects