Recollection of Echoes: Architecture as a Vehicle for Post-War Collective HealingRecollection of Echoes: Architecture as a Vehicle for Post-War Collective Healing

Recollection of Echoes: Architecture as a Vehicle for Post-War Collective Healing

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What happens when architecture refuses both the impulse to forget and the compulsion to memorialize? "Recollection of Echoes" stakes out a third position: reframing. The proposal treats a war-scarred city not as a blank slate awaiting reconstruction but as a living repository of trauma and resilience, where ruin patterns become pathways, water features signal purification, and housing units embed coexistence into the rhythm of daily life. It is an argument that the built environment can hold two truths at once, the physical destruction of urban fabric and the silent fragmentation of the people who inhabited it, and still move forward.

Designed by Maria Selinotaki, Anastasia Milonas, Christos Savva, and Giorgos Agathocleous, the project assembles seven interconnected programmatic elements, from a museum and healing sanctuary to working hubs and social living units, into a single urban ecosystem. The ambition is clear: craft a setting where people from opposing sides of conflict can visit, learn, heal, and ultimately celebrate civilization together. Rather than presenting trauma as spectacle, the design frames memory as an opportunity for understanding and shared humanity.

Curved Walls and Vertical Connections as Spatial Mediators

Section drawing showing multi-level interior spaces with curved walls and staircases connecting various floors with figures
Section drawing showing multi-level interior spaces with curved walls and staircases connecting various floors with figures
Axonometric drawing of a three-story structure with green-tinted walls and figures on each level surrounded by palm trees
Axonometric drawing of a three-story structure with green-tinted walls and figures on each level surrounded by palm trees

The section drawing reveals a multi-level interior carved out by curved walls, with staircases threading between floors in a continuous vertical promenade. Figures populate each level, suggesting that the architecture is not merely observed but inhabited, moved through, lived in. The curving surfaces soften what could have been a stark institutional interior, producing pockets of intimacy within a larger civic volume. There is a deliberate avoidance of sharp orthogonal divisions; the building's internal logic favors flow over partition.

The axonometric view of a three-story structure with green-tinted walls reinforces this reading. Palm trees frame the building, and figures occupy every level, from ground-floor gathering areas to upper terraces. The tint of the walls hints at a material strategy that ties the architecture to its landscape, allowing vegetation and built form to read as a single organism rather than figure against ground. This is where the project's concept of a "cultivation arena" begins to manifest physically: the boundary between garden and building dissolves.

A Site Plan Built on Ruin Patterns and Landscape Memory

Site plan drawing showing building footprints, paved areas, and landscape elements including palm trees and vegetation clusters
Site plan drawing showing building footprints, paved areas, and landscape elements including palm trees and vegetation clusters

The site plan is perhaps the most telling drawing in the set. Building footprints nestle among clusters of palm trees and vegetation, with paved areas tracing paths that follow existing ruin patterns rather than imposing a new grid. The designers describe these fragments as "anchors of authenticity," and the plan bears that out: the new architecture is not superimposed on the site but threaded through it, allowing the scars of conflict to remain legible as spatial thresholds. Open areas between structures create informal gathering zones, the kind of interstitial space where chance encounters between formerly divided communities can occur.

Water features woven into the plan introduce what the designers call "auditory softness and visual calm," a deliberate counterpoint to the violence inscribed in the ground. The landscape reads as an oasis, not in a decorative sense, but as a genuine refuge where the programmatic anchors of exhibition, cultivation, work, and healing are held together by shared greenery and pedestrian circulation.

Stacked Volumes That House Memory and Everyday Life

Section drawing through a multi-level structure with figures in interior spaces and palm trees flanking the building
Section drawing through a multi-level structure with figures in interior spaces and palm trees flanking the building
Perspective drawing of stacked volumes with exposed structure and exterior stairs set among palm trees and figures below
Perspective drawing of stacked volumes with exposed structure and exterior stairs set among palm trees and figures below

Two additional drawings, a cross-section and a perspective of stacked volumes, reveal how the project negotiates its vertical ambitions. The section cuts through a multi-level structure flanked by palm trees, showing figures in interior spaces that range from the intimate scale of a reading nook to the generous height of a double-volume gathering hall. The exposed structural frames in the perspective view suggest a deliberate rawness, an architecture that does not conceal its making. Exterior stairs cascade down through the stacked forms, making the act of ascent and descent a public performance rather than a hidden service route.

The social living units occupy these stacked volumes, transforming the proposal from a symbolic memorial into what the designers call "living architecture." Mixed communities are encouraged to inhabit side by side; the working hub on adjacent levels promotes knowledge exchange, traditional crafts, and new creative economies. A contemplative healing space completes the sequence, offering meditation areas and psychological support within the same urban fabric. The result is a single organism where remembrance, residence, and recovery coexist floor by floor.

Why This Project Matters

Post-war reconstruction projects too often default to one of two modes: erasure, in which the past is bulldozed for a clean start, or preservation, in which ruins are frozen as untouchable monuments. "Recollection of Echoes" refuses both. Its seven programmatic layers, from ruin-tracing pathways and water features to museums, cultivation arenas, housing, workspaces, and healing sanctuaries, compose a coherent argument that architecture can simultaneously acknowledge trauma and cultivate new civic life. The spatial sequence is not linear; it is woven, reflecting the messy, nonlinear reality of collective recovery.

What makes the proposal compelling is its insistence on the everyday. By embedding housing and workspaces alongside memorial and contemplative programs, Selinotaki, Milonas, Savva, and Agathocleous assert that healing is not an event but a condition sustained through daily coexistence. The drawings communicate this clearly: figures cook, walk, garden, work, and rest within the same architectural frame. If post-war architecture is to mean anything beyond shelter, it must create the spatial conditions for trust to rebuild slowly, one shared staircase and one communal garden at a time.



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About the Designers

Designers: Maria Selinotaki, Anastasia Milonas, Christos Savva, Giorgos Agathocleous

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Project credits: Recollection of Echoes by Maria Selinotaki, Anastasia Milonas, Christos Savva, Giorgos Agathocleous.

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