














"Every surface is a record of events."
Sanford Kwinter
Architecture begins where time becomes visible.
The building unfolds within a duration shaped by slow processes, successive adjustments, and silent responses to reality.
Time does not act as an external agent, but as a continuous force that writes upon matter.
This photographic series emerges from that processual condition of architecture. The image does not seek to represent the building as an ideal object, but as a continuous presence, traversed by minimal and cumulative events. By suspending the instant, photography makes visible what usually escapes: time as slow action, deterioration as inscription, imperfection as a condition of the real.
These ephemeral moments do not interrupt the long time of architecture; they make it legible. Everyday variation reveals the building’s age without dramatizing it, emphasizing its temporal thickness.
The visible results from the overlap between permanence and transformation — a place where the project ends, but architecture continues, written by time, by matter, and by what insists on happening.