Andrada Calin | in collaboration with Tabby Bunyan (RE_CONSIDERED) and Mark Smith (Isokon Plus) - Think Twice: A Public Installation Made from Textile Waste

£8,500.00

Mixed media (reclaimed plywood, Fabreco textile composite panels, hemp panels, planting)
105 x 210 x 55 cm
2025

“Andrada is an architect, urban designer, and educator based in London, working at the intersection of architecture, art, and public realm. After years in private practice, it became clear that the depth of her skills and creative ambition could not be realised within conventional frameworks, prompting a shift towards more experimental and artistic modes of production. This led to the founding of Andrada Calin Studio earlier this year, following a competition win for the London Festival of Architecture with Think Twice—a public bench conceived as a sculptural social artefact and a pivotal moment in the evolution of her design language.

Shaped by community engagement and public-sector experience, her practice spans installations, material prototypes, and urban strategies, often treating waste as both medium and message. Through competitions and public interventions, her work invites critical reflection on how we live, consume, and care for our shared environments.”

Mixed media (reclaimed plywood, Fabreco textile composite panels, hemp panels, planting)
105 x 210 x 55 cm
2025

“Andrada is an architect, urban designer, and educator based in London, working at the intersection of architecture, art, and public realm. After years in private practice, it became clear that the depth of her skills and creative ambition could not be realised within conventional frameworks, prompting a shift towards more experimental and artistic modes of production. This led to the founding of Andrada Calin Studio earlier this year, following a competition win for the London Festival of Architecture with Think Twice—a public bench conceived as a sculptural social artefact and a pivotal moment in the evolution of her design language.

Shaped by community engagement and public-sector experience, her practice spans installations, material prototypes, and urban strategies, often treating waste as both medium and message. Through competitions and public interventions, her work invites critical reflection on how we live, consume, and care for our shared environments.”