My architecture does not erase—it extends, repairs, and repositions the existing for the future.
This is a practice without spectacle or signature forms.
Its strength lies in restraint: doing only what is necessary.
https://www.linkedin.com/in/barbara-lambec/ In over seven years and around one hundred projects, I have engaged in transformation without production in the conventional sense. Each intervention preserves the energy, resources, and cultural value embedded in structures—avoiding the environmental and historical losses that demolition and replacement entail.
I approach architecture as a continuum: reducing extraction, extending the usefulness of materials, and weaving the past into the future. This redefines creation as the intelligent preservation and transformation of what already exists.
As a specialist in Heritage and a Docteure ès Sciences in reuse, I unite historical analysis with technical innovation, advancing architecture as a discipline of continuity, where preservation and transformation are central acts of design.
Architecture should not always be about adding more. It can be about making what we have last—sustaining structures, conserving resources, and shaping change without erasing what came before.