hortence is the research centre for Architectural History, Theory and Criticism of the Faculty of Architecture La Cambre-Horta of the Université libre de Bruxelles
The international symposium Mapping Architectural Integration (1960–2000) aims to critically examine architectural approaches, projects, and debates in which the sensitive and contextual integration of contemporary architecture into historic cities emerged as a contested—and often contentious—issue. Within historic cityscapes, architects have often claimed expertise and agency to deliver design solutions that reconciled the contradictory demands of conservation and urban planning: adapting to historical contexts, respecting heritage values, contributing to urban renewal, and producing an architecture “of its time.” Histories and critiques of architectural integration have often refrained from questioning the architect’s claim to mediate among diverse stakeholders and concerns. Today, historical reassessments of these projects face the challenge of addressing the socio-economic complexities, governance frameworks, and interdisciplinary controversies in which they were embedded.
This symposium proposes to re-examine the history of architectural integration in historic cities through a cartography of previously understudied cases. We seek papers that contribute to mappings of:
Theorizations of different strands and degrees of integration across discursive and cultural contexts.
The negotiations, debates, and controversies through which integration projects were constituted.
The entanglements of these projects with broader environmental, economic, and infrastructural processes and scales that conditioned their materialization.
A key ambition of the symposium is to redirect this multidimensional cartography and historiography toward peripheral urban contexts worldwide, frequently marginalized within architectural historiography.
Submission instructions:
Please submit an abstract of 500 words, an academic bio, and an image, by September 15th, 2026, via the symposium website: www.mappingarchitecturalintegration.com
The symposium is organized within the framework of the research project Integration of Contemporary Architecture in Historical Cities in Belgium (1970–1989) at Université libre de Bruxelles and Ghent University, funded by the Research Foundation – Flanders (FWO) and the National Fund for Scientific Research (FNRS).
Organizing Committee
Maarten Liefooghe Ghent University Valentine Masset Université libre de Bruxelles, Ghent University Warre Onnockx Ghent University, Université libre de Bruxelles Wouter Van Acker Université libre de Bruxelles
Scientific Committee
Kirsten Angermann Bauhaus-Universität Weimar Véronique Boone Université libre de Bruxelles Pierre Chabard ENSA Paris-La Villette Yonca Erkan Universiteit Antwerpen StylianosGiamarelos University College London Claudine Houbart Université de Liège AnneKockelkorn Ghent University Andrew Leach Queensland University of Technology Helena Mattsson KTH Royal Institute of Technology Simon Mitchell Oslo School of architecture Christophe Van Gerrewey Architectural Critic
deadline 15.09.2026
The international symposium Mapping Architectural Integration (1960–2000) aims to critically examine architectural approaches, projects, and debates in which the sensitive and contextual integration of contemporary architecture into historic cities emerged as a contested—and often contentious—issue. Within historic cityscapes, architects have often claimed expertise and agency to deliver design solutions that reconciled the contradictory demands of conservation and urban planning: adapting to historical contexts, respecting heritage values, contributing to urban renewal, and producing an architecture “of its time.” Histories and critiques of architectural integration have often refrained from questioning the architect’s claim to mediate among diverse stakeholders and concerns. Today, historical reassessments of these projects face the challenge of addressing the socio-economic complexities, governance frameworks, and interdisciplinary controversies in which they were embedded.
This symposium proposes to re-examine the history of architectural integration in historic cities through a cartography of previously understudied cases. We seek papers that contribute to mappings of:
A key ambition of the symposium is to redirect this multidimensional cartography and historiography toward peripheral urban contexts worldwide, frequently marginalized within architectural historiography.
Submission instructions:
Please submit an abstract of 500 words, an academic bio, and an image, by September 15th, 2026, via the symposium website: www.mappingarchitecturalintegration.com
For questions, please contact: mapping.arch.integration@gmail.com
The symposium is organized within the framework of the research project Integration of Contemporary Architecture in Historical Cities in Belgium (1970–1989) at Université libre de Bruxelles and Ghent University, funded by the Research Foundation – Flanders (FWO) and the National Fund for Scientific Research (FNRS).
Organizing Committee
Maarten Liefooghe Ghent University
Valentine Masset Université libre de Bruxelles, Ghent University
Warre Onnockx Ghent University, Université libre de Bruxelles
Wouter Van Acker Université libre de Bruxelles
Scientific Committee
Kirsten Angermann Bauhaus-Universität Weimar
Véronique Boone Université libre de Bruxelles
Pierre Chabard ENSA Paris-La Villette
Yonca Erkan Universiteit Antwerpen
Stylianos Giamarelos University College London
Claudine Houbart Université de Liège
Anne Kockelkorn Ghent University
Andrew Leach Queensland University of Technology
Helena Mattsson KTH Royal Institute of Technology
Simon Mitchell Oslo School of architecture
Christophe Van Gerrewey Architectural Critic