Schön! alive 2 | what more can a space become?

Co-founded in 1975 by Rem Koolhaas, OMA has continuously challenged architectural norms through projects that are as conceptual as they are civically minded. Emerging in the late 1990s and early 2000s, van Duijn and Shigematsu witnessed a profession in transformation: post-Bilbao, increasingly global and ever more interdisciplinary.

As OMA began collaborating with Prada, the studio expanded architecture’s boundaries by designing not just buildings but new cultural formats: stores as epicentres, museums as public squares and offices as sites for encounter and social wellbeing rather than routine. Today, OMA approaches architecture as both a spatial and urban act – centred on flexibility, specificity and public impact. Whether reimagining the office post-pandemic or adapting historic and cultural buildings for new uses, it remains driven by one essential question: what more can a space become?

Partners Chris van Duijn and Shohei Shigematsu speak with Schön! alive and reflect on their early influences and how those creative impulses led them to join OMA at a pivotal time in architectural history.

View the full interview and feature now, only in Schön! alive.

 

Fondazione Prada. Milan.
photography. Bas Princen
courtesy of Fondazione Prada

Prada Epicenter Los Angeles.
photography. Phil Meech
courtesy of OMA

Fondazione Prada. Milan.
photography. Bas Princen
courtesy of Fondazione Prada

Axel Springer Campus. Berlin.
photography. Laurian Ghinitoiu
courtesy of OMA

Spiral staircase in the
The Jeffrey E. Gundlach Building.
photography. Marco Cappelletti

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interview. Ilaria Sponda