Oslo Architecture Triennale returns in 2022 with Mission Neighbourhood

Outside bird’s eye view of Oslo

Promotion: the Oslo Architecture Triennale will return in September 2022 with “Mission Neighbourhood”, a programme exploring how to create diverse, inclusive and sustainable urban development.

The 8th Oslo Architecture Triennale will run from 22 September to 30 October at the Old Munch Museum and other venues across Oslo.

Directed and curated by Christian Pagh, it aims to bring professionals and citizens together to imagine ways to build fair and thriving neighbourhoods.

Bird’s eye view of a landscape
The programme explores how to create diverse and sustainable urban developments

“Current development in the city makes it clear that we need to find a new understanding and approach to how to build and develop neighbourhoods,” said Pagh. “Where if not the Nordic cities can be the role model for better, more sustainable and social neighbourhoods?”

“How can Oslo meet those expectations?” he continued. “Mission Neighbourhood goes beyond criticism and represents an optimistic call for action.”

Textile colourful installation with children playing inside
The 8th Oslo Architecture Triennale runs from 22 September to 30 October

At the heart of the programme is the Oslo Neighbourhood Lab, which will take over the Old Munch Museum and turn it into an alternative exhibition space and festival hub, home to three of the Triennale’s key exhibitions.

Mission Neighbourhood: (Re)forming communities will feature direct commissions, selections from the Triennale’s international Open Call, artistic interventions and student projects, all responding to the challenge of how to form more diverse, more generous and more sustainable neighbourhoods.

Oslo city centre
The Triennale takes place at the Old Munch Museum and other venues across Oslo

The Peter Cook: City Landscapes exhibition will feature the drawings of Peter Cook, whose colourful architectural drawings have suggested visionary new ways of shaping cities, buildings and landscapes.

And Oslo in the Making will look at “the state of neighbourhood thinking and doing” in the Norwegian capital with an overview of current projects, including an analysis of proposals for the Grønlikaia development.

People enjoying outside space in Oslo
The event aims to bring professionals and citizens together to imagine ways to build thriving neighbourhoods

The Neighbourhood Lab will also be home to talks, workshops, conferences, social gatherings, concerts and a pop-up cafe run by Forandringshuset, a social enterprise helping young people.

Elsewhere around Oslo, the National Museum, one of the Triennale’s main partners, will host the exhibition Architecture: Coming Into Community. Here the focus will be on who’s been included and excluded from urban development, with queer and feminist perspectives contributing to the discourse.

People watching a speaking event
The event is directed and curated by Christian Pagh

The exhibition will include an installation by Swedish art and architecture collective MYCKET. It will transform part of the museum into a queered and playful place and is based on the group’s research into queer spaces and nightclub architecture.

Meanwhile, arts venue ROM will host Betraktninger = Observations, Dialogues and Actions, which will present 15 artistic responses to the idea of the neighbourhood. Many of the projects are based on the neighbourhood around ROM, Maridalsveien, while others focus on other parts of the city.

an outside structure in Oslo
The event includes installations and exhibitions

A key educational event is the Triennale Academy at the Oslo School of Architecture and Design, which will bring together students and staff from European schools in Oslo to engage with the festival’s curatorial team on the topic of “(RE)acting/(EN)acting: Collective Dissidence, Reclaiming the Neighbourhood”.

“The Covid-19 pandemic has clarified the importance of neighbourhood, as well as significant inequalities when it comes to access to neighbourhood qualities,” said Pagh in his curatorial statement. “The Triennale aims to add insight, ideas and proposals for action that can help build more quality neighbourhoods for the many.”

The Oslo Architecture Triennale takes place from 22 September to 30 October 2022. See Dezeen Events Guide for an up-to-date list of architecture and design events taking place around the world.

Partnership content

This article was written by Dezeen for the Oslo Architecture Triennale as part of a partnership. Find out more about Dezeen partnership content here.

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