The regenerative ruin

Type | Stage design / scenography    Year | 2023    Project site | Salles-sous-Bois, France

Client | La Vallee Electrique Festival

The Re-generative ruin, a research-through-design project, explores how deconstruction can be leveraged through design as a generative act. We designed a stage for a music festival that took place in the south of France inspired by gothic and roman ruins common to the area. Over time, these ruins have become absorbed into the landscape, in their decay playing host to new ecosystems. Only in their abandoned, deconstructed, post-use state, does a new space emerge for alternate, unknown relationalities, hosted on a scaffolding comprised of anthropogenic decay. 

The stage was designed for its human functioning – to host multiple performers for a 48hr festival –but also to evolve and open itself up to use by other creatures following its deconstruction. The stage was embedded with several ‘regenerative devices’ designed to activate over time through decomposition, deconstruction, and decay. A rock tower was embedded with soil and plant species, equally designed as an attractive space for birds to dwell; A wall was created using organic compost from the festival; and a column of wood comprised of the off-cuts of the stage was left to rot, playing host to insects and detritivores of various kinds. Following the festival, the stage was partially deconstructed, and offered to the forest to do with it as it will.

regenerative ruin plan studio method architecture