Concéntrico returns to the city of Logroño with 24 installations that invite viewers to engage in dialogue about the future of cities in its tenth edition, the most ambitious of all. After an annual tour to places such as Milan, Bucharest, Madrid, Huesca, and Dammam, Concéntrico concludes, as usual, in its hometown of Logroño.
The International Festival of Architecture and Design in the city of La Rioja is a space to raise questions, imagine other ways of living together, and transform everyday life, explains Javier Peña, the festival's director. In this new edition, they take another step in transforming the city, and the ideas born in Logroño will remain in established projects.
Concentric Logroño 2025
Concéntrico 2025 is ten years old and something to celebrate, a very important date to raise the message of change. That's why this year's Festival is divided into four main themes: water, food, social and ritual processes, and climate. One hundred and eleven lampposts by Bayona Studio open the inaugural route of the International Architecture and Design Festival, which will conclude in Viña Lanciano and run for six days, from June 19 to 24.
Throughout these days, Logroño becomes a shared territory of research, celebration, and action. Ephemeral interventions, immersive installations, collective workshops, encounters, and urban tours activate new interpretations of space, raising questions about the social, ecological, and cultural challenges of the built environment. Concéntrico 2025 brings together studios and creators such as Zyva studio, Bayona studio, BairBalliet, Sahra Hersi, Chris Kabel, and Colectivo 2001, among others.
Concentric Logroño 2025
Transformation of the city, design, a tool for imagining the future, and possibilities as forms of coexistence. Ten years that will transport viewers through streets, squares, vacant lots, and gardens in a comprehensive and detailed program featuring food as a collective practice, climate as a shared challenge, water as a vital and cultural resource, and social and ritual processes as a way of activating the common good and shared memory.