Wind and weather leave traces in the landscape, create erosion and change its shapes. Just think of wild mountain formations or the paths that water seeks through the terrain. Protection from the forces of nature is therefore of fundamental importance for human architecture in order to keep it intact in the long term.
"Meander", on the other hand, deliberately integrates erosion into the concept by making the weakness of unfired earth its own, following the tradition of rammed earth construction. The focus is on unfired clay tiles for the exterior wall, which have a reduced material resistance but can be completely recycled.
There are two complementary positive-negative shapes that are flexibly combinable. The relief of the tiles, initially of exact geometry, becomes softer and softer over time and takes on an organic, meandering appearance. An interplay between material and climate begins, in which the forces of nature take over the design process.





