
KEY DATES
website launch & call for abstract
February 23, 2026
conference registration opens
March 3, 2026
abstract submission extendedApril 19, 2026
April 30, 2026
notification of abstract
acceptance
May 30, 2026
deadline for final submission of reviewed abstracts
June 15, 2026
early bird registration deadline
June 16, 2026
excursions registration deadline
August 3, 2026
conference registration deadline
August 3, 2026
EAAE Annual Conference
August 26-29, 2026
Thirty years after the proclamation of Bigness, a vision of architecture conceived as a scalar device of urban power, we are now in a position to critically reassess its ambitions and limitations. That moment in architectural discourse, fueled by a strong confidence in growth, large-scale interventions, and the possibility of constructing a boundless urban whole, has progressively fractured under the pressure of the intertwined crises that shape our present. The very idea of global well-being has been unsettled, exposing widespread conditions of vulnerability, precarity, and uncertainty. As Denis Cosgrove anticipated in 2011, globalization has revealed itself not only as a sea of connections, but also as a complex system of shared fragilities. Architecture—among the most exportable cultural products of that moment—has increasingly distanced itself from the lived realities of place. This stance has contributed to the marginalization of weaker territories that are now confronting depopulation, deindustrialization, economic decline, limited access to essential services, and the erosion of civic rights.
Against this backdrop, a radical rethinking of architecture’s role becomes imperative in order to identify new trajectories for territories facing the progressive depletion of both material and immaterial resources. So-called peripheral or marginal territories are no longer at the edge of architectural discourse; they have become critical observatories of present and future transformations. It is precisely within these conditions that alternative modes of building and inhabiting can be explored and spatial formations can be reimagined. Here, the small-and-medium-scale is not is not a leftover of decline but a deliberate strategy of survival, adaptation, and regeneration. Far from suggesting a nostalgic return, this approach calls for a rediscovery of the right measure, that is, finely tuned, site-specific interventions that transform limitation into a resource and design into an act of attentive listening and spatial interpretation. This perspective is not new. Since the late twentieth century, a range of architectural approaches has increasingly engaged with small- and medium-scale strategies in response to the progressive depletion of places and resources. Across both professional practice and architectural education, renewed attention has been given to reduced scales of intervention, incremental processes, and context-sensitive design projects, interpreting socio-economic contraction as an opportunity.
Today, in an era marked by the renewed prevalence of what Anna Tsing has defined as an economy of appearances (2005)—a cultural and economic regime in which value, growth, and development are produced and legitimized through visibility, narrative, and promise rather than through lasting material benefits—the crucial question for architecture is how “fitting” may be reframed as an operative principle and translated into design practices and educational frameworks, where reduction and contraction are understood not as limitations but as forms of knowledge.
This vision underpins the conceptual framework of EAAE AC/GA 2026, hosted by the School of Architecture of Cagliari. With its low-density landscapes, imperfect processes of modernization, and still-intact material and immaterial resources, the island of Sardinia functions as a nexus within a broader constellation of shrinking territories united by the urgent need to rethink development paradigms and construct new forms of centrality rooted in care for place. Therefore, investigating local conditions without endorsing localism, XS–S–M positions the small-and-medium-scale as a paradigm for architectural practice and education, through which wider implications can be critically examined across diverse yet interconnected disciplinary fields. Ultimately, do small and large scales operate as fixed oppositions, or can intermediate and relational scales emerge beyond extreme categorizations?
To address this question, XS–S–M is structured around the interplay of two key concepts:
Architecture | understood, through the lens of a regressive crisis, not as a condition of loss but as an opportunity to reframe architectural practice in response to emerging needs, reaffirming it as a cultural and artistic discipline engaged with questions of beauty, sustainability, and shared experience.
Fitting | conceived as a paradigm for architectural responses to depopulation, economic regression, resource optimization, and limits to consumption (energy, land, materials), articulating the search for the right measure through a deep and situated engagement with place.
Call for Abstracts / EXTENSION
The deadline for the Call for Abstracts has been extended to Thursday, April 30.
Authors are invited to submit their abstracts by completing the submission form in the dedicated section of the conference website. Please ensure that all required fields are fully completed.
CREDITS
Steering Commitee
Roberto Cavallo
EAAE President / TU Delft (NL)
Pier Francesco Cherchi
University of Cagliari (IT)
Adriano Dessì
University of Cagliari (IT)
Marco Moro
University of Cagliari (IT)
Local Organizing Committee
Maddalena Achenza, Pier Francesco Cherchi, Adriano Dessì, Alessio Floris, Donatella Rita Fiorino, Stefano Mais, Francesco Marras, Marco Moro, Elisa Pilia, Valentina Pintus, Emanuele Reccia, Sergio Serra
Scientific BoardRoberto Cavallo
EAAE President
TU Delft (NL)
Mia Roth-Čerina
EAAE vice-president
University of Zagreb (HR)
Dag Boutsen
EAAE Council Member
KU Leuven (BE)
Michela Barosio
EAAE Council Member
Politecnico di Torino (IT)
Patrick Flynn
EAAE Council Member
TU Dublin (IE)
Māra Liepa-Zemeša
EAAE Council Member
Riga Technical University (LV)
Madeleine Maaskant
EAAE Council Member
Amsterdam Academy of Architecture (NL)
Claus Peder Pedersen
EAAE Council Member
Aarhus School of Architecture (DK)
Nicolas Pham
EAAE Council Member
ENSA Versailles (FR)
Massimo Santanicchia
EAAE Council Member
Iceland University of the Arts (IS)
Jörg Schröder
EAAE Council member
Leibniz University Hannover (DE)
Ivan Blečić
Dean of DICAAR
University of Cagliari (IT)
Adriano Dessì
EAAE contact person
University of Cagliari (IT)
Carlo Atzeni
University of Cagliari (IT)
Vincenzo Bagnolo
Coordinator of the Bachelor’s Program in Architecture (L17)
University of Cagliari (IT)
Marco Cadinu
University of Cagliari (IT)
Anna Maria Colavitti
University of Cagliari (IT)
Massimo Faiferri
University of Cagliari (IT)
Caterina Giannattasio
University of Cagliari (IT)
Maurizio Memoli
University of Cagliari (IT)
Giorgio Mario Peghin
University of Cagliari (IT)
Paolo Sanjust
Coordinator of Master’s Program in Architecture (LM4)
University of Cagliari (IT)













