We gather stories, memories, and personal archives from those who lived these landscapes or inherited their legacies.
We organize training sessions in the field—especially at sites like Camp 65—to teach how to record, preserve, and interpret memory.
With support from AISO, these schools involve students, locals, and researchers in collecting voices and testimonies.
It’s a way to protect history that hasn’t yet been written down.
We open our research sites to the public during excavation and documentation phases.
At Camp 65, visitors explore the site with archaeologists, hear the stories, and even share their own.
These events help connect communities to the landscapes they thought they had lost.
Living Labs are spaces of dialogue where researchers and communities work together.
In places like Pantanella, they allow locals, experts, and descendants to co-create knowledge, ask questions, and propose new uses for forgotten places.
It’s heritage in the making—shared, open, and evolving.
From small workshops to exhibitions, we host events that bring people together around the themes of memory, conflict, and landscape.
Whether at schools, museums, or on-site, these gatherings give voice to communities and create new connections across generations.