Domus 1108 hits the shelves

The first of the 10 Domus issues curated by Ma Yansong in 2026 is a statement of architecture as fantasy and an act of resistance: from Foster’s mega museum in Abu Dhabi to the “infernal” metro station designed by Anish Kapoor in Naples.

Editorial/ Architecture is not architecture: it is fantasy

Text Ma Yansong  

Essays/ Fantasies of less Adisciplinedimaginationandrespectfor the landunite agroupof Koreanpractitionerswho share a desire to create sustainable living environments. Because in the era of degrowth,the focus shifts to interventions that use less material and minimise carbon footprints

Text  Jihoi Lee 

Essays/ Creativity channels Adrive towards transcendence lies atthe core of all creativepractice,withfantasyalways intension withoperational constraints.This is the viewoftheGuggenheimFoundation’s long-standingdirector, who recounts 30 years of museum projects with Frank Gehry, Jean Nouvel and Rem Koolhaas

Text Thomas Krens 

Let's chat to/ Norman Foster What place does imagination have, or should have, in design? How can we strike a balance between imagination and pragma - tism? We discuss this with Norman Foster, whose long and distinguished career has been consistently linked to technological innovation and social responsibility, with a bold eye on the future

Text Ma Yansong 
Photo Chiara Becattini, Ma Wenxiao, Nigel Young 

Architecture/ Foster + Partners, Zayed National Museum, Abu Dhabi, AE, 2025 Although largely the result of energy-saving phys- ics, Abu Dhabi’s monumental, sculptural museum could be described as a literal flight of fancy

Text Jonathan Glancey 
Photo Nigel Young 

Architecture/ Open Architecture., Sun Tower, Yantai, CN, 2024 Conceived to celebrate the relationship with the sun and sea, the Sun Tower provides a variety of public programmes, including a theatre, a library, a square and e

Text Li Hu, Huang Wenjing 
Photo Jonathan Leijonhufvud  

Art/ Velvet, Nest Originating from a sweet, childlike idea, the mast-top light installation created with recycled materials from nearby construction sites has become a beacon for the local area

Text Velvet
Photo Tõnu Tunnel 

Architecture/ Wallmakers, Toy Storey Incorporating thousands of old toys into its facade, this residence in Kerala preserves the childhood of an entire generation within its walls

Text Oshin Varughese, Vinu Daniel 
Photo Syam Sreesylam 

Architecture/ Line+ Studio, Sky Ring Two technical infrastructures in rural China become a form of storytelling, where memory and imagination converge 

Text Peidong Zhu 
Photo Arch-Exist Photography

Design/ GN Architects, Seaside Pavilion On the remote Chinese island of Chaishan, an installation that sways with the wind and tide has catalysed the renewal of this place which risked disappearing

Text Shen Lijiang – GN Architects 
Photo Wenjun Liang 

Art/ Anish Kapoor, Monte Sant'Angelo Metro Station, Naples, 2025 A symbiosis of sculpture and architecture, Monte Sant’Angelo is an artistic expe- rience more than a metro station

Text Anish Kapoor 
Photo Amedeo Benestante

Architecture/ Xisui Design, The Tree of Wonder  In a shopping centre’s atrium, a giant tree of wonder invites visitors to immerse themselves in a lush landscape that blends steampunk aesthetics and nature

Text  Hu Yihao 

Art/ Superflux, Nobody told me rivers dream As part of the London Design Museum “More than Human”, the installation explores how artificial intelligence can help deepen our perception and understanding of nature’s intricate intelligence

Text Superflux  

Architecture without architects/ Constructive imagination In Gurunsi houses, imagination is not fiction but a spatial belief system that produces architecture. In this context, imagination is a ritualised, cyclical and material process for world-building

Text Bushra Mohamed 

Stories/ Imagination, the primordial drive of architecture

Text Ma Yansong 

Fact of the month/ Can art save a city? The inconvenient beauty of Gibellina

Text Walter Mariotti

Domus Archive/ Signature houses, Purini and Thermes in Gibellina

Text Simona Bordone 

Person of the month/ The many faces of a starchitect

Text Gabriele Neri

Utopias and dystopias/ Blade Runner and urban anxieties

Text Alberto Mingardi

At home with/ Nietzsche’s inner homeland

Text Nanni Delbecchi

In this January issue, marking the dawn of 2026, Domus explores the art of inhabiting the present. Under the stewardship of Ma Yansong—the latest Guest Editor of our magazine for 2026—the editorial program morphs into a collective dream: a radical inquiry into that primordial force we call fantasy. This is no flight of fancy, but a conscious act of resistance. In a fragmented era, ruled by algorithms and the "dictatorship of capital," architecture reclaims its role as the essential mirror of our boldest desires. Ma Yansong greets us with a provocation that is, at its heart, a liberation: architecture is not architecture; it is fantasy.He invites us to peer beyond the veil of economic development—the very phenomenon he observes in his native China—to find not just metrics, but the beauty of a possible originality. This yearning for imagination intersects with the reflections of Jihoi Lee, who explores the Korean scene through a "fantasy of reduction." Here, the dream is not about accumulation but masterful subtraction. The work of Jung Youngsun on living systems and the subterranean stillness of Cho Byoungsoo remind us that to imagine also means knowing when to stay silent, making room for nature. 

Domus 1108, January 2026

The conversation turns historical and monumental with Thomas Krens, who traces the currents of creativity through thirty years of iconic museums. From Gehry to Nouvel and Koolhaas, a constant tension emerges between the flight of transcendence and the iron grip of the Zeitgeist. This same tension vibrates in the dialogue between Ma Yansong and Norman Foster, where design is stripped back to its essence: a tool for the survival of the species. Foster reminds us that, even amidst global crises or digital shifts, technology must remain handmaid to a poetic vision capable of shaping a future we do not yet dare to inhabit.

In a fragmented age dominated by the algorithm and the dictatorship of capital, architecture once again becomes the necessary mirror of our boldest desires.

This constellation of visions takes flight in works that defy the gravity of the everyday. Jonathan Glancey depicts Foster’s Zayed National Museum as a "steel wingbeat in the desert," while Open Architecture’s Sun Tower in Yantai rises like a giant sundial, a bridge between humanity and celestial rhythms. Architecture becomes visceral in Anish Kapoor’s Naples station and explores the virtual frontier through the sensibilities of Matt Shaw and emerging practices like Space Popular and Pills.
Yet, this push toward the "elsewhere" always finds its way back to the roots, as seen in the Gurunsi houses in Ghana documented by Bushra Mohamed, where fantasy is a cyclical ritual of belonging. The issue closes, fittingly, within the walls of a Beijing kindergarten, where Yansong has crafted a whimsical space free from convention. It is a reminder to us all: the human endeavor is always born of a high ideal. Architecture, after all, is but the noble and fragile attempt to give our dreams a roof before the harshness of reality makes them vanish.

Foster + Partners, Zayed National Museum, Abu Dhabi, UAE, 2007 - 2025

Nigel Young / Foster + Partners

Foster + Partners, Zayed National Museum, Abu Dhabi, UAE, 2007 - 2025

Nigel Young / Foster + Partners

Foster + Partners, Zayed National Museum, Abu Dhabi, UAE, 2007 - 2025

Nigel Young / Foster + Partners

Foster + Partners, Zayed National Museum, Abu Dhabi, UAE, 2007 - 2025

Nigel Young / Foster + Partners

Foster + Partners, Zayed National Museum, Abu Dhabi, UAE, 2007 - 2025

Nigel Young / Foster + Partners

Foster + Partners, Zayed National Museum, Abu Dhabi, UAE, 2007 - 2025

Nigel Young / Foster + Partners

Foster + Partners, Zayed National Museum, Abu Dhabi, UAE, 2007 - 2025

Nigel Young / Foster + Partners

Foster + Partners, Zayed National Museum, Abu Dhabi, UAE, 2007 - 2025

Nigel Young / Foster + Partners

Foster + Partners, Zayed National Museum, Abu Dhabi, UAE, 2007 - 2025

Nigel Young / Foster + Partners

Foster + Partners, Zayed National Museum, Abu Dhabi, UAE, 2007 - 2025

Nigel Young / Foster + Partners

Foster + Partners, Zayed National Museum, Abu Dhabi, UAE, 2007 - 2025

Nigel Young / Foster + Partners

Foster + Partners, Zayed National Museum, Abu Dhabi, UAE, 2007 - 2025

Nigel Young / Foster + Partners

Foster + Partners, Zayed National Museum, Abu Dhabi, UAE, 2007 - 2025

Nigel Young / Foster + Partners

Foster + Partners, Zayed National Museum, Abu Dhabi, UAE, 2007 - 2025

Nigel Young / Foster + Partners

Foster + Partners, Zayed National Museum, Abu Dhabi, UAE, 2007 - 2025

Nigel Young / Foster + Partners

Foster + Partners, Zayed National Museum, Abu Dhabi, UAE, 2007 - 2025

Nigel Young / Foster + Partners


In our Diario section, the story begins where the earth once shook: Gibellina. Recently named the Italian Capital of Contemporary Art 2026, this Sicilian town has been given a mandate: to transform the trauma of 1968 into a design methodology. Editorial Director Walter Mariotti walks us through this utopian vision. While Burri’s Cretto remains a monumentalized wound—an unprecedented silence in concrete—the city prepares for the future, betting on its own marginality as an antidote to oblivion. Also in Gibellina, Simona Bordone revisits the archives of Franco Purini and Laura Thermes’ "endless project." Through the historical chronicles of Francesco Moschini, we rediscover the Pharmacist’s House and the unbuilt Casa Patti: dreams on paper that force us to ask what it means to inhabit a memory that offers no discounts.

Anish Kapoor, stazione Monte Sant'Angelo Anish Kapoor, Monte Sant'Angelo Station. Naples, Italy. Photo Amedeo Benestante. © Anish Kapoor. All rights reserved, DACS - SIAE, 2023

Anish Kapoor, stazione Monte Sant'Angelo Anish Kapoor, Monte Sant'Angelo Station. Naples, Italy. Photo Amedeo Benestante. © Anish Kapoor. All rights reserved, DACS - SIAE, 2023

Anish Kapoor, stazione Monte Sant'Angelo Anish Kapoor, Monte Sant'Angelo Station. Naples, Italy. Photo Amedeo Benestante. © Anish Kapoor. All rights reserved, DACS - SIAE, 2023

Anish Kapoor, stazione Monte Sant'Angelo Anish Kapoor, Monte Sant'Angelo Station. Naples, Italy. Photo Amedeo Benestante. © Anish Kapoor. All rights reserved, DACS - SIAE, 2023

Anish Kapoor, stazione Monte Sant'Angelo Anish Kapoor, Monte Sant'Angelo Station. Naples, Italy. Photo Amedeo Benestante. © Anish Kapoor. All rights reserved, DACS - SIAE, 2023

Anish Kapoor, stazione Monte Sant'Angelo Anish Kapoor, Monte Sant'Angelo Station. Naples, Italy. Photo Amedeo Benestante. © Anish Kapoor. All rights reserved, DACS - SIAE, 2023

Anish Kapoor, stazione Monte Sant'Angelo Anish Kapoor, Monte Sant'Angelo Station. Naples, Italy. Photo Amedeo Benestante. © Anish Kapoor. All rights reserved, DACS - SIAE, 2023


If architecture is a "crystal," as Gabriele Neri suggests regarding Frank Gehry, then every facet reflects a different truth. From his 1972 Easy Edges cardboard furniture to his cameo on The Simpsons, Gehry has balanced the "wow factor" of Bilbao with a quiet socio-political ethic, designing homes for veterans and centers for the homeless. In our Detailscolumn, Valentina Petrucci interviews Francesco Siciliano, President of the Teatro di Roma. For him, art is "violent seduction." From the chromatic explosions of the Turner Collection to the mysterious sensuality of Antonello da Messina’s Annunciata, Siciliano reminds us that color is pure emotion—a "here and now" that inhabits spaces and transforms bodies. Leaving Sicily behind, Nanni Delbecchi takes us to Sils Maria, the "spiritual homeland" of Friedrich Nietzsche. In a modest room in the Engadine, between white walls and green wallpaper chosen to soothe his nerves, the philosopher conceived the Eternal Return, teaching us that thoughts born in the open air have the vigor of a "feast for the muscles." Nicola Ermanno Barracchia then reveals how Pythagorean numerology serves as a lens to decode the "golden ratio" of our soul: in a digitized world, everything is a number, and every digit hides a message already written within us.

Domus 1108 journal, January 2026

Design emerges as a tool for empowerment. Elena Sommariva explores the "new wood" designed by Nendo (Oki Sato)for Vittorio Alpi, where Kasumi and Futae blur the line between nature and artifice. Design is also movement: Silvana Annicchiarico presents the work of Lisa Stolz (MOWO), who replaces the inertia of sitting with the elasticity of birch and beech—a "gentle revolution" against daily immobility. While Loredana Mascheroni analyzes the "lyricism of writing" in Francesco Librizzi’s Scarlatta bookcase and the French lightness of Ambroise Maggiar for Infiniti, Francesco Franchi shifts the focus to graphics as infrastructure: the Made in Europe trademark by Dada Projects turns regulations into a design language, making European trust visible.

The issue closes ideally within the walls of a kindergarten in Beijing, where Yansong has created an extravagant space free from convention. It is a reminder to all of us: human endeavor always stems from a lofty ideal.

The architecture of responsibility knows no borders. Alessandro Benetti takes us to Toronto to admire Limberlost Place, a net-zero timber giant by Moriyama Teshima and Acton Ostry Architects, while Antonio Armano recounts the energy of Energieker, where CEO Riccardo Monti translates ceramic matter into a contemporary language.

Ma Yansong. Photo Li Yingwu. Domus Archives ©Publisher Domus S.p.A.

The diary concludes at the intersection of utopia and reality. Alberto Mingardi revisits the claustrophobia of Blade Runner, Paul Smith surprises us with the history of 1900s mail-order houses, and Daniela Brogi analyzes the Hotel Saltus and the cinematic fictions of Park Chan-wook—tales of houses as tragic symbioses and acts of care. Finally, Paola Carimati urges us to "use our brains" through the maxims of Paolo Borzacchiello, and the studio TAKK gives children "rooms on wheels"—pockets of intimacy within industrial spaces.

In this landscape, the workspace undergoes a radical metamorphosis, moving from the Fordist model of repetition to an identitarian dimension. As Stefania Boschetti and the EY dossier highlight, today’s office must nourish "carbon networks"—human relationships—against the abstraction of silicon networks. Piuarch’s project for EY transforms space into a living organism that breathes through its people. Here, beauty is not decoration, but a form of energy that generates desire and belonging. This issue interrogates architecture not to save us from history, but from the indifference of a world that has stopped questioning its own beauty. Happy 2026, and enjoy the read.

Editorial/ Architecture is not architecture: it is fantasy Text Ma Yansong  

Essays/ Fantasies of less Text  Jihoi Lee 

Adisciplinedimaginationandrespectfor the landunite agroupof Koreanpractitionerswho share a desire to create sustainable living environments. Because in the era of degrowth,the focus shifts to interventions that use less material and minimise carbon footprints

Essays/ Creativity channels Text Thomas Krens 

Adrive towards transcendence lies atthe core of all creativepractice,withfantasyalways intension withoperational constraints.This is the viewoftheGuggenheimFoundation’s long-standingdirector, who recounts 30 years of museum projects with Frank Gehry, Jean Nouvel and Rem Koolhaas

Let's chat to/ Norman Foster Text Ma Yansong 
Photo Chiara Becattini, Ma Wenxiao, Nigel Young 

What place does imagination have, or should have, in design? How can we strike a balance between imagination and pragma - tism? We discuss this with Norman Foster, whose long and distinguished career has been consistently linked to technological innovation and social responsibility, with a bold eye on the future

Architecture/ Foster + Partners, Zayed National Museum, Abu Dhabi, AE, 2025 Text Jonathan Glancey 
Photo Nigel Young 

Although largely the result of energy-saving phys- ics, Abu Dhabi’s monumental, sculptural museum could be described as a literal flight of fancy

Architecture/ Open Architecture., Sun Tower, Yantai, CN, 2024 Text Li Hu, Huang Wenjing 
Photo Jonathan Leijonhufvud  

Conceived to celebrate the relationship with the sun and sea, the Sun Tower provides a variety of public programmes, including a theatre, a library, a square and e

Art/ Velvet, Nest Text Velvet
Photo Tõnu Tunnel 

Originating from a sweet, childlike idea, the mast-top light installation created with recycled materials from nearby construction sites has become a beacon for the local area

Architecture/ Wallmakers, Toy Storey Text Oshin Varughese, Vinu Daniel 
Photo Syam Sreesylam 

Incorporating thousands of old toys into its facade, this residence in Kerala preserves the childhood of an entire generation within its walls

Architecture/ Line+ Studio, Sky Ring Text Peidong Zhu 
Photo Arch-Exist Photography

Two technical infrastructures in rural China become a form of storytelling, where memory and imagination converge 

Design/ GN Architects, Seaside Pavilion Text Shen Lijiang – GN Architects 
Photo Wenjun Liang 

On the remote Chinese island of Chaishan, an installation that sways with the wind and tide has catalysed the renewal of this place which risked disappearing

Art/ Anish Kapoor, Monte Sant'Angelo Metro Station, Naples, 2025 Text Anish Kapoor 
Photo Amedeo Benestante

A symbiosis of sculpture and architecture, Monte Sant’Angelo is an artistic expe- rience more than a metro station

Architecture/ Xisui Design, The Tree of Wonder Text  Hu Yihao 

 In a shopping centre’s atrium, a giant tree of wonder invites visitors to immerse themselves in a lush landscape that blends steampunk aesthetics and nature

Art/ Superflux, Nobody told me rivers dream Text Superflux  

As part of the London Design Museum “More than Human”, the installation explores how artificial intelligence can help deepen our perception and understanding of nature’s intricate intelligence

Architecture without architects/ Constructive imagination Text Bushra Mohamed 

In Gurunsi houses, imagination is not fiction but a spatial belief system that produces architecture. In this context, imagination is a ritualised, cyclical and material process for world-building

Stories/ Imagination, the primordial drive of architecture Text Ma Yansong 

Fact of the month/ Can art save a city? The inconvenient beauty of Gibellina Text Walter Mariotti

Domus Archive/ Signature houses, Purini and Thermes in Gibellina Text Simona Bordone 

Person of the month/ The many faces of a starchitect Text Gabriele Neri

Utopias and dystopias/ Blade Runner and urban anxieties Text Alberto Mingardi

At home with/ Nietzsche’s inner homeland Text Nanni Delbecchi