Sometimes, what is essential doesn’t require time — only clarity. Building a chapel in just two weeks may seem like a technical challenge, but in truth, it is a commitment to simplicity as an architectural language. The goal is to create a space for reflection, for intimate encounter, where the superfluous disappears. Light, proportion, material, and silence become the true protagonists.
Speed does not mean precariousness. On the contrary, it demands that every decision focus on what truly matters: a serene volume, noble materials, and an atmosphere that invites contemplation and ritual. Here, architecture becomes a vessel for the invisible — for the transcendent.
A chapel can be built in two weeks if its purpose is well understood: to sustain silence. And that —in times of noise— is already a profoundly contemporary act.