Bio-
Ricardo Salazar [Puebla, Mexico 1984]
Ricardo Salazar
[Puebla, Mexico 1984]
He graduated as an architect from the Universidad Iberoamericana Puebla in 2008, working for the next two years on residential and commercial projects. In 2010, he ventured into the gastronomic sector in Central America. In 2015, he resumed his architectural career, specializing in Lighting Design through a postgraduate degree at the Polytechnic University of Catalonia, followed by another postgraduate degree in Ephemeral Space in 2017 at the same institution, where he developed museographic and scenographic projects. In 2019, he completed a Master’s degree in Housing at CENTRO University. He has been a project professor at the Universidad Iberoamericana and currently works as an independent professional, collaborating on various architectural projects in Mexico and Central America. Research is one of the methodological focuses that guide his current proposals, developing architectural diagnoses primarily centered on the domestic sphere.
He graduated as an architect from the Universidad Iberoamericana Puebla in 2008, working for the next two years on residential and commercial projects. In 2010, he ventured into the gastronomic sector in Central America. In 2015, he resumed his architectural career, specializing in Lighting Design through a postgraduate degree at the Polytechnic University of Catalonia, followed by another postgraduate degree in Ephemeral Space in 2017 at the same institution, where he developed museographic and scenographic projects. In 2019, he completed a Master’s degree in Housing at CENTRO University. He has been a project professor at the Universidad Iberoamericana and currently works as an independent professional, collaborating on various architectural projects in Mexico and Central America. Research is one of the methodological focuses that guide his current proposals, developing architectural diagnoses primarily centered on the domestic sphere.
Work
Row House reinterprets the single-family home by challenging the spatial rigidity of suburban domesticity.
The Semillero was an urban intervention located in the public park Alameda Central, just a few steps from the Palacio de Bellas Artes, in the heart of the Historic Center of Mexico City
Work
Row House reinterprets the single-family home by challenging the spatial rigidity of suburban domesticity.
The Semillero was an urban intervention located in the public park Alameda Central, just a few steps from the Palacio de Bellas Artes, in the heart of the Historic Center of Mexico City
Research
interwar kitchens:
The Rise of Domestic Industry
The home has emerged as a critical site of inquiry shaped by technological transformation. Within it, the kitchen exceeds function, operating as a symbolic and social apparatus that reorganizes domestic life.
Research
interwar kitchens:
The Rise of Domestic Industry
The home has emerged as a critical site of inquiry shaped by technological transformation. Within it, the kitchen exceeds function, operating as a symbolic and social apparatus that reorganizes domestic life.
Press
Press
The Radical Project