As part of an ongoing reflection on the relationship between architecture and science, the second event in the Swiss Talks 2025 series addresses the transformations of the Alpine landscape and its built heritage in an era marked by the progressive disappearance of snow. Après-ski – a term that commonly refers to the convivial moments following a day on the slopes -here instead alludes to a post-Alpine condition, in which the mountains are redefining their cultural, economic, and environmental identity beyond the winter season and beyond the rhetoric of the chalet as a symbol of a tourism model now in crisis.
Three complementary perspectives offer a critical update on the settlement and typological models of the contemporary mountain, in light of scientific evidence and ongoing climate change. Silke Langenberg investigates strategies for adapting and maintaining the Alpine built heritage in a context of reduced human presence and new ecological balances. Martina Voser interprets the landscape as a living infrastructure, capable of absorbing and reworking environmental transformations, and proposes a design approach grounded in resilience. Nicole McIntosh explores the international circulation of the Swiss chalet typology, reconsidering its global popularity and the potential for its reinvention as a form of dwelling that bridges memory and experimentation.
