The ArchFilmFest in London is happening right now and takes place on this territory through a six-day, biennial festival that will celebrate architectural film through screenings, installations, symposia, workshops and an international film competition. This year’s theme is “Scale” and Chile the partnering country, keep scrolling and find out the 5 movies you should not miss at the festival!
SEE ALSO: ANOTHER AMAZING PROJECT BY KINNERSLEY KENT DESIGN
Fragments on Machines by Emma Charles
Bargehouse, Room 11, Thursday 8 June, 4.45-5.30pmTaking its

IMAGE SOURCE: VIMEO
Focused on the relationship between man and machine, Fragments on Machines unveils the physical aspects of the Internet.
Produced by a Dezeen collaborator, Emma Charles, the film has a fictional storyline that threads together spaces inside art-deco buildings in New York, with a focus on elements like fibre-optic cables, computer servers and ventilation systems.
Francis Keré: An Architect Between by Daniel Schwartz
Bareghouse Room 11, Friday 9 June, 3.40-5.30pm

IMAGE SOURCE: DEZEEN
This is one film of tree documentary film celebrating architect Francis Kéré, Daniel Schwartz’s focuses on seven projects by the African architect.
By exploring Kéré’s work, both in his native Burkina Faso and other countries, Scwartz aims to show how architecture has become more socially driven, with a focus on issues like sustainability, poverty and climate change.
Souvenirs de Iasi (Iasi Memories) by Romulus Balazs
Bargehouse Room 11, Saturday 10th June, 3.50-4.45pm

IMAGE SOURCE: YOUTUBE
Romulus Balazs’ Souvenirs de lasi tells the lesser known story of Romania’s role in the Holocaust.
Balazs revisits the locations of photographs that were taken 74 years ago during a massacre in a Romanian city, with the aim to discover the nature and scale of deportation and extermination of Jews living in Romania during the second world war.
The Infinite Happiness by Beka & Lemoine
Bargehouse Room 13, Friday 9 June 2017, 1.30-3pm
IMAGE SOURCE: YOUTUBE
The Infinite Happiness explores the 8 House, the figure of eight housing block in Copenhagen designed by Danish architect Bjarke Ingels, through personal stories of those who have connected with the building.
Different anecdotes are stacked together “like a game of lego” to explore how and why the looping housing block is so successful in fostering happy communities.
London Modern Babylon by Julien Temple
Bargehouse Room 3, Sunday 11 June 2017, 11am-6pm

IMAGE SOURCE: YOUTUBE
Julien Temple’s London Modern Babylon explores how London has changed over the last 100 years, through a tapestry of its inhabitants, including musicians, writers, artists and thinkers.
SOURCE: Dezeen
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