Can architecture be built from food? Between the fire that warms, the smells that spread, and the bodies that gather around the table, the apparent banality of cooking and eating reveals itself as a choreographed dance of spatial appropriation and belonging. These gestures organize routines, produce bonds, and transform the built environment into lived place. The kitchen—domestic, communal, or urban—thus ceases to be merely a functional space and affirms itself as a territory of encounter.

From Service Space to Social Center: Reconfiguring the Kitchen

Since the beginnings of humanity, fire has acted as a gathering element around which everyday life was organized, incorporating food preparation into collective rituals. Over the centuries, this fire—initially kept outdoors—was sheltered and progressively domesticated through different inventions, making the act of cooking increasingly automated and efficient.

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