A hybrid exhibition to raise awareness on the situation of Palestinian children
(67 projects)
A hybrid exhibition to raise awareness on the situation of Palestinian children
A journey through Earth accompanying children on a CT-scan
Building a data-driven sculpture as a tribute to collective team values
Celebrating the history of the gaming community
Putting life-changing data in the right hands.
An immersive journey into the legacy and future of global immunisation
An interactive installation to make us think about our food waste habits
An exposure of the truth behind one of Europe’s largest-known cases of state-run phone hacking
A floating exhibition to reframe the migrant journey
What we don’t always realize is that the first moment of food waste happens in the fields - when perfectly edible fruits and vegetables are discarded for not meeting aesthetic standards: the “ugly” produce. We’ve all seen them: irregular, bumpy, with unexpected shapes.
What we don’t always realize is that the first moment of food waste happens in the fields - when perfectly edible fruits and vegetables are discarded for not meeting aesthetic standards: the “ugly” produce. We’ve all seen them: irregular, bumpy, with unexpected shapes.
The installation was built for two of the events of Team Wonder in New York in October 2025: the Wonder Salon at the Museo del Barrio and the Wonder Fest at Sunset park library. Both events were open to all New Yorkers, and featured art, performances, talks and activities, all around the feeling of “awe” and its necessity in current times as a positive approach through which to imagine the New York of the future - whether from the perspective of urban planning, community engagement, art, public policy… As such, to build an installation for this occasion, we wanted to go beyond the macroscopic reading of New York, and speak about a massive city from a smaller scale. That led us to hone in on personal, individual stories of the city, rather than try to get a generalised big picture of everything. In the same vein, rather than portraying New York's future as abstract or intangible, we wanted the installation to think of it as something concrete, personal, and real.
The installation was built for two of the events of Team Wonder in New York in October 2025: the Wonder Salon at the Museo del Barrio and the Wonder Fest at Sunset park library. Both events were open to all New Yorkers, and featured art, performances, talks and activities, all around the feeling of “awe” and its necessity in current times as a positive approach through which to imagine the New York of the future - whether from the perspective of urban planning, community engagement, art, public policy… As such, to build an installation for this occasion, we wanted to go beyond the macroscopic reading of New York, and speak about a massive city from a smaller scale. That led us to hone in on personal, individual stories of the city, rather than try to get a generalised big picture of everything. In the same vein, rather than portraying New York's future as abstract or intangible, we wanted the installation to think of it as something concrete, personal, and real.
The key idea was to communicate the urgent everyday reality of children in Gaza - in an accessible, yet accurate and comprehensive way, without fitting everything within an invented narrative: we wanted to “show, not tell” an extremely harsh reality, with the ultimate goals of raising awareness on the situation of children, highlighting the humanitarian effort, and advocating for a ceasefire & rights protection in Palestine.
The key idea was to communicate the urgent everyday reality of children in Gaza - in an accessible, yet accurate and comprehensive way, without fitting everything within an invented narrative: we wanted to “show, not tell” an extremely harsh reality, with the ultimate goals of raising awareness on the situation of children, highlighting the humanitarian effort, and advocating for a ceasefire & rights protection in Palestine.
From 12,000m below to 12,000m above
We designed an accessible, immersive narrative that takes patients on an audiovisual journey through Earth - from 12,000m below sea level to 12,000m above - helping them focus on the storyline rather than the CT-scan, which might often seem scary or unfamiliar.
From 12,000m below to 12,000m above
We designed an accessible, immersive narrative that takes patients on an audiovisual journey through Earth - from 12,000m below sea level to 12,000m above - helping them focus on the storyline rather than the CT-scan, which might often seem scary or unfamiliar.
So when the TOUS Innovation Team came to us with the desire to partner on a phygital (physical + digital) project addressing Gen Z, they decided to do something different - and speak about friendship instead, in such a way that it would resonate better with, and thus attract, a younger audience.
So when the TOUS Innovation Team came to us with the desire to partner on a phygital (physical + digital) project addressing Gen Z, they decided to do something different - and speak about friendship instead, in such a way that it would resonate better with, and thus attract, a younger audience.
Building a data-driven sculpture as a tribute to collective team values.
Building a data-driven sculpture as a tribute to collective team values.
Turning the processes at work within large-scale change into a tangible, livable experience.
Turning the processes at work within large-scale change into a tangible, livable experience.
An installation to make visible potential futures and collective imagination
An installation to make visible potential futures and collective imagination
A monument to tell the story of the gaming community through the objects and consoles that have defined it.
A monument to tell the story of the gaming community through the objects and consoles that have defined it.
We developed an automated, user-friendly platform to transform complex marketing data into clear, actionable insights. The overall purpose of this data is to assess how prepared marketing organisations are for the future, and highlight any areas for improvement.
We developed an automated, user-friendly platform to transform complex marketing data into clear, actionable insights. The overall purpose of this data is to assess how prepared marketing organisations are for the future, and highlight any areas for improvement.
An immersive installation looking at the legacy and future of global immunisation.
An immersive installation looking at the legacy and future of global immunisation.
A digital experience to explore the professional future of young people while learning how to identify, prevent, and avoid gender stereotypes in the labor market.

A digital experience to explore the professional future of young people while learning how to identify, prevent, and avoid gender stereotypes in the labor market.

Oxfam Intermón conducted a survey to build a picture of inequality in Spain and we made this valuable information more accessible through a scrollytelling website.
Oxfam Intermón conducted a survey to build a picture of inequality in Spain and we made this valuable information more accessible through a scrollytelling website.
The project "Mentre Respirem" (While We Breathe) shines a light on a critical yet often overlooked public health issue: indoor air quality.
The project "Mentre Respirem" (While We Breathe) shines a light on a critical yet often overlooked public health issue: indoor air quality.
A multi-sensory experience, merging light, sound, and sculpture to embody Catalunya’s diverse musical ecosystem.


A multi-sensory experience, merging light, sound, and sculpture to embody Catalunya’s diverse musical ecosystem.


Redesigning UNICEF's transparency portal to help them share data on where they spend their resources in a more human and engaging way.


Redesigning UNICEF's transparency portal to help them share data on where they spend their resources in a more human and engaging way.


Catalonia: Modelling the Future of Supercomputing
We went back to some of the earliest tools to show how a human obsession with counting has gotten us from an abacus to a machine that completes 314,000 trillion operations per second.


Catalonia: Modelling the Future of Supercomputing
We went back to some of the earliest tools to show how a human obsession with counting has gotten us from an abacus to a machine that completes 314,000 trillion operations per second.


Through the Sustainable Development Goals, the world committed to ending child marriage by 2030. Yet, few countries are on track to achieve this. Experience shows that putting good quality data in the right hands can make a real difference: informing policy, guiding programming and mobilising resources to give girls a brighter future. We created the Child Marriage Data Portal with UNICEF to do just that.


Through the Sustainable Development Goals, the world committed to ending child marriage by 2030. Yet, few countries are on track to achieve this. Experience shows that putting good quality data in the right hands can make a real difference: informing policy, guiding programming and mobilising resources to give girls a brighter future. We created the Child Marriage Data Portal with UNICEF to do just that.


The Sea, The Widest Border
We produced an exhibition onboard the Open Arms rescue boat to challenge myths and assumptions around the migrant experience.


The Sea, The Widest Border
We produced an exhibition onboard the Open Arms rescue boat to challenge myths and assumptions around the migrant experience.


We created an interactive installation in the centre of Barcelona to celebrate the 18th Barcelona Design Week, and share ideas on how design choices can support sustainable development.

We created an interactive installation in the centre of Barcelona to celebrate the 18th Barcelona Design Week, and share ideas on how design choices can support sustainable development.

Ultimately, the main challenge of the project resided in finding the right balance between accurately, rigorously communicating the large amount of technical information we received, and synthesizing it all in an intrinsically interesting, modern, and appealing format - as we wanted to move away from the more conventional type of reports that are usually adopted in public funding contexts. This is what led us to produce a transparency website, which showed how public funds could be spent by a government, into a more didactic and comprehensive experience.
Ultimately, the main challenge of the project resided in finding the right balance between accurately, rigorously communicating the large amount of technical information we received, and synthesizing it all in an intrinsically interesting, modern, and appealing format - as we wanted to move away from the more conventional type of reports that are usually adopted in public funding contexts. This is what led us to produce a transparency website, which showed how public funds could be spent by a government, into a more didactic and comprehensive experience.