![Call for Submissions: [TRANS-]ient - Featured Image](https://snoopy.archdaily.com/images/archdaily/media/images/58a5/8e68/e58e/cec2/1d00/0166/slideshow/open-uri20170216-15296-jiuusk.jpg?1487244878&format=webp&width=640&height=580)
It is often thought that architecture has a quality permanence. In the third issue of [TRANS-] journal we seek to understand that this is not always true. Exploring how the construction of spaces can speak to impermanence, transient design could be a variety of things: built one day and disassembled another; rootless, wandering, and drifting as a nomad among environmental and geopolitical conditions; or spaces that house impermanent populations or respond to temporary phenomena or needs. With transient space comes participants that condition its purpose and interpretation. Perhaps of equal importance is not the design itself but rather the symbolic significance of its remnants, which has the capacity to endure or pass.























