The generation born in and after 1986, the year Spain joined the European Community, marked a turning point in Spanish architecture. After the boom of the profession in the heat of the Seville Expo and Barcelona Olympics and then the dramatic drop triggered by the global economic crisis, with the blatant abetment of construction, young architects are dealing with a pandemic that for two years now has marred all hope for stability. This is a generation that started architecture school during years of plenty, only to soon find itself challenged head-on by the somber reality of recession. More than ten years have passed and these new architects have since reinvented themselves by building an ecosystem, precarious but upbeat, in which with the help of changes in format, scale, and objectives they have managed to develop their creativity...[+]