The exhibition “Entretejidas”, organized by the School of Architecture, Art, and Design (EAAD) at Tecnológico de Monterrey, addresses the border between Mexico and the United States not as a line of separation, but as a territory of exchange, tension, and possibility. Through collective projects and actions, the exhibition showcases architectural, artistic, and social practices that understand the border as a permeable space where cultural differences meet and transform, opening new ways of inhabiting, resisting, and building community.
The exhibition presents projects located in border contexts, including Mercado Mirador, Centro de Desarrollo, and Centro Social y Deportivo in the Sonoran Desert, by Fernanda Canales. These works demonstrate how architecture can operate from a social and territorial perspective, creating accessible collective spaces that address realities marked by migration, vulnerability, and isolation, always maintaining a close relationship with the context.