The soil massif conceals the layers of history that were once inhabited, but nowadays have faded into oblivion. One of such places is Panticapaeum, an ancient Greek settlement on Mount Mithridates in the city of Kerch, traces of which are partially conserved on its slopes. From this perspective, a return to research and public activity to this territory is necessary, backed by proper conditions for the preservation of the remains and excavation sites and by introducing the historical context of the Panticapaeum.
The principles of working with the soil stratum and its relief were taken as the starting point. In order to create a bond between the Past and the Present, the project gives a special role to the interaction of Aboveground with Underground. Excavating processes are the mean needed for both architectural and archaeological interventions. By creating voids, tunnels and rooms the excavations initiate the relationship between the historical, exploratory and socio-cultural aspects, adapting to the archaeological investigation of the site. The project refers to the soil massif as the protagonist, the material of memory. Through the depths of the earth, it looks for ways to express archaeology and history through the architecture and natural conditions of the site. In addition to its symbolic meaning, the project also explores the massif of earth as a tool for archaeological knowledge in its physical and scientific meaning.
Thus, in the project, excavations become an architectural language of uniting the aboveground and the underground, the Hidden and the Open, the Past and the Present. By creating voids, excavations become spaces, findings and ruins appear as its core. Just as the layers of history overlap in the thickness of time, hiding events beneath themselves, so underground architecture volumes obtain a news deeper meaning on the archaeological site of Panticapaeum.