MOME in the Valley

Date: 2025.07.29
This summer, MOME returns to the Valley of Arts Festival with its very own venue – the Harcsa Veronika × MOME Courtyard, where visitors can join workshops and interactive sessions, and discover how sustainability, learning, and design come together.

A space for building community and shaping perspectives 

Designed by Design alumnus Ádám Tóth, founder of the MALOM Project, the MOME pavilion is built from rental scaffolding, banners, and flooring made from compressed plastic waste. Mobile and recyclable, it is both a functional venue and an architectural statement in itself. Open on all sides, it embodies the idea of an open studio where anyone can step in, and where the university’s professionals can meet and work alongside festivalgoers. 

In a recent interview, Ádám spoke about the challenge of designing the pavilion, especially given its scale.  Seeing it in use at the festival proved how well it works – not just as an installation, but as a lively community space blending design, teaching, research, and play during the afternoon workshops. 

MOME workshops for everyone 

It’s a rare chance to see MOME’s lecturers, researchers, and students sharing their expertise in a festival setting. The courtyard programme is a mix of entertainment and learning, guided by themes of sustainability, education, and a hands-on DIY approach.   In the ecoprinting sessions, participants use plant pigments to dye textiles while discovering the traditions of natural colouring. The cyanotype workshop combines analogue photography with soil observation, as visitors create prints of indicator plants and learn about their ecological role. Postcard printing uses woodcut-style graphics, helping anyone produce their own Valley-themed card with small presses. 

The “Analogue concrete 3D printing” workshop focuses on designing and making shoreline protection elements that support freshwater ecosystems. Carabiner-making from plastic waste takes participants through the recycling process from shredding to injection moulding and even encourages them to bring their own materials. Finally, the “Anatomy of the Nettle” workshop, complete with tastings and refreshments, shows how this plant is not only stingy but also edible, versatile, and surprisingly interesting. 

Once again, MOME’s presence in the Valley offers moments of discovery and shared creativity, set in a space where sustainability meets design in the most engaging way. 

 

More news

From Berlin to Oberhausen to Sarajevo – Wish You Were Ear, a diploma film by Mirjana Balogh about the imprints of romantic relationships, continues its journey through the international festival circuit. Following its triumph at the 71st Berlinale, where it received the Crystal Bear for Best Short Film, the animation has now been selected for the international student film competition at the prestigious Sarajevo Film Festival.

From Berlin to Oberhausen to Sarajevo – Wish You Were Ear, a diploma film by Mirjana Balogh about the imprints of romantic relationships, continues its journey through the international festival circuit. Following its triumph at the 71st Berlinale, where it received the Crystal Bear for Best Short Film, the animation has now been selected for the international student film competition at the prestigious Sarajevo Film Festival.

Q&Alumni sorozatunk következő részében Tóth Ádámmal beszélgettünk, aki 2018-ban végzett a MOME-n formatervezőként. Ádám az aktív egyetemi évek után megalapította a Malom Projekt elnevezésű designstúdiót, amely termékfejlesztéssel, belsőépítészettel foglalkozik, műanyag és természetes anyagok újrahasznosításával kísérletezik, emellett kreatív foglalkozásokat is tart. Több projekten is együtt dolgozott a MOME-val is, például a tavaly elkészült Művészetek Völgye Pavilonon, amely idén is várja a látogatókat Kapolcson a MOME × Harcsa Veronika udvarban! Erről a projektről és még sok másról mesélt nekünk Ádám.
Member of the European
Network of
Innovative
Higher Education Institutions
9 Zugligeti St,
Budapest, 1121