In photography cameras are calibrated using an arrangement of black squares that allows the device to organise all of the information it captures. For the printer to produce this image a ‘dead-line’ is required – the point which is defined as the inside limit. The contributors to this issue have set out a myriad of interpretations of the very universal condition of the deadline. Looking at the statistics of the AA community with regards to this topic, there seems much to be hopeful for as AArchitecture celebrates its silver anniversary. Tim Ivison posits the deadline as the means by which work is determined or perhaps ‘calibrated’. The manner in which Ryan Neiheisier questions the productivity of its placement in relation to the distribution of work questions the productivity of its placement. Kosha Joain Ahmadi remarks on the interruptive nature of this condition in regards to the everyday, while Mengchan Tang speaks of a grave form of the end point. With regards to a more architectural nature, Victoria Eugenia Soto Magán speaks of alternative approaches to interpreting buildings and PhD candidate Ricardo Ruivo attempts to show that at times we mistake what should be regarded as targets for deadlines. (Editors’ note: we have attempted to understand the deadline of this issue as an actual deadline and not as a target). Monia de Marchi explains the rationale for using a brief to introduce the deadline
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