How to Experience Lúcida

Lúcida is not a neutral space.
It is inhabited.

It is a space in process, where works engage with time, scale, and the conditions of the site. Not everything arrives fully resolved; many things are tested, adjusted, and transformed along the way.

Its architecture proposes non-linear paths, overlaps, and shifts in perspective. Each movement reveals a different possible relationship between bodies, images, sounds, and surfaces. Finding one’s way is part of the experience.

To inhabit Lúcida is to work with what the space proposes—its folds, transitions, and limits—and also with what resists. The space supports the work, but it does not disappear. That tension is part of the practice.

Proposals are not imposed on the space; they are negotiated with it.
Each use activates a different possibility.

There is no single way of being here.
What matters is sustained attention to processes, decisions, and to how the space is occupied.

Lúcida is defined through each activation.

In its operation, Lúcida will include a cinema room, an immersive room, and an adaptable stage for theatre and music. These spaces are designed to host works, cycles, and experiences that treat space as an active part of the proposal.

Throughout the year, Lúcida will host workshops, hybrid experiences, hackathons, conferences, academic gatherings, and Lúcida meetings—understood as spaces for exchange, shared thinking, and project development. Activities may take diverse forms, combining exhibition, research, education, and experimentation, according to the needs of each proposal.

The space is not conceived as a fixed container, but as a living infrastructure that adjusts to each activation and accompanies ongoing processes.

The official opening of the season is scheduled for March 2026.


The full technical rider will be available shortly.