ii. Curiosity Space — Wondering
A room for the slow thinking that comes before the form — applied research, structured strategy, methodology days.
The space
Whiteboards on three walls. A long table at the centre. Considered light, the right kind of quiet, and enough room for a small group to think without being watched.
The Curiosity Space is the room for the part that doesn't fit on a slide. The careful framing of a complex problem. The half-formed strategy that needs three hours and a wall, not thirty minutes and a meeting room. The methodology that becomes clear only when it's been drawn.
Group sizes are small — four to twelve. The format adapts: facilitated days, self-driven retreats, mixed sessions with outside experts. What stays constant is the room — which is built for the work, not for the optics of it.
What this isn't matters too. It is not a classroom — there is no front of the room. It is not a conference room — there is no agenda template. It is not a hotel meeting space — there is no neutrality being performed.
Some rooms hold a meeting. This one holds a question, until it has earned its answer.
Every session, the same filter — PEC²: Personal · Environmentally Friendly · Creative · Collaboration.
Programmes from the Curiosity Space
Some programmes we curate ourselves. One — the Iterators sessions — is operated by Equora Institute and finds its physical home here. We hold the room; they hold the programme.
Equora Spaces and Equora Institute are distinct entities under separate brands. The Spaces hold the rooms — the Institute holds its own intellectual programmes. The Iterators sessions are an Institute initiative that simply finds its physical home here. For research collaboration with the Institute itself, write to [email protected].
How it works
Before we discuss a date or a format, we want to know what you're trying to think through. The shape of the day follows the shape of the question — not the other way round.
Most Curiosity Space conversations start with a question someone has been holding on their own for too long. If that sounds familiar — write to us.
[email protected]