In the first instalment of a series of monographs on emerging architects in the relatively uncharted territories of the Balkans and Central Europe, ‘The Architecture Observer’ examines the Sarajevo-based Studio Nonstop, founded by Sanja Galić and Igor Grozdanić.
 
        In the first instalment of a series of monographs on emerging architects in the relatively uncharted territories of the Balkans and Central Europe, ‘The Architecture Observer’ examines the Sarajevo-based Studio Nonstop, founded by Sanja Galić and Igor Grozdanić.
Studio nonstop is one of the foremost contemporary architectural  practices in Bosnia and Herzegovina. With the capital Sarajevo as home  base and principal work site, the architects of Studio nonstop have  realized a number of impressive works since 1999, a selection of which  can be found in this monograph. With their architectural and urban  design work, they are contributing not only to the reconstruction of  war-ravaged Bosnia and Herzegovina, but also to the reconstruction of an  architectural culture of the Balkans, which was also thrown off balance  by the civil war and the laborious transition from a stagnating  socialism to an imperfect capitalism.