Mirza Mujezinovic, a Bosnian-Norwegian architect, got his M.Sc. AAD degree from Columbia University/New York (Fulbright scholar) in 2004 and sivilarkitekt degree from NTNU/Trondheim in 2001. After winning Europan 8 competition in Vienna in 2006 he set up his practice MALARCHITECTURE. Mr. Mujezinovic is a Ph.D. candidate at the Institute of Urbanism and Landscape, where he has also been teaching since 2007. The working title of his Ph.D. research is “The Architecture of the Urban Project in Norway”. The research questions what issues architecture faces in the moment of its engagement with the contemporary city. It uses Norway as a case study, but the aim is to identify extractable conditions, those that may be taken from Norway and applied elsewhere. In an ambitious way, if the condition of Venturi/Scott-Brown’s Las Vegas created the notion of “duck and decorated shed”, or Atelier Bow-Wow’s Tokyo created the notion of “da-me architecture”, one may ask what kind of extractable architectural condition does the Norwegian urban context yield.