In David Barrie: 'Open source' place-making At http://davidbarrie.typepad.com/david_barrie/2010/11/open-source-place-making.html How to deliver a Big Society - a place that acts as a catalyst to and inspires grassroots local activism - in the most bureaucratic, statist and controlled public space of them all: the built environment? Here's one answer: 'open source' place-making. This is an approach to urban development that centres on the making of an implementable 'social action plan' first - not a master plan - is inspired by the autonomy that many people want from their lives and seeks to create places through an unfolding process of interaction design first, architecture second. -- Karl Dubost Montréal, QC, Canada http://www.la-grange.net/karl/ |
So Cool Karl!
It is interesting to see old concepts & methods being re-branded to speak to new communities. In my world this is called participatory planning, group design charettes, or participatory mapping (http://zunia.org/post/participatory-3d-modelling-for-intangible-cultural-heritage-preservation-in-ethiopia/; http://participatorygis.blogspot.com/2009/06/map-symbols-and-coding-means.html). Interesting how many have been great at exporting this process to developing countries but not so great at implementing those practices here. In the Netherlands, most social housing projects are designed by committees of those who will live in them and a committee of dedicated women who know how to design for maximum utility and great functionality. I live in a housing coop built in the late 70s by a group of people who chose to co-design with an architect who designed based on a pattern language, and about 95% of all the 36 units are perfect in their design and in their lighting. It is also one of the most successful coops in Ottawa because of the space but mostly because of the membership, the people who live there, who are of mixed income with 30% of the population in rent assisted housing. It is downtown affordable family living. The membership then have to do everything in terms of maintenance, finance, membership, landscaping, etc. It is not always easy, but it sure is interesting. Cheers t On Sat, Nov 6, 2010 at 7:24 AM, Karl Dubost <[hidden email]> wrote:
-- Tracey P. Lauriault 613-234-2805 |
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