Making kin with pigeons; multispecies design of urban spaces beyond anthropocentrism
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Författare
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Examensarbete för masterexamen
Master's Thesis
Master's Thesis
Modellbyggare
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Sammanfattning
The relentless attempts to maintain the division between nature and culture have
resulted in a loss of connection to the natural environment for urban dwellers,
leading to a loss of knowledge and empathy for nonhuman species. Reinforcing
the problematic belief that human beings are above nature and its ecosystems,
this dichotomy also dictates which species belong in our cities, and which do not.
Pigeons. Our companions, collaborators, and allies for centuries, bred, trained,
and cared for, are now considered a nuisance that our buildings and public
spaces must be protected from. When architects and planners consider the birds,
it is often in the form of exclusion. However, emerging approaches such as more
than-human design show promising potential in contributing to a shift in the
architecture practice, proposing strategies and solutions to design for and with
other species.
In the spirit of Donna Haraway's concept of Making kin, this thesis explores the
potential of architecture as an interspecies mediator and how spatial
interventions in Brunnsparken, Gothenburg, can encourage mutualistic
connections between humans and pigeons. The long-term aims being to (re)build
our relationship with pigeons, to reconnect with nature, and to sustain our
empathy for nonhumans.
The process builds on more-than-human design theories and methods. Through
three phases called context analysis, making kin, and multispecies placemaking,
the thesis explores the spatial and social entanglement of pigeons and humans,
and how design can be used as an interspecies mediator.
The outcome of this thesis is four spatial interventions: multispecies fika tables,
bathing fountains, stringfoot assistance benches and observatory walls, that all
benefit both humans and pigeons. Together, these interventions transform
Brunnsparken into a multispecies park that encourages humans and pigeons to
share space and facilitates real interspecies connections.
This thesis is about accountability and what we owe to the species that our
anthropocentric worldview has negatively impacted. It is about taking
responsibility for (re)building a relationship with pigeons, instead of blaming
them for being exactly what we bred them to be.
Beskrivning
Ämne/nyckelord
More-than-human design, mutualism, interspecies, entanglement
