Architects in Ambulance
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Date
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Examensarbete för masterexamen
Master's Thesis
Master's Thesis
Model builders
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Abstract
Over the last decades, following increasingly neoliberal ideology
permeating all layers of political life, centralization has taken an ever
increasingly rigid hold on development on urban, regional, national and
global scales. Power and resources are increasingly concentrated to higher
instances, and an urban norm permeates public discourse. Simultaneously,
processes of urbanization must be viewed as complex, multipolar and
encapsulating much more than a simplified understanding of it as a rural to
urban migration.
Arguing that the static, distanced and projecting nature of ordinary
architecture practice is complicit with such extractive processes, this thesis
attempts to challenge conceptions of what architects can do. Utilizing
the idea of crossbenching as a critical spatial practice, the aim is to use
an ambulatory approach to architectural work in order to enter spatial
peripheries without formal mandate, and in that place invite people to
engage in collective building as a para-institutional space for discourse and
unofficial democracy. Learning from performance theory, it is argued that
such spaces can activate latent agency through forming networks, probing
the concerns and desires in people and seriously assess them and create
platforms to act on them.
The thesis inquiry is tackled through a two-part project: Building a
framework for ambulatory work, and testing it through action in field.
The first part is conducted at the Chalmers School of Architecture,
using methods of case studies, interviews with practicioners, and
staging participatory events to test the performative functions of the
built framework. The second part is carried out during a two-week field
experiment in the small rural town of Virserum, Småland, where a space of
participatory building is set up in collaboration with Virserums Konsthall,
attempting to engage people in discussion about their local context and the
architectural questions about local public space.
Rather than producing a design proposal, the thesis emphasizes a
processual focus. The outcome takes the form of a ”negative” manifesto,
using the incongruence between hypotheses from the first phase and
the complex relationality of the in-field operations to extract learnings
that form fragments of an outline of what a decentralized and ambulant
architectural practice could be.
Description
Keywords
mobility, crossbenching, rurality, micro-scale, performance
