Cities Methodologies
Inaugurated in 2009, Cities Methodologies is a pan-UCL initiative to showcase innovative methods of urban research.
About
Through exhibits and events, Cities Methodologies draws together undergraduate, masters, and doctoral research, alongside work produced by academics, and the wider community of urban researchers. Those involved are developing and using innovative methods to understand cities and urbanization.
Cities Methodologies aims to promote cross- and inter-disciplinary work, and to showcase recent research on a wide range of cities. Visitors to Cities Methodologies encounter diverse methods of urban research in juxtaposition‚ from archival studies to statistical analyses, practice-led art and design work to oral history, writing, walking, film-making and photography.
Cities Methodologies 2013
Location: UCL Slade Research Centre, Woburn Square, London WC1H 0NS
Exhibition launch: 23 April 6.30pm – 9pm
Exhibition and events continue: Wednesday 24 - Friday 26 April, 10am – 8pm
The
UCL Urban Laboratory community is delighted to present the 2013 edition
of Cities Methodologies, an annual exhibition and events programme
showcasing recent innovations in urban research methods and
cross-disciplinary work on cities worldwide.
From the start, five
years ago, Cities Methodologies has been a pan-UCL cross-faculty
initiative and we are pleased to once again be able to hold the
exhibition in UCL’s Slade Research Centre. Previous shows have also
travelled further afield, most recently to Bucharest in 2010.
The
exhibition and events feature work by undergraduates, masters and PhD
students as well as academic staff and the wider community of
researchers and practitioners developing new methods to tackle urban
questions. We welcome you to participate in the exciting programme of
talks, screenings, workshops and launches that accompanies this year’s
diverse array of individual and group exhibits. In each gallery space
visitors will be exposed to different methods of scrutinising the city
and processes of urbanization, including practice-led research from art
and architecture, ethnography, film-making, graphic design, soundscapes,
photography, archival studies and performance.
All events are open to the public and free to attend. No booking is required.
Exhibitors
Luisa Alpahão – Architrope - Dana Ariel - Anchor and Magnet
- Raphaële Biddault-Waddington - Anja Borowicz & Vanessa
Maurice-Williams - Ben Campkin & Rebecca Ross – Max Colson – Richard
Dennis, Carlos Galvix & Sam Merrill – Bernadette Devilat – Fugitive
Images – Michael Hebbert – Hanna Hilbrandt, Anna Richter, Thomas Le
Bas, Fiona McDermott, Nayeli Zimmermann, Jenny Baese - William Hunter –
isik.knutsdotter – Peter Ivanov, Yegor Korobeynikov, Yuriy Milevsky
& Kristina Popova - Felipe Lanuza Rilling - Little Red Dots - MA
Architectural History module, UCL: Theorising Practices/Practising
Theory: Art, Architecture and Urbanism - MA Culture, Materials, Design,
UCL - Material Museum - Ioana Marinescu & Tapio Snellman - Nela
Milic - Gynna Millan, Juraj Rutsek & Matt Wood-Hill - Isis Nunez
Ferrera - Hilary Powell - Harriet Poznansky - Screens in the Wild -
Simson & Volley - Andrew Stevenson - Giorgio Talocci & Camillo
Boano - Maider Uriarte & Luisa Alpalhão - Henrietta Williams
Programme Schedule
Opening of Cities Methodologies 2013
Slade Research Centre, UCL, Woburn Place, London WC1H 0AB
April 23, Tuesday, 6.30pm - 9.30pm
All welcome.
April 24, Wednesday
10am - 6pm:
MA Architectural History module: Site Writing/Site Reading
Masters
and doctoral students from the UCL Bartlett School of Architecture MA
Architectural History module Theorising Practices/Practicing Theory:
Art, Architecture and Urbanism have produced an exhibition of
site-writings that open out into a performative display of
site-readings. Join the students and visiting critics throughout the day
for presentations and discussion of the exhibition.
11am - 12.30pm:
Artists in Residence, The Drawing Shed: Screens in the Wild
This
project explores the spatial, social and cultural dimensions of Urban
Prototyping by connecting urban screens in four locations (two in London
and two in Nottingham), exploring how this medium can enable
participation in the urban environment.
1.30pm - 3 pm:
Katharine Willis, Remediating Urban Space: Screens in the Wild
Katharine
Willis, Lecturer in Architecture at Plymouth University, will
investigate the impact of social networks on public spaces. Her work
focuses on the emergence of hybrid neighbourhoods, new types of spaces
which will be explored and reviewed through some current empirical work.
3pm-5pm Interchanges #1
Gallery presentations by exhibitors followed by Q&A sessions
Korobeynikov, Milevsky – Social Survey Method and Courtyard Design Process in Post-Socialist Moscow, Russia
What
is the logic of the planning process in contemporary Moscow? How is it
informed by traditional sociological methods? In this talk and Q&A
session, we will use an experimental study conducted in one of Moscow's
courtyards to discuss the challenges of a participatory design process
in post-socialist cities and the methods which inform it.
Hilary Powell - Book of Hours - chapter 1
A
behind the scenes look at the materials, methods and stories Hilary is
working with to construct a book of hours based on the changing fringes
of the London Olympic Park. The project explores the process of working
in direct collaboration with the materials of these sites (from roofing
zinc to London brick stock) to experiment with and reinvigorate the
traditions of etching and pop up book construction.
Max Colson – Hide and Seek: the Dubious Nature of Plant Life in High Security Spaces by Adam Walker-Smith
A
review of the latest photographic research project by the artist's
alter-ego (the paranoid photojournalist Adam Walker-Smith), illuminating
some of the extraordinary methods that he used to identify and document
plants he suspected as being part of the high security apparatus found
in London's secure financial and commercial spaces.
Giorgio
Talocci, Camillo Boano – Deconstructing Porto Fluviale’s Odysseys. Urban
Social Movements in Rome and the spatial practice of squat-occupying
Looking
at an inner courtyard that now wants to become a public piazza, we will
try to understand a Social Movement and the wider process of the
Struggle for Housing in Rome deconstructing its space and everyday life.
In so doing, the talk will discuss the conditions of possibility for an
archaeological approach to the study of the built environment.
5pm – 6.30pm Interchanges #2
Gallery presentations by exhibitors followed by Q&A sessions
William Hunter – Four Men and a Methodology in Beirut
This
"critical poetic reading" of Beirut traces a week-long research
immersion into the conflicting politics, visions and approaches to urban
development in a still on-going post-war reconstruction context.
Andrew
Stevenson - 16 Cities: Participatory potentials for sensory
ethnographies in exploring place-making in newcomers to a city
A
showcase of collaboratively produced artworks from Andrew’s sensory
ethnographic fieldwork exploring place making amongst new arrivals in a
city.
Isis Nunez Ferrera – Tracing Scarcity in the Built Environment: From Material Accounts to Socio-Spatial Realities
This
talk will explain a series of diagrams that illustrate the construction
of spatial scarcity in informal settlements and how these diagrams can
be used as analytical and projective tools to reveal spaces for change
and creative intervention.
7 pm: Gynna Millan and Juraj Rutsek - Whose Olympics?
An
exploratory project carried out during London 2012 to record
transformations in open spaces and citizens' experiences as a result of
the Olympic Games. During this talk, the team will present how video was
used as a methodology for urban research as well as sharing some
original footage that is part of the forthcoming documentary Whose
Olympics?
April 25, Thursday
3.30pm
Architrope - House
Film screening
followed by Q&A: House is a 20-minute video projection that explores
aspects of what the house means to us today, using the example of a
derelict Georgian town house in Marylebone.
4pm – 5.30pm Interchanges #3
Gallery presentations by exhibitors followed by Q&A sessions
Felipe Lanuza Rilling – Materializing Absence: the Present of the Heygate Estate
The
exhibited pieces are palimpsests that represent the Heygate as an
absence by over-layering its different times. Here, absence embodies
multiple and simultaneous presences situated at a distance, creating an
alternative vision for the vanishing Heygate Estate while interrogating
the processes of urban renovation.
Raphaële Biddault-Waddington – Paris Galaxies, A Vision for the Greater Paris
Starting
from a design for Grand Paris, this is an experimental artistic and
academic project which combines creative inputs and formats with
transdisciplinary theoretical and critical thinking, organising them in a
conceptual model of the urban galaxy in order to design a future
strategy for the extended urban area.
Michael Hebbert – Klimaatlas: revealing the invisible city
Michael
examines the methodology of the urban climate map, connecting
meteorological observation and modelling with real-world urbanism and
the complex microclimate of urban streets, illustrating a method that is
up-and-running in several cities world-wide, but unaccountably missing
from mainstream literature on urban climate change.
6 pm – 8 pm
Participatory Methodologies PhD workshop
A
cross-disciplinary conversation about participation focusing on a
selection of projects in progress by doctoral students from the Bartlett
Faculty of the Built Environment (Architecture, the Development
Planning Unit, Planning) and affiliated with the UCL Urban Laboratory,
including members of the recently formed Participatory Activist and
Research Network (PARN).
April 26, Friday
10 am – 6pm
isik.knutsdotter – astate
astate is a continuous public meeting presented here as a series of conversation-events, films and workshops.
11.30am -1pm
Dennis, Galviz, Merrill – Under London by Rail: Memory, the Archive and Heritage: A Round-Table
A
round-table discussion on themes of heritage, memory and the archive,
focused around the three presenters’ (Richard Dennis, Carlos Galviz and
Sam Merrill) research on and participation in the ongoing commemoration
of the 150th anniversary of the London Underground, with contributions
from guest discussants including Sam Mullins (Director, London Transport
Museum) and David Lawrence (Senior Lecturer in the Faculty of Art,
Design & Architecture, Kingston University).
3pm-4.30pm Interchanges #4
Gallery presentations by exhibitors followed by Q&A sessions
Bernadette Devilat – The role of the record: photography of earthquake-affected areas through time
The
exhibition explores the changes – and the non-changes – that a heritage
village in Chile, San Lorenzo de Tarapacá, has experienced since a
large earthquake affected it in 2005. Photographic records from
different historical periods are juxtaposed, aiming to reveal sometimes
imperceptible variations and to question the reconstruction process that
follows the earthquake.
Anja Borowicz and Vanessa Maurice-Williams – Urban Pathways and Seams of Space
This
project deals with movement and identity in the city, questioning our
interaction with various spaces through an overlap of language and
painting, sculpture and architecture. The exhibit is offered up for
interaction and engagement – to be walked through, picked up, worn and
imagined.
Little Red Dots – First Person Audio/Visual Urban Narratives
A
short presentation explaining some of the ideas underpinning the First
Person Audio/Visual Urban Narrative approach, as well as the related
research material presented in the exhibition. Followed by a brief tour
of UCL’s immediate environs designed to explore the collaborative
possibilities of the methodology.
5pm-6.30pm Interchanges #5
Gallery presentations by exhibitors followed by Q&A sessions
David
Roberts and Andrea Luca Zimmerman of Fugitive Images – From ‘Heroin’ to
Heroines: Performing social housing in an inner-city estate
A
dialogue between filmmaker Andrea Luka Zimmerman and writer David
Roberts of Fugitive Images to discuss their long-term collaborative
engagement filming residents of the Haggerston Estate.
Ioana Marinescu + Tapio Snellman – Dalston Fluxus
Discussion
of the making of 'dalston fluxus' (5') - a continuous elevational
portrait of Dalston High Street, originally commissioned for the London
Cultural Olympiad 2012.
Henrietta Williams – The Secret Security Guard
Exploring
the theatre of security: Henrietta Williams explains 'The Secret
Security Guard', a photographic project based on fortress urbanism,
private security and regeneration which resulted from her experience
working as a security guard and x-ray screener during the London
Olympics.
6.30 pm
Ben Campkin, Rebecca Ross and Guglielmo Rossi – Urban Pamphleteer
The
launch of Urban Pamphleteer issue #1, ‘Future & Smart Cities’. Each
illustrated pamphlet in this series collates and presents expert
voices, across disciplines, professions, and community groups, around
one pressing contemporary urban challenge. The intention is to confront
key contemporary urban questions from diverse perspectives, in a direct
and accessible tone, drawing on the history of radical pamphleteering.
Cities Methodologies 2013 and the UCL Urban Laboratory gratefully acknowledge the financial support of:
UCL Bartlett Faculty of the Built Environment
UCL Faculty of Social and Historical Sciences
UCL Engineering
UCL Faculty of Arts and Humanities
Curatorial committee:
Wesley Aelbrecht, UCL Bartlett School of Architecture
Sabina Andron, UCL Bartlett School of Architecture
Dr Pushpa Arabindoo, UCL Geography
Dr Camillo Boano, UCL Bartlett Development Planning Unit
Dr Ben Campkin, UCL Urban Laboratory
Dr Adam Drazin, UCL Anthropology
Dr Ger Duijzings, UCL School of Slavonic and Eastern European Studies
Laura Hirst, UCL Urban Laboratory
Dr Caroline Newton, UCL Bartlett Development Planning Unit
Kieren Reed, UCL Slade School of Fine Art
Dr Claire Thomson, UCL Scandinavian Studies (chair)
For further information visit UCL Urban Laboratory.
Cities Methodologies 2012
UCL Urban Laboratory exhibition and events programme showcasing innovative urban research methodologies
4-7 July 2012
Launch, 4 July, 18.30, all welcome
Open Thurs to Fri 10.00-20.00, Sat 10.00-13.00
UCL Slade Research Centre, Woburn Square, London, WC1H 0NS
Thursday 5th July
Alejandra Celedon
Exhibit: The City of Oikonomia (Room 1)
Event: 'Retracing the City Mapping Plans' (lecture)
Thursday 5th July 12.00 - 12.30, Gallery
The City of Oikonomia aims at presenting the drawing of the plan as a sociopolitical operation that internalises rhetorical power through its drawn lines. It displays a collection of six central drawings, constituting a visual history of the Plan, paired with six different rhetorical tactics metaphor, metonym, synecdoche, decorum, ekphrasis and irony. By doing so, it proposes a drift in the role of plans from representation towards instrumentalisation, arguing that the modern plan becomes a technology for the administering, and eventually normalization, of the entire city. In this way, these tactical drawings ultimately question the fate of the plan and planning.
Retracing the City - Mapping Plans, an accompanying lecture, aims to internalise the rhetorical power of the lines drawn in housing plans, using the exhibited plans to look at how the plan of the house becomes a technology for the administration, and eventually normalization, of the entire city.
Angela Last and Mireille Roddier
Exhibit: DIY City Branding / Semiopathic City (Room 3)
Event: The Image of the City: the politics of representation and democratisation of access to shaping the materiality and representation of the city (presentation)
Thursday 5th July 12.30 - 13.30, Gallery
Angela Lasts DIY City Branding is an experimental public engagement project intended to provoke discussion about the branding of cities, iconographic skylines and privileged views. Visitors to the exhibition are invited to modify London skylines, as seen from exemplary privileged (tourists, luxury housing, corporate headquarters) and unprivileged (social housing) sites. Providing the option to chose from existing iconic buildings or to commission new ones, DIY City Branding draws attention to relations between image versus the experience of place and the use of architecture to create marketable identities. The installation is part of a wider project on democratic decisionmaking and urban space.
Michel Serres term soft pollution describes the tsunamis of signs, images, and logos flooding rural, civic, public and natural spaces. Mireille Roddiers The Semiopathic City attempts to record the conflicting signifiers emblazoning the Parisian public sphere. It juxtaposes two series of traditionally Parisian imagery: the first is a series of overstylized touristic snapshots of typical Parisian faades. By exaggerating the pictorial compositions of Haussmanian details, the pervasive presence of global corporate logos comes to the foreground, as well as our general blindness to them. The second series presents a toponymic analysis of Parisian places, highlighting the lives and merit of those who most illustriously represent 2000 years of resistance to occupations.
These two exhibits are accompanied by a presentation, The Image of the City, which discusses both the politics of representation (Roddier) and the democratisation of access to shaping the materiality and representation of the city (Last). Both projects consider the role of city branding, urban economics and the politics of tourism in overlapping ways. This joint talk discusses the roles of image and place, representation and experience, local and global metropolitan identities, from the prominent display of global corporate logos on the local vernacular to the use of architecture itself as icon of economic power.
William Hunter/MSc Building and Urban Design in Development
Exhibit: Dharavi, Contested Urbanism: Mega Projects, Critical Strategies, and Design Methodology
Event: Dialogue on methodologies and casebased research
Thursday 5th July 13.30 - 14.15, Gallery
This exhibition represents the culmination of 4 years design research including writing, field work and design studio projects carried out in conjunction with the Bartlett Development Planning Unit's MSc Building and Urban Design course. Through the presentation of the Dharavi/Mumbai case study and the emblematic nature of its sociopolitical and sociospatial complexities from topdown redevelopment plans and bottomup resistance to the revelations of dynamic informal economies the exhibition reveals various phases of design investigation highlighting interlinked tools, methodologies and conceptual frameworks that attempt to reinterpret the notion of design principles and processes, pointing towards distinct yet complementary design actions for addressing a range of scales and interventions ultimately suggesting a critical reconfiguration of design practice.
UCL MSc Adaptive Architecture and Computation, City as Interface module
Ava Fatah gen Schieck, Tasos Varoudis and Moritz Behrens
Exhibit: The timebased city: Methodological innovations in the digital age (Room 6)
Event: Swipe I Like (presentation)
Thursday 5th July 14.15- 14.45, Gallery
The city is increasingly generating a huge amount of data on various platforms including physical, mobile, digital and social ones and through various data sources such as GPS, Google Maps, Twitter, and Facebook. We show methodological and detailed explorations as part of the Module City as Interface on the MSc Adaptive Architecture and Computation.
The central question underpinning the research explores:
How the use of digital media technologies might generate an additional platform for interactions in the city, locally and remotely and how the use of media technologies might make our cities more social, rather than just more hi tech. Three exhibits exploring these questions will be shown:
Urban Flows: Pedestrian Movement and Simulated Behaviour Formations in Urban Public Space (Christos Chondros, Eleni Georgiadou, Lida Theodorou)
Space/aSpace: Exploring mediated cityscape through geolocated Twitterdata (Stefanos Gkougkoustamos, Yimeng Tang, Martin Traunmueller)
Swipe I Like: Can we Enhance Visitor Engagement with Museums through Embedding a LocationBased I like Button which connects Online and Real World Communities? (Moritz Behrens)
Moritz Behrens will give a talk and demo about the project Swipe I Like'. He will explore how we can enhance visitor engagement with museums through embedding a locationbased I like button which connects online and real world communities. Specifically, it will extend the use of Near Field Communication (NFC) technology to locate NFC card readers in cultural institutions, allowing visitors to simply swipe a card with an NFC chip to register whether they like an event, idea or place. This information is instantaneously transmitted to an online social networking platform and/or database for collection and sharing.
Stella Flatten
Event: The role of the image in reconstructing contemporary Berlin
Thursday 5th July 15.00 - 16.00, Auditorium
The presentation is about the usage of images in shaping the built environment of Berlin since 1989. 'Reconstructionsim' is in fashion when it comes to architectural projects in Germany. The recourse of styles of the past is an old practice, but the exact photographic reconstruction of the outside appearance of a building is a new phenomena. The presentation focusses on the different roles images play in the act of reconstructing buildings, representing history and linking memories to the public space. Three main examples will be discussed: the Stadtschloss, the Berlin Wall Memorial at Bernauer Strasse and the citywide intervention 'destroyed diversity'.
Rachel Alliston & Laura Weatherly
Exhibit: Elastic Subtle City (Room 3)
Event: Public sculpture in relation to practice and the city at large (lecture)
Thursday 5th July 16.00 - 16.30, Auditorium
The city in its contemporary moment accepts the urban dweller as much an expert as the urban planner; the squatter as the architect; and the artist as the critic. Within the resultant network of interaction, Alliston and Weatherly posit their interdisciplinary collaboration in public sculpture as a mode of urban research.
Elastic Subtle City evaluates conversation around work as one form of urban building, acknowledging the significance of discourse to collaboration and the city. Alliston and Weatherlys' drawings for their upcoming public sculpture in Londons Gordon Square are sited in the event of a conversation traced by their written correspondence.
The artists will talk on public sculpture in relation to the their separate practices and the city at large. What promise does public sculpture offer to the continued making of the city at a historical moment in which participation beyond building and policymaking is proving key to social operations? And where does the microevent of the conversation stand in relation to the broader language moves of the macroevent that is citybuilding?
Liz Rideal
Exhibit: Speed Date: St. Pauls (Room 2)
Event: Speed Date: St. Pauls (lecture)
Thursday 5th July 17.00 - 17.30, Auditorium
Liz Rideal's artwork uses contemporary media and elements of abstraction to refocus our attention on St.Pauls. The coloured silks not only enhance the way that the building is perceived, they recapture particular parts of the structure possibly lost within the totality and represent them in a new and imaginative way. A lecture and Q&A on this and related work will elucidate the research underpinning the exhibit.
Matteo Mellioli
Exhibit: Ghost Space (Room 4)
Event: Ghost Space (gallery talk)
Thursday 5th July 18.00 - 18.20, Gallery
Matteo Mellioli will talk about his work, Ghost Space, a visual representation of Venices soundscape, which leaves the viewer imagining sounds and far echoes generated by the canals and the lagoon while standing in front of San Marcos square. Discussion will focus on the importance of representing sound, its form and movement.
Matteo Melioli is a London based designer, currently working for Zaha Hadid Architects on several art and performance projects. Matteo trained in Architecture and Design Theory in Venice, where he practiced on a number of historical refurbishment projects under the patronage of UNESCO. He subsequently relocated to London to enrol in a PhD program at the Bartlett. Today, Matteos main interest is in writing about design that engages visual and acoustic issues. This is the subject of his publications Sensorial Spaces: the Construction of Reality through Perception (2007) and Inhabiting Soundscape: Architecture of the Unseen World (2007). The essays explore the concept of space as it evolves in response to perception and phenomenology, cutting across the fields of architecture, music and the visual arts.
Matteo's work explores the perceptual linking of seeing and listening, and the sculptural properties of sounds. In his drawings and graphics, Matteo represents the varying interplay of music, time and movement, unfolding the often imperceptible structure that binds sound and space together.
When stating that listening to sound is something related to space, Matteo does not only mean that the sounds come from somewhere or that they fill a certain place, he wants instead to express the fact that these sounds are actual presences with their own specific spatial form, and this is not so much because the phenomenon unfolds in a certain space, but because it forms and creates a spatial dimension that Matteo aims to capture in his works.
Matteo also presented his research at leading international conferences and symposia such as the Systems Research in the Arts and Humanities and the Architecture Music Acoustic where he engaged artists such Bernhard Leitner and Bill Fontana. In 2009 Matteo exhibits his series of printing Ghost Space at the cole nationale suprieure d'architecture de ParisLa Villette and in 2011 at the Serikawa Gallery in Tokyo.
Ben Campkin and Rebecca Ross
Exhibit: Realtime London (Room 3)
Event: Realtime London (gallery talk)
Thursday 5th July 18.30 - 19.00, Gallery
This project explores the contemporary vernacular portrayal of London by displaying text and images being created in and of the city, and uploaded to the internet, right now. The fragments displayed are drawn from the most recent uploads to various public databases (e.g. Twitter, Flickr, Instagram, Google). Our aim is to frame these new types of visual and textual vernacular representation in relation to one another, examining how they produce new understandings and experiences of the city on the ground, and how they operate as new forms of participation in London life.
Games Monitor
Exhibit: Grasping the incommensurable: Coresearch and politics as immanent experience (Room 5)
Event: Investigative research into radioactive waste on the Olympic Park site (discussion with Paul Charman and Mike Wells of Games Monitor, chaired by Julian Cheyne).
Thursday 5th July 19.00 - 20.30, Auditorium
The 2012 Olympic developments have devastated local light industry and contribute to landrent inflation across the area, accelerating the displacement of those on low incomes. Policymaking indicates a shift towards reflexive governance, a neoconservative turn. Games Monitor, a website dedicated to deconstructing the Olympic development process will be showcased, highlighting the multidisciplinary work undertaken by the core production group. A display board profiles an essay on the Games Monitor groups praxis, while photography projection will highlight the human resonance of displacement, and its negation in planning procedures and construction.
A hosted discussion with Paul Charman and Mike Wells will explore the processes of investigative journalism, including the limitations of Freedom of Information legislation, and the detail of their investigations into the excavation and disposal of contaminated and radioactive soil on the Olympic Park site in Stratford.
Friday 6th July
David Kroll
Exhibit: Lease Agreements and Estate Planning: The Minet Estate 18411890
Event: Lease Agreements and Estate Planning: The Minet Estate 18411890 (talk)
Friday 6th July 11.00 - 11.15, Gallery
David Kroll will discuss the exhibit and will talk about the planning of the Minet estate, a Victorian housing estate in Lambeth. The study of the Minet estate is part of his PhD research on the planning and design of late Victorian and Edwardian speculative housing in London.
Gynna Franco and Vanesa Castn Broto
Exhibit: Tuzla: Energy Landscapes (Room 3)
Event: Tuzla: Energy Landscapes (talk and film)
Friday 6th July 13.00 - 14.00, Gallery
The short film Tuzla: Energy Landscapes was shot in two weeks in October 2011 after urban researcher Vanesa Castn Broto was given funding to return to the Bosnian city where she has been doing research on local perspectives on pollution and environmental justice since 2005. The event will share specific details of the 2011 research trip with the audience and update them on the current debate. The film will then feature the previously inaccessible voice of the TEP (thermoelectric plant) in the debate and show images of the plants internal operations for the first time.
Hilary Powell and Isaac Marrero-Guillamn
Exhibit: Stratford City and the New Oz
Event: Stratford City and the New Oz
Friday 6th July 13.00 - 14.00 Auditorium
"My name is Ozymandias, King of Kings:
Look on my works, ye mighty, and despair!'
Nothing beside remains. Round the decay
Of that colossal wreck, boundless and bare,
The lone and level sands stretch far away".
Ozymandias. Percy Bysshe Shelley
An eventful installation and exploration of the nebulous idea of legacy in relation to the London 2012 Olympics. This installation arises from the issues and contents of the book 'The Art of Dissent: Adventures In London's Olympic State' edited by Hilary Powell and Isaac Marrero and including the work of 60 artists, writers, photographers, film makers, poets and academics: http://www.theartofdissent.net
An accompanying evening event will focus on the imaginative potential of examining notions of (specifically Olympic) Legacy through fiction and artistic practices making their way on a boulevard of questionably broken dreams and dystopian visions. Contributors to this discussion will include poets, writers and artist contributors to the book The Art of Dissent. The event will be filmed and the future visions conjured up throughout the evening later composited into a final film.
MSc Urban Studies
Event: MegaEvents and Urban Practices
Friday 6th July 14.00 - 15.00, Auditorium
This event will detail and discuss the innovative and critical practices Urban Studies MSc students at UCL developed and explored in relation to urban megaevents and festivals. Students will talk about why they chose particular approaches and how these have helped reconsider the interface between practice and urban theory. Practices ranged from filmmaking and fictionwriting, to the creation of postcards and bunting, and covered the 2012 London Olympics, Millennium Dome, 1951 Festival of Britain, 2014 Glasgow Commonwealth Games and the Notting Hill Carnival.
Steven Chodoriwsky and Farid Noufaily
Exhibit: Unifil City (Room 6)
Event: Unifil City (live Skype presentation)
Friday 6th July 15.00 - 15.30, Gallery
The project investigates informal marketplaces in conflict zones, especially those on the doorsteps of political or infrastructural wherewithal. This exhibit presents the role, evolution, and current state of "Mingy Street" market, a thriving market living alongside the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL) headquarters' thirtyfiveyear peacekeeping presence in Naqoura, Southern Lebanon. Equal parts archivebuilding, architectural fieldwork and performative gesture, visitors are invited to select and project overhead transparencies from a curated dossier, presenting unmanifested futures and overlapping, elusive versions of Mingy Street and its inhabitants, asking viewers to speculate on the Unifil City that never was.
The event will feature a talk on the research project that investigates informal marketplaces in conflict zones, especially those on the doorsteps of political or infrastructural wherewithal.
Sebastian Juhnke
Event: Analysing travel guides to understand how visitors make sense of the city (talk)
Friday 6th July 15.30 - 16.00, Auditorium
Travel guides are a major source of information about cities, most of all for actual visitors. They are a vital resource for exploring how tourists are meant to understand the city. Based on a case study on East London this talk will demonstrate that the celebration of ethnic diversity in travel guides is embedded in economic contexts of leisure consumption and maintains ethnic boundaries.
Andrew Harris, Louis Moreno, Oliver Goodhall and William Haggard
Event: Creative City Limits and Urban Reasoning (pamphlet launch)
Friday 6th July 16.00 - 17.00, Auditorium
Creative City Limits was an AHRC-funded international and interdisciplinary research network run in 2011 by the UCL Urban Laboratory and CABE. It used the recent financial crisis, and the uneven urban prospects of recovery, to review and rethink the historical and theoretical relationship between culture, economy and urban development. Further information: www.creativecitylimits.org
This event will launch a pamphlet and booklet that have developed out of the networks presentations and discussions. Firstly a pamphlet written by Andrew Harris and Louis Moreno, and designed by Adria Davidson, which emphasizes five points that can help reformulate and reclaim the notion of the creative city. Secondly, a booklet produced by William Haggard and Oliver Goodhall which opens up new questions about the parameters of regeneration policy, and the links between ethics, research, and practice.
David Roberts
Exhibit: Am I Here (Room 1)
Event: Am I Here (gallery talk)
Friday 6th July 17.30 - 17.50, Gallery
Am I Here is an artwork created collaboratively by the residents of the condemned Haggerston Estate in East London to challenge tabloid stereotypes and reclaim language that has defined social housing tenants. David Roberts will give a presentation on the methodological terrain of collaborative practiceled engagement.
Agnieszka Mlicka
Exhibit: Alternative Masterplan (Room 2)
Event: Painting an Alternative Masterplan (CPD session)
Friday 6th July 17.00 - 18.00, Auditorium
Painting an Alternative Masterplan is an 1hour Continuing Professional Development session (CPD) which will set out the rationale behind the production of painting as a design method. During this interactive training, you will: learn about alternative modes of visual representation of the urban environment; develop an understanding of painting as a research method; and become skilled in critically assessing your own design intentions. The session will provide reallife examples through the work Alternative Masterplan, which analyses the visual methods used to (re)present the current largescale redevelopment of Canning Town in East London. The projection appropriates the visual material produced as part of urban regeneration, while the painting proposes an alternative visual language that reflects the diversity of perspectives coexisting in an urban site.
Rebecca Merrill
Event: 'Fahrenheit 451 Displaced' (a screening of Franois Truffaut's 1966 film)
Friday 6th July 19.30 - 21.30, Auditorium
Do you ever read the books you burn? In the process of locating his 1966 adaptation of Fahrenheit 451, Franois Truffaut chose spaces as a simultaneous advertisement and critique of the new modern then situating itself within the postwar landscape. The project Fahrenheit 451 Displaced drives towards a new form of observing urban space, shifting the political charge present in Truffauts original locations towards the contemporary equivalent. Fahrenheit 451 Displaced presents a stack of papers divided by sixteen chapter titles derived from the original landscapes. These chapter titles in their deliberate ambiguity are designed to entice the audience subconsciously towards a new landscape, the modern equivalent of 1966.
Each sheet bears an autonomous set of instructions, these being a painstakingly typed version of Truffaut's camera movements. The camera thus becomes the script and through the formulae of instructions, the audience the actor. The audience is invited to enter the landscape where they have displaced Fahrenheit 451, and act out the derivatives. Hence their bodies automation provide a new form for observation and critique of urban and nonurban landscapes. The audience is finally invited to submit text, sounds, images and film from their displaced derivs on the blog, (http://fahrenheit451displaced.tumblr.com/) in the drive towards archiving a multitude of subconsciously chosen and consciously visited landscapes, acting as a displacing of the film's original modernist concerns within the 21st Century landscape.
ResonanceFM will broadcast landscape five, entitled Modernity's Home Comforts on July 10th and July 17th.
Saturday 7th July
Schaum/Shieh
Exhibit: Sponge Urbanism, Room 3
Event: Detroit, Newark and the post/exindustrial American city
Saturday 7th July 10.00 - 12.00
Sponge Urbanism is a proposition for Detroit that projects a vision for an expanded field of land use and activities. The project tests how the remnants of an old, rectilinear, platted urban order can be transformed into a multidirectional, opencell, spongelike organization. The project operates through a manipulation of conventional drawing techniques: plan and perspective are combined with selective cutting, notation and diagram in a manner that encompass a variety of criteria to construct a view that, while impossible, establishes a means to simultaneously visualize critical elements cohering the sponge order.
Conversation and presentations on 'Detroit, Newark and the post/exindustrial American city' with Tahl Kaminer (TU Delft, Edinburgh), Torange Khonsar (Public Works Group), Troy Schaum and Rosalyne Shieh.
BJNilsen & Sandra Jasper
Exhibit: Residues I A Stairwell
Event: Live concert based on field recordings
Saturday 7th July 12.00 - 12.30, Auditorium
Recordings and Images are taken from the stairwell of Slade Research Centre.
The project Residues explores the acoustic ecology of buildings. The focus lies on capturing the ambient sounds within a building, a sort of sonic waste emerging from the interior as well as the exterior, a collage of internal and external events. The recordings are made in movement by actively listening and exploring spaces with the microphone. They are then presented in form of a structured installation in a different space hereby joining two acoustic environments.
Residues I - A Stairwell joins the sonic worlds of elevator and stairwell. The stairwell gathers the sounds of human movement together with an array of unnoticed sounds; Residues of street life, voices, electricity, pipes, birds, a car honking, echoes, leaves of trees, sirens, traffic, water dripping, wind blowing through keyholes and windows. This sonic waste is generally termed ambient. The elevator works as a listening post. By moving us mechanically it enables us to focus in on listening to this invisible acoustic ecology.
Exhibitors
Adriana Allen, Vanesa Castn Broto, Andreas Eriksson, Gynna Milln Franco
Discussing Urban Metabolism at UCL
This video explores the concept of urban metabolism through interviews with UCL-based academics who approach it from different perspectives. The concept of urban metabolism, referring to the exchange processes that produce the urban environment, has inspired new ways of thinking about how cities can be made sustainable and has raised criticisms about specific social and economic arrangements in which some forms of flow are prioritised or marginalised within the city. This video presents an attempt to use this concept as an instrument to generate interdisciplinary dialogue across engineering, development studies, geography, planning, politics and economics to develop practical solutions for sustainable urban development. The video was produced within the project Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Urban Metabolism funded by the UCL Environment Institute (see: http://www.bartlett.ucl.ac.uk/dpu/urbanmetabolism.)
Megan Bradshaw
Cycling and Changing Mobility Patterns in the 2012 Olympic City
This project is interested in the way that the city is remade through the performance of cyclists in London, with specific reference to the way that cyclists mobility patterns are affected by infrastructural preparations for the 2012 Olympic Games. Improvements in air, rail, and road transport are included in the typical sevenyear preparation period for an Olympics (mega)event, and the latter especially affects the placemaking and mobility practices, as well as the sensory experiences, of London cyclists.
Philip Comerford
Mapping the hidden risks of the London 2012 Olympics
This project interrogates strategies of risk control used during the London 2012 Olympics by critically subverting tactics used by the Olympic Delivery Authority (ODA) themselves, such as public engagement, photoshopped imagery, and mapping. These are used to question the framing of risk: who or what is at risk, and who gets to define this risk? A public engagement process records concerns articulated by locals. From these an alternative set of maps are prepared. Some of these record invisible features such as security and surveillance. Others use innovative methods of mapping to record hidden power relationships such as those involving corporate sponsors.
Ismail Farouk, Stephen Hobbs, Marcus Neustetter and Johan Thom
(in)Visible bodies: Migrants in the city of gold
(in)Visible bodies: Migrants in the city of gold is a curated selection of three art projects produced by artists from and about the city of Johannesburg. The concept of migration (as the movement of bodies from one place to another) is used as a framework through which to rethink the complex interplay between what is rendered in/visible by the symbolic, economic, political and historic dimensions of the city of Johannesburg. The three works are 'Challenging Mud after Kazuo Shiraga' (2008) by Johan Thom, the Hilbrow/Dakar project (20078) by Hobbs/Neustetter and the Trolley project (2007) by Ismail Farouk.
Hayley Gewer
Greenwich Peninsula A Tale of Two Halves
Once a derelict and contaminated site, Greenwich peninsula is a changing and contested landscape. Film, soundscapes and interviews are layered and juxtaposed to explore life on either side of the A102, a major dual carriageway the splits the peninsula into two halves. The combining and contrasting of these three mediums help to create a sense of familiarity and at the same time disorientation, mirroring what one perceives when walking around the peninsula. The film aimed to explore how a sense of place is being constructed by residents in an area that is being refashioned through regeneration and corporatization and the extent to which they are benefitting from these processes. By intentionally setting up the two sides of the peninsula against each other and overlapping additional aural information I became engaged in the construction of a new representational and dialectic enactment of landscape and place.
Mohamad Hafeda
The Twin Sisters are About to Swap Houses
This project addresses the social and spatial arrangements of displacement as performed by residents of contemporary Beirut. Twins try to realign their political positions and personal affiliations across urban space through decisions concerning where to live. It examines how residents internalize displacement as an act of passive resistance, contrasting the twin sisters decisions concerning where to live, through both poetic and violent spatial and visual strategies of representation. The project is poised at the time of about to, the moment before the swapping occurs, and focuses on creating spatial moments of twining and matching across visual horizons and through lines drawn on maps to reveal geographies of division and the immaterial borderlines of the city.
Hanna Hilbrandt
DOMPOLY
DOMPOLY reframes political and economic conflicts associated with urban planning. Set in the context of the regeneration of the Greenwich Peninsula, two players compete for power and influence in the planning process. Both players take on fictitious positions a development company and a local community and aim at implementing a type of development that serves the necessities and interests of their gamecharacters. Through tactical play they can think through alternative processes and outcomes of regeneration. The game ends when the peninsula is fully developed.
Ignacia Mesa
Inaccessible City
For this work I decided to make a one day journey walking from my home in Camden Road to a gas station in Battersea, taking photographs of every manhole cover of the street in order to symbolically follow the energy network that operates all over the city. They represent a limit within the city, a beneath system that is at the same time connected and disconnected, individual and collective. The photographs draw attention to the passing of the day and travel, to size and patterning, over a granted delimited space.
Azzurra Muzzonigro and Daniele Zacchi
Dwell the Threshold: an opportunity of encounter among differences
This work aims at investigating the role of space in the act of the encounter with Otherness, as a catalyst for a radical social and cultural transformation of society.
Between the Self and the Other there is a gap, in which the negotiation of identities, that allows processes of hybridization, takes place. This inbetween space is a space of threshold: the place where different worlds meet (Stavrides), therefore to dwell the threshold becomes the practice that allows the encounter with the Other. Border, Circle and Interstices will illustrate the spatial dimension of the act of dwelling the threshold.
Alexandra Parry and Facha O'Dubhda
Finding Home
Finding Home documents our public research into local housing issues on Chatsworth Road, Hackney. For a week we occupied a disused Dentists, interviewing passersby about their experiences of housing. This forum was open to the public to inhabit, criticise and reflect upon. The research process itself became part of the dialogue with the locality, its vulnerabilities continuously exposed and its goals always under question. As an extension of this process, we invite you to occupy our seats, use our tools, read our research journals, listen to the recordings, browse the works that have informed our research, view images gathered throughout the project, and leave your own commentary, thoughts and responses.
Brent Pilkey and Rachel Scicluna
The Heteronormative Gaze at Home: a Scene from the Everyday
This exhibit/performance aims to challenge the dominant ideology of heteronormativity a regime of power based on heterosexuality as the natural way of being and taken as the blueprint of western social order. Born in such a social context, most nonheterosexual experiences are shaped by this ideology. In this exhibit we aim to bring out the relationship between space, experience and sexual identity in everyday London homes. Sitting in our domestic space and gazing through the viewmaster, an iconic childrens toy, we encourage the viewer to reflect upon the multiple ways heteronormativity influences everyday experiences of home, street and neighbourhood across different stages of life. The viewmaster is used here as a conceptual tool which comes to represent the tunnel vision of heteronormativity. The triangulation of the gaze, viewmaster and the homely images aims to reproduce the power relation between the viewer and the viewed. Although some of these images from our respective research projects may look like your home, or any typical home in London, we argue that it is the social normative context within which these homes are set in relation to alternative lifestyles that nonheterosexuals queer domesticity. Hence, we argue that the meaning of a queer home needs to be understood within a holistic cultural context.
Brent Pilkey is a doctoral student at the Bartlett School of Architecture, UCL. He has completed an Honours Bachelor of Arts in architectural design and art history as well as a Master of Arts in art history at the University of Toronto, Canada. His research, funded by a UCL Overseas Research Scholarship, looks at the queering of domesticity in London.
Rachel Scicluna is reading her doctorate in social anthropology at The Open University where she was awarded a Charter Studentship attached to an ESRC funded research project. Her background is in social and medical anthropology where she completed her Masters in medical anthropology at The University of Sussex. Her PhD looks at the meaning and ontological experience of the kitchen from the perspective of older lesbians.
Troy Schaum and Rosalyne Shieh
Sponge Urbanism
Sponge Urbanism is a proposition for Detroit that projects a vision for an expanded field of land use and activities. The project tests how the remnants of an old, rectilinear, platted urban order can be transformed into a multidirectional, opencell, spongelike organization. The project operates through a manipulation of conventional drawing techniques: plan and perspective are combined with selective cutting, notation and diagram in a manner that encompass a variety of criteria to construct a view that, while impossible, establishes a means to simultaneously visualize critical elements cohering the sponge order.
Simson&Volley
Green to Gold
Last year the City of London Corporation launched a campaign, Green to Gold, in an attempt to get more people involved in sport and activity with one year to go to the London Olympics. Its aim was to engage and inspire communities to use open spaces for positive recreation. Green to Gold transforms the image of an open green space into a pulsating gilded geometric form. It is part of a series of temporary installation works that deal with the overlap and associations between memory and place and allude to the poetic possibilities held within a landscape in which inner and out vision are reconciled. The work also refers to the golden coffer ceiling paintings by Veronese in the Cheisa di San Sebastiano, patron saint of sport and athletes, in Venice.
Peter Wood
Is this what the Elephant feels like? Using mobile video to evoke a feeling of area
The displayed video depicts a cyclists eye view of Elephant and Castle, an area of South London currently undergoing substantial redevelopment. As the cyclist passes through, images from architects proposed streetscape changes have been inserted into the videos top lefthand corner. The same video was shown to focus groups, and selected excerpts are displayed here. These discuss the social connotations of urban forms, but also allow an exploration of how the lived experience of area differs from and relates to the medium of video as a contiguous linear series of places.
Cities Methodologies 2011
4 to 7 May 2011
Launch, 18.30, Wednesday 4 May 2011.
Performance by T.R.I.P.O.D.
Inaugurated in 2009, Cities Methodologies showcases innovative methods in urban research.
Visitors to Cities Methodologies encounter diverse methods of urban research in
juxtaposition - from archival studies to statistical analyses, practice-led art, architectural and design work to oral history, writing, walking, performances, film-making and photography.
Cities Methodologies promotes cross- and inter-disciplinary work, and showcases recent research on a wide range of cities.
Participants are drawn from right across UCL, as well as from De Montfort University, CUNY, University of Edinburgh, Goldsmiths, Harvard Graduate School of Design, Humboldt Universität Berlin, LSE, University of Manchester, National University of the Arts, Bucharest, Queen Mary’s University of London, and the University of Westminster.
Venue: Slade Research Centre, Woburn Square, London, WC1H 0AB.
All events are free. No booking required except where stated.
Supported by:
UCL Urban Laboratory
UCL Bartlett Faculty of the Built Environment
UCL Slade School of Fine Art
UCL School of Slavonic and East European Studies
Curated and organised by:
Dr Ben Campkin, UCL Urban Laboratory/Bartlett School of Architecture
Dr Susan Collins, UCL Slade School of Fine Art
Dr Ger Duijzings, UCL School of Slavonic & East European Studies
Prof Jane Rendell, UCL Bartlett Faculty of the Built Environment
Füsun Türetken, UCL Urban Laboratory/PhD Candidate Goldsmiths
Exhibits
Nana Adusei-Poku and Füsun Türetken, No Name in the Street
Ximena Alarcón, Sounding Underground
Yun Jie Chung and Brent Pilkey, Do Ho Suh’s ‘The Bridge Project’
Inês Dantas, Wohnwald: Inhabitable Urban Forest
Carolyn Deby, citysited/1
Ming Deng, Jacob Wilson and Mayuri Sisodia, Orhan in the City
Teresa de Macedo, Dual Archaeology
Max Dewdney, Chiaroscuro City
Oliver Gregory, Lucia Caistor, Samira Islam, Matthew Wright, The Heygate
Mohamad Hafeda, Sewing Sound
Suzanne Hall and Juliet Davis and others, City Street
Benjamin Holzman, Hold My Hand
Tom Jenkins, The City
SubREAL, Interviewing the Cities
Iosif Kiraly and others, Ro-Archive
Mircea Nicolae, Glass Globes / 25 Demolished Houses
Benjamin Leclair-Paquet, West Bank Lab: Military Urbanism and Border Bending
Manu Luksch, Mapping CCTV around Whitehall and Blue-sky Blueprint
Hilary Powell, Structures of Enchantment: Pop-Up Books in/on progress
Sophia Psarra, Detroit: the Fall of the Public Realm
Bradley L. Garrett, Jonathan Prior and Brian Rosa, Jute
Seijin Kim, Hana_Set
Maria Sfaellou, London - the City of Senses
Simson&Volley, Project Project, Protest!
Dorian Wiszniewski and others, Florence: Curating The City.
Events
Gregory Cowan, Occupying Streets at all Hours: Frankfurt and London
Workshop, Thursday 5 May, Room 5, 10.00; continues Friday 6 May, Room 5, 10.00
24 hour Street Design analysis workshop – round table for max. 20 people. Briefing, field work excursion to Caledonian Road, Kings Cross; a short walk, cycle or bus ride 15 minutes along Euston Road. Return 20 hours later to UCL, compilation of findings and discussion. Interactive seminar will involve a practical field work street appraisal exercise. I will encourage attendees to engage with perceptions and representations of a city study area, testing some analysis techniques such as building form and use, permeability, and legibility – considering drawn and three-dimensional modelled analyses, including scale analysis and use-coding.
Booking required for this event.
www.facebook.com/notes/gregory-cowan/24-hour-street-design-analysis-workshopoccupying-streets/10150218300975330
Deepa Naik and Trenton Oldfield, This Is Not A Gateway: Revealed and Exposed
Roundtable
Thursday 5 May, Room 7, 10.00.
A roundtable of invited guests will interrogate the ideas and methodologies underpinning the work of This Is Not A Gateway and explore methodologies TINAG could employ to help it achieve its aim of provoking a critical transformation of the urban industry and its post-critical condition.
Benjamin Holzman, Hold My Hand
Installation and screenings, Thursday 5 May, Room 7, 12.00 and Friday 6 May, Room 7, 16.00.
The Hold My Hand Project aims to challenge inequality in the public acceptance of
homosexual and heterosexual public displays of affection. The project asks two people of the same sex who identify as heterosexual to walk a mile down a busy London street whilst holding hands, to see how they felt and to see how the public reacts. This is contrasted with a similar experiment asking two people of the opposite sex who both identify as homosexual to do the same, to determine if they felt more comfortable in the public domain. The project is presented as a documentary film.
Catherine Hall, Nick Draper, Keith McClelland and others, Mapping the Legacies of
London Slave-ownership: a Discussion
Presentation and discussion, Thursday 5 May, 13.00, Room 7.
When slavery in the British Empire was abolished in 1833, slave-owners received
compensation of £20 million. About 70 claimants lived in the immediate surrounds of the new University College, London. Legacies of British Slave-ownership Project, based in UCL’s Department of History, has been tracing the political, commercial, institutional, imaginative and physical legacies of this money. This event will present their findings on the Bloomsbury area, followed by a discussion bringing together people from a range of disciplines to think through how, ahead of an exhibition this autumn, these legacies might be mapped, presented and exhibited in innovative and challenging ways.
SubREAL, Iosif Kiraly, Ger Duizlings, Mircea Nicolae and others, Cities Methodologies
Bucharest
Thursday 5 May, Room 2, 12.30.
Screenings and discussion of works exhibited at Cities Methodologies Bucharest edition, 2010.
Oliver Gregory, Lucia Caistor, Samira Islam, Matthew Wright, The Heygate
Exhibit and roundtable
Thursday 5 May, Room 7, 15.00.
What is the impact of redevelopment sites such as the Heygate Estate within a wider setting of places and actors? Using the Heygate Estate as a case-study the presentation will explore the complexity of socio-spatial processes and stakeholder dynamics during urban redevelopment projects. We seek to challenge many of the geographically bounded and polarised discourse. In particular: the specific focus of the impact of urban transformations on the sites of redevelopment rather than considering the site in its wider spatial context; the polarisation of representations of ‘failed’ Modernist housing estates like Heygate and the relevant stakeholders in academic and media discourses.
Nana Adusei-Poku and Füsun Türetken, No Name in the Street
Installation and readings, Room 2, Thursday 5 May, 15.00.
The installation No Name in the Street is based on the non-fiction book with the same title by US American author James Baldwin (1924 - 1987). Through the title as well as the narrative of the book Baldwin draws attention to complex mechanisms of in/visibility and objectification experienced by Black subjects in the realm of the city, which is understood as a locus of exclusion. The installation will be accompanied by a polyphonic reading, which creates a collage of voices from the Diaspora channelled through Baldwin’s text; and will be concluded by Sedat Pakay’s Film James Baldwin: From another World (1972).
Shane Davey, 14th Floor: A History of Social Housing in Tower Hamlets
Screening, Thursday 5 May, Room 7, 17.00, 70 minutes.
The film is a documentary looking at the pioneering London borough of Tower Hamlets which has consistently been at the fountainhead of social housing developments and
implementation for over 100 years. A chronological social history of Tower Hamlets is
presented through candid handheld interviews with residents, members of parliament, CEO’s of housing associations, architects, artists and historians. These interviews are counterposed with elegant moving shots (photographed from a track and dolly) where the buildings are contextualised against the landscape and surrounding environments.
Tom Cordell, Utopia London
Screening, Thursday 5 May, Room 7, 18.30, 82 minutes.
Utopia London: There was a time when London united around the vision of a better future. A group of young idealists were fusing science and art to build an egalitarian society. Their architecture fused William Morris with urban high-rise; ancient parkland with concrete. Follow the film-maker’s journey through the city where he grew up, meeting the architects who designed it, and reuniting them with the buildings they created. It shows how their work once revolutionized life in the city and how it can, today, inspire an optimistic vision of the future. Film followed by Q and A featuring the films director and contributors.
Q & A with Director Tom Cordell, architects George Finch, Kate Macintosh and Neave Brown
(TBC), resident Zoe Slade, Joseph Heathcott (TBC).
Trailer: http://www.vimeo.com/15858101
Jamie O’Brien, Mapping Brain Injury
Talk, Friday 6 May, Room 7, 10.00.
Mapping Brain Injury is in collaboration with Headway East London, a brain injury day centre. The project uses map-making to capture the everyday and life-theme experiences of Headway’s members. People with neurological impairments often experience amplifications of day-to-day experiences such as confusion, forgetfulness, fatigue, isolation. Their maps enact phenomenal landscapes that are connective and productive, and also disrupted, knotted and decayed. The project aims to build a digital guidebook to the city after brain injury for public participation.
Manu Luksch, Mapping CCTV around Whitehall and Blue-sky Blueprint
Installation and screenings, Friday 6 May, Room 7, 11.00.
A two-part exercise to map CCTV cameras around Whitehall, London, within a zone covered by SOCPA, to expose the streets1 multiple layers of surveillance. The second part involved mapping the range of one of these cameras by intercepting its signal as it was transmitted wirelessly without encryption.
Suzanne Hall, Juliet Davis, Fran Tonkiss and others, City Street: public realm as line
and labyrinth
Exhibit and discussion, Friday 6 May, Room 5, 12.00.
City streets are linear aggregations of a dense multitude of parts and combine diverse forms of public space and social life. In London, global impacts converge on the city’s urban routes and seams, such that economic forces, increased immigration and local adaptations reshape the life and livelihoods of city streets. The ‘high street’ is the recent focus of policy, planning and design consideration in London. The Mayor’s policy inclination is towards protecting small shops and local high streets; the ‘High Street London’ report emphasises the role of streets within small localities of the city; while the ‘High Street 2012’ project promotes the linear quality of a 6 kilometre stretch of street from the City through to the Olympic Games site. Our Masters students’ studio project explores the spatial and social complexity of the contemporary city street through 8 detailed analyses of increments of High Street 2012. The varied methods reveal the crucial interplay of global forces and local adaptations, large and small investment energies, and public and private forms of expression.
Carolyn Deby, citysited/1 and Hilary Powell, Structures of Enchantment: Pop-Up
Books in/on progress
Gallery talks by UCL artists-in-residence, Friday 6 May, in gallery, 12.30,
Powell discusses early work in progress from the AHRC-funded Fellowship project ‘The
Critical Pop-Up Book: Re-imagining London’s Olympic ‘Structures of Enchantment’
examining and reinvigorating the playful tradition/techniques of the pop-up book as a critical and creative tool in urban design/research. As each turn of the page enacts a critical moment of simultaneous construction/demolition the project critiques the idealised future projections of conventional architectural models, exposing the mechanisms of change and creating an unsettled landscape on the brink of major transformation. Deby explains citysited/1, a time/site-based audience experience leads out into UCL’s immediate built environment. This is the first public outcome of my Leverhulme-funded artistic residency at the Urban Laboratory, examining the lived experience of the Urban Laboratory itself – seeking to create meaning by making connections between the physical, geographic, intellectual and incidental trajectories of its academic research themes, and the real people and urban places implicated in that research.
Ann Thorpe, Architecture and Design after Consumerism
Workshop, Friday 6 May, Room 7, 14.00.
Architecture and Design after Consumerism is a project to examine design’s changing roles and the possible material and spatial results from a steady-state economy that is not under constant pressure to ‘grow.’ The workshop is a hands-on exploration of the relationship between economic growth (as expressed through patterns of consumerism) and our material and spatial experiences of cities. The workshop unfolds in two parts (1) how does consumerism shape architecture, infrastructure and cities? and (2) if we could lessen the pressures for growth/consumerism, how might we retrofit cities for ecological and social sustainability, and override configuration for economic growth?
Matthew Gandy, Entropy by design: Gilles Clément and the limits to avant-garde urbanism
Lecture, Friday 6 May, Room TBC, 15.00
Andrew Harris, Visualising the Ups and Downs of Mumbai
Talk, Friday 6 May, Room 7, 17.00.
This presentation reflects on the visual methods used in a recent research project exploring elevated transport projects in Mumbai. In particular it charts how photographs, video and internet technologies were used to supplement and extend traditional archival, interviewing and ethnographic techniques. These visual methods have been key in investigating how the construction and maintenance of vertical transport projects are often indicative and constitutive of a growing polarisation in urban India between social groups with access to infrastructure and those that survive and subsist at a more basic, ‘horizontal’ level. However, the presentation also suggests that more explicitly artistic interventions are required beyond visual documentation to capture some of the more dynamic and opaque qualities of everyday life in Mumbai.
www.verticalurbanism.com
Rebecca Ross and Ben Campkin, INTERNET <--> CITY
Panel discussion on relationships between the internet and London. Friday 6 May 2011,
Room 7, 18.00
Internet <--> City will feature four speakers presenting projects that make innovative use of the internet to facilitate new kinds of relationship between London and its citizens. Featuring Matt Brown, Editor of The Londonist, an eclectic online city guide. Mark Eves, creator of MyCouncil iPhone app, a tool to submit in situ feedback and complaints to councils on the fly. Kieran Long, prolific London-based architectural journalist who streams his critique through a highly active twitter feed. Tim Hardy, member of the Sukey collective, developers of an ad hoc live mapping service for use by demonstrators during protests.
Cities Methodologies 2010
Exhibition and events programme. 5-7th May 2010.
Venue: Slade Research Centre, UCL, Woburn Square, London WC1H 0AB
Cities Methodologies 2010 presents recent innovations in urban methods from current researchers at UCL. Through the juxtaposition of installations, films, maps, models, objects, performances, photographs, poems, talks, texts, walks, websites and workshops, visitors will encounter a diverse array of cities and urban conditions from literature in London, to flyovers in Mumbai, from movement and spatial organisation in Jeddah, to fear in New York City, and housing in Lisbon seen through cinema. The exhibition and events programme promise a unique experience for urban practitioners, researchers, and others interested in contemporary cities. They will provide insights into emerging and experimental methods in the urban field, looking right across the full spectrum of disciplines in which the city is predominant, including distinctive perspectives and interdisciplinary collaborations from the built environment, the arts and humanities and the social and historical sciences.
Participants include
Wesley Aelbrecht | Adriana Allen | Pushpa Arabindoo and Camillo Boana | Daniel Lobo Azeredo | Rosalina Babourkova & Zhang Le-Zin | Matthew Beaumont | James N. Blomstrand | Ben Campkin & Rebecca Ross | Darryl Chen | Rosario Del Vikki | Richard Dennis | Barbara Dovarch and Gynna Millan | Lee Eunkyung | Matthew Gandy | Sam Griffiths (BSGS Space Group) | Mohamad Hafeda | Andrew Harris | Jeremy Hutchison | Matthew Ingleby | Rebecca James | Thomas-Bernard Kenniff | Roland Francois Lack | Benjamin J. Leclair-Paquet | Stephen Lorimer | Leah Lovett | Kieran Mahon | Rastko Novakovic | Liz Rideal | David Roberts | Peter Sant | Simson & Volley | Sarah K. Stanley | Julia Tcharfas | Fsun Tretken | Sandra Wallman | Jung Woon | Salma Zavari.
Cities Methodologies 2010 events programme
All events will take place in the UCL Slade Research Centre, Woburn Square unless stated otherwise.
Entrance is free and events are open to the public, but registration is necessary in certain cases where specified.
Wednesday 5th May 2010
6.30 Exhibition launch
7.30 Screening, Deptford | Tributes (Dir. Amanda Egbe and Rastko Novakovic, 2009, 55 mins) followed by Q&A with the directors. Deptford | Tributes was filmed on and along the rivers Ravensbourne, Quaggy and Pool. It is an exploration of the everyday spaces and rhythms of the river and a tribute to the industries, peoples and ways of life along the rivers of South East London and Kent.
Thursday 6th May
10.00 Bishopsgate transformed: understanding spatio-temporal change, postgraduate student-led discussion of exhibit.
Discussion of innovative methodologies employed by the postgraduate students of a module at the UCL Development Planning Unit, documenting and analysing the ongoing transformation of Londons Bishopsgate area. The tools used are inter-disciplinary, cutting across the realms of humanities and social sciences, and ranging from the expert-eye analysis of the architect to the ordinary documentation of everyday practices, with the latter proving particularly helpful in animating the rather static analyses of the former.
10.00-5.00 Leah Lovett (UCL Slade) and Sandy Grierson (Vanishing Point), Performing the city, one-day workshop followed by show and discussion.
This session will introduce participants to dramatic techniques that enable the exploration and rethinking of the city street as staging. Through physical exercises borrowed from practitioners including Boal and the Situationist International, and filtered through their respective arts practices, the group will work together to test and twist the fictions played out within the urban realm with a view to realizing performance as a political, urban strategy.
1.00-2.00 Ben Campkin (UCL Bartlett School of Architecture & Urban Laboratory) and Rebecca Ross (Central St Martins School of Art and Design), Picturing Place, presentation of research project and exhibit followed by discussion.
Picturing Place is an interdisciplinary project which critically explores the agency of images in urban change. At the centre is a belief in the efficacy of images as active forms in relation to urban conditions. The starting point is to consider how images of cities and images in cities influence change and perceptions of place. To begin, all kinds of image are being curated in a database, including, but not limited to, plans, architectural renderings, data visualizations, maps, films, public art, photographs, billboards, murals, illustrations, expositions and panoramas. The database is both archive and method, enabling the parallel placement of images across different visual cultures, and the layering of different interpretations, contexts and viewpoints.
2.30-3.00 Prof Matthew Gandy (UCL Urban Laboratory), presentation of Interstitial spaces exhibit and discussion of photographic method in urban research.
Matthew Gandy will be exhibiting photographs from research on urban landscapes and infrastructure, juxtaposing spaces and places from the global North and the global South to present a visual scenography that blurs existing boundaries and preconceptions. The photographs are drawn from several locations including Lagos, Mumbai and Los Angeles and highlight features such as empty or interstitial spaces, infrastructure networks, derelict zones or various forms of informal spaces. What role do such landscapes play in the urban research imagination? Do we need new aesthetic categories and concepts to make sense of these marginal or in between spaces? How does photography operate to record specific locales and as a stimulus for critical thinking?
5.00 Will Self, author of the forthcoming Walking to Hollywood (Bloomsbury Publishing), Are Beliefs Ideas Going Bald?, lecture organised by UCL English Department City Centre, Gustav Tuck Lecture Theatre. Enquiries to Matthew Beaumont m.beaumont@ucl.ac.uk
6.30 Screening, Deptford | Tributes (Dir. Amanda Egbe and Rastko Novakovic, 2010, 55 mins) followed by Q&A with the directors.
Friday 7th May
10.00 Bishopsgate transformed: understanding spatio-temporal change, postgraduate student-led discussion of exhibit.
11.00-12.00 Barbara Dovarch and Gynna Millan Franco (Development Planning Unit), With-in walls: resistance against forced evictions and the case of Bonpastor neighborhood, Barcelona, intervention and discussion of recent International Alliance of Inhabitants competition.
1.00-2.00 Professor Sandra Wallman (UCL Anthropology), The shock of urban change: an anthropological perspective, lecture.
The combination of academic, policy and practical perspectives is rare in current literature on urban change. With a view to a user-friendly typology, this analysis builds on a simple ideal-type model of open/closed contrast. It demonstrates that as local systems, some areas are more open and more heterogeneous than others. These are routinely more resilient in the face of change or incursion effectively more sustainable. The indicators of open/closed are specified providing a step guide to field research.
2.00-3.00 Professor John Aiken, What makes successful public space?, lecture.
Does art play an important role in generating and sustaining successful public space or is it at best transient and peripheral? Where and how can art locate itself successfully within the complex interweaving and shifting methodologies of the city?
3.00-3.30 David Roberts (UCL Urban Laboratory), Reconnections, presentation and reading from exhibit.
Reconnections is a site-writing project based on an abandoned Jewish cemetery in Mile End. The tombstones lie flat, equal in death, starkly reducing life to essential facts. They represent a migrant culture defined by language, their epitaphs a Rosetta stone of experiences. Now they lie shattered, histories obscured, rendered incomplete, in a lost language.
Each photographed epitaph has an accompanying poem constructed around archival text and experiential accounts. These were delivered to each room in a student hall overlooking the site. This intervention reconnected this forgotten history with its place, encouraging a reconsideration of relationships with the city.
6.30-8.00 Dr Matthew Beaumont, Dr Greg Dart and Prof Rachel Bowlby (UCL English Department Cities Centre) and others Being in the city, panel discussion, JZ Young Lecture Theatre.
This roundtable discussion is designed to explore particular modes of being in the city. It will address both specific modes of relating to the modern metropolis (commuting, convalescing and daydreaming respectively) and the quality of everyday life in contemporary cities (the condition of metropolitan being, so to speak, at the beginning of the twenty-first century). What does being in the contemporary metropolitan city entail? What does being entail in the contemporary metropolitan city?
Organising and curatorial committee
Wesley Aelbrecht, UCL Bartlett School of Architecture.
Prof John Aiken, UCL Slade School of Fine Art.
Dr Adriana Allen, UCL Development Planning Unit.
Dr Pushpa Arabindoo, UCL Urban Laboratory/Development Planning Unit.
Dr Ben Campkin, UCL Urban Laboratory/Bartlett School of Architecture.
Dr Ger Duijzings, UCL School of Slavonic & East European Studies.
Prof Matthew Gandy, UCL Urban Laboratory.
Dr Andrew Harris, UCL Urban Laboratory/Geography.
Dr Claudio de Magalhaes, UCL Bartlett School of Planning.
Rastko Novakovic, Artist-in-residence, UCL School of Slavonic & East European Studies.
Prof Jane Rendell, UCL Bartlett School of Architecture.
Fsun Tretken, UCL Urban Laboratory.
Supported by
UCL Faculty of Arts and Humanities.
UCL Bartlett Faculty of the Built Environment.
UCL Department of English City Centre.
UCL Grand Challenge of Sustainable Cities.
UCL School of Slavonic & East European Studies.
UCL Slade School of Fine Art.
UCL Urban Laboratory.
Cities Methodologies visitors may also be interested in attending the following colloquium on Saturday 8th May 2010
3.00-6.30, Critical minds, critical spaces, colloquium, UCL Cruciform Building Lecture
Very often, at the heart of cultural production, there is a practice shaped by a rational or existential response to material, technical and cultural constraints. This practice in turn generates products conceived also as tools that enable the rest of the community to critically understand and question messages, objects and environments rather than take them for granted. This one-day symposium is an occasion to reflect on the field of intellectual inquiry from the material and visual perspectives, looking at the work of architects and designers and its social and cultural relevance in stimulating awareness and criticism of the contemporary. The event will feature some presentations on current research and on recent projects and a final panel discussion introduced by journalist Justin McGuirk.
Speakers include Mark Cousins (Architectural Association), Annelys de Vet (Sandberg Institute, Amsterdam), James Auger (Royal College of Art), Teresa Stoppani (Greenwich), Eyal Weizman (Goldsmiths), Jonathan Hill (Bartlett School of Architecture).
This event is supported by UCL Grand Challenge of Intercultural Interaction.