Here is a small selection of the roundtable discussion, condensed into Q&A, with Jan Konings and Timo de Rijk on how to effectively transform a functionless public space.
Q: How can you transform public space?
A: If you want to change something you have to change something in the process. Through putting a device with a certain function in public space one creates a program.
Q: How can this device have a lasting impact?
A: The function and impact of an object or space dissipate and is eventually understood. In order for it to be carried on one has to create dynamic change instead of static, through for example involvement.
Q: How can you create dynamic change?
A: Through setting up a set of necessary rules. You have to reintroduce social responsibilities.
Q: What kind of social responsibilities?
A: Through giving a function to a public space. Take for example the skate-board places. Skateboarders take care of this space/place because they use it which in turn makes them feel responsible for it. In order for this to happen a group of people has to decide that this is ‘their’ space and take care of it.
Q: What are social responsibilities connected to?
A: Social responsibilities are connected to certain privileges. Give people privileges but let them do something in return
An example for dynamic change is a project in Haarlem, Reinaldapark, that Jan Konings initiated. The park was built on a former refuse-dump which caused old garbage to resurface. Therefore the municipality wants to clean up the park and is drawing up new development plans. During this transitional period Jan will use the park as an experimental platform to develop new ways of usage. On sight, he will build a working space pavilion where visitors can come to socialize and use building materials to create their own park environment. The municipality has decided to incorporate the most successful results in their master plan.
We were invited by Askar Ramazanov from Theory and Practice to elaborate on Future Faculty and the Post Socialist Russian City Project. Please check the last minutes of the lecture for some images and video. More material will be posted soon.
Exhibition space 'The Ruin'. It literally is a ruin used for exhibitions. Before the Soviet time it used to be part of an Usadba that belonged to a well off Russian family.
Hereby a short post to let you know that we are working on updating the blog. At the moment we are working on processing all the work produced by the participants during the week in Moscow.
We put up the Artifact in Cheremushki, a busy public area full with micro rayons. Everyone's idea was on top of one of the wooden boxes. Some people stopped to check them out others just marched on.
In this meeting Gerrit Oorthuys would like to share his historical expertise on Moscow and St.Petersburg with us. Gerrit will talk about how both cities developed and how you can divide Moscow in several layers of time and also will give us insight in important architectural places. For this he will show dia’s from his personal archive that he collected during several visits to Russia.
Gerrit Oorthuys (architect and historian), in the 80’s he taught at the TU Delft and Rietveld Academy in Amsterdam. During the Khrushchev period, Gerrit was able to do research on Constructivist in the Russian archives. This resulted in several exhibitions, trips to Russia and further research. Together with Rem Koolhaas he did a research project on the work of Ivan Leonidov.* He was one of the founders of the chair collection at the Faculty of Architecture in Delft. (article and clip are in Dutch). His photo archive has collections from microrayons in Russia and the Bijlmer (a Dutch Micro Rayon), to constructivist buildings in Russia.
Round table discussion will take place this Wednesday, June 24! | 19:00 – 22:00 | Auditorium U | Faculty of Architecture in Delft. We will start a bit earlier as Gerrit would like to spend more time on sharing his expertise with us than to focus too much on the discussion.
What can urban planners, architects and designers learn from the Efteling (a Dutch themepark)?
‘A lot’, says Jan Konings, an industrial designer. ‘Because the Efteling knows exactly how to tie the visitor to the park. With musical mushrooms for example and Holle Bolle Gijs, a caricature trash bin ‘PAPIER HIER!’. These sort of simple attractions should be part of cities, says Konings, to freshen up the boring, monotonous and impersonal new suburbia.
The evening will centre around the margins that architect, planners and designers forget in public space. We will focus on new ways/methods to interpret public space, Jan Konings calls them ‘infiltrations’ in order to have a more dynamic collective space. Jan and Timo will show examples of micro urban projects that they conducted and plan to develop in the future.
Jan Konings is an industrial designer. He is co-founder of the office Ral2005, that specializes in design for public space. Previously he co-founded the office Schie 2.0 and together with Jurgen Bey he had the design office Konings.
Timo De Rijk is a design-historian at the Faculty of Industrial Design at the TU Delft. Next to that he is a guest-lecturer at the Design Academy Eindhoven. He is editor of the Dutch Design Annual and has published several other books such as ‘Under Cover’ (with Ed van Hinte) and ‘The World According to Concrete’ (editor).
The round table discussion will take place June 22, this Monday!!! | 19:30 – 22:00 | Auditorium U | Faculty of Architecture in Delft.
Before the meetingplease think about intermediates that could stimulates the connection of:
Hereby we would like to invite you for thecoming round round table discussion this Thursday with Bart Goldhoorn and Axel Kilian. We will focusses on the question:
“How can architects and industrial designers adapt mass production and pref-fab techniques in order to design a sustainable collective living space?”
Bart Goldhoorn will talk about the Biennale project that he is currently preparing for September 2009. It will focus on the so-called Micro Rayon 2.0; new microrayons whereby architects use pre-fabrication and mass production techniques to create non standard buildings versus the existing principles of building a microrayon. Also he will show the condition, conflicts and possible additions for existing micro rayons in Russia.
Next to this Axel Kilian will show his unorthodox design approach on architecture and design.
Axel Kilian currently is an Assistant Professor at the TU Delft and holds a PhD and SMArchS in Design and Computation at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. His research focuses on Design Exploration in Architecture and Design based on computational models.
The round table discussion will take place This Thursday!!! | 19:30 – 22:00 | Auditorium U | the Faculty of Architecture in Delft.
The images are an example of a micro-intervention by Sophie Panzer (architect). It was part of her graduation project at the TU Delft, that focussed on Microrayon districts in Kaliningrad.
Program and activities Moscow
• Explorative and observational research in the Microrayon
• Interviews with local residents and users of collective space
• Micro interventions through involving inhabitant of the Microrayon
• Developing ideas and concept designs based on exploration in the MicroRayon
• Round table discussions on collective space with experts from several disciplines
• Lectures on new approaches towards generating collective space and interaction
• Documenting process by using film and photography
• Public presentation and exhibiting work in Moscow
Summaries of recent activities of the round table discussion at the TU Delft will be updated soon on the blog. Interested to join this project mail to info@futurefaculty.org
I read something really cool in today’s newaspaper. It’s about a group that makes ‘collective improv’. They are called improv everywhere and that is also their websites name: http://improveverywhere.com. They create chaos by collectively doing something weird and trying to get unaware passengers go along with their surreal collective.
For example, they went to The New York train station and let over 200 people ‘freeze’ at the same time for 5 minutes.
Their newest mission is faking an exhibition in the subway with posters and things that are always there, but by making a cloakroom, nametags, information signs and other things, people really think that there is an exhibition. Weird effects!!
I thought it could be inspiring…
This saturday (25th of april) they will be in Amsterdam, of you want to join, mail to amsterdam.improv@gmail.com, subject ‘count me in’ and make sure you can be in Amsterdam at about 12.