Democratic Landscape Transformation 2023 - Team 8: Difference between revisions

From Ledwiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 9: Line 9:
* Which linguistic and cultural perspectives are you representing? Which disciplinary backgrounds?
* Which linguistic and cultural perspectives are you representing? Which disciplinary backgrounds?
* '''Malavika Mohan Das :''' Architect based in Kerala, India with experience and interest in sustainable and landscape architecture.
* '''Malavika Mohan Das :''' Architect based in Kerala, India with experience and interest in sustainable and landscape architecture.
* '''Aynun Nur Sadia:''' I am an Architect from Bangladesh and have completed my B.Arch there. I started my professional career with some residential projects and later I got some opportunities to work on various projects. I am interested in Landscape Architecture as it can provide a range of scopes to think creatively and foster communities.


==Your Landscape Democracy Manifestoes==
==Your Landscape Democracy Manifestoes==

Revision as of 11:41, 5 July 2023

>>> Back to working group overview

>>> Back to seminar reading list

>>> go to the Editing Help

Background of your team

  • Please write a few words about your team.
  • Which linguistic and cultural perspectives are you representing? Which disciplinary backgrounds?
  • Malavika Mohan Das : Architect based in Kerala, India with experience and interest in sustainable and landscape architecture.
  • Aynun Nur Sadia: I am an Architect from Bangladesh and have completed my B.Arch there. I started my professional career with some residential projects and later I got some opportunities to work on various projects. I am interested in Landscape Architecture as it can provide a range of scopes to think creatively and foster communities.

Your Landscape Democracy Manifestoes

Links to the manifestoes we have presented on April 26


Examples of Landscape Activism

In the session on May 10 we discussed examples of landscape activism.

The Role Play

In the session on May 17, we presented a small role play with our team. For the role play, the link of our chosen manifesto is given below:

https://drive.google.com/file/d/1PyMCjdZWz2umbIFTAGIEW5jbynzcmAF2/view?usp=sharing

We chose an activist to role play individually.


Aynun Nur Sadia
Karl Linn, An American Landscape Architect

Activist: Karl Linn(1923-2005), United States

Karl Linn is an American Landscape Architect, Psychologist, Educator, and Community Activist. Best known for inspiring and guiding the creation of "Neighborhood Commons" on vacant lots in East Coast inner cities during the 1960s-1980s.

He employed a strategy called “Urban Barn raising" .Linn is considered as 'Father of American Participatory Architecture' by many academic colleagues and architectural and environmental experts of the National Endowment for the Arts. Linn believed in “Participatory Architecture”. He engaged neighborhood  residents, volunteer professionals, students, youth teams, social activists, and community gardeners in envisioning, designing, and constructing instant, temporary, and permanent gathering spaces in neighborhoods, on college campuses, at sites of major conferences and events.

Link to the full presentation with the overview of Linn´s life, works, philosophy of works, challenges he faced and the role playing of how he would address the challenge of chosen manifesto is given below:

https://drive.google.com/file/d/1AXZ4cGHqLQUdTCVrcecbn7MaXD4kf-0i/view?usp=sharing

Reflection:

I was so inspired by his philosophy of works. It was so amazing to learn how he gathered people from different cultures, background and ensured their participations in envisioning, designing and constructing of a project. How he produced positive self identifications within community members and design students was quite interesting. His tactics to focus on work training programs and the establishment of "Process Institutions" made me so amazed. Focusing on local assets like using local materials, blending Art with the nature was on of his strategy of works .

i learned from his works how to share knowledges and work together. In my perspective it´s really important to engaged the community to share knowledge and utilizing it for designing the common spaces they share.

Rafi Ahmad

Activist: Khondaker Hasibul Kabir (1985-), Bangladesh

Khondaker Hasibul Kabir; a Bangladeshi Architect, Landscape Designer & Activist.

Khondaker Hasibul Kabir is a Bangladeshi landscape architect and sustainability advocate who works in rural and sustainable design with Bangladeshi development organisations such as BRAC and Grameen. He is the co-founder of Co.Creation.Architects, which works with human and non-human communities to co-create better-built and natural habitats. He is a core team member of the Platform of Community Action and Architecture (POCAA) which works in Bangladesh and Community Architects Network (CAN) which works in 19 Asian countries. He teaches landscape and architecture at BRAC University, Bangladesh. Co.Creation.Architects received the UIA 2030 Award and the Aga Khan Award for Architecture 2022 for their works.


A link to the full presentation with an overview of Kabir´s life, works, philosophy of works, challenges he faced, and role-playing of how he would address the challenge of his chosen manifesto is given below:

https://drive.google.com/file/d/1QmI9-QOSQnlbZgNOZMHTk5wkTgzndEsA/view?usp=share_link

Reflection:

His work strategy impressed me tremendously. It was fascinating to learn how he brought together people from all backgrounds and assured their participation in the conceptualization, planning, and construction of a project.  His strategies to focus on job training programmes and the tool "Networking" astounded me. His efforts taught me how to share information and collaborate. In my opinion, it is vital to involve the community in the exchange of information and its application in the creation of cooperative environments.

Malavika Mohan Das

Activist: Anne Whiston Spirn (1947-), America

Anne Whiston Spirn: an American landscape architect, photographer and author

Anne Whiston Spirn is an award-winning author, landscape architect, photographer, teacher, and scholar. Her work is devoted to promoting life-sustaining communities: places that are functional, sustainable, meaningful, artful, and just, places that help people feel and understand the relationship between the natural and built worlds. Spirn is Cecil and Ida Green Distinguished Professor of Landscape Architecture and Planning in the Department of Urban Studies and Planning of the MIT School of Architecture and Planning. She is the 2001 winner of the International Cosmos Prize.


A link to the full presentation with an overview of Anne´s life works, philosophy of works, challenges she faced, and role-playing of how she would address the challenge of her chosen manifesto is given below:

https://drive.google.com/file/d/1QmI9-QOSQnlbZgNOZMHTk5wk

Reflection:

Spirn's contributions to landscape activism extend beyond her design practice. She has written extensively on topics such as urban ecology, river restoration, and the relationship between nature and culture.

Anne Whiston Spirn's work and ideas continue to inspire and shape the field of landscape architecture, advocating for sustainable design, community engagement, and the creation of landscapes that reflect the values and aspirations of the people who inhabit them.

Her portfolio: https://www.annewhistonspirn.com/work/portfolio/



>>> All information on the phase B activities is compiled in this PDF

Readings, concepts and definitions

  • Start: April 5, 2023
  • Due: July 5, 2023

Working in your group, express your personal understanding of the relation of landscape and democracy in the form of a concept map with linking words or any other diagrammatic representation. Please make your maps very visual and not just verbal. Think critically about why one map differs from another

About concept mapping

Before starting the exercise you can read this article by Joseph D. Novak & Alberto J. Cañas about Theory Underlying Concept Maps and How to Construct and Use Them. This paper gives a good explanation of how concept maps are conceived and developed.

You can use any tool you like for producing your concept map. However, since the result needs to be submitted digitally we recommend the following open source software for producing your maps:

Please add your concept map(s) here

  • Possible format: JPG (for wiki upload) or link to any other resource
  • You may add one map per team member or an integrated one
  • add as many additional materials as you need

Please finish with a short reflection

  • What are the similarities and differences in your team regarding your understanding of what democratic landscape transformation is?
  • In how far did the seminar lectures and readings help you to clarify this?
  • What will you take home from this seminar?