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ARCHT-5070-4: Advanced Studio: UR: [Un]common Ground - Revealing the Ground Floor in Post 2020 City

Spring 2022

Subject: Architecture
Type: Studio
Delivery Mode: In-Person
Level: Undergraduate

Campus: San Francisco
Course Dates: January 18, 2022 — May 08, 2022
Meetings: Mon/Thu 12:00-06:00PM, San Francisco - Main Building - S3
Instructors: Julia Grinkrug, Uzoma Idah

Units: 6.0
Enrolled: 5/0 Closed

Description:

This advanced urban studio explores the figure ground relationships of “Post-2020 City” in the quest to reveal urban commons from within the tensions of the neoliberal city. The studio centers on the role of the commons and their supportive social infrastructure as indispensable components in fostering a more just, inclusive, and co-authored city. It follows the premise that social infrastructure, produced on the city’s ground floor, is an [un]common good driven by a divergent yet collective civic agency. This approach compels us to rethink the fundamental notions of motive, property and method, in understanding the physical configurations of the city’s ground floor.  The studio views the city as a process rather than a product. It interrogates the relationship between the commons and the market as well as the tensions intrinsic to commoning. We will question the singularity of top-down systems, such as the market or the state, in the production and functioning of social infrastructure by revealing bottom-up networks and catalysts that contribute to its physical, financial, and organizational frameworks. Focusing on the “who” in the urban drama, the studio explores the internal dynamics and relative efficacies of various stakeholders in relation to systemic conditions of the physical, environmental and socio-political components of the city. How can we unearth alternative scenarios that re-evaluate current hierarchies and suggest new sets of relationships, decentering the authorship over the urban condition and considering a coexistence of divergent perspectives and “ideo-logics”?Through a series of immersive, investigative and creative explorations, the studio develops tools for reciprocal dialogue between architectural discourse and other spheres of cultural debate. Bringing questions of class, race, privilege and identity to the foreground of architectural inquiry, the studio is aiming to identify the glitches/breaches/hacks/surreal experiences of the citizens that the market neglects, to reveal the [un]common realities of the post-2020 city. The goal of the studio is to demystify the design process, opening up to a possibility of an inclusive city-making that seeks common ground in restoring the broken social contract between the city and its residents.
 

Pre-Requisites and Co-Requisites:

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