Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta tactical urbanism. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta tactical urbanism. Mostrar todas las entradas

martes, 27 de enero de 2015

Adaptive cities: co-creating places beyond austerity

The way in which local policy has been understood and the role of urban development projects have left a complex map of underutilized infrastructure, public facilities without financial support, failed housing developments, unfinished industrial developments and urban vacant lots for example. Climbing out of this crisis from a local policy perspective means finding ways to activate and convert these passives into public assets. The current state of permanent paralysis and widespread budget cuts which municipal policies are going through has led to a landscape of stalled projects, white elephants and stationary cranes. ‘Under construction’ or ‘Keep out’ signs draw a line to prevent any alternative use in these sites that will remain incomplete for years. Everything was planned but it failed and became out of date before it started to work.

Can we afford to have so many urban spaces not being used? Isn’t it a waste of potential energy for social creativity? What can we do with such an amount of sites, buildings and public facilities while they are being completed or there is enough public budget to run them to their potential capacity? There is a need to make use of them in the meantime and here is where transitional and temporary creative projects appear as a reponse.


This is the context that is precipitating the relevance of transitional use projects. As crisis has prevented the development of large-scale hierarchical interventions, transitional projects are more visible as the best catalog to continue reviving city life. Such projects are capable of generating major impacts on key social dynamic at a very low cost and highly significant. This approach is not new and the interest in making the best of the public realm with reactivation project is a well known strategy. The good news now is that there is a stronger experience on temporary uses, new emerging topics such as tactical urbanism and a growing literature in the last few years.

Adaptive urbanism is a way to deal with the limits of formal planning. Planning intends to regulate uses and permits with the promise of offering a permanent solution. When a project is planned, there is an expectation that everything will work fine (schedules and finances, but also final uses and operations). But every urban plan is out of date since it is approved, because circumstances change –and how have they changed in the last five years!- and users and citizens give new uses and behave and interact with the city in different ways than the expected one. Formal urbanism thinks in terms of projects, material projects, as an output. But now that lots of envisaged projects won’t become real for years it is time to think in a more adaptive ways and give priority to social creativity processes and local networks as the main outcome we have to promote. This is the software of the city.

Temporary urbanism is a threat to formal and planned regulations of space in cities, as illegal, output expected, everything was legitimate. However, in current economic constraints, even when social needs are higher, cities must keep offering solutions using flexible formulas and transitional planning, and give importance to social, collaborative and grassroots processes now that big investment cannot be part of the agenda. It will be time for the imagination. It will be time for limited resources but more creative action, time for case-by-case solutions instead of pretentious long-term planning. Over the years there is an accumulated wealth of experience and knowledge on how to address tactical interventions in cities with a more adaptive, suitable, creative and participatory approach. It is a matter of raising the shutters and tearing down the fences, exploring and testing to see if there is something that can be done on those sites and buildings apart from waiting for better times to come.

This implies a mix of uncertainty, austerity, insecurity and temporality as the landscape for re-imagining the city. These conditions are present, to greater or lesser extent, in Western cities as newcomers after the financial crisis and its subsequent impact on urban development. As institutions try to understand how to face these new conditions, a wide experience of practices and appropriation projects, developed sometimes as outsiders in the previous economic stage, appear as an adequate response to give social value to neglected plots and facilities. 107 spontaneous or accidental uses, activities and forms emerge in a hierarchical logic of planning. The history of cities is somehow determined by informality and temporality and only in the process of more detailed ordinances and regulatory activity things have become as formal as urbanism is nowadays. Having said this, authors acknowledge that this view of temporality as an exemption can be applied to countries where urbanism has gained a level of formality, while in most parts of the world the condition of temporal informality has particular patterns the book does not addresses.


Legal, financial or planning frameworks are not a burden but conservatism and lack of vision and capacity are a bigger problem. The practices and theories of a DIY approach to urbanism and informal temporary actions in urban spaces are in their infancy. However, the context favors a new understanding of cities. Contradictions with formal regulations are inherent to this change process and political and social tensions will keep rising. It is part of the idea of enjoying more complex cities where groups and individuals can gain power to intervene and influence the planning process that seems to be no longer so capable to give responses. Zoning, regulations and masterplans will need to share their roles with short term projects and more flexible activities because these projects better match not only the economic context but also the changes in the way we want to enjoy cities.

Rigid planning and formal regulations give narrow chances to face this unexpected situation. They were not designed to cope with the circumstances we are witnessing. They were thought out in a business as usual scenario in which usual meant the big party of iconic buildings, large developments, and massive public resources without economic and social bottom lines. But the party is over and thinking cities as hardware –just build it and things will happen- has come to an end.

From an adaptive approach, cities should avoid keeping these assets out of work and expelling any alternative use to the one they were planned for. But this requires changing the mindset, regulations adapted to the new conditions and a new possibilities for creative projects that could make suitable use of these sites and buildings in the meantime: infrastructures, public facilities, public spaces, empty shops, new urban developments, unused roofs in residential and public buildings, etc.

In all these situations, hierarchical and formalistic understanding of planning and urban policies offers definitive and permanent solutions: keep out, close, stop, interdict, etc. Planning for permanent circumstances and definite solutions is what makes us feel secure even though we know cities are more and more complex and always changing systems. This way of thinking in which outputs from public policies -not process- were the core of urban action and is the kind of framework that supported the massive obsession with buildings and infrastructures. If there was a material/physical output expected, everything was legitimate.

This implies a mix of uncertainty, austerity, insecurity and temporality as the landscape for re-imagining the city. These conditions are present, to greater or lesser extent, in Western cities as newcomers after the financial crisis and its subsequent impact on urban development. As institutions try to understand how to face these new conditions, a wide experience of practices and appropriation projects, developed sometimes as outsiders in the previous economic stage, appear as an adequate response to give social value to neglected plots and facilities.

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This text is my contribution to EDGECondition Vol. 5 on Placemaking.

From the editors:

(,,,)
This issue of EDGEcondition aims to be part of that critical placemaking discourse. Reflecting the global nature of the placemaking sector, this issue is international, with articles from Japan, USA, China, UK, Israel, Canada, Australia and Germany. The issue starts with conversations on the definition, ethos and practices of placemaking and then moves on to show various forms of placemaking, from the ‘top-down’ to the ‘bottom-up’, to explore just how many different placemaking practices there are and the diverse actors involved in them and resulting outcomes. 

This issue is by no means a definitive answer to ‘the placemaking question’, but it is a part of a conversation the placemaking sector, its ‘professional’ and ‘non-professional’ constituents need to be having, to understand placemaking better and to communicate it more effectively outside of our sector. http://www.ciudadesaescalahumana.org/2012/03/the-time-of-temporary-city.html

viernes, 14 de diciembre de 2012

EQUIciuDAD 2012. Qué hacemos mientras tanto. Por un urbanismo adaptativo


Dejo aquí parte del material preparado para la edición de este año de EQUIciuDAD. Además de lo presentado ayer, hoy viernes participo en una mesa redonda con el título La ciudad de los ciudadanos junto con Todo por la Praxis y Zuloark en la que presentaré la comunicación sobre urbanismo adaptativo en la que incidiré especialmente en la posibilidad de introducir dinámicas temporales y transitorias en intervenciones urbanísticas de cierta escala.

RESUMEN

El artículo propone un marco estratégico para comprender los beneficios de una nueva visión bottom-up de los proyectos urbanos desde la perspectiva del urbanismo táctico temporal y cómo vincularlos a la creación de oportunidades económicas y la activación de la vida social en un contexto de crisis. Desde esta perspectiva, este paper propone un marco estratégico para las instituciones públicas sobre cómo integrar las intervenciones tácticas y los micro-proyectos de espacio público para añadir valor a activos urbanos y convertirlos en nuevas oportunidades para ampliar la capacidad de actuación de las comunidades locales en grandes proyectos de intervención urbanística

This paper proposes a strategic framework to understand the benefits of a new interpretation of the role of bottom-up projects from a tactical temporary urbanism perspective and how to link them to the creation of economic opportunities and  the activation of social life. From this perspective, this paper will draw a guideline framework for public institutions on how to integrate tactical interventions andmicro-scale projects in public space to add value to urban assets and turn them into new expanding abilities for local communities y large-scale urban development projects.

PRESENTACIÓN


Qué hacemos mientras tanto. Por un urbanismo adaptativo from Manu Fernández

INTRODUCCIÓN

El proceso de expansión territorial que hemos vivido en las dos últimas décadas y de forma particular en los años anteriores a la crisis económica es uno de los elementos que mejor contextualiza no sólo las causas de esta crisis sino también los importantes efectos que ésta tiene. Desde la perspectiva de las políticas públicas de ordenación del territorio, de la planificación urbanística y, en general, la gestión pública local, la dimensión territorial y urbana es, hoy en día, una importante incógnita en las políticas para salir de la crisis.
La forma en la que se ha entendido la política local y el papel de los proyectos de desarrollo urbano han dejado un complejo mapa de infraestructuras infrautilizadas, de equipamientos sin uso posible por incapacidad financiera para mantenerlos abiertos siquiera, de desarrollos de vivienda fallidos, de espacios a medio urbanizar, etc . Un diagnóstico que, desgraciadamente, sólo hemos sabido entender cuando ya era demasiado tarde. Salir de la crisis implica dar respuesta a estos recursos públicos que se han convertido en una losa patrimonial de gestores públicos y privados y un pasivo que lastra la capacidad de recuperación. Salir de la crisis implica, necesariamente, abandonar de una vez el pensamiento de hardware respecto a la gestión del territorio y el desarrollo urbano. Este pensamiento de hardware ha priorizado la construcción de infraestructuras como vía única e inexorable para el desarrollo económico. Y bien que sabemos que ese desarrollo económico era un gigante con pies de barro. Puertos de mercancías, puertos deportivos, estaciones de tren de alta velocidad, centros de arte contemporáneo... han sido la promesa permanente para traer prosperidad, una prosperidad que como vino se fue.

La agenda de las políticas urbanas necesita reinventarse para un tiempo que no fue el previsto en las normativas que rigen las dinámicas del urbanismo tal como lo hemos conocido. El marco tradicional del urbanismo ha perseguido siempre fijar usos y dar respuestas sólidas y con vocación de permanencia con herramientas de planificación que buscan dar estabilidad. Sin embargo, en un momento de cambio como el que vivimos, esta aspiración de permanencia necesita flexibilizar su lógica para poder ser permeable a proyectos y dinámicas de expresión social mucho mejor adaptadas a la realidad social actual y a la urgencia por ofrecer valor social a tantos recursos ociosos en las ciudades.


viernes, 26 de octubre de 2012

Week picks #2

URBAN PROTOTYPING


UP: San Francisco 2012 is a festival centered around Placemaking Through Prototyping: How Citizen Experiments Reimagine the Public Realm. The festival will foster a wide array of new creative projects which blend the digital and physical to explore new possibilities in public space. Every project produced will be open source, publicly documented, and replicable in any city in the world.

Urban Prototyping is a global movement exploring how participatory design, art, and technology can improve cities. Each UP Festival uses its own strategy to uniquely address that city’s specific circumstances – soliciting, testing, and deploying digital and physical projects with high potential for impact.
UP is an initiative of Gray Area Foundation for the Arts (GAFFTA), the San Francisco nonprofit dedicated to building social consciousness through digital culture, in partnership with Rebar, IDEO, and strong local partners in cities around the globe.

MEANWHILE SPACE

Meanwhile Space works with landlords, landowners, developers and local authorities to advise and deliver projects that relieve them temporarily of liabilities (insurance, rates, security etc.) associated with holding redundant shops, offices, cleared land etc. whilst an  appropriate commercial solution is being sought. By working with local communities and other stakeholders, interim or 'Meanwhile,' uses are deployed to reanimate the space and provide opportunities for community benefit and social enterprise.

Meanwhile Space are a Community Interest Company that incorporated in July 2009, stimulated by a combination of the directors' track record for project delivery and  a central government grant to the Development Trusts Association to deliver a  nationwide initiative called the Meanwhile Project. The CIC was the delivery arm  of the Meanwhile Project which aimed to boost community uses of empty properties and sites. The project has built a 'library' of ideas and information as a resource to make it easier for both the landlord and the project sides to realise Meanwhile opportunities, including the Meanwhile Manual, Lease and Insurance policies.

BRICKSTARTER

Brickstarter is about 21st century social services. We are sketching a system that would enable everyday people, using everyday technology and culture, to articulate and progress sustainable ideas about their community. The Brickstarter project explores the ideas behind these systems, and will provide the blueprints for a platform that can turn possibilities into proposals into projects. By creating its prototype, we aim to stimulate more productive debates about 21st century governance and local decision-making.

The core of Brickstarter is a prototype for a web service that provides a shared platform for citizens to suggest and build possibilities into proposals into projects. Brickstarter is a:
  • Forum for citizens to articulate possibilities, and start aggregating attention
  • Public story-telling platform, capturing the ebb and flow of debate around proposals
  • Community fundraising tool for shared initiatives
  • ‘Real-time dashboard‘ displaying  the collective desires of a community that can be mapped against institutional strategies and legislative frameworks, enabling bureaucracy to work more effectively

Read also: Brickstarter prototype v0.1, and using sketches to ask questions

RENEW AUSTRALIA

Renew Australia is a new national social enterprise designed to catalyse community renewal, economic development, the arts and creative industries across Australia. It works with communities and property owners to take otherwise empty shops, offices, commercial and public buildings and make them available to incubate short term use by artists, creative projects and community initiatives.

Renew Australia is based on the intellectual property, experience, and case study pioneered by Renew Newcastle. In 2008 Renew Newcastle was established as a low cost, low budget DIY urban renewal scheme that has proved highly successful and generated significant media and community interest locally, nationally and internationally. Through a simple strategy based on the temporary and low cost creative activation of some of the more than 150 empty buildings in the Newcastle CBD significant parts of Newcastle have been transformed.

Week pick series features every Friday some initiatives and projects I found or want to highlight on this blog. It will help me to track new findings from community groups, startups or local governments working and delivering solutions relevant to the issues of this blog. I often bookmark them or save them on Tumblr while I wait to use them. Maybe this a good way.

miércoles, 26 de septiembre de 2012

Master planning meets temporary urbanism, and it works!


Sometimes we tend to circumscribe the possibilities of tactical and temporary urbanism to urban spaces of limited size (urban voids) or open spaces expected to be public (parks, plazas, streets, etc.), thinking only of their usefulness as small-scale interventions. However, in the current times of economic crisis in which so many large scale urban developments are stalled or have simply seen the implementation of the plan will take longer than originally envisaged, we cannot afford to maintain these urban spaces waiting better times to return for the developer to complete the plan for years and years. Can we do more than contemplate the fences that enclose these halted building sites?

During the last months I have been collecting some experiences on using adaptive and temporary strategies to develop transitional projects in master plan developments. As usual without aim of being exhaustive, here you can find some notes. I started mulling over the idea after discovering in the book The temporary city some cases (check particularly the chapter titled “Re-imagining the city”) that go beyond the small-scale project and in the field of large urban developments, big real estate corporations and urban master planning. One of the covered stories in the book is located in King's Cross area of London under redevelopment, a large area of 67 acre development that will host mixed uses through a multi-year regeneration plan. Argent, winner of the competition to become the development partner, proposed from the beginning a very flexible master plan, assuming, first, that everything is outdated in a master plan from the beginning and, second, it was worthy to allow parts of the site and remaining buildings to be uses for temporary uses taking advantage of the different periods of time it will take to complete the site. Thus, the site is able to accommodate transitional activities and experimentation while completing the master plan synchronizes with the market situation in a strategy that eases to open up the building site and host activities and temporary facilities. Among all the interventions that have been hosted over time perhaps the Electric Hotel, a pop-up theatre boosted by cultural organizations that understood there was a great opportunity to use this site (while it was yet being redeveloped) to install a very simple structure to organise by-night sound and dance performances, giving a temporary use to this space.

In the same area of the city we can also find another similar example: the use of an abandoned petrol station on a site that will be transformed into residential use but in the meantime (while the project is completed), this facility has been converted into a temporary installation, The Filling Station, which houses a restaurant in the remaining structure. Also in London, in Newham, another relevant project is taking place in an analogous process is which complete development will take some times but some uses and activities have been liberated to host Canning Town Caravansei, a project developed by Ash Sakula.


Another project of interest is developed in Ghent (Belgium), in a former industrial area that, before becoming a residential zone through an urban regeneration process, has allowed hosting a large outdoor cultural space to be used while the process is completed. DOKGent is the materialisation of this idea of introducing temporal strategies for community use and social dividend in a master plan that, otherwise, would have remained just a fence with the "under construction" banner precluding any other use. Again, this is a master plan that assumes the possibility of the temporality not as an obstacle to the traditional exclusive, permanent and expulsive features of urban projects, but as an opportunity to expand the possibilities for enjoying the city and even for temporary income generation for private promoter (includes cafes, markets and art exhibition spaces with musical activities, sports, outdoor cinema, community gardens, etc..). Again, a way to create social value in a complex long-term process of urban transformation by introducing transient uses and.


But, for once, I'm not going to go very far for a last example. ZAWP Bilbao (Zorrozaurre Art Working Progress) is the best way to explain the potential of confronting the master plan to the needs to activate every urban asset. Bilbao has opened its last major transformation process in the Zorrozaurre area with master plan designed by Zaha Hadid. Bilbao has been acknowledged as a major experience in urban renewal and the Abandoibarra area regeneration (the central piece of this renewal where Guggenheim Museum is located) has just been completed in a process s that has lasted nearly two decades. Twenty years to complete a huge central area in the city and in a time of great economic prosperity. A renewal process as complex as Zorrozaurre, now developed under much more difficult economic constraints in public budget and real estate market will also take place a long period of time (2030?). Do we have any alternative to just wait until bulldozers come and the process is complete? People behind ZAWP saw the opportunity, without sacrificing their critical position on council´s plans, to develop a process for reuse of spaces and possibilities of this industrial district, with a strong focus on cultural promotion and giving visibility to neighbourhood memory, configuring the project as a good way to understand the possibilities of introducing the transient logic in complex urban development, even as a way to influence the resulting final design.

These are a few examples of the many cases that could be mentioned. All of them point out the ability of flexible scale urban intervention to create useful spaces that cannot be suspended simply because they are under development or regeneration. Clearly the more formalist tradition of urbanism shelters permanent, large-scale, long-term and hierarchical planning, all of them central patterns of our legal tradition but it is increasingly evident that masterplanning is not able to respond to reality and social needs. The economic crisis has stalled many urban projects is our cities (and likely they will be for a long time) but it would be a huge loss not finding use for these spaces with proposals capable of activating the creative capacity of society and public assets to generate flexible and not costly urban initiatives.

Masterplanning has met the growing movement of tactical urbanism interventions and is discovering that it simply works. Lighter, quicker and cheaper appears and offers an alternative to the difficulties of developing large-scale projects in cities. Flexible phasing, better responses to changing conditions, leverage full capacity use, test low-scale solutions,..represent a new understanding of the planning famework but also a new way to use master planning for community needs.


P.S. By the way, if you were looking for a good collection of tactical urbanism interventions, Spontaneous Interventions is your site. Spontaneous Interventions: design actions for the common good is the title of the U.S. Pavilion proposal for the 13th Venice Biennale and the collection includes all types of interventions and offers a magnificent example of available possibilities. You can also take a look at Urban tactics. Temporary interventions + long term planning prepared by Killing Architects, which mentions some of these projects and many more.

miércoles, 4 de abril de 2012

Urbanismo adaptativo para tiempos de crisis


The temporary city, escrito por Peter Bishop y Lesley Williams, es un recorrido muy bien organizado a través de las diferentes tipologías de proyectos de naturaleza temporal en la ciudad, sea cual sea las nombres que tomen (temporary, transitional, interim, pop-up o meanwhile). Aunque el libro es, básicamente, una revisión de experiencias británicas, el marco analítico es perfectamente válido para otros contextos en los que el urbanismo dispone de herramientas de formalización y solidificación de usos. Y, aunque no pretende una utilidad como guía práctica, es una de las aproximaciones más completas que he encontrado sobre esta cuestión que está teniendo tanta atención últimamente. Tanto que hay quienes ya se apresuran a rechazar tanta atención. En cualquier caso, el texto plantea con claridad las razones de la efervescencia de este tipo de proyectos urbanos y las vías por las que se van colando como instrumentos relevantes para la gestión urbana. De hecho, la idea de adaptive cities con la que estoy trabajando últimamente en el blog coincide bastante con el planteamiento de este libro en el sentido de que los autores un valor principal al contexto de crisis económica como argumento principal para sostener la idoneidad del enfoque temporal y adaptativo para favorecer estrategias de intervención ante la crisis.

El recorrido en Ciudades Escala Humana ha pasado por diferentes fases en relación al análisis de la crisis económica, partiendo desde aquellas series sobre los fondos locales para el empleo del Plan E (¡qué lejos queda!) y pasando por el seguimiento al despilfarro de infraestructuras hasta llegar a una fase más propositiva y de identificación de experiencias desde la idea de urbanismo adaptativo. De alguna forma, este libro cubre el ansia de querer sistematizar tipologías y contextos en los que surgen estas intervenciones ya que el texto cubre esto de forma muy amplia, así que casi me quito en encima la tentación de escribir un libro. Llego a este urbanismo temporal buscando respuestas a la crisis, proyectos alternativos a la dinámica de grandes intervenciones urbanísticas y masterplan que han sido regla general en las estrategias de desarrollo y regeneración urbana y que no van a tener mucha salida en los próximos años ante la crisis del sector inmobiliario y la tormenta perfecta que afecta a las arcas municipales. Y, sin embargo, las ciudades siguen en movimiento. Por esto es bueno acercar estos proyectos -que no son nada nuevo pero sí son grandes desconocidos- con un lenguaje accesible a quienes hasta ahora no se interesaban por este tipo de intervenciones urbanas.
THE LIDO (Southwark, Londres)

Al mismo tiempo, el libro trata de no desprestigiar estos proyectos asignándoles una función secundaria desde la lógica del mientras tanto, como si fueran tan sólo una second-best option, porque tienen un valor por sí mismos. Pero, tácticamente, este es el mejor momento para ampliar el horizonte del urbanismo formal y los proyectos urbanos top-down. Son 68 los casos descritos en el libro y en conjunto dan muchas claves sobre qué alternativas de acciones existen para reactivar espacios abandonados, locales cerrados, masterplans detenidos, etc. Creo que también está bien resulta la lógica de su propuesta ya que definen con claridad en qué ámbitos la temporalidad e informalidad se expresa en otros contextos donde el urbanismo no funciona como estamos acostumbrados en los países más desarrollados.
Siendo como es la crisis económica uno de los motores que pueden estar extendiendo este tipo de prácticas, no son los problemas financieros las únicas razones. Fenómenos como los de las shrinking cities (Detroit, Flint,..) nos han hecho preguntarnos qué hacer con tantas extensiones urbanas literalmente abandonadas. Las grandes industrias en declive en las economías más avanzadas han generado en las dos últimas décadas grandes solares industriales en los que a veces se han probado nuevas fórmulas de regeneración más allá del proyecto uniforme. Las calles de nuestras ciudades han visto cómo se cerraban locales comerciales y ha habido que hacerse la pregunta de qué hacer con tantos recursos. Pero no es sólo esto. El cambio en los patrones de la organización del trabajo está creando nuevas formas de ocupación del espacio público y de diversificación de los espacios de oficinas, mientras que el avance en la sociedad conectada está intensificando la organización de nuevas actividades en el espacio público (festivales, happenings, instalaciones o flashmobs, por ejemplo) utilizando las tecnologías digitales como favorecedores. De la misma forma, el activismo y las contraculturas siguen luchando por encontrar en la ciudad las respuestas que el urbanismo formal y el mercado inmobiliario no ofrecen.
THE DEPTFORD PROJECT (Deptford, Londres)
Imagen tomada de Cure Studio

Son muchos los proyectos casi emblemáticos que circulan por las redes y van ganando atención, hasta el punto de convertirse algunos en iconos. Algunos de ellos aparecen en el libro y son significativos precisamente aquellos en los que los propietarios privados entienden estos proyectos como alternativas viables. No son las barreras legales, financieras o urbanísticas la gran dificultad. La traba es el conservadurismo a la hora de afrontar los problemas urbanos cambiando la lógica. Es la falta de visión de que se pueden atajar desde otra perspectiva. Son proyectos que ponen en crisis y afloran las contradicciones entre el procedimiento regulatorio y formalista del urbanismo y el enorme dinamismo de las necesidades sociales y la ciudadanía. Esas contradicciones seguirán existiendo, siempre. La cuestión es si el marco regulatorio necesitará aprender a incorporar lógicas de corto plazo frente a la mentalidad de largo plazo del masterplan, lógicas transitorias frente al rigorismo de la urbanización. Sólo así podrá darse salida, caso a caso, a los pasivos que llenan las ciudades y que tienen que activarse cuanto antes.
Esta dinámica para favorecer usos espontáneos, temporales, accidentales o informales en los intersticios de la regulación formalista y planificadora puede alcanzar a todas las funciones de la ciudad. Encajan aquí los espacios temporales de consumo en forma de pop-up restaurantes o tiendas, que activan espacios abiertos o cerrados para dar vida a lugares o calles en declive o abandonados, pero también las intervenciones capaces de ampliar la gama de "escenarios" urbanos como espacios públicos, como espacios marginales de uso residual ganados como atractores de atención en tejados, infraestructuras subutilizadas, solares abandonados o espacios entre edificios. Son usos que en la investigación Post-it City ya fueron bien explicados y definidos también como formas de resistencia ante la normalización de los comportamientos púiblicos en el espacio urbano al renovar el carácter urbano de estos espacios en términos de acceso, libertad, densidad e interacción, enfatizando el valor de uso frente al valor de intercambio. Son espacios donde pueden volver a surgir o se amplían usos deportivos, como espacios de juego infantil, como cines o espacios de exhibición artística o, sobre todo, como espacios de protesta y manifestación.
DUMPSTER SWIMMING POOL (Nueva York)
Imagen tomada de Modestoblog

Son intervenciones que ensanchan las posibilidades de expresión del compromiso social y en sí mismos, experimentos de innovación social llevada a la calle al ampliar nuevas formas de participación y organización ciudadana a través de herramientas y contextos de diálogo y confrontación.
SADLER´S WELLS THEATRE (Londres)
Imagen tomada de The Guardian

Como en anteriores posts, estoy convencido de que es la época adecuada para mirar con ojos bien abiertos este tipo de proyectos. Como el libro destaca, no se trata únicamente de proyectos a la contra, que también, sino que existen también iniciativas institucionales en forma de complejos desarrollos de regeneración o de urbanización que pueden beneficiarse de modelos de intervención más transitorios y flexibles. En tiempos de grandes dudas y casi parálisis, la inacción puede ser el peor de los errores. Pero las grandes intervenciones, con ejecuciones de largo plazo, pueden acoger en ese mientras tanto iniciativas que les den un carácter más flexible y que les permita adecuarse a los cambios sociales, financieros o técnicos que sufren muchos proyectos urbanos a lo largo del tiempo. Una forma táctica de negociar e intervenir en la ciudad que incluya la variable de tiempo y las necesidades reales de las personas, un urbanismo del día a día que sea permeable al dinamismo de las ciudades.
@manufernandez

miércoles, 21 de marzo de 2012

The time of the temporary city


The process of territorial expansion we have experienced in the last two decades particularly in the years before the economic crisis is one of the elements that best contextualizes not only the causes of this crisis but also the significant impact it had. The way in which local policy has been understood and the role of urban development projects have left a complex map of underutilized infrastructure, public facilities without financial support, failed housing developments, unfinished industrial developments, urban vacant lots, etc. Unfortunately, we were only been able to understand the diagnosis when it was too late. Climbing out of this crisis from a local policy perspective means finding ways to activate and convert these passives into public assets.
The crisis will involve changing the perspective, and the era of huge development projects and iconic interventions is over. Given this development model that has been able to give form and mainstream only large projects as a way of making a city, we now need a much more intelligent and adaptive strategy that, at least until we get out of the crisis.
In this sense, the crisis will precipitate (it is already doing so, in fact) the emergence of new types of intervention projects and activation of urban capabilities that until now had little place in local public policies. These are projects that in many cases, at the time of urban expansion and major urban projects had little echo or were directly considered as outsiders or alien radicals. However, at that time and under conditions of weak institutional support, groups and organizations were able to check the social value of tactical interventions as driving forces of urban life using public spaces, empty shops, underused buildings and failed public facilities as living labs for a new way to activate creative and social projects. As crisis has prevented the development of large-scale hierarchical interventions, transitional projects are more visible as the best catalog to continue reviving the city life from a logic of "good, nice and cheap". The latter term is not to impair their significance, but precisely to emphasize the value of these projects as contributions with the urban agenda. Such actions are capable of generating major impacts on key social dynamic at a very low cost and highly significant.

The temporary city, by Peter Bishop and Lesley Williams, covers this topic including different terms such as temporary, interim, pop-up or meanwhile uses for urban spaces and buildings. Though very dependent on the UK context, the analytical framework offers a clever review of the logic behind a more responsive approach to urban planning, conceived not as a guidebook but as a proposal to understand this phenomenon, to look into its drivers and find reasons to show how this can be more than hype and become a relevant instrument in the future. I found lots of coincidences with the way I am using the idea of adaptive cities, as the book tries also to offer a response to economic restraints in the current crisis in which masterplans and long term urban projects are no longer viable. However, the authors remark that these temporary projects should not be conceived -and probably I should incorporate this point of view- as a second best option where other use is preferable but, in the meantime, not viable. This is why in the 68 cases covered in the book, showing their own values and benefits by themselves provide a common ground with the descriptions.


Temporary urbanism is a threat to formal and planned regulations of space in cities, as illegal, spontaneous or accidental uses, activities and forms emerge in a hierarchical logic of planning. The history of cities is somehow determined by informality and temporality and only in the process of more detailed ordinances and regulatory activity things have become as formal as urbanism is nowadays. Having said this, authors acknowledge that this view of temporality as an exemption can be applied to countries where urbanism has gained a level of formality, while in most parts of the world the condition of temporal informality has particular patterns the book does not addresses.
The context for this growing attention to pop-up urbanism and temporary expressions in the public space is clear and has been one of the main topics in this blog for the past few months under the idea of adaptive cities. It is not a matter of the uncertainties local economic crisis has added to large development projects, but of course is one of the reasons for the current interest in what we do in the meantime. Vacant spaces in shrinking cities like Detroit, vacant factories from declining industries and vacant commercial spaces in high streets are part of the urban landscape. However, other factors are driving this trend. The way we work is changing and work places are spreading out of the formal office parks and buildings. In general, people are using public spaces more intensely or, at least, the complexity and the growing networked society means more and new needs for the use of public spaces and thanks, to new technologies, public interventions such as festivals, happenings, installations or flashmobs, for example, are competing to find place in cities using technologies as enablers. Last but not least, counterculture and activism are always seeking for spaces to gather social and cultural expressions that the real estate market is not able to offer a solution for.
As authors show, even private property owners, previously reluctant to this approach, are showing more interest in exploring how temporary urbanism can be linked to their own projects. As cases explained in the book confirm, legal, financial or planning frameworks are not a burden but conservatism and lack of vision and capacity are a bigger problem. Practice and theory of DIY approach to urbanism and informal temporary actions in urban spaces are in their infancy. However, the context favors a new understanding of cities. Contradictions with formal regulations are inherent to this change process and political and social tensions will keep rising. It is part of the idea of enjoying more complex cities where groups and individuals can gain power to intervene and influence the planning process that seems to be no longer so capable to give responses. Zoning, regulations and masterplans will need to share their roles with short term projects and more flexible activities because these projects better match not only the economic context but also the changes in the way we want to enjoy cities.
@manufernandez
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Image from THE LIDO (Southwark, Londres): The Oslo School of Architecture and Design 
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