Stairs as public places in Hong Kong

Our lab has invited Melissa Cate Christ to give a talk about stairs as public places in Hong Kong. This lecture is included in the courses Urbanisation and Social Change in East Asia, and Theory of Urban and Regional Sociology.

Melissa is a doctoral candidate and casual academic at the University of New South Wales, Faculty of Arts, Design and Architecture, and at the University of Technology in Sydney, Australia. She’s also the director of transversestudio, and has previously worked as an assistant professor of Hong Kong Polytechnic University and University of Hong Kong. Melissa holds master in landscape architecture from the University of Toronto, Daniels Faculty of Architecture, Landscape, and Design. Her art and design research and practice explores mechanisms of critical intervention at the juncture of landscape, culture, urbanism, and infrastructure.

The talk ‘Stairs as public places: investigation, collaboration, and celebration along Shung Fung Lane, Hong Kong’ will take place online on Friday, December 8th, 2023 (11:30-13:30). Below is a brief description of her talk.

Due in part to historical street and development patterns, topography, and building restrictions, Hong Kong Island’s urban development and population density is one of the highest in the world. Within this densely populated hilly area, stairs are a crucial typology of vernacular pedestrian infrastructure that sustain Hong Kong as a walkable city with a unique ‘Stair Culture’. Stairs act not only as movement corridors which allow access to areas otherwise inaccessible, but also as vibrant public places with crucial social, cultural, environmental, and heritage value. This talk presents one example of this in the context of Magic Lanes, a placemaking project which was located along Sheung Fung Lane, a set of alley stairs in the Sai Ying Pun neighbourhood in the Central and Western District of Hong Kong Island. This project, which was funded by the HKSAR Urban Renewal Fund and developed by two NGOs, aimed to create places for intergenerational activities and community engagement, and to improve the environment through green and blue infrastructure. The talk reflects on how the project provided challenges and opportunities for investigation, collaboration, and celebration, and the potential role of these places in the creation of a more inclusive and healthier environment in Hong Kong.

Magic Lanes placemaking project along Sheung Fung Lane in Hong Kong (Photo: Magic Lanes Project)

Community rewilding

Our colleague Jeff Hou will give lecture Community Rewilding: Case Studies of Urban and Rural Commoning. The lecture will take place on Wednesday, September 13, 2023 at 19:00 in the 1 Euro Project in Seongdong-gu, Seoul.

Jeff is professor of Landscape Architecture and director of the Urban Commons Lab at the University of Washington, Seattle. Together with Cho Im Sik and Blaž, he edited the book Emerging Civic Urbanisms in Asia: Hong Kong, Seoul, Singapore, and Taipei beyond Developmental Urbanization, published last year by Amsterdam University Press.

Registration is required to attend the lecture.

Designing as making sense together

Our school has invited Jae Shin to deliver a lecture on community design as a part of the BK21 HY-GRIP seminar. Her lecture “Designing as Making Sense Together” will take place online on Wednesday, July 19, 2023 (10:00-12:00).

이 강의는 BK21 HY-GRIP Super Seminar의 일환으로 커뮤니티 디자인에 대한 강의를 위해 Jae Shin님을 초빙하였습니다. ‘Designing as Making Sense Together’ 강의가 2023년 7월 19일 10시에 온라인으로 진행될 예정입니다.

Jae holds degrees in painting from the Rhode Island School of Design and architecture from Princeton University. Serving as an Enterprise Rose Architectural Fellow at the New York City Housing Authority, she facilitated efforts to define and implement design principles for preserving and rehabilitating New York City’s public housing. She is lecturer at the University of Pennsylvania Stuart Weitzman School of Design and founding partner in HECTOR urban design.

HECTOR practices urban design, planning, and civic arts. Informed by traditions of visionary architecture, popular education, and community organising, they work on landscapes, buildings, development plans, and regulations with complex constituencies and competing priorities. HECTOR’s recent projects include a South Philly neighbourhood park, a youth-centric development plan for a district of 37,000 people on Detroit’s west side, and a memorial for ecofeminist Sister Carol Johnston. The MacArthur Foundation describes HECTOR’s designs as “vivid and witty strategies to help residents exercise power within the public and private processes that shape our cities.”

Reconstruction of Mifflin Square Park in Philadelphia (Photo: HECTOR, 2022)

Talking about community design…

Forum season is about to begin. This year, it seems to be all about community design.

Blaž will talk about civic urbanisms, community design and sustainable neighbourhoods and cities on the Jeju Universal Design Forum on Monday, November 14th, 2022 and Urban Design Forum in Seoul on Friday, December 16th, 2022. He will also join the International Forum of the Institute for Urban Humanities at the University of Seoul as discussant on Wednesday, November 16th, 2022.

블라쉬는 2022년 11월 14일 월요일 제주국제유니버설디자인엑스포과 2022년 12월 16일 금요일 서울에서 열리는 더나은도시디자인포럼에서 시민적 어바니즘, 지역 사회 디자인 및 지속 가능한 이웃과 도시에 대해 이야기 할 것이다. 2022년 11월 16일 수요일 서울대학교에서 열리는 도시인문학포럼-국제포럼에 토론자로 참여한다. 

Lots of talking to do… 😛

Community will not be designed, part deux

Last Friday, Urban Regeneration students took part in the opening of COMMUNITY will not be DESIGNed exhibition that is currently on show in the Project Space Mium in Seoul.

지난 금요일, 도시재생 학생들은 현재 서울의 Project Space Mium 에서 전시되고 있는 COMMUNITY will not be DESIGNed 전시 오프닝에 참여했습니다.

The curator Alban Mannisi has brought together inspiring cases of community design from around the world that question the very possibility of designing communities and try to rethink the idea of community design. The exhibition opening tried but not fully succeeded to discuss diversity of contexts, approaches and results of exhibited cases.

The discussion, nevertheless, showed that community design may not be only about a participatory process of engaging communities in identifying and addressing problems in their living environment. If community design is to address these problems effectively, it should also make tangible the unequal social relations that underpin environmental and social conflicts, constraining the everyday life in communities.

Korean artist Park Chan-kook closed the discussion with the ‘Lost-Post’ performance that felt somewhat out of place at the first sight. Yet, his performance made visible the devastating consequences of unequal social relations in Korea on a Jeolla-do community which has been destroyed after crossing paths with what he portrayed as ‘development soldiers.’

The performance perhaps suggested a way to rethink how COMMUNITY will (not) be DESIGNed.

‘Development soldier’ and community design (Photo: Alban Mannisi)

Emerging civic urbanisms in Asia

The book Emerging Civic Urbanisms in Asia: Hong Kong, Seoul, Singapore, and Taipei beyond Developmental Urbanization has been finally published after more than four years of hard work. The book discusses eighteen cases of grassroots activism and resistance, collaboration and placemaking, neighbourhood community building, and self-organization and commoning in Hong Kong, Seoul, Singapore and Taipei:

‘In parts of Asia, citizens are increasingly involved in shaping their neighbourhoods and cities, representing a significant departure from earlier state-led or market-driven urban development. These emerging civic urbanisms are a result of an evolving relationship between the state and civil society. […] Exploring how citizen participation and state–civil society partnerships contribute to more resilient and participatory neighbourhoods and cities, the authors use the concept of civic urbanisms not only as a conceptual framework to understand the ongoing social and urban change but as an aspirational model of urban governance for cities in Asia and beyond.’

This collaboration has brought together twenty-two contributors from Asia, Europe and the United States with many of them having a direct first-hand experience with civic urbanism. Blaž was involved as one of the book editors, organised the Cities after Development workshop and coauthored three book chapters.

The book is a part of the IIAS Asian Cities series and was published by the Amsterdam University Press.

아시아의 떠오르는 시민 중심 도시론

4년이 넘는 노력과 열정이 담긴 책 ‘아시아의 떠오르는 시민 중심 도시론: 발전주의 도시화 너머의 홍콩, 서울, 싱가포르 그리고 타이페이‘가 드디어 출간되었습니다. 이 책에서는 홍콩, 서울, 싱가포르, 타이페이에서 수집한 18개의 사례들을 풀뿌리 운동과 저항, 협력과 장소 만들기, 마을공동체 만들기, 자기 조직화와 공유 자산화 등의 주제로 나누어 자세히 살펴보았습니다:

아시아 곳곳에서는 도시 만들기 과정에 시민 참여의 기회가 점점 확대되고 있다. 이는 오늘날 도시 만들기 방식이 예전의 국가/시장주도 도시개발과는 다른 방향으로 진화해가고 있다는 반증이기도 하다. 아시아에서 등장하고 있는 시민 중심 도시론은 국가와 시민사회의 관계의 변화에서 얻어진 부산물이다…이 책에서는 이러한 시민 참여와 국가-시민사회의 새로운 협력관계가 마을 그리고 도시의 회복력과 포용력에 어떠한 기여를 하는지 살펴보면서, 저자는 시민 중심 도시론 개념을 아시아 도시에서 현재 진행 중인 다양한 변화를 이해하는데 필요한 개념 틀로 활용하는 동시에 아시아 밖 도시에서는 미래지향적 도시 거버넌스 모델을 상상하는데 도움 줄 수 있는 개념 틀로 제안하고자 한다.’

이 책은 아시아 외에도 유럽 및 미국 등지에서 아시아의 시민 중심 도시론 관련 연구/사업 경험이 있는 22명의 연구자와 실무자들이 모여 협력하면서 출판의 여정이 시작되었습니다. 블라쉬는 공동 편집자로 책 출판을 위한 워크숍 ‘개발 이후의 도시들(Cities after Development)’을 개최하였으며, 총 3개 챕터의 공동저자로 참여하였습니다. 그리고 이 책은 네덜란드 국제 아시아학 연구원(IIAS)의 Asian Cities북시리즈물의 일환으로 기획되었으며 출판은 암스테르담대학교 출판부(AUP)가 맡아 진행했습니다.

옥인 오픈 사이트: civic urbanism as resistance (Photo: Blaž Križnik, 2010)

Community will not be designed

Blaž will participate in the opening discussion of the Community will not be Designed exhibition, on Friday, October 14th, 2022. The exhibition is curated by Alban Mannisi and will take place in the MIUM Project Space in Seoul, from October 10th to November 5th, 2022.

Blaž는 2022년 10월 14일 금요일에 열리는 Community will not be Designed 전시회의 오프닝 토론에 참여할 것입니다. 전시회는 Alban Mannisi가 큐레이션하고 2022년 10월 10일부터 11월 5일까지 서울의 MIUM 프로젝트 공간에서 열립니다.

The exhibition aims to reach beyond established political ecology by mapping community practices around the world that are environmentally conscious and grounded in local cultural and political traditions.

Appraising Gil Scott-Heron’s inspiring poem and song The Revolution will not be Televised, community practices exhibited at the Project Space MIUM suggest that community, aiming to address threatening environmental crises, will not be designed.’

Instead, selected cases of community design from Australia, Brazil, China, Germany, Indonesia, Japan, Singapore, South Korea, Spain, Sweden and Thailand show how environmental and social resilience can be achieved through active community engagement and interaction between humans and non-humans.

An academic symposium on environmental pedagogy will accompany the exhibition.

Community design in 대전 소제동 비타민 파크 (Photo: Baek Han Yeol, 2022)

Community design in Singapore

Our lab has invited Larry Yeung to deliver a lecture on community design in Singapore as a part of the BK21 HY-GRIP Super Seminar.

우리 연구실은 Larry Young 초빙해 공동체와 도시 커먼즈에 대한 강의를 듣고자 합니다. 이 강의는 BK21 HY-GRIP Super Seminar의 일환으로 커뮤니티 디자인에 대한 강의를 위해 Larry Yeung님을 초빙하였습니다. ‘사람을 위한 것이아닌 사람과 함께하는 디자인: 싱가포르의 커뮤니티 디자인’ 강의가 2022년 8월 3일 16시에 온라인으로 진행될 예정입니다.

Larry is a designer and community organiser from Singapore. He is currently the Executive Director of Participate in Design (P!D), a non-profit design organisation that helps neighbourhoods and public institutions design community-owned spaces and solutions. He has also been recognised as a World Cities Summit Young Leader in 2021, honouring him as one of the change-makers shaping the global urban agenda, as well as a recipient of the BCA-CPG Industrial scholarship and the URA Urban Design prize in 2014. Long ago, Larry has also spent a semester at the Hanyang University as an exchange student of architecture.

His lecture ‘Designing with people and not just for people: community design in Singapore‘ will take place online on Wednesday, August 3, 2022 at 16:00.

Neighbourhood Pop Up Ideas Market at Tampines North, Singapore (Courtesy of P!D)

Community design in ‘challenging times’

Blaž gave a short interview about community design in post-Covid era for the 2021 Seoul Design International Forum. The forum was organised under the theme Re-connect: Design as a Value Creator and discussed subjects like ‘problem-solving,’ ‘inclusion and resilience,’ ‘city attractiveness,’ and a ‘new-level of experience.’

In the interview, Blaž has stressed the social value of community design in building resilient communities and democratic urban governance.

Blaž는 2021 서울디자인국제포럼에서 포스트 코로나 시대의 커뮤니티 디자인에 대한 짧은 인터뷰를 하셨습니다. 포럼 ‘리-커넥트: 가치창조자로서의 디자인’이라는 주제로 ‘problem-solving,’ ‘inclusion and resilience,’ ‘city attractiveness,’ ‘new-level of experience’로 구성되었습니다. 인터뷰에서 Blaž은 탄력적인 커뮤니티 조직구성과 민주적인 도시 거버넌스를 통해 커뮤니티 디자인의 사회적 가치를 강조했습니다.

Korean version of the interview is available on the Seoul Design International Forum website. English version is attached below.

Seoul Metropolitan Government has also published book with all contributions of the 2021 Seoul Design International Forum, including the interviews.


The theme of this year’s Seoul Design International Forum is ‘Re-connect: Design as a value creator’. What do you think the city government should do to improve the value in the cities and the lives of their citizens through design? And for that, how should the city’s design organization be structured?

Design aims to address diverse needs and resolve problems in everyday life. In this sense, it is the social value, social innovation, and social responsibility that make up the very idea of design. At the same time, it is important for design, as an innovative and responsible social practice, not only to improve the quality of everyday life of citizens but also to enable and empower citizens to ‘design’ their everyday life on their terms.

This can be achieved through community design for various reasons. First, community design focuses on citizens. Second, ‘designing everyday life’ cannot be an individual effort but requires a collective effort, where diverse ideas and knowledge are shared, discussed, and implemented through a participatory process. Third, community design as a participatory process allows for a citizen-informed and citizen-led approach to design for what it needs an autonomy from the state and markets, which tend to overly control and commodify everyday life.

The city government should, hence, see and support community design as an opportunity not to design for but rather to design with the citizens and neighbourhood communities and empower them to ‘design their everyday life.’ In this way, the city government could build partnerships with citizens and neighbourhood communities which is recognised as the key to inclusive and democratic urban governance.

  
If there is an important case as an example of efforts made by city governments or public institutions to create social value, please introduce it.

Seoul Metropolitan Government has already made efforts over the past decade to engage citizens, neighbourhood communities and civil society organisations in community design. Community design in Seoul has so far addressed diverse problems in neighbourhood communities related to clean environment, improvement of public space, provision of social welfare, communal childcare and education, access to safe food, expansion of local media and culture, etc. These examples show the importance and social value of community design. There seems to be a lot to re-learn from community design in Seoul.

An interesting case to learn from is also the Open Green Programme, launched in 2014 in Taipei. Through this programme, the Urban Regeneration Office of Taipei provides small funding for citizens, neighbourhood communities and civil society organisations to identify problems in their living environment and improve them through a participatory process. Along with providing funding, the programme also focuses on organisational support. The Urban Regeneration Office often contracts design professionals to provide knowhow, work with the citizens, and help them design and implement their ideas. In this way, over 60 cases of community design have been successfully implemented through the Open Green Programme, which has reportedly created social value beyond neighbourhood communities involved.

 
With the COVID-19 pandemic, we are living through a challenging time. How can design strive for social innovation or improvement of public life in the post-COVID era?

There are many cases of grassroots-led responses to the Covid-19 pandemic in East and South-East Asia, where citizens, neighbourhood communities and civil society organisations effectively responded to the crisis by taking care of fellow citizens, providing mutual help and support for those in need, organised local relief efforts, etc. These responses often took place in marginalised communities, which are affected hard by environmental and health hazards. For this reason, marginalised communities already have a capacity and support networks in place that allow them to respond effectively to threats like the Covid-19 pandemic. 

Examples of grassroots-led responses to the Covid-19 pandemic include Sitio San Roque in Quezon City in the Philippines, or IMMA relief activities in Taipei in Taiwan. These two cases show that grassroots responses to external threats are possible because of the social innovation and continuous involvement of dedicated volunteers, public donations, and organisational support of civil society organisations. 

Volunteers, donations and civil society organisations, however, cannot sustain grassroots-led responses for ever. State support is crucial to sustain and expand grassroots efforts. Community design as a participatory process not only addresses particular problems in communities but also helps them innovate and build capacity to resist threats like the Covid-19 pandemic. State support of community design, thus, has a potential to become an effective and democratic way of building resilient neighbourhood communities and cities in ‘challenging times.’