Tuesday, 28 February 2012
Monday, 27 February 2012
More Bike adaptations
Kind of reminds me of your market stalls - http://www.bow-wow.jp/profile/2003/WhiteLimousine/index.html
And for the ultimate Occupy experience, how about the bicycle caravan:
Found here: http://popupcity.net/
The People's Bank - Schedule of accommodation
This is the first draft of the Schedule of Accommodation. The total area is just over 1200 sq m, so I need to decide if that is going to be enough building for the Synergies project.
The People's Bank [synopsis update]
“Modern bourgeois society, with its relations of production, of exchange and of property, a society that has conjured up such gigantic means of production and of exchange, is like the sorcerer who is no longer able to control the powers of the nether world whom he has called up by his spells.” (Marx, Engels, 1848)
The project is the culmination of an investigation into protest as a construct of the urban environment, based in Birmingham’s southern gateway. The Urban Synergies project envisions a scenario set in 2030, in which the Occupy Movement (originating from Occupy Wall Street) has established a permanent presence - a shadow city (Neuwirth, 2005) - in Birmingham, in its quest for social, economic and political reform.
The Occupy Movement has traditionally been given the label ‘anti-capitalist’. However, whilst the majority of the movement’s protests takes on a somewhat socialist spirit, the issues against which the movement campaigns are actually diverse and wide ranging, and it is recognised that “we will need [money], but [its methods of exchange] have to be revolutionarily transformed” (Harvey, 2009) so that it does not continue to act as “an instrument of oppression” (Lechevalier, J. quoted in Dana, C.A, 1896).
Founded in Marxist and Anarchist theories of dialectical materialism (philosophy of motion and change) (Trotsky, 1939), labour value and mutualism (Dana, C.A, 1896), and Guattari’s Three Ecologies (2000, p.41), the project explores the role of the bank in a post-capitalist society. It is based on Pierre-Joseph Proudhon’s ‘Bank of the People’ and the aims of the Alternative Banking Group.
In the same way the bank’s economics challenges capitalist banking methods and motives, the architecture of this new bank challenges the traditional typology of the bank, helping to strengthen the ABG’s core principles, namely that it is:
- Accessible to all equally
- Democratically run
- Robust
- Transparent
- Moral
- Environmentally sustainable.
- Dana, C. A. (1896) Proudhon and his "Bank of the People" Benj. J. Tucker: New York
- Guattari, F. (2000) The Three Ecologies, Continuum Publishing: London
- Harvey, D. (2009) Their crisis, our challenge Available: http://www.redpepper.org.uk/Their-crisis-our-challenge [accessed 27th February]
- Marx, K. Engels, F. (1848) Manifesto of the Communist Party
- Neuwirth, R. (2005) Shadow Cities, Routledge: London
- Trotsky, L (1939) The ABC of Materialist Dialectics
Friday, 24 February 2012
Field Journal- Informal Markets In Europe
I have recently been reading a particular text that is very relevant to the study into informal markets as a hub for political discourse and occupation of public space. Some of the poignant quotes from the texts are extracted below.
Informal markets generate sites of counter-globalisation based on a deterritorialisation of cultures.A striking facet of the many contradictions produced by the global economic system is the resurgence of markets as prime sites of struggle relating to questions of governance and self-governance. Markets have turned into a stage upon which battles over existing societal order and alternative forms of organisation are smouldering.
The underbelly of the liberalised capital market performs a shadow play, whose relation to the homogenising force of globalisation, is most of all characterised by a paradoxical production of micro sites of cultural heterogeneity.
Source: http://www.field-journal.org
Wednesday, 22 February 2012
Tuesday, 14 February 2012
Their crisis, our challenge
I haven't read this in full but it might be help full for you alternative banking scenario.
In a far reaching interview with Red Pepper, David Harvey argues that the current financial crisis and bank bail-outs could lead to a massive consolidation of the banking system and a return to capitalist 'business as usual' - unless there is sustained revolt and pressure for a dramatic redistribution and socialisation of wealth
http://www.redpepper.org.uk/Their-crisis-our-challenge/
Monday, 13 February 2012
The Politcal Economy Of Public Space
A recent trip to Marakech and The Reading of Harvey's The Political Economy of Public Space Have lead me to produce the graphic below.
David Harvey, discusses the effects of hausmanisation in creating a public space for the rich alone. He uses Baudalaire's poem, the eyes of the poor to highlight this. In the poem the female character, whilst looking out upon the boulevards of Paris, proclaims to her husband that "Those people are insufferable with their great saucer eyes. Can't you tell the proprietor to send them away?"
In conclusion Harvey states that,
"the character of public space counts for little or nothing politically unless it connects symbiotically with the organization of institutional (in this case commercial though in other cases it may be religious or educational institutions that need to be placed in the forefront of consideration) and private spaces. It is the relational connectivity between public, quasi-public and private spaces which counts when it comes to politics in the public sphere."
http://davidharvey.org/media/public.pdf
David Harvey, discusses the effects of hausmanisation in creating a public space for the rich alone. He uses Baudalaire's poem, the eyes of the poor to highlight this. In the poem the female character, whilst looking out upon the boulevards of Paris, proclaims to her husband that "Those people are insufferable with their great saucer eyes. Can't you tell the proprietor to send them away?"
In conclusion Harvey states that,
"the character of public space counts for little or nothing politically unless it connects symbiotically with the organization of institutional (in this case commercial though in other cases it may be religious or educational institutions that need to be placed in the forefront of consideration) and private spaces. It is the relational connectivity between public, quasi-public and private spaces which counts when it comes to politics in the public sphere."
http://davidharvey.org/media/public.pdf
Market Interrelations
The slides below show thee dependance of the markets upon the wholesale market and the knock on effects of its closure.
The City as a Body Politic
Occupation of public space as a political act has allowed a system of non-hierarchal government to entrench itself deep within the organizational and administrative operations of the occupy movement. As the process of occupation develops, the ephemeral nature of the protest camp, and its subsequent urban form, is superseded by a more permanent habitation. Through a combination of appropriation and expropriation of the city’s existing void spaces, a burgeoning new body politic evolves from the roots of the occupy movement.
One such burgeoning void space is that of the former bullring markets, once set for redevelopment under the big city plan. The demolition of the wholesale markets, as a result of managed decline and privatization, has a detrimental effect upon the indoor, outdoor and rag markets. As the relationship between produce (wholesale market) and trade (market) is severed, the market traders are unable to sustain and compete with the business model as it currently stands. As such they are forced to vacate the market infrastructure and trade elsewhere. This leads to the emergence of informal markets across the southern gateway site, adopting the nomadic/ephemeral tactics previous employed by the occupy protests.
The vacant market site then falls into disrepair as private investment stagnates and the state is forced to follow a policy of austerity imposed by the IMF/World Bank. The indoor market eventually has to be demolished as it falls victim to arson and is deemed unsafe. The occupy movement then decide to expropriate the Rag market building to ensure that it does not suffer the same fate. The threshold location and the nature of the internal spaces result in the building becoming the political heart of the movement. The now demolished wholesale market is adopted as a public space that forms counter-spectacle to that of the Selfridges commodity-spectacle. The informal markets relocate upon this threshold space. As a result of the amalgamation of Market traders and customers, innumerable small eating and drinking establishments emerge, becoming centers of sociality and politics.
The former rag market, as a house of government, then connects symbiotically with this heterogeneous space creating a relationship between the private, public and commercial spaces. This therefore creates a radically different spectacle to that of the Selfridges site to the north. It develops a counter spectacle, a public space for the public, the city as a body politic.
Future History
Good link for inspiration and developing the context of the project:
http://www.futuretimeline.net/index.htm
http://www.futuretimeline.net/index.htm
Post-capitalist bank (?)
“Modern bourgeois society, with its relations of production, of exchange and of property, a society that has conjured up such gigantic means of production and of exchange, is like the sorcerer who is no longer able to control the powers of the nether world whom he has called up by his spells.” (Marx, Engels, 1848)
The project is the culmination of an investigation into protest as a construct of architecture and an ‘urban design’ exercise based in Birmingham’s southern gateway. The Urban Synergies project envisions a scenario set in 2030, in which the Occupy movement (originating from Occupy Wall Street) has established a permanent presence - a shadow city (Neuwirth, 2005) in Birmingham in its quest for social, economic and political reform.
Founded in Marxist theories of dialectical materialism (philosophy of motion and change) (Trotsky, 1939) and value, and Guattari’s Three Ecologies (Guattari, 2000), the project explores the role of the bank in a post-capitalist society.
Guattari, F. (2000) The Three Ecologies, Continuum Publishing: London.
Marx, K. Engels, F. (1848) Manifesto of the Communist Party
Neuwirth, R. (2005) Shadow Cities, Routledge: London.
Trotsky, L (1939) The ABC of Materialist Dialectics
Tuesday, 7 February 2012
ABG Statement of Need
In the context of deepening recession and increased unemployment, the occupation of the southern gateway has come to a critical threshold by the year 2020: the crossover from nomadic occupation of open space, to permanent habitation and formation of place.The Occupy Movement has traditionally been given the label ‘anti-capitalist’. However, whilst the majority of the movements protests takes on a somewhat socialist spirit, the issues against which the movement campaigns are actually diverse and wide ranging. Money is not therefore to be ignored by the movement. It has a purpose but for different ends.The goals of the Alternative Banking Group are inextricably linked to the goals of the occupation, and other socialist groups. It is therefore agreed that a post-capitalist bank should form part of the permanent occupation of Birmingham's southern gateway, founded upon the following principles:
- Democratic decision making by the bank’s customers
- Accessibility to all
- Stability
- Non-profit
- Competitiveness
- Transparency
In the same way the ABG will challenge capitalist banking methods and motives, the architecture of this new bank should challenge the traditional typology of a bank, and strengthen the ABG’s principles.
- Equality amongst its workers
Wednesday, 1 February 2012
Masterplan
“Southland wasn’t constrained by it’s material conditions. Instead the human spirit radiated out from the metal walls and garbage heaps to offer something no legal neighborhood could: freedom.” (Neuwirth, 2005).
The project explores the idea of protest as a construct of architecture, and the tension of threshold spaces. It is driven by economic and
political issues and is intended as a critique of consumerism and the kind of insatiable capitalistic thirst described by Mike Davis (1999).
An initial study into the void spaces of Birmingham’s ‘Southern Gateway’ has opened up the idea of Eutopia (literally ‘no place’) and how this could be reappropriated as a ‘shadow city’. Reading of Guattari (2000) has led to an investigation into how the existing skill-set of the labour force in Birmingham could be reappropriated leading to a new ‘creationist subjectivity’.
The project imagines a future scenario in the context of an ever-worsening jobs recession, the collapse of the European currency, and an increasingly polarised society. As global unrest escalates, the Occupy movement gains momentum and a nascent community forms, which relies on illegal occupation of the Southern Gateway’s voids (once set for redevelopment under the Big City Plan).
The threshold between the Bullring Shopping Centre and the site of the now demolished wholesale markets develops into a ‘soapbox’ area: A space for occupants of the shadow city to petition for their community to be acknowledged as a legitimate form of urban development.
With increasing ‘third-worldization’ of the UK, as seen with the squatter ‘cities’ of the developing world, in the absence of any alternative solution to homelessness and unemployment, the authorities are left will little alternative but to allow the Occupiers to remain and for a shadow city, with its own systems, infrastructure and economy, to develop.
David, M. (1999) City of Quartz, Pimlico: London.
Newirth, R. (2005) Shadow Cities, Routledge: London.
Guattari, F. (2000) The Three Ecologies, London: Continuum Publishing, p41.
The project explores the idea of protest as a construct of architecture, and the tension of threshold spaces. It is driven by economic and
political issues and is intended as a critique of consumerism and the kind of insatiable capitalistic thirst described by Mike Davis (1999).
An initial study into the void spaces of Birmingham’s ‘Southern Gateway’ has opened up the idea of Eutopia (literally ‘no place’) and how this could be reappropriated as a ‘shadow city’. Reading of Guattari (2000) has led to an investigation into how the existing skill-set of the labour force in Birmingham could be reappropriated leading to a new ‘creationist subjectivity’.
The project imagines a future scenario in the context of an ever-worsening jobs recession, the collapse of the European currency, and an increasingly polarised society. As global unrest escalates, the Occupy movement gains momentum and a nascent community forms, which relies on illegal occupation of the Southern Gateway’s voids (once set for redevelopment under the Big City Plan).
The threshold between the Bullring Shopping Centre and the site of the now demolished wholesale markets develops into a ‘soapbox’ area: A space for occupants of the shadow city to petition for their community to be acknowledged as a legitimate form of urban development.
With increasing ‘third-worldization’ of the UK, as seen with the squatter ‘cities’ of the developing world, in the absence of any alternative solution to homelessness and unemployment, the authorities are left will little alternative but to allow the Occupiers to remain and for a shadow city, with its own systems, infrastructure and economy, to develop.
David, M. (1999) City of Quartz, Pimlico: London.
Newirth, R. (2005) Shadow Cities, Routledge: London.
Guattari, F. (2000) The Three Ecologies, London: Continuum Publishing, p41.
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