We Make The City 2019: Formality x Informality

Book-launch: how do informal urban interventions interact, meet and challenge urban masterplans?

WeMakeThe.City is a new international urban innovation festival. From June 17 til June 23 2019 we celebrate urban living whilst addressing important urban issues in the metropolitan region of Amsterdam. How can we make our cities better? How do we make better cities? All over the world, including Amsterdam and its metropolitan region, cities are growing rapidly. This growth causes serious problems concerning, for instance, climate, safety, affordable housing, and health. The key question is: what kind of city do we want to live in, in five, ten or fifteen years time? WeMakeThe.City will be searching for answers, together with you and many others. Because together we make the city of the future.

Worldwide, but especially in the Global South, fast processes of urbanization are changing and shaping the cities of tomorrow - but for whom? In their newest book 'To Build a City in Africa’, authors Michelle Provoost & Rachel Keeton describe how the African New Towns trend caters to middle- and upper income groups, while disregarding the majority of the (low-income) urban dwellers. How can formal and informal urban planning contribute to inclusive cities? A conversation with Michelle Provoost, Rachel Keeton and special guest Alfredo Brillembourg.

Serious gaming workshop in Mahonda, Zanzibar

The Play Mahonda workshop took place from 21-27 September in Mahonda, Zanzibar and Stone Town, Zanzibar. This weeklong workshop aimed to test the adaptive planning principles developed in the book To Build a City in Africa: A History and a Manual (International New Town Institute, nai010, 2019) by applying the principles to a real case study. This case was brought forward by the Department of Urban and Rural Planning (DoURP) as one of many new urban developments needed on the island of Unguja. Together with input from African Architecture Matters (AA Matters), the location of Mahonda was chosen as most suitable for a test site. Mahonda is a small farming community of 7000 – 12000 residents (no precise numbers were available), concentrated in linear development along existing roads. It is roughly 20 kilometers north of Stone Town. 

In addition to testing ‘real world’ application of the planning principles, auxiliary goals of this workshop were (1) to build collaboration and strengthen networks among the international experts, the DoURP planning officers, and local residents; (2) to support negotiations among stakeholders; and (3) to make a first step towards the development of a Local Area Plan (LAP) for Mahonda.  

The workshop brought together 8 experts in urban planning issues, or ‘resource persons’, with the DoURP planning officers. The week began with a day of introductions to the site and relevant stakeholders. A community meeting at the Mahonda District Council Hall allowed DoURP, local residents, and external resource persons to get to know each other as well as the main opportunities and challenges of the site. A group walk through the site in the afternoon provided the opportunity to observe and document the local landscape and built environment. 

The following day, a serious gaming event was held with largely the same participants. The game materialized the Mahonda site at a scale of 1:300, where the (redrawn) site plan was used as a gameboard. The game rules and pieces were developed in collaboration with Play the City, and the game was facilitated by Cristina Ampatzidou. The ‘Play Mahonda’ game was conceived as a test of the principles, and as a way to engage local community members in a participatory design process. 10 teams of ±5 players used the game to develop different future scenarios for Mahonda. The players included 48 local residents (invited by DoURP), including farmers, teachers, and local community leaders (Shehia).

The game results produced new insights for the planning team, including a prevailing desire throughout the community for dense, mid-rise, multi-family housing; a local need to protect agricultural land from encroachment; and a clear mandate for ‘modern’ amenities such as a new hospital, a fresh market, more schools, and a bus station. Some teams showed more sensitivity to specific issues such as the local need for a daycare facility and orphanage, improved accessibility for people with physical disabilities, or the desire to protect existing cemeteries from redevelopment.

An evaluation round revealed that the players appreciated the opportunity to express their ideas and opinions on the future of their town. They also indicated their appreciation for the resource persons who travelled to Mahonda. One participant noted, “We need a well-structured system to shift from individual houses to more dense development; we are ready to accept the changes.” 

Following the game, the final two days of the workshop shifted to a focus on capacity building with DoURP. For these sessions, both morning and afternoon presentations by resource persons were followed by intense discussions and interactive sketch sessions to produce a conceptual plan for Mahonda. The first sketch session divided the group into two smaller groups who addressed the area’s main connections and existing opportunities. The second sketch session divided the group into four smaller groups that explored different future scenarios. The scenarios were meant as thought experiments of extreme situations to help workshop participants think beyond the expected plans. The third session brought these ideas together in one plan at national, regional, urban and neighborhood scales, while the fourth session was used to finalize drawings. 

At the end of the workshop, the group reviewed the principles individually and evaluated the drawings for Mahonda based on these principles. Although most of the principles had been well-integrated, it was observed that more research was needed to ensure that some of the principles be adequately applied. Following this, DoURP planning officers presented the plan to the Director of the Department of Urban and Regional Planning, Dr. Muhammad Juma. Dr. Juma expressed his satisfaction with the work, and requested that the resource persons maintain contact with DoURP and explore the possibility of further collaboration in the future.

Book Presentation "To Build a City in Africa: A History and a Manual"

On March 28, 2019, Rachel Keeton and Michelle Provoost presented their book To Build a City in Africa: A History and a Manual (nai010) as part of the African Perspectives conference at TU Delft.

About the book:

Africa’s population and economic growth make it the world’s fastest urbanizing continent. While some might still associate Africa with rural development, the future of Africa is, in fact, very urban. This urbanization poses a huge challenge in areas with fragile institutional frameworks and chronic poverty; new city-dwellers frequently end up in self-organized settlements without basic services. Developers and investors have offered one alternative, designing and building new towns in Africa modeled after Asian and American cities. But is this really a proper alternative? Does one size fit all?

To Build a City in Africa brings together authors from various academic, political and design backgrounds to explore case studies on new towns in Ghana, Egypt, South Africa, Angola, Morocco and Kenya, among other examples. This publication provides a critical narrative about African urbanization and questions the western world’s role in the radical transformations happening in Africa today.

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Public lecture at the Institute for Housing Studies (IHS)

14 February 2018

Rachel Keeton gave a presentation on the ongoing research for her PhD at IHS, Erasmus University on 14 February 2018. The lecture touched on the spatial challenges of contemporary African New Towns, and explored alternative approaches. The objective of the research is to establish a set of planning principles that will inspire and guide future New Town planners in the African context. The draft guidelines presented at the close of the presentation proved to be fertile ground for discussion with the housing, policy, and governance experts at IHS. 

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PrepCon for African Perspectives in Addis Ababa

25-27 January 2018

The PrepCon was jointly organized by the Faculty of Architecture at TU Delft, and EiABC at Addis Ababa University to determine the themes of the upcoming African Perspectives conference (March 2019). The event was held at the Economic Commission for Africa in Addis Ababa from 25-27 January 2018.

The PrepCon combined two days of presentations by experts in the field of African urbanization and heavy discussion and debate related to the education of architects working in the African continent. The results of the event will inform not only the conference in 2019, but also future research and education trajectories at the Faculty of Architecture at TU Delft. Rachel Keeton was part of the organizing committee from TU Delft and an active participant at the event. 

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Lecture on methodology

25 October 2017

As part of the workshop series Understanding Key Methodologies of Complex Cities, Rachel Keeton was invited to present her research methodology to masters students in the Complex Cities graduation stream at TU Delft. From the website: 


Analysing perspectives and participation of actors
with Katarzyna Piskorek, Rachel Keeton, Ana Chagas Cavalcanti
Introduction: Perspectives and participation of actors in planning research;

·        In her PhD research, Rachel Keeton seeks to provide a transdisciplinary roadmap for inclusive, sustainable, future African new towns in the form of a series of planning principles. She will elaborate on fieldwork and interviews with stakeholders, conducted under challenging circumstances;

·        In her PhD research, Katarzyna Piskorek investigates communication for urban transformations in perspective of the relation between citizens and local authorities. She will elaborate on how to analyse communication acts;

·        In her PhD research, Ana Chagas Cavalcanti proposes a method for the design of social housing that emerges from the social practices in informal settlements. Her particular interest is in the building of labour relations in contemporary systems of economic circulation. During the workshop she will elaborate on how to identify these practices and how to relate these to design principles, discussing appropriate approaches in analyzing perspectives and participation of actors.

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Urban Thinkers Campus at TU Delft

7-9 June 2017

The first and only Urban Thinkers Campus (UTC) to address education was held at the Faculty of Architecture at TU Delft.  The UTC was one of many event organized around the world as part of UN-Habitat's World Urban Campaign

Rachel Keeton developed a full-day workshop as part of the UTC that brought together 21 multidisciplinary experts to reflect on contemporary African New Towns and identify alternatives to current practice. A full report is available on request. 

The Urban Lab: Imagining Adaptive Planning for African New Towns took place on 8 June 2017 at TU Delft. This event was organized in collaboration with the International New Town Institute and with financial support from the Delft Global Initiative.

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Contribution to The Beeker Method: Planning and Working on the Redevelopment of the African City

23 March 2017

Rachel Keeton contributed a chapter on the need to 'unplan' the planned African city to the book The Beeker Method: planning and working on the redevelopment of the African City: retrospective glances into the future, co-edited by Antoni Folkers and Iga Perzyna. To celebrate the book launch, a seminar with Coen Beeker and other speakers was organized at the African Studies Centre in Leiden, the Netherlands, together with AAMatters. A video of the entire seminar is available here

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Lecture at Harvard GSD

22-23 September 2016

The Toward 21st Century New Towns conference at Harvard University convened 30 scholars and practitioners working on a book about the international experience in new town development, operations, management, and the perceptions and quality-of-life of residents.   

Additional events included a public panel on Thursday evening, a conversation with alumni and friends involved in real estate, and a pre-workshop dinner.

Rachel Keeton presented a lecture on contemporary African New Towns and contributed a paper on the same topic, co-authored by Michelle Provoost, of Crimson Architectural Historians. The resulting book, co-edited by Ann Forsyth and Richard Peiser (both of Harvard GSD) will be published by University of Pennsylvania Press in 2018. 

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Learning from Saadiyat Island

In this lecture, given at the Canadian Centre for Architecture in Montreal on August 21, 2014, Rachel Keeton describes a new development that has become a poster child for private cities springing up around the world. 

Saadiyat Island is a “dreamscape” created by Tourism Development & Investment Company just half a kilometer from downtown Abu Dhabi. It is an amalgam of luxury residential areas, 5-star resorts and golf courses crowned by a Cultural District containing a hallucinatory collection of museums designed by five Pritzker Prize winners.

Is this the future of private development?

Private developers are building more like Saadiyat, where the “chaotic and compromised” city championed by Rem Koolhaas has met its match.

The Learning From… series takes its title from Learning From Las Vegas (1972), Robert Venturi, Denise Scott Brown and Steven Izenour’s influential publication, which analysed the commercial strips and architectural symbolism of Las Vegas in order to understand urban sprawl. In this spirit, the series brings together experts to explore specific urban conditions and their relevance to the future development of cities.

 

Saadiyat Island is a "dreamscape" created by Tourism Development & Investment Company just half a kilometer from downtown Abu Dhabi. It is an amalgam of luxury residential areas, 5-star resorts and golf courses crowned by a Cultural District containing a hallucinatory collection of museums designed by five Pritzker Prize winners.