Self-initiated practices in the urban community of Balteiro: Design challenges in a post-pandemic setting (original) (raw)

Housing activism and urban space during the Covid19 pandemic. Research notes on the bairro of Arroios, Lisbon

PArtecipazione e COnflitto, 2023

This paper presents some research notes from an ongoing project on housing activism in Lisbon in the last decade, describing its ascendant trajectory (2012-2019) and the impact that the Covid epidemic had on the local activist community (2020-2022). In particular, the paper focuses on two of the main protagonists of local housing activism, the association Habita and the collective Stop Despejos, and on the relation that they have developed in time with an ecosystem (of sites, groups, projects) that have developed in the last ten years in the neighbourhood of Arroios, which have found a characteristic spatial infrastructure in the coletividades (a Portuguese expression that identifies spaces managed by no-profit associations or collectives). The paper examines this relation against the background of two bodies of literature, namely contributions that have examined (i) the nexus between collective action and space and (ii) the different forms of political agency represented by the conceptual pole of "contentious" and "everyday politics". This research is based on extensive data collection (through ethnographic notes, documental analysis, and in-depth interviews, 2020-2022) and on the authors' status of insiders in the process observed.

City in the Making: From São Paulo's Home-Made Homes to Home-Made City

MONU Magazine on Urbanism, 2020

As basic housing increasingly commodifies, a third of São Paulo’s metropolitan popu- lation is left to dwell in precarious conditions (Pinheiro, 2015). At the same time, speculative market-dynamics mustered a festering stockpile of vacant buildings and terrains (Silva 2009; Silva, Biava, and Sígolo 2009). Challenging this paradox, con- temporary urban social movements are providing shelter by occupying these residual spaces dispersed across the urban fabric. Resonating with a Lefebvrian plea for rights to the city (Earle 2017; Lefebvre 1968), occupation movements address housing inequal- ity through collective self-organization and -construction. This article explores how such urban movements produce peculiar forms of affordable housing. More specifically, it focusses on the occupation tactics that the Frente de Luta por Moradia, known as FLM (Alliance/Forefront of the Struggle for Housing) wields over successive stages of insurgent city-making in São Paulo.

Compressing urban living in the dwelling: pandemic living praxis

Compressing urban living in the dwelling: pandemic living praxis, 2022

Purpose-This paper aims to understand how the residents have utilized domestic spaces and furniture during three months' lockdown time for the Covid-19 virus spread measures and to explore how domestic living practices were adjusted which had been the daily urban activities previously. Design/methodology/approach-The research method is a qualitative interpretivist philosophical approach with a quantitative data collection. Short questionnaires were conducted via e-mails with attached links via SurveyMonkey. The sample was the group of people who had been in active urban life before the pandemic and had been actively working at the office spaces. Findings-Separate learning/working spaces were urged at home, at least for the set intervals in the daytime. Production in the kitchen also acted as an interactive production and entertainment. Balconies and terraces were rediscovered and acted as "urban-substitute open spaces". The living room became the new venue for domestic interaction especially during working-learning breaks, for watching movies, personal care or reading sessions. Computers, tablets and smartphones became the urban activity base due to online meeting applications for social reasons, online shopping, working and learning. The separation of domains at home became essential. Research limitations/implications-The study only focuses domestic uses of white-collar workers; during the lock-down period, Covid-19 pandemic. Sampling constraints are the employees who were active urban life before the pandemic and working at the office space. Sharing the house at least with one other roommate, sibling or spouse with or without children. Individuals who had not been working outside the home before the pandemic, people aged over 65, retired, permanent home workers, housewives, freelancers and other such demographic structures are excluded from the study. Social implications-Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the first wave lockdown began between early March-June 2020, and millions of people were confined to the dwellings. "Staying home" stood for working-learningshopping-interacting online, more production in the kitchen, using the living room as a domestic multifunctional venue, spending time on the terraces and balconies as domestic open spaces. The active living in the urban context dramatically shifted to "at-home living". Originality/value-The study only focuses on the three months' interval in which strict rules for staying home were enforced in Istanbul, Turkey. Schemas, charts and tables are generated concerning the input. The study challenges the making meaning via praxis of "to dwell" and urban living. Nevertheless, the main questions of housing such as production, social aspects, shared spaces, interaction are re-configured and the substitute urban space is created at home.

Rethinking rules and social practices. The design of urban spaces in the post-Covid-19 lockdown

Tema. Journal of Land Use, Mobility and Environment, 2020

In the last months a pandemic has changed the daily life of billions of people Among the efforts to reduce the impact of the disease, social distancing has had huge consequences and raised may concerns, from the inadequacy of contemporary urban design to the social inequality of national and regional lockdown This paper focuses on the consequences that this experience is having on the design of urban public and private areas Everybody admits that our cities are going to change but, beside the first quick adaptation to social distancing, it is unclear how to rethink today's urban areas We start from our previous work on the classification of architectural rules and on the study of how creativity is expressed via architectural rules, to discuss the principles and social aspects of newly proposed designs The motivation for this analysis is to investigate and raise awareness of the consequences of changes in social practices: given that we are in need for new structures and service ...

City meeting: urban living practices as bonds for the production of care in the streets

This paper aims to present the potential city dwelling tactics and strategies employed by People Living on the Streets (PLS) in Brasília, Brazil, to reflect on the production of care and bonding within the Brazilian PHC (known as APS). First, we will discuss the broad sense of this notion of living as a set of everyday creations and innovations established as transient and circumstantial ways of creating bonds and care and as daily tools of health workers within the Brazilian Unified Health System (SUS). We will then present two PLS narratives to offer examples of actions performed in their homes built in the streets. The analysis of these encounters allows us to contextualize their lives on the streets, highlighting the movements that lead to the invisibility of this population and the precarious and fragile state of these practices and existences in and of the city. As a final perspective, we will point to the meeting of these living practices with the actions and technologies used by health workers in the process of self-care in the urban spaces.

POPULAR PARTICIPATION IN THE CONSTRUCTION OF A SOCIAL HOUSING PROJECT IN SÃO PAULO: THE EXPERIENCE OF BARRA DO JACARÉ

ENVIRONMENT AND DESIGN 2014, 2014

This work seeks to value participatory design in the building of a housing product; and emphasizes collective learning as a means and the dissemination of knowledge as a triggering element towards individual and social transformation. It is based on the experience of a housing project of social interest resulting from popular initiative which took place in the West Side of the city of São Paulo, Brazil, called Barra do Jacaré. Its concerned players are individuals within a socially vulnerable position, and they are organized under a community association.