Fem MAP BERLIN 2049 (Julia Köpper, Dagmar Pelger, Martha Wegewitz with Juliana Garcia Leon, Jörn Gertenbach, Maximilian Hinz, Tildem Kirtak, Katrina Neelands Malinski, Natasha Nurul Annisa, Jessica Voth, TU Berlin & Peter Máthé, Ana Rodriguez Bisbicus, Lara Stöhlmacher, UDK Berlin) (original) (raw)

fem*MAP Berlin 2049: Feminist spatial systems for a non-sexist city

CIDADES, Comunidades e Territórios

In search of a feminist perspective for Berlin and an answer to the question of what a non-sexist city could and should look like, an analysis of hegemonic and feminist spatial systems was carried out based on practice-based teaching research formats. Using critical mapping (Harley, 1989; Wood, 1992) with a collective-feminist approach, this paper will demonstrate the potential of the map as a tool that allows for a non-hegemonic perspective of space. The mapping research reveals how the dichotomy of the terms public and private determines hegemonic spatial systems and how the concept of commons as a counter-image and third spatial realm opens up a possible typology of feminist spatial systems. Thus, in the evaluation of the results, the need for new common notions in urban planning discourse is discussed.

“Mapping Urbanism”

2012 ACSA International Proceedings, 2013

Much has been written of late about the crisis of the architectural profession and our education system. For too long, architecture education has focused on a teaching methodology that privileges the architectural design of a singular building on a singular plot (e.g. a library, a theater, a museum), with a shuffling series of technical and humanities courses that often lack integration and cohesion. Such a system of education leaves the architects that it produces ill-equipped to engage in a dynamic, complex and increasingly global twenty-first century.

Reclaiming Gendered Urban Spaces by Facilitating Fearless Movement of Women in the Fearful Cities: Enabling Inclusiveness by Advocating Spatial Mediation

2018

While women in most developing countries contribute significantly to the development of cities by being an integral part of the urban systems, often they are the last to benefit from it. Women have far more dynamic relationships with cities than men, “Poor spatial planning can often leave women “time poor”, Violence and fear of violence prevent women from utilizing the intended equal opportunities the city offers.” (UN-HABITAT). Alexander Cuthbert explains “patriarchal capitalism”, a male-dominated approach for designing cities, that conveniently puts women in the back seat of the planning process making them vulnerable in the urban environment. The research advocates ‘Right to city’ and investigates its effectiveness for ‘right to everyday life in a city’, asserting right of women to public spaces, instead of treating it as transit. Through mapping and on-site observations, the study conducted in a commercial center of Bhopal, India, one can state that by loitering in public spaces...

Vibrant maps. Exploring the reverberations of feminist digital mapping

Inmaterial, 2018

In recent years, feminist activists in various Latin American countries have been creating digital maps of feminicide –the gender-related violent deaths of women. The intersection of activism and mapping has been explored by scholars and activists who have addressed the performative, participatory and political nature of mapping, and by feminist scholars who have analysed and advocated for mapping and Geographic Information Systems (GIS) to be reclaimed by and for women, and for feminist thinking and action. In this essay, I use the case of the Feminicidio Uruguay map and draw from some of the ideas of new materialism in order to put forward a novel methodological approach to study such an intersection. An approach that might reveal more complex understandings of the agency of digital things that are created in the disobedient appropriation of everyday objects, such as Google Maps.