Eine Plattform für die Wissenschaft: Bauingenieurwesen, Architektur und Urbanistik
Fieldwork: uncovering cultural landscapes
This paper will discuss three years of an undergraduate design studio at the University of Brighton, and how working continuously in the field has enabled students to gain a richer and more complex reading of the British landscape. Each year, the studio stationed itself somewhere in the British countryside – recent locales have been the Isle of Portland, Shoreham-by-Sea and the South Downs National Park. We journey away from our usual environment on multiple field trips for extended periods of time. Immediately developing beyond the observational into the propositional, we begin each project with each student making a gift to offer to the place or community that we visit. This gift is designed in response to the stories, memories, myths and folklore that are uncovered when initially researching the history of an area. They are given to people or left in landscapes to reveal change, collect data, unveil hidden stories, provoke conversations or start friendships. The studio returns periodically to retrieve and critique the findings and test new ideas through physical interventions, events and exhibitions. By being in residence the students are empowered to propose brave and incisive future scenarios. They are then more confident in developing these ideas into new rural architectural languages that still remain relevant to the existing communities. By setting up year long conversations with the local community we have shown that some of the project ideas can act as a catalyst to local regeneration that moves beyond the sentimental or nostalgic and understands the British Countryside as a culturally rich landscape.
Fieldwork: uncovering cultural landscapes
This paper will discuss three years of an undergraduate design studio at the University of Brighton, and how working continuously in the field has enabled students to gain a richer and more complex reading of the British landscape. Each year, the studio stationed itself somewhere in the British countryside – recent locales have been the Isle of Portland, Shoreham-by-Sea and the South Downs National Park. We journey away from our usual environment on multiple field trips for extended periods of time. Immediately developing beyond the observational into the propositional, we begin each project with each student making a gift to offer to the place or community that we visit. This gift is designed in response to the stories, memories, myths and folklore that are uncovered when initially researching the history of an area. They are given to people or left in landscapes to reveal change, collect data, unveil hidden stories, provoke conversations or start friendships. The studio returns periodically to retrieve and critique the findings and test new ideas through physical interventions, events and exhibitions. By being in residence the students are empowered to propose brave and incisive future scenarios. They are then more confident in developing these ideas into new rural architectural languages that still remain relevant to the existing communities. By setting up year long conversations with the local community we have shown that some of the project ideas can act as a catalyst to local regeneration that moves beyond the sentimental or nostalgic and understands the British Countryside as a culturally rich landscape.
Fieldwork: uncovering cultural landscapes
Cheyne, Catriona (Autor:in)
20.02.2015
Cheyne , C 2015 , Fieldwork: uncovering cultural landscapes . in 2nd Annual AAE Conference 2014 Living and Learning . University of Sheffield , UK , pp. 215-221 , 2nd Annual AAE Conference 2014 Living and Learning , 20/02/15 . < https://aaeconference2014.files.wordpress.com/2015/02/aae_proceedings_final.pdf >
Aufsatz (Zeitschrift)
Elektronische Ressource
Englisch
DDC:
720
British Library Conference Proceedings | 1993
|Emerald Group Publishing | 2013
|British Library Online Contents | 2008
|Fieldwork : Landschaftsarchitektur Europa
TIBKAT | 2006
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