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2024 | Book

The Role of Architects in Informal Settlements

Claiming the Right to the City

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About this book

With over one billion people worldwide living in informal settlements and enduring substandard housing conditions, these areas present one of the greatest urban challenges of our time. The existence of informal settlements is deeply intertwined with global issues such as climate change, war-induced displacement, and colonialism. As sustainability becomes a central focus in various disciplines, including architecture, the path to sustainable urban development lies in addressing the problems of informal settlements.

Architecture's relevance to this discourse is paradoxically highlighted by its perceived 'irrelevance'. Informal settlements are often overlooked as legitimate sites for architectural practice. This neglect stems from two assumptions: first, architecture's traditional dependence on power and capital, isolating the marginalised who rarely have the chance to receive architectural services; and second, architecture's perceived incapability to address urban-scale infrastructural problems, and thereby its reduction to aesthetic creativity and form making.

This book challenges architecture's focus on the 'centre' and its lack of ambition for creating a pervasive impact on cities. Instead, it highlights the profession's potential to serve the common good and address urban-scale infrastructural issues and proposes the effective engagement of architects in informal settlements.

Drawing on Henri Lefebvre’s dichotomy of margin versus centre in urban spaces, informal settlements are interpreted as spaces on the city’s periphery, created by the marginalised with limited access to power, capital, and authority. By revisiting interrelated concepts such as the production of space, the right to the city, social architecture, and spatial agency within the context of informal settlements, the book claims a space for architectural practice in these areas. It incorporates discussions on insurgent citizenship and critiques of the self-help approach, contextualising its arguments with architectural intervention precedents from around the world. The book concludes with a brief manifesto on practising architecture in informal settlements.

The book aspires to inspire architecture students, practitioners, and researchers to explore the profession’s potential in social problem-solving and to push the boundaries of practice towards inclusiveness for all urban inhabitants.

Table of Contents

Frontmatter
Chapter 1. The Problem: Architecture's Disengagement from Informal Settlements
Abstract
This chapter frames the urgency and relevance of the informal settlements’ issues in relation to architects’ disengagement from these communities. It starts with a review of the reasons behind the existence and growth of informal settlements, the stats associated with these settlements, the issues faced by their inhabitants, and the opportunities for these communities to pursue a better life. Then, it moves on with briefly looking at how modern-day definitions of the architectural profession place architects above the ‘prosaic’ concerns of how to build and later, how to engage users in building processes. It reviews examples of alternative exercises in this regard, but using examples of professional codes of conduct in a developing (Iran) and a developed country (UK,) it argues that the architectural profession is still recognised mainly as a provider of services to clients who can afford it and tends to stay away from facing social malaises head-on. In the end, it calls for rethinking this position in response to exacerbating the urgencies of today in informal settlements and the relevance of architecture in this context.
Nastaran Sedehi, Seyed Hossein Iradj Moeini
Chapter 2. The Position: Engaging Architects in Informal Settlements
Abstract
This chapter revisits the six concepts, the production of space, the right to the city, social architecture, spatial agency, insurgent citizenship, and self-help in relation to the role of architects in informal settlements. It establishes a position and a logical argumentation based on which a rethinking of architects’ role in informal context will be proposed.
Nastaran Sedehi, Seyed Hossein Iradj Moeini
Chapter 3. Precedents: Architects in Informal Settlements
Abstract
This chapter looks into several architectural intervention precedents to see the practical side of engaging architects in the informal context. It contextualises the concepts of the theoretical framework, delineates characteristics of the architectural practice in informal settlements, and introduces ideas for working in that context.
Nastaran Sedehi, Seyed Hossein Iradj Moeini
Backmatter
Metadata
Title
The Role of Architects in Informal Settlements
Authors
Nastaran Sedehi
Seyed Hossein Iradj Moeini
Copyright Year
2024
Electronic ISBN
978-3-031-67125-8
Print ISBN
978-3-031-67124-1
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-67125-8