EDRA  |  Building Resilient Neighborhoods in the Post-Covid City: Bridging the Social and Ecologial
  • Type

    Webinar

EDRA | Building Resilient Neighborhoods in the Post-Covid City: Bridging the Social and Ecologial

DATE: November 21, 2022
TIME:  11:00 US Central – 18:00 Europe
LOCATION: Via Zoom

The research project ‘From Prevention to Resilience‘ explores how public space and civic engagement can contribute to more resilient urban neighbourhoods. In this final webinar, we present and discuss one central outcome of this project: a framework that challenges and enables urban designers to not only contribute to more resilient human communities but also to non-human communities. The framework proposes three qualities for designers to pursue — i.e., agency, connectedness, and diversity — and provides various strategies and examples on how to do so. The framework was applied in three design cases that took place in Amsterdam neighbourhoods, in collaboration with design professionals and social housing organizations. 

What value was created by integrating human and non-human perspectives? What obstacles and challenges emerged while doing so? And what lessons were learned that could inform future design practices for more resilient neighbourhoods? In this webinar, three design researchers address these questions by presenting and discussing their experiences and findings from the design cases.

Speakers

  • Boudewijn Boon
    Design Researcher, Amsterdam University of Applied Sciences, Civic Interaction Design Research Group, Netherlands
  • Giulia Gualtieri
    Junior Researcher, Amsterdam University of Applied Sciences, Civic Interaction Design Research Group, Netherlands
  • Sába Schramko
    Researcher, Amsterdam University of Applied Sciences, Netherlands
  • Luisa Bravo (Moderator)
    Founder and president, City Space Architecture


Learning Objectives

Participants in this webinar will:

  • be invited to take a new perspective on neighborhood resilience, which encourages designers and other professionals to consider human and non-human communities simultaneously.
  • understand design factors that contribute to elevated stress in healthcare settings
  • become familiar with a rationale for integrating human and other-than-human perspectives on neighborhood resilience.
  • learn about the opportunities and challenges of integrating human and non-human perspectives on neighborhood resilience.

This event was organised in collaboration with City Space Architecture, Environmental Design Research Association