Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1942/42456
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dc.contributor.authorRODRIGUEZ ALFONZO, Josymar-
dc.contributor.authorHUYBRECHTS, Liesbeth-
dc.contributor.authorROOSEN, Barbara-
dc.date.accessioned2024-02-21T12:17:24Z-
dc.date.available2024-02-21T12:17:24Z-
dc.date.issued2024-
dc.date.submitted2024-02-19T10:57:47Z-
dc.identifier.citationDiseña, 24 (1) , p. 1 -15 (Art N° 4)-
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/1942/42456-
dc.description.abstractParticipatory Design (PD) is increasingly interested in a repair process, motivated by the curiosity to articulate a more caring and relational attitude toward our socio-ecological environment. However, placing "repair" centrally in PD is difficult since it has been traditionally focused on "making together" and less on repairing what was once made or even "unmake." While repair is part of our continuous activities (repairing clothes, bikes, marriages, and relationships), it is often a painful and challenging endeavor. Repair entails hope but also grief. This article discusses how we used a Live Lab to explore more intimate design approaches, opening pathways to explore plural relations and access embodied and emotional knowledge. Finally, based on our research experience in a garden city, we will reflect upon how acting within an intimacy framework contributes to PD's repair process in bringing socio-ecological entanglements to the agenda of citizens.-
dc.language.isoen-
dc.publisherSchool of Design of the Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile-
dc.rightsCC BY-SA 4.0 CL Free of access-
dc.subject.otherParticipatory Design-
dc.subject.otherRelationality-
dc.subject.otherIntimacy-
dc.subject.otherMetabolic Engagements-
dc.subject.otherCommunicative-
dc.titleCare and Repair through Intimacy: A Live Lab Approach inthe Garden City-
dc.typeJournal Contribution-
dc.identifier.epage15-
dc.identifier.issue1-
dc.identifier.spage1-
dc.identifier.volume24-
local.format.pages15-
local.bibliographicCitation.jcatA2-
local.publisher.placeSantiago de Chile-
dc.relation.referencesLiesbeth Huybrechts is an Associate Professor who works in participatory design and spatial transformation processes in the research group Arck at the University of Hasselt. She is also the Head of the Research Faculty of Architecture and Arts. She holds a Ph.D. and Postgraduate degree in Cultural Studies and a Master's Communicatiewetenschappen from KULeuven (2011, 2004, 2003). She has developed a research interest in the design for/with participatory exchanges and processes of building capacity between humans and the material/natural environment and the “politics” of designing these relations. Liesbeth is editor-in-chief of the CoDesign Journal, Taylor and Francis, and part of the second Handbook of Participatory Design editorial committee, Routledge. Her most recent publications include (1) Huybrechts, L., Devisch, O. & Tassinari, V. (2022). Re-framing the Politics of Design. Mechelen: Public Space. (2) Liesbeth Huybrechts, Oswald Devisch & Virginia Tassinari (2022) Beyond polarisation: reimagining communities through the imperfect act of ontologising, CoDesign, 18:1, 63-77. Barbara Roosen is an architect and postdoctoral researcher at the research group Spatial Capacity Building at the Faculty of Architecture and Art, Hasselt University, Belgium. Her research focuses on the critical agency of mapping and imaging in spatial design processes. In her Ph.D. thesis (2021), she investigated ‘critical atlassing’ as a dialectical design approach to mapping and dialogues. She obtained a MA in Architecture at Sint Lucas School of Architecture and Arts, Brussels, and a MA in Human Settlements at KULeuven. Her most recent publications include: (1) Zuljevic, M., Roosen, B., Huybrechts, L. (2022) Thinging with the Past: Co-Designing a Slow Road Network by Mediating between the Historical Landscape and the Design Space. CoDesign. (2) Roosen, B., Devisch, O., Huybrechts, L. (2020) Dialectical Design Dialogues: Insights from the Production of an Atlas in a Flemish residential neighborhood. Journal of Urban Planning 5(4), pp.28-251. Josymar Rodriguez Alfonzo is an activist and architect from Caracas, Venezuela. She is a Ph.D. candidate whose work centers on spatial transformation and participatory design in the research group Spatial Capacity Building at the Faculty of Architecture and Art, Hasselt University, Belgium. Josymar holds a Bachelor’s degree in architecture from Universidad Simón Bolívar (VE) and a Master’s degree in architecture specializing in spatial justice from the University of Oregon (USA) as a recipient of the prestigious Fulbright Scholarship. She is a founding director of Incursiones, a laboratory striving to transform the city’s shared spaces and dynamics through projects that expand the range and quality of interactions between the environment and its inhabitants. Her projects range from temporary installations to small-scale infrastructure in self-built settlements, exhibition design, and education.-
local.type.refereedRefereed-
local.type.specifiedArticle-
local.bibliographicCitation.artnr4-
dc.identifier.doi10.7764/disena.24.article.4-
dc.identifier.urlhttps://www.revistadisena.uc.cl/index.php/Disena/article/view/59637/57119-
local.provider.typePdf-
local.uhasselt.internationalno-
item.fulltextWith Fulltext-
item.fullcitationRODRIGUEZ ALFONZO, Josymar; HUYBRECHTS, Liesbeth & ROOSEN, Barbara (2024) Care and Repair through Intimacy: A Live Lab Approach inthe Garden City. In: Diseña, 24 (1) , p. 1 -15 (Art N° 4).-
item.accessRightsOpen Access-
item.contributorRODRIGUEZ ALFONZO, Josymar-
item.contributorHUYBRECHTS, Liesbeth-
item.contributorROOSEN, Barbara-
Appears in Collections:Research publications
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