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URBAN FACILITATORS, Collaborative Urbanism

Why | To promote and develop the approach of the urban facilitators
What | International trends watching + meetings + social media + website (in construction)
With COLOKi

I met diverse “urban facilitators” around the world, feed Facebook, TwitterLinkedIn pages and develop website “URBANfacilitators.net “ (in construction) to promote collaborative urbanism.

Urban facilitators? They are the solution to create sustainable development in our cities divided in zones, specialties, departments. They are the missing link between experts, professionals, communities, governmental institutions, stakeholders. They are the generalist doctors able to clarify the complexity of our places and cobuild programs with the right persons and tools.

Here are the 3 features they share: integral approach, collaborative work, transversal action. Continue reading

PLUG & PLAY, Tactical Urban Park

Why | To activate an empty spot with urban temporary installations
What | Facilitation + design + communication
Where | Staatsliedenbuurt, Utrecht, the Netherlands
With | dolte
Who | For AORTA

The Staatsliedenbuurt in Utrecht is a neighbourhood in transition. Social housing from the last century have been dismantled to let room for more modern and qualitative housing. Only… the new buildings take long to come and it is now several years that there is a large empty spot in the middle of the neighbourhood. Architecture centre AORTA has had the good idea to ask few designers to imagine temporarily uses for this area with the inhabitants. Continue reading

PANYA, EartHome

Why | To learn how to use natural materials: earth bags, adobe, cob and wood
What | Natural construction
Where | Rural area, Chiang Mai, Thailand
Who | For the local community

The goal was to create a small earth house for our local village in an energy packed 10 days.  With an international team of about 30 people, I made and laid adobe bricks held together with mortar, helped setting the carpentry and the windows, covered the wall of mortar. Natural building relies on materials and techniques which are ecologically sound, culturally sensitive, reliant on local resources and skills, and are within economic reach of local inhabitants. Building a house with the earth beneath is an empowering and liberating experience, connecting people back to their roots, it has countless benefits both for the bodies that inhabit it and the planet it exists on. Continue reading

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