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PROPERTYRIGHTS-PLANNING  April 2021

PROPERTYRIGHTS-PLANNING April 2021

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Subject:

2022 Calgary CFP: Urbanism, Landscapes, Architecture, Design and Teaching

From:

Matt Thomas <[log in to unmask]>

Reply-To:

Property Rights - Planning <[log in to unmask]>

Date:

Tue, 27 Apr 2021 13:37:33 +0100

Content-Type:

text/plain

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Hi, below is a call from the University of Calgary. Abstracts (early) due July 1st. Publications with UCL Press and Cambridge Scholars publishing 


CULTURES, COMMUNITIES AND DESIGN

A CONFERENCE CONNECTING PLANNING, LANDSCAPES, ARCHITECTURE AND PEOPLE

The University of Calgary
June 28-30, 2022
Abstracts: 01 July, 2021 (Early)

https://architecturemps.com/calgary/


THEMES:

Design + Planning; Society + Cultures; Infrastructure + Building; Teaching + learning 


PROVOCATION:

‘The Countryside’ – a polemically generic term Rem Koolhaas has recently used to reposition debates about our cities to those of rural areas. While posited as ‘new’, it is, in reality, a well established mode of thinking. Through notions such as the peri-urban for example, geographers, sociologists, architects, urban designers and regional economists have all debated the urban-rural relationship for several decades. Under this framework we are obliged to consider the city and its architecture on its own terms, but also address the ‘rural’ in its particular context and, importantly, explore the parallels and mutual influences at play.

ISSUES:

According to this logic, the social, cultural, planning and design issues relevant in our cities find parallels outside the city fringe. Calgary, the host city of this conference, is a perfect example. It has heavy industry, a thriving business economy and a growing tourist sector. However, pockets of the city contend with poverty and gentrification. As a city, Calgary also ‘pressures’ its surrounding lands including the Rockies and the Banff nature reserve.

HISTORY:

While such debates are of concern today around the world, they were also highlighted 50 years ago when the host school of this conference was founded. Back then, Archigram and Buckminster Fuller argued that architecture, technology and the ‘earth’ were interconnected. Jane Jacobs connected the built environment with social concerns. Aldo van Eyke fought for communities and the participatory practices and, in 1971, the National Organization of Minority Architects (NOMA) was founded in the United States.

As it celebrates its 50th Year anniversary in 2021-22, the School of Architecture, Planning and Landscape at the University of Calgary sees this conference as engaging in the interdisciplinary ethos of its origins. It seeks to debate contemporary questions of architecture, the city, society, rights and the environment globally. It argues that each of these disciplines are interrelated fields of thought and practice, and that the lessons learnt in one place and time, are useful in another.



PUBLISHERS: 

Cambridge Scholars Publishing and UCL Press.


CONFERENCE SITE:

https://architecturemps.com/calgary/

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