Making Architecture Relevant to Underserved Communities: Mapping Reconsidered

Joongsub Kim
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Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic and the death of George Floyd shed new light on longstanding disparities that exist in low-income communities of color and impact their overall well-being. Architectural educators and practitioners across the United States are engaging in public discourse to debate the role that architecture should play in promoting diversity, equity, and inclusion in education and the architectural profession. This trend has motivated us to ask: How can architecture be made more relevant to underserved communities? This article investigated that question via the construct of mapping. Mapping is a mechanism for reflection, rediscovery, and reexamination of the familiar and self-discovery of the less familiar. To further explore how mapping can help make architecture more relevant to disadvantaged populations, we used a mobile mapping station (MMS)—a practical, hands-on, community-based project conducted in Detroit. This article focused on MMSs, exploring how, when coupled with social justice values and equitable development principles, architecture can be made more accessible to broader populations.
使建筑与服务不足的社区相关:重新考虑映射
2019冠状病毒病大流行和乔治·弗洛伊德的去世,为低收入有色人种社区长期存在的差异提供了新的视角,并影响了他们的整体福祉。美国各地的建筑教育家和从业者都在参与公共话语,讨论建筑在促进教育和建筑专业的多样性、公平性和包容性方面应该发挥的作用。这种趋势促使我们提出这样的问题:如何使建筑与服务不足的社区更加相关?本文通过映射的构造来研究这个问题。映射是一种对熟悉的事物进行反思、重新发现和重新审视的机制,也是对不太熟悉的事物进行自我发现的机制。为了进一步探索地图如何帮助建筑更贴近弱势群体,我们使用了一个移动地图站(MMS)——一个在底特律进行的实用的、动手的、基于社区的项目。本文主要关注mms,探索如何在与社会公正价值观和公平发展原则相结合的情况下,使体系结构更容易为更广泛的人群所接受。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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