Als je deze strook ziet is het best mogelijk dat onze website niet optimaal functioneert of zelfs niet werkt bij bepaalde onderdelen. Je gebruikt best een recente versie van Chrome, Firefox, Safari of Edge.

Contact | Secretariaat
Martine Pollier
Zandstraat 324, 8200 Brugge
T +32 50 322 420
info@archipelvzw.be

Lecture

Inclusive city

On thresholds for and doors to welcoming in-between spaces in the metropolis
Thursday
26.09
20:00

 

With the support of:

&bogdan & BC architects
Globe Aroma

In September, we focus on inclusion, hospitality and diversity in the city. We look at a plan for a centre for drug users and an artistic workplace for artists from the margins. Not because spaces for drug users or artists with a migration story are comparable one-to-one, but because there is an ambition from both projects to create a safe environment that can offer perspective to people in precarious situations and, from that environment, have an impact on the hospitality of the city as a whole.

BCarchitects_studies_bogdan

The project for the integrated centre for drug users at the Tour & Taxis site designed by &bogdan and BC architects, raises many fascinating questions. They describe it themselves as a 21st-century hostel – a place where one can find a warm welcome and temporary rest along the way. How do they deal with the incorporation of this project into the city and the role of its users – often in very precarious circumstances – in it? How is attention to inclusion and exclusion in the city reflected in the rest of their work?

In another part of Brussels, Globe Aroma puts many of these ideas into practice with an arts centre/atelier as an intermediate space. The daily studio operation and the impending conversion of the site touch on many layers and contradictions at play for groups on the margins of society: need for a stage and voice on the one hand and security, safety and perhaps even invisibility on the other.

Commissioned by the Society for Urban Development (MSI.brussels), BC architects & studies &bogdan are designing a reception centre for primary care on Brussels Avenue de la Port. The construction of such a reception centre is much needed for the city and the Canal Zone and goes hand in hand with the continuation of port activities. The result will be a “well-oiled machine” for the Port on the one hand and an open building for the non-profit association Transit on the other, with 24/7 social control and maximum privacy for the most vulnerable in our society. The obvious choice was to design a warm and welcoming architecture, one that does not speak of itself but gives meaning. The project is not an anonymous institution, but a juxtaposition of several autonomous houses that are well connected. Architecture here becomes more than ever an instrument of social justice.

Oana Bogdan, &bogdan

BCarchitects_studies_bogdan

An Vandermeulen, Globe Aroma

Globe Aroma


Globe Aroma