Lee
Guy Livingstone
The book ‘The Lee Place’ by Geert Peymen and Pleuntje Jellema is the result of an investigation into spatial parameters that make urban public spaces places of silence, tranquillity and stillness. The concept of the lee – as a place in the river where the current has no hold – symbolises what a place of silence can mean within an urban landscape. The lee place, as a new typology, can help shape the city of the future. The emphasis on experience, on ‘being’ in public space is echoed by the firm NEW SOUTH, a studio for architecture, urbanism and anthropology based in Paris and Brussels. They like to quote Bell Hook’s statement “We put the margin at the centre” and ask how hospitality is extended to the margins, how other voices can be heard and given (public) space in the city? At the intersection of research and practice, they engage with areas in tension, with a focus on vulnerable bodies and fragile places.
Geert Peymen en Pleuntje Jellema
Guy Livingstone
Pleuntje Jellema
Geert Peymen
Meriem Chabani, New South
New South
Antoine Guerin
Matthieu Torres