UCL Development Planning Unit: 
  - "Planning for socially just and sustainable development in the global 
south"
  
BUDDlab series
BUDDlab is published by the  Development Planning Unit, UCL.
The Development Planning Unit is an international centre specialising in academic teaching, practical training, research and consultancy in sustainable
urban and regional development policy, planning and management. 
Development Planning Unit, University College London 
34 Tavistock Square, London WC1H 9EZ, United Kingdom
  
 
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 BUDDlab Volume 1 - October 2010 
 Wales Workshop
 
  
 Since the beginning of time, the art and act of building has been at the core of human evolution and our relationship
with the specific landscapes that surround us. And while the idea of building with traditionally local 
materials and resources still exists in parts of the world, in many western societies, 
the opportunity to initiate and engage in an actual building project is difficult in 
comparison to the amount of ideas that are hatched on a drawing board or computer.
  
For the past years, the Wales Workshop at CAT-Machenllyth
has provided a platform for BUDD students to escape
the urban confines of London, and gain hands-on skills utilizing local 
resources and methods while further building upon their group dynamics outside the classroom.
BUDDlab Volume 1 captures the essence of these experiences, offering a collection
 of essays regarding the conceptual multiplicity of ‘building’ and the role of practitioners,
as well as the reflective voices of past students.
People are at the heart of building and the Wales Workshop
would not have been possible without the passion
and dedication of our esteemed colleague, Maurice Mitchell of the London Metropolitan University, 
the fine hosts and facilities at CAT-Machenllyth and indeed the many BUDD students who have trudged its grounds.
 
  
Foreword -Caren Levy 
Materials that Fit -Maurice Mitchell 
Reflecting on Action -Camillo Boano 
Building Dimensions -William Hunter 
Student Voices 
References
  
  BUDDlab
    Vol 2 - June 2011 
    BUDDcamp, Brescia-Italy
    
...In ‘Trading Cities 1’ from his now seminal text Invisible
Cities, Italo Calvino describes the city of Euphemia as
a place “where the merchants of seven nations gather
at every solstice and equinox.” These merchants arrive
at Euphemia for trade and simultaneously develop an
evening cultural exchange, “sharing tales of wolves,
sisters, treasures” unifying merchants from different nations
along their travels for financial gain. Though cultural
diverse, this sharing of second hand experience of
the world serves to connect specific lifestyles, thereby
giving Euphemia a distinct social identity.
  
Unfortunately, in most urban areas throughout the world,
this symbolic and evocative aura of collectiveness falters
by way (among other things) of stereotypical fear and
fragmentation. Nestled near Brescia, Italy’s main central
square, the Quartiere Del Carmine, was a place not unlike
Euphemia. Though finding itself in a state dereliction
in the ‘70s and ‘80s, subsequent refurbishment and
transformation in the ‘90s has given way to a completely
gentrified character with pockets of mixed immigrant areas.
A major consequence of this development is that
it has stifled the use of open spaces and semi-public
spaces where everyday meetings took place and strong
social ties were formed and thrived. However, despite
this challenge, small groups of women have initiated
projects underlining good neighbourhood practices that
revolve around a network of open houses where immigrant
families develop ‘care’ practices at different levels...
      
    FOREWORD - William Hunter 
INTRODUCTION - Agostino Zanotti 
STUDENT REFLECTIONS 
BUDD 2011 Class 
REFERENCES 
    
     
  
              BUDDlab Vol 3 - February 2012
                "Speculations on a Good City"
              “Through its complex orchestration of time and
space no less than through the social division of labor,
life in the city takes on the character of a symphony:
specialized human aptitudes, specialized
instruments, give rise to sonorous results which,
neither in volume nor in quality, could be achieved
by any single piece.”
  
The symphony of Lewis Mumford’s city is one of progressive
innovation, an evolving repository of meanings
and memories. It distinguishes itself from other scales of
creation due to the way density harnesses and gives rise
to a new energized circuitry manifest in social activity
and material artefacts. Yet the city, with all this dynamic
sophistication, is arguably just as imperfect. Essentially
the city provides the location for culture to feed, to roam,
and to make mischief.
  
Indeed plenty of mischief occurs in cities- from the wallows
of criminal activity, to uneven capital distribution
and societal fragmentation brought about by neoliberal
urban planning. Hardly a city in the world can claim exclusion
from these debilitating forces. But certainly these
rather negative and challenging facets of human nature
are not the only defining features of our cities. After all,
cities everywhere are counteracting these realities with
ever-competing campaigns of unique and attractive urban
projects and initiatives, cultural experiments, and
overall positivity. The burning question then is not one of
perfection, but rather considers what factors and criteria
can simply render a ‘good city’?...
                
  Preface - William Hunter
  
THE GOOD CITY: Inclusive City: Recognition, Redistribution
and Representation for Negotiating Insurgent Citizenships - Veyom Bahl
  
Cultivating Innovation: Seeds of a good city and the case of Rosario - Krista Canellakis
  
Shaking Up the City: From Street Art to Creating a Sense of Place - Melissa García-Lamarca
  
Two Ideal Contemporary City Visions: England and Chile: Daniela Godoy
  
Musings on a Networked City - Benjamin Leclair-Paquet
  
Memory City- Still Learning from Las Vegas - William Hunter
  
Composing the City: Urban Feedback, Connectivity & Strengthened Identity - Andrew Wade
  
             
Good for whom? Nick Wolff
The    concept    of    the    good    city    is    inherently   subjective -good  for  whom?  Beyond  the  physical  infrastructure,  the  
 concept  of  a  city  is  also  made  up  of  its  visitors  and workers,  the  role  that  the  city  as  a  functioning  entity  performs 
 and   the   influence   that   it   brings   to   bear   on   those  outside 
  its   borders,  which  may  reach  from  the  local  to  the  
 global.    However  the  group  that  has  the   greatest  stake  in    
 the  notion  of  a   good  city  are  its  residents,  and  it  is  they  
 with   whom    this  essay   will  be  primarily   concerned.    The   
 essay   will  approach  the  good  city  as   one  that  is  good  for      
 all  its   residents.  It  is  therefore  directly  concerned  with  the  
 concept  of  social  justice. 
  
AFTERWORD - Camillo Boano
  
REFERENCES
     
    
    
  
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