LECTURE SERIES, WS 2014/2015
Prof. Dr. Philipp Misselwitz
Global City, Local Space
Cities do not develop as planners want: Since the origins of modern planning the discipline struggles to position itself between the paradigm of control and the more messy reality of application. With the emergence of a critique of modernist (positivist) planning new approaches and role definitions have been formulated which expose planning not as ansolated, hermeticdiscipline, but as a complex, dynamic, multidisciplinary, situated and mostly open-ended process. There is no objectivity in planning: Planners always face difficult choices.
Decisionmaking in planning is deeply influenced by the broader political and societal contexts through which the planner is conditioned. Yet throughout history, planners have also assumed agency forcing new contexts, shaped new frameworks and va-lue systems and imposed them on society. Planning is a multi-disciplinary and complex affair: Despite an assumed heroic ambition, urban designers often only exert a negligible influence on actual processes and results. Instead, urban managers, politicians and a multitude of private and public actors control planning.
“Urban planners” therefore need to skillfully navigate a complex field between (urban) policy-making, urban governance and urban management. This lecture series will focus on different theoretical approaches to cities, global urbanisation and transformation as well as on the practice of urban planning. Students are encoura ged to develop a (self)critical awareness of the broader context and multidisciplinary field in which planners operate. This should facilitate (not limit) his/ her creative involvement in forging more beautiful, just, and sustainable urban environments through constant critical experimentation with strategies, tools and role models applied.
Lecture, 3 ECTS
MA Arch: WP(3) HAB.01
MA UD: 1 COC
MA SRP: 8. SP IV, WP, W
Teaching day
Tuesday, 2 - 4 pm, A 053
First meeting
October 21, 2 - 4 pm, A 053
Application
List on the first lecture
Prof. Dr. Philipp Misselwitz
misselwitz@tu-berlin.de
Room A 624
T + 49 – 30 – 314 – 21908
F + 49 – 30 – 314 – 21907