“Mapping as a Tool for Collective Thinking” [25- 28 November 2024]
The workshop series combines artistic and design methods with intergenerational approaches to explore active participation in community building. In collaboration with students from the practical class at Alfred-Nobel-Schule in Neukölln, the project is organized by an interdisciplinary team led by *Sadia Sharmin (Habitat Forum Berlin) as part of the FORM IT practical module at the weißensee kunsthochschule berlin and in cooperation with Young Arts Diversity.
The first two workshops provide students with the opportunity to develop their own visions for social spaces while simultaneously exploring approaches to sustainable urban development. By working with artistic methods, the workshops strengthen design skills and personal responsibility, while also making the transformative power of collective processes tangible.
The third workshop is aimed at creative professionals and students interested in intergenerational collaboration and participatory approaches. Speculative methods such as fictional scenarios and “what-if” narratives are used to develop alternative visions of urban spaces and social infrastructures. The final reflection session invites creative professionals and interdisciplinary practitioners to engage in dialogue, share insights on co-creative processes.
*Sadia Sharmin is an architect and researcher specializing in co-creation processes, creative advocacy, and collective knowledge production. With an interdisciplinary approach, she collaborates with diverse stakeholders, including community members, children, and young people, emphasizing a “learning by doing” methodology. Her research explores the role of architecture in fostering community building and developing narratives centered on care and anticipation.
THIS IS NOT AN ATLAS
20 MARCH 2023 TO 30 JUNE 2023
While traditional cartography reflects and reinforces the power in place, experiments in counter-cartography aim to reverse points of view and propose alternative spatial representations to those of the established order. The aim of Ceci n’est pas un atlas is to disseminate critical cartography as a tool for grassroots struggles and mobilisation. The men and women who produce the maps are the first to be involved in their creation.
This unique exhibition, organised in collaboration with Éditions du commun, coincides with the publication in February 2023 of CECI N’EST PAS UN ATLAS – La cartographie comme outil de luttes, 21 exemples à travers le monde by Éditions du commun. It is the counterpart to the book Cartographie radicale. Explorations by Nepthys Zwer and Philippe Rekacewicz, published at the end of 2021 by Dominique Carré – La Découverte.
Amader Pathagar (A Library of Our Own), 2021, 18:19 Min || Benjamin Busch & Sadia Sharmin
Framed as an encounter, the story of the Shaheed Rumi Memorial Library, situated in the self-organised settlement Karail Basti in Dhaka, Bangladesh, unfolds through a series of interviews and visual materials depicting spatial imaginaries. Although they use the term “library” for this politically conscious social organization, which carries a collective ideology against the hegemonic system, and believes in the power of resistance from the grassroots, the group expands its activities and actions beyond reading. They represent strength against the authoritarian perspective and challenge the limitations of informality. A space like this is rare, even in the “formal” neighborhoods of Dhaka and around the world.
Interviews conducted there in February 2020, especially with the young members of the library, reflect the group’s history, activities, and dreams for the future. Presented in two channels, the viewer observes a multilayered representation of the encounter in a way that both challenges cinematic immersion and builds a bridge between the space of screening and the space of everyday life in Karail Basti. Visually, it combines the interviews with collective drawings produced in workshops led by Sadia Sharmin as well as 3D scans of the space produced by Benjamin Busch. Part of the Habitat Forum Berlin Archive (est. 2009), the work contributes to ongoing research in Karail Basti.
We welcome you to the symposium Andernorts – Denken Handeln Fühlen from 10.12. to 13.12.2020 in the former Tempelhof Airport building. The event takes place within the exhibition Living the City on cities, people and histories. Together with interested participants and students from the fields of art, architecture, design and sociology, we would like to shed light on the reports and works of Karail’s residents and their different approaches to the organization of everyday life and space in a 4-day workshop symposium. In the Agora, contributions will be shown in the form of lectures, films and performative events on related topics. The results will be presented on Sunday in the former airport restaurant. Prospective participants can send an application to the following e-mail address: nest.hfb@t-online.de. Further information will be published soon.
Information Overload from the Map to the Ground
With Information Overload from the Map to the Ground, we didn’t aim to explain or reduce the complexity of urbanisation in the 21st century, or of the settlements like Karail Basti, that are such a characteristic, if worrying, part of it. Taking off from the actual ambiguity of the instruments “satellite picture” and “mapping”, applied in an increasing number of studies since the so-called “topographical turn”, we put into practice the radical lesson these settlements teach, which is, to stop counting and start talking with their inhabitants. Searching for words to name what we’re looking at, we were able to grasp these settlements’ and their inhabitants’ own voice. The visualisation, which earned the first prize in the international competition Planetary Urbanism, benefitted from the onsite research efforts of Louisa Scherer, Paul Klever, Farhana Rahman, Anna Sauter, Abdul Kader Khan (Komol), Marian Knop, Lisa Lampe and Tamanna Siddiqui. It will be exhibited during Habitat III in Quito, Ecuador, in October 2016.
What is Karail Basti?!
High fluctuation, insecurity about the future and a state deserting its role on the one hand; self-organisation, practices of resilience and established networks on the other, shape physical outlook and social forms of Karail Basti, a squatter settlement in the heart of Bangladesh’s capital city, Dhaka. To those who are ready to look behind the surface, the basti (don’t call it slum!) offers an opportunity to reflect on the effects of enduring neglect of structural problems, such as poverty and lacking governance, vis-à-vis the neoliberal promises of “digital futures” and “smart cities”. Like in other parts of the world, Bangladesh’s urban poor, subject to consistent politics of exclusion from basic resources, are left no alternative but to occupy, self-organise and negotiate space in order to access housing.
Karail Basti – a socio-physical mapping
Along with the Bangladesh-based organisations DSK and NDBUS, and with the support of ASA programme, HFB is carrying out a longue durée socio-physical mapping of Dhaka’s biggest spontaneous settlement, Karail Basti. Thanks to repeated interviews with the dwellers and sustained field observation, we are collecting anthropological and sociological knowledge on the basti’s everyday life. A baseline study of the living conditions and living environment in the settlement as well as workshops with selected groups of inhabitants delivered maps that were handed over to the basti dwellers’ organisation in 2012/2013. In 2014, special attention was given to architectural solutions for housing (in-situ upgrading), to the networks that ensure the provision of water, electricity and gas, as well as to emergent spatial phenomena linked to the in-move of new socio-demographic groups. In the remainder of the project (2015-2017), we aim at widening our understanding of the inhabitants’ mental, i.e. cultural representations of the Basti via participant observation, mental maps, sound and video recordings.