Passed foundation level courses (bachelor level) Open for master level architecture and landscape architecture students.
The In Transit Studio
The In Transit Studio aims at preparing students to conduct their architectural investigations through engaging in current, complex societal topics. Students will develop their design skills by studying and proposing site-specific solutions at a detailed architectonic and neighborhood scale. Through practice-based research, the In Transit Studio aims at developing a deeper understanding of the fundamentals of architecture and to (re-) discover the role of the architect as a societal agent of change.
In the Fall 2021 semester, the studio will collaborate with the Oslo Architecture Triennale 2022 (OAT) team and contribute to knowledge production leading up to and potentially presented as part of the official program in different formats.
THE NEIGHBORHOOD PROJECT
Neighborhoods – whether in Greenwich Village, Vallingby, or Djakarta – are the foundation for neighborliness, the greatest virtue in the repertoire of urban citizenship, the core of global civility. That these bonds are produced even under the worst physical adversities is a testament to their abiding importance. The struggle for neighborhoods, though, is in finding the means to be non-exclusionary. - Michael Sorkin, All over the Map (2011:386)
The neighborhood as urban social and formal organization supporting a varied, safe, and active existence, plays an important role in our everyday life. The ongoing pandemic has contributed to a new appreciation for the neighborhood as many of us now spend most of our time in our immediate surroundings, our own neighborhoods. Amplified by the consequences of the pandemic however, the reality for the many who do not have access to safe and inclusive environments is the opposite.
The city of Oslo is a patchwork of different neighborhoods with diverse histories and a varied architectural language – spanning from the 19th century apartment blocks in Frogner and Grünerløkka, the large city blocks in Iladalen, the garden cities like Actanderbyen og Ullevål hageby, the “apple orchard” districts with single family housing, to large-scale satellite towns like Stovner og Alna. The neighborhood has been celebrated in popular and scholarly literature of architecture and urbanism for many decades (Jacobs, 1984, Sorkin, 2011). However, also appropriated by different socially conservative urban development movements, especially in the UK and the US. Yet, the neighborhood approach has survived also in progressive circles – partly due to increased focus on the concept of “the local” as a sustainable way of urban life. Increasingly, the idea of the successful neighborhood manifests itself in politics and official urban development policies, the city of Oslo included. It is also becoming a topic of exploration by leading cultural institutions and will be the thematic focus of the forthcoming Oslo Architecture Triennale 2022 (OAT). This indicates a newfound interest in the neighborhood in policy, practice and research of architecture and urbanism, to which the In Transit Studio will contribute.
A question that presents itself is then: is Oslo a city of well-functioning neighborhoods? During the pandemic, the inequality and the already existing social stigma experienced by residents of certain districts of Oslo, has been amplified by high numbers of COVID-19 infections. The spread of the virus in these districts, compared with more affluent districts of Oslo, is often the result of small and overcrowded apartments and lack of meeting places outside of people’s homes. Numbers from Oslo Municipality as of April 2021, show that districts associated with social challenges also before the pandemic, had the highest numbers of COVID cases: With this as a point of departure, one or several neighborhoods in one or more of these districts will be selected as cases for the semester assignment. The studio aims to explore the following questions: How can new ways of living and social infrastructure contribute to creating diverse, tolerant, and inclusive neighborhoods? How do we plan and facilitate for diversity and social sustainability in our neighborhoods?
Working and learning activities
Through research and design, the student will develop an urban strategy and project proposal for one neighborhood, which should include one - or a set of architectural projects that addresses social challenges. You should consider the entire neighborhood as your site, and determine functions and programs needed for your project proposal. This will be based on input provided throughout the course and found through self-study, and to a large extent based on the urban profiling exercise, as detailed below:
At the beginning of the semester, the studio will study and compare the different neighborhoods by conducting urban profiling exercises. This involves both desk studies and field work. In collaboration with the Oslo Architecture Triennale 2022 (OAT), and through direct engagement with residents and organizations of the selected neighborhoods, the studio will use qualitative methods for studying and evaluating the everyday life of public spaces, buildings, and other structures in a chosen neighborhood, to uncover the causes and dynamics of social behavior (or exclusion), (lack of) diversity, and (in-) equality in the uses and access of these spaces. Part of the Oslo City Council’s strategy for developing the city, is to compensate for scarcity of land in the denser parts of the city center by making use of courtyards, rooftops, and other so-called left-over areas. Thus, a part of the assignment is to also identify appropriate sites for interventions included in the semester assignment project proposal.
Learning outcome
The student will learn how explore and develop architectural design for neighborhoods facing social inequality and reflect on how to plan for and respond to unexpected situations. The student will gain insight into real-time, global challenges– and the role of the architect in this context. The studio will provide knowledge about societal challenges.
Working and learning activities
Through research and design, the student will develop an urban strategy and project proposal for one neighborhood, which should include one - or a set of architectural projects that addresses social challenges. You should consider the entire neighborhood as your site, and determine functions and programs needed for your project proposal. This will be based on input provided throughout the course and found through self-study, and to a large extent based on the urban profiling exercise, as detailed below:
At the beginning of the semester, the studio will study and compare the different neighborhoods by conducting urban profiling exercises. This involves both desk studies and field work. In collaboration with the Oslo Architecture Triennale 2022 (OAT), and through direct engagement with residents and organizations of the selected neighborhoods, the studio will use qualitative methods for studying and evaluating the everyday life of public spaces, buildings, and other structures in a chosen neighborhood, to uncover the causes and dynamics of social behavior (or exclusion), (lack of) diversity, and (in-) equality in the uses and access of these spaces. Part of the Oslo City Council’s strategy for developing the city, is to compensate for scarcity of land in the denser parts of the city center by making use of courtyards, rooftops, and other so-called left-over areas. Thus, a part of the assignment is to also identify appropriate sites for interventions included in the semester assignment project proposal.
Excursions: Selected neighborhoods of the Oslo Metropolitan area. In addition, the studio plans to visit selected architecture and urban design projects in Oslo and surroundings, as shorter day-trip excursions.
Form of assessment
Deliverables throughout - and at the end of the course - shall include imaginative and innovative, yet concrete project proposals with architectural designs that are carefully presented through models, drawings and visualizations. Students are expected to work at both a (strategic) city level and at a detailed architectonic scale. Students need to answer all assignments and be present at all presentations to pass the course (depending on how the situation evolves, online meeting platform will also be used in daily communications and teaching). If a student is not able to be present his/her/their project or be present at scheduled reviews, a medical leave note must be presented. All answered assignments and presentations are subject to an overall assessment - with an emphasis on the presentation of the final design project, which will be evaluated by external juror(s) and responsible teachers.
Grading scale
Pass / fail for AHO students,
Grades A - F for ERASMUS and other exchange students
Form of assessment | Grouping | Grading scale | Comment |
---|---|---|---|
Project assignment | Individual | Pass / fail |