Imaginative Practices and Measure: Re-Presenting the Danish Welfare Landscape as Common Ground

Research output: Contribution to conferenceConference abstract for conferenceResearch

Standard

Imaginative Practices and Measure : Re-Presenting the Danish Welfare Landscape as Common Ground. / van Haeren, Kristen Danielle.

2017. Abstract from Common Ground: - Design and Research in Architecture and Landscape, Hannover, Germany.

Research output: Contribution to conferenceConference abstract for conferenceResearch

Harvard

van Haeren, KD 2017, 'Imaginative Practices and Measure: Re-Presenting the Danish Welfare Landscape as Common Ground', Common Ground: - Design and Research in Architecture and Landscape, Hannover, Germany, 04/05/2017 - 06/05/2017.

APA

van Haeren, K. D. (2017). Imaginative Practices and Measure: Re-Presenting the Danish Welfare Landscape as Common Ground. Abstract from Common Ground: - Design and Research in Architecture and Landscape, Hannover, Germany.

Vancouver

van Haeren KD. Imaginative Practices and Measure: Re-Presenting the Danish Welfare Landscape as Common Ground. 2017. Abstract from Common Ground: - Design and Research in Architecture and Landscape, Hannover, Germany.

Author

van Haeren, Kristen Danielle. / Imaginative Practices and Measure : Re-Presenting the Danish Welfare Landscape as Common Ground. Abstract from Common Ground: - Design and Research in Architecture and Landscape, Hannover, Germany.

Bibtex

@conference{2042b9f8cd074e1e93dedadb55fb6d6b,
title = "Imaginative Practices and Measure: Re-Presenting the Danish Welfare Landscape as Common Ground",
abstract = "The Welfare State in Denmark, as established during a great surge of post-war technological developments, was firmly rooted in a time motivated by Modernist ideas of rationalization and regulation. The dreams and desires of establishing the Functionist City resulted in architectural and landscape projects being dictated by notions of objective truth. Motivated by the new industrial efficiency, social-housing projects became an experiment of standardization, fabricated from factual analysis and modern measure.It is the position of this paper that the notion of {\textquoteleft}the good life{\textquoteright} that the Modernist period strived for resulted in housing estates that were merely an assemblage of material and visual data, devoid of all that ensues from human experiences and lived-in perception. Driven by practices of analysis and calculated conventions of Cartesian order, the Danish Welfare Estates became a tool for self-promotion and an output of universal desire. What is depicted though the various archival material documenting their designs, portrays a scenario of a closed and stabilized world immune to the temporalities of reality embedded in experience. The projects are masked by a representational order and mediated by modern measure, leaving little room for interpretive and perceptual freedom. Derived from an attempt to hold the world still in hopes of autonomy and control, the Welfare sites struggle to remain relevant today.Thereby, this paper focuses on the landscapes of the Danish Welfare State projects as a potential medium for revealing the presence of spatial temporalities derived from traditional (experience-centred) measuring of the sites. The project aims to reveal the ever-unfolding temporal and immaterial aspects of the housing estates through experiments of making which combine that which was originally derived from modern measure (archival material) with a newly situated and relational reading of the landscape. Though re-presenting landscape as a constructed milieu, derived equally from material and contingent immaterial experiences of the being-in-the-world, the ambition is to construct a common ground for future acts of collective re-imagining. By exploring landscape as a medium, both permanently present yet always transient, the hope is to establish the Welfare Estates as part of a poetic process of continual becoming, promoting future possibilities built upon dynamics, openness, multiplicity and imagination. ",
keywords = "???Landskabsarkitektur???, common ground, measure, respresentation, welfare landscapes, interpretation and experience",
author = "{van Haeren}, {Kristen Danielle}",
year = "2017",
language = "English",
note = "Common Ground: - Design and Research in Architecture and Landscape ; Conference date: 04-05-2017 Through 06-05-2017",

}

RIS

TY - ABST

T1 - Imaginative Practices and Measure

T2 - Common Ground: - Design and Research in Architecture and Landscape

AU - van Haeren, Kristen Danielle

N1 - Conference code: 7

PY - 2017

Y1 - 2017

N2 - The Welfare State in Denmark, as established during a great surge of post-war technological developments, was firmly rooted in a time motivated by Modernist ideas of rationalization and regulation. The dreams and desires of establishing the Functionist City resulted in architectural and landscape projects being dictated by notions of objective truth. Motivated by the new industrial efficiency, social-housing projects became an experiment of standardization, fabricated from factual analysis and modern measure.It is the position of this paper that the notion of ‘the good life’ that the Modernist period strived for resulted in housing estates that were merely an assemblage of material and visual data, devoid of all that ensues from human experiences and lived-in perception. Driven by practices of analysis and calculated conventions of Cartesian order, the Danish Welfare Estates became a tool for self-promotion and an output of universal desire. What is depicted though the various archival material documenting their designs, portrays a scenario of a closed and stabilized world immune to the temporalities of reality embedded in experience. The projects are masked by a representational order and mediated by modern measure, leaving little room for interpretive and perceptual freedom. Derived from an attempt to hold the world still in hopes of autonomy and control, the Welfare sites struggle to remain relevant today.Thereby, this paper focuses on the landscapes of the Danish Welfare State projects as a potential medium for revealing the presence of spatial temporalities derived from traditional (experience-centred) measuring of the sites. The project aims to reveal the ever-unfolding temporal and immaterial aspects of the housing estates through experiments of making which combine that which was originally derived from modern measure (archival material) with a newly situated and relational reading of the landscape. Though re-presenting landscape as a constructed milieu, derived equally from material and contingent immaterial experiences of the being-in-the-world, the ambition is to construct a common ground for future acts of collective re-imagining. By exploring landscape as a medium, both permanently present yet always transient, the hope is to establish the Welfare Estates as part of a poetic process of continual becoming, promoting future possibilities built upon dynamics, openness, multiplicity and imagination.

AB - The Welfare State in Denmark, as established during a great surge of post-war technological developments, was firmly rooted in a time motivated by Modernist ideas of rationalization and regulation. The dreams and desires of establishing the Functionist City resulted in architectural and landscape projects being dictated by notions of objective truth. Motivated by the new industrial efficiency, social-housing projects became an experiment of standardization, fabricated from factual analysis and modern measure.It is the position of this paper that the notion of ‘the good life’ that the Modernist period strived for resulted in housing estates that were merely an assemblage of material and visual data, devoid of all that ensues from human experiences and lived-in perception. Driven by practices of analysis and calculated conventions of Cartesian order, the Danish Welfare Estates became a tool for self-promotion and an output of universal desire. What is depicted though the various archival material documenting their designs, portrays a scenario of a closed and stabilized world immune to the temporalities of reality embedded in experience. The projects are masked by a representational order and mediated by modern measure, leaving little room for interpretive and perceptual freedom. Derived from an attempt to hold the world still in hopes of autonomy and control, the Welfare sites struggle to remain relevant today.Thereby, this paper focuses on the landscapes of the Danish Welfare State projects as a potential medium for revealing the presence of spatial temporalities derived from traditional (experience-centred) measuring of the sites. The project aims to reveal the ever-unfolding temporal and immaterial aspects of the housing estates through experiments of making which combine that which was originally derived from modern measure (archival material) with a newly situated and relational reading of the landscape. Though re-presenting landscape as a constructed milieu, derived equally from material and contingent immaterial experiences of the being-in-the-world, the ambition is to construct a common ground for future acts of collective re-imagining. By exploring landscape as a medium, both permanently present yet always transient, the hope is to establish the Welfare Estates as part of a poetic process of continual becoming, promoting future possibilities built upon dynamics, openness, multiplicity and imagination.

KW - ???Landskabsarkitektur???

KW - common ground

KW - measure

KW - respresentation

KW - welfare landscapes

KW - interpretation and experience

M3 - Conference abstract for conference

Y2 - 4 May 2017 through 6 May 2017

ER -

ID: 185270614