Lecture: "The Right to Architecture: Beyond Participation" by Kareem Ibrahim
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Theme:
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Date:
Jun 23, 2013 7:00pm
Organized by: Megawra - Built Environment Collective
Takween Integrated Community Development
Tadamun
Venue: Megawra - Built Environment Collective
Address: 2 Darb al-Shaykh Khalil, beside Sabil Umm ‘Abbas, off Saliba St., al-Khalifa., Cairo,
Admission: Arabic
Website: www.facebook.com/events/472382039516861/


The Right to Architecture: Beyond Participation
Lecture, Kareem Ibrahim

 

The term ‘Right to Architecture’ assumes there are three elements: a right, people who claim the right, and custodians of the right. If local communities strive day after day to claim their right to architecture, are architects the custodians?
In fact, architects are often accused of serving only the rich and the ones who can afford their services. Architects are also accused of excluding the needs of their local communities when it comes to designing public buildings and spaces. Architects are accused that they are simply indifferent.

 

In some other cases architects start to care. As a result, they believe they are the custodians of the right to architecture. But such beliefs soon end up with failing attempts of social engineering. Hassan Fathy’s New Gourna and so as many similar projects are good examples of architects’ illusions of total control and ability to influence and shape people’s lives. Such architects believe they are the only ones who possess the wisdom, knowledge and ability to grant local communities their right to architecture.

 

In a world where local communities produce more than 90% of its built environment without the need for architects, should not architects be more realistic about their true influence? What would be the role of architects to support such local communities? How would architects escape the traps of either being indifferent or falling under illusions of social engineering and absolute control?

 

In fact, architects have many roles to play beyond their conventional practice and direct community participation models. The development of economic, social and cultural rights since the 1960s in different urban contexts around the world provides architects with more responsibilities towards their communities. These roles and responsibilities transcend the direct technical functions of today’s architect, to what is economic and political about their profession.

 

This lecture is an attempt to explore the parameters among which architects can find a role to support local communities. It also tries to identify what elements constitute the ‘Right to Architecture’ and how to work with local communities to claim it. And finally, it demonstrates the efforts of a group of Egyptian architects who strive to work with local communities, while trying to find practical mechanisms to sustain their daily business in today’s Egypt.

This lecture was first presented in April 2013 through the “Right to Architecture” symposium organized by Professor Nasser Rabbat and sponsored by the Aga Khan Program for Islamic Architecture (AKPIA) at the MIT (Boston). The content of this lecture is part of the efforts of TADAMUN: the Cairo Urban Solidarity Initiative aiming at encouraging citizens to claim their Right to the City and its democratic management.
This event is organized by TADAMUN (the Cairo Urban Solidarity Initiative) and Megawra (Built Environment Collective)

The lecture will be in Arabic.