Contingency, debate, and popup ‘hygge’ at Valby Pavilion: Situating temporary public urban settings in design critique

Public spaces emerge through a diverse field of practices and events that combine to make space and create meaning. In today’s design and planning practice, temporary interventions play an increasing role in the creation and rethinking of public space ‘on the go’. In such transitional interventions,...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Anne Margrethe Wagner
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: TU Delft Open 2018-01-01
Series:Spool
Online Access:https://journals.open.tudelft.nl/index.php/spool/article/view/1944
id doaj-be3406316572490a81875a9442898be4
record_format Article
spelling doaj-be3406316572490a81875a9442898be42020-11-25T00:05:03ZengTU Delft OpenSpool 2215-08972215-09002018-01-015110711910.7480/spool.2018.1.19441944Contingency, debate, and popup ‘hygge’ at Valby Pavilion: Situating temporary public urban settings in design critiqueAnne Margrethe Wagner0University of CopenhagenPublic spaces emerge through a diverse field of practices and events that combine to make space and create meaning. In today’s design and planning practice, temporary interventions play an increasing role in the creation and rethinking of public space ‘on the go’. In such transitional interventions, ‘the project’ is both physically and symbolically created through entangled actions of design with somewhat non-designed and informal practices and DIY aesthetics, as well as various narratives and modes of communication.Temporary public spaces thereby challenge established ways of evaluating and critiquing spatial settings as determined design solutions or ‘classic’ architectural works—in terms of what they do and how they can be qualitatively understood as part of contemporary place-making approaches. This article forms a critique of the project Valby Pavilion, a temporary space in Valby (Copenhagen, Denmark) that serves as a test setup for the future use of its highly contested site. Through a juxtaposition of selected theoretical perspectives from art and architectural criticism to relational site thinking and performance studies, the discussion of the project elaborates upon which aspects require detailed attention when performing a critique of temporary urban public spaces. The article concludes that critical examination of a number of issues (intentionality and origin, the role of spatial adaptions, appropriation, events and situated public debate, dominant planning paradigms, and the characteristic aesthetics of the informal) helps to fruitfully locate public settings initiated under the ‘temporary project’ label within design and architectural critique.https://journals.open.tudelft.nl/index.php/spool/article/view/1944
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Anne Margrethe Wagner
spellingShingle Anne Margrethe Wagner
Contingency, debate, and popup ‘hygge’ at Valby Pavilion: Situating temporary public urban settings in design critique
Spool
author_facet Anne Margrethe Wagner
author_sort Anne Margrethe Wagner
title Contingency, debate, and popup ‘hygge’ at Valby Pavilion: Situating temporary public urban settings in design critique
title_short Contingency, debate, and popup ‘hygge’ at Valby Pavilion: Situating temporary public urban settings in design critique
title_full Contingency, debate, and popup ‘hygge’ at Valby Pavilion: Situating temporary public urban settings in design critique
title_fullStr Contingency, debate, and popup ‘hygge’ at Valby Pavilion: Situating temporary public urban settings in design critique
title_full_unstemmed Contingency, debate, and popup ‘hygge’ at Valby Pavilion: Situating temporary public urban settings in design critique
title_sort contingency, debate, and popup ‘hygge’ at valby pavilion: situating temporary public urban settings in design critique
publisher TU Delft Open
series Spool
issn 2215-0897
2215-0900
publishDate 2018-01-01
description Public spaces emerge through a diverse field of practices and events that combine to make space and create meaning. In today’s design and planning practice, temporary interventions play an increasing role in the creation and rethinking of public space ‘on the go’. In such transitional interventions, ‘the project’ is both physically and symbolically created through entangled actions of design with somewhat non-designed and informal practices and DIY aesthetics, as well as various narratives and modes of communication.Temporary public spaces thereby challenge established ways of evaluating and critiquing spatial settings as determined design solutions or ‘classic’ architectural works—in terms of what they do and how they can be qualitatively understood as part of contemporary place-making approaches. This article forms a critique of the project Valby Pavilion, a temporary space in Valby (Copenhagen, Denmark) that serves as a test setup for the future use of its highly contested site. Through a juxtaposition of selected theoretical perspectives from art and architectural criticism to relational site thinking and performance studies, the discussion of the project elaborates upon which aspects require detailed attention when performing a critique of temporary urban public spaces. The article concludes that critical examination of a number of issues (intentionality and origin, the role of spatial adaptions, appropriation, events and situated public debate, dominant planning paradigms, and the characteristic aesthetics of the informal) helps to fruitfully locate public settings initiated under the ‘temporary project’ label within design and architectural critique.
url https://journals.open.tudelft.nl/index.php/spool/article/view/1944
work_keys_str_mv AT annemargrethewagner contingencydebateandpopuphyggeatvalbypavilionsituatingtemporarypublicurbansettingsindesigncritique
_version_ 1725426560420282368