Studio 10

H2O

Leire Asensio Villoria & David Mah

This studio is available to students enrolled in ABPL90142 Studio C, ABPL90143 Studio D, and ABPL90115 Studio E.  This studio is co-taught with ABPL90376 Urban Design Thesis.

Studio Description

“We cannot be radical enough.”
- David Attenborough

Recent events have given many of us an ominous preview of the vicious disruptions that climate change will bring to our lives. Different studies have outlined the likelihood of Melbourne becoming subject to an even more volatile climate. Weather and resource emergencies are likely to become the new normal. More frequent and severe storms with projections for the con­sequences of sea level rise are expected to dramatically transform our environment.

Projections for the regular flooding and even disappearance of some of the city’s established neighborhoods and communities are potential scenarios for Melbourne’s future under climate change. This studio will focus on addressing the looming urban risks related to water. This will be caused by its acute overabundance during what are projected to be increasingly severe storm events. Other risks also relate to its counterpoint, where Melbourne is expected to experience water scarcity.

Do the conventions and the preoccupations of contemporary architectural and urban design practice still hold water in light of this anticipated devastation? Established disciplinary knowledge and professional practice have been largely informed by the presumption of an environment with a stabilized climate. But given the different scenarios put forth by climate change, shouldn’t the design community acclimatize itself to a new set of contexts, concerns and perhaps opportunities? Is it responsible to follow conventions and established practice when these have been predicated on a very different reality? If we are to face these challenges head on, can we be “radical enough”?

The studio is the third time that we will run this theme which is part of the Arc-DR3 Initiative (The Architecture and Urban Design for Disaster Risk Reduction and Resilience Initiative). This international initiative is coordinated by The International Research Institute of Disaster Science (IRIDeS) at Tohoku University in Japan, xLAB at The University of California Los Angeles (UCLA) and Miraikan, The National Museum of Emerging Science and Technology of Japan. This studio will be one of the University of Melbourne’s contributions to this larger project. Other participating schools from the Associa­tion of Pacific Rim Universities include UCLA, UC Berkley, Tsinghua University, National University of Singapore and the Pontifical Catholic University of Chile.

The initiative will consist of research, symposia and exhibitions linked to design studios using existing programs by the participating universities. The larger aim of the initiative “is to create a more effective integration of theory (research) and practice (design) by creating an international platform for producing and exchanging knowledge on environmental design that reduces the risk of recurring disasters and enhances resilience.”

Students undertaking this studio will be asked to give permission for their work to be published and exhibited at the Arc-DR3 Initiative events and publication. We intend to publish the work produced in the studio within academic and/or professional architectural journals. However, please be assured that consent for your work to be used for these research purposes will not be mandatory.

Studio Leaders

Leire is a Senior Lecturer at the University of Melbourne's School of Design. She has taught at Harvard University’s Graduate School of Design, at London’s Architectural Association School of Architecture, Graduate School Landscape Urbanism Program and at Cornell University’s College of Architecture, Art and Planning.

David Mah is a senior lecturer in architecture and urban design at the University of Melbourne’s school of design. David was a lecturer at Harvard’s Graduate School of Design. He has also taught design and theory at Cornell University’s department of architecture and Landscape Urbanism at the graduate design school of the Architectural Association in London

Schedule Mondays 16:15-19:15 and Thursdays 15:15-18:15

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