Travelling Studio Tonga

2024 Travelling Studio

Tonga

Studio Leaders: Derlie Mateo-Babiano & Xavier Cadorel (MSD)

waves striking the shores

Applications close: 13 May 2024

Introduction

The Tonga Traveling Studio is a Placemaking Sandbox that will provide students with intellectual and creative tools to explore multiple place-based issues in an island community setting. It equips students with intercultural competencies to navigate complex cultural settings and apply placemaking strategies rooted in Indigenous knowledges to better adapt to climate change. The studio sandbox helps prepare students to effectively engage residents in constructive input into their place, connect with those who practice it, and advance their learning on how to shape healthier, more inclusive cities and communities in the Asia-Pacific region, with relevance to Australia.

In early 2022, tsunami waves hit the West Pacific islands, including Tonga. As a result, it generated a 7km high Tonga Trench from the bottom of the ocean. This has resulted in large scale devastation affecting several island-countries, including the Ohonua community of the Eua island in Tonga. Students will engage with the Ohonua residents to better understand their ongoing challenges and work with them in building back better in the aftermath of the January 2022 tsunami.

Within the context of Eua, a hilly island in Tonga, with a unique shoreline made up of coral reefs with many small tidal pools called ʻotumatafena’, teams will examine the central question: What innovative nature-based (placemaking or urban design) ideas or solutions, deeply rooted in Indigenous knowledges, can assist climate change adaptation as well as individual and community wellbeing? We will partner with the community to work and collaborate with them to learn from them and to engage in meaningful and intentional conversations to support their re-building.

The subject introduces Placemaking as a global movement that focuses on the process, development and design of places through the active participation of the citizens. In the placemaking sandbox studio, students explore place-based strategies to develop nature-based urban design solutions, rooted in Indigenous knowledges that support climate change adaptation and health and wellbeing of Ohonua residents, increasing place attachment, sense of belonging, sense of place, biophilia, and ecosystem services, which is linked to positive citizenship, health and safety.

This subject examines the placemaking process in relation to the long-term benefits of place by strengthening the relationship outcomes between place, self, community and nature. The subject is based on case-studies. It provides lectures and practical exercises on the critical steps of placemaking. Topics include place governance and community engagement, place evaluation, integrating nature into place and the economics of place. Different models for placemaking will be explored such as tactical urbanism, guerrilla urbanism, creative placemaking and regenerative placemaking. The subject has been written by the Place Agency Consortium, a group of six universities working towards enhancing place co-creation capacity in students and industry.

Approximate costs to students

This subject has international fieldwork component. Students will be required to cover travel (airfare), accommodation and food costs. The approximate cost is estimated at $2000 per person, not including airfare.

Travel Location: Tonga

Funding Available:

Participating students will receive a one-off subsidy of $800 from the Faculty utilised towards student’s accommodation costs.

Dates:

Applications close: 13 May 2024
Study Period Start Date 24 June 2024 
Teaching Start Date: 24 June 2024
Subject census date: 5 July 2024
Overseas travel dates:  24 June - 5 July 2024 
Teaching End Date: 8 July 2024 
Final submission/presentation: 19 July 2024
OH&S information session: TBC

To Apply:

This subject is a quota subject and places are limited. Students may provisionally enrol via the Student Portal, but places are not guaranteed until selection is completed. You will be notified in writing by Stop 1 if you are selected.

Selection criteria: Send a maximum of 200-word Expression of Interest by answering the following question: What (knowledge and/or skill) do you think will you learn by participating in the Tonga studio? How do you think will this knowledge/skill be useful in your future career? What (knowledge and/or skill) do you think will you bring to the Tonga studio? to the subject coordinator imateo@unimelb.edu.au not later than 13/05/2024.


For detailed information on the quota subject application process and due dates, refer to the EDSC Quota Subjects webpage: http://edsc.unimelb.edu.au/quota-subjects

Contact Handbook

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