All articles in category Blog

Gentrification Map Making

18/01/2010

Tired of irrelevant school subjects? Tired of being stuck in textbooks and classrooms? We’ll try to break free in this collaborative* workshop. Montreal is your city, and in many neighbourhoods gentrification is causing massive change. Lets find ways to turn our personal and academic experience into dynamic, critical maps of Montreal under gentrification. Please bring your creativity and your ideas!

Wednesday January 27 @ 5 PM

Shatner University Centre (3480 McTavish) – room 433A

Read the rest of this article »

No Comments

Urban density fights climate change

14/11/2009

Pedestrian and bike-friendly urban areas don’t just reduce transportation emissions, but fossil-fuel use by buildings as well. Apparently a home that shares its sides with the houses next to it – and we have many of those in Montreal – uses one to two-thirds of the energy that a detached home does. There must be a similar effect for apartment buildings. Had not thought of that! We have lots of row-houses in Montreal, let’s make sure we keep them.

http://www.tnr.com/blog/the-avenue/can-we-build-our-way-reduced-carbon-emissions

2 Comments

Ball-O-Stupidity in Connecticut

14/11/2009

This New York Times article about Pfizer closing its facilities in a city that had expropriated and demolished a neighborhood so that the company could build a “private urban village” (aaa! what?), leaving empty fields behind at the site of the ‘development,’ is just full of stupid. Unfortunately it all sounds very familiar. Except that the neighborhood residents took the city all the way to the Supreme Court, lost, and the conservative justices were the dissenters. Happily, 43 states have enacted legislation that will hopefully keep something similar from happening again. But, now I’m curious, what would Ayn Rand say?

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/11/13/nyregion/13pfizer.html?em

No Comments

The Right to the City

14/11/2009

The lovely Polis blog has an interesting article on the concept of ‘The Right to the City,’ which we had not heard of before now! There are some interesting links in the article to follow up on, including “The European Charter for Human Rights in the City.”

“This concept was coined by Henri Lefebvre, a radical French Marxist sociologist and philosopher, in 1968 and is about the rights of all urban dwellers, regardless of citizenship, ethnicity, ability, gender and so forth, to participate in shaping the city. It is about the rights of the excluded and marginalised to be part of the production of the city, for their needs and aspirations, rather than exclusively those of capital as occurs in most urban development, to be met in the process. The right to the city thus fundamentally challenges existing power relations and the deep roots of the capitalist system that drive urban development and the production of urban space, including social, political and economic relations.”

http://www.thepolisblog.org/2009/11/right-to-city-reflections-on-theory-and.html

No Comments

Rad School Workshop

11/11/2009

Holly, could you give a recap and share your thoughts on the RS workshop?

No Comments