Showing posts with label urban development. Show all posts
Showing posts with label urban development. Show all posts

Friday, 1 May 2015

Workplace for the New World - Exhibition

Werkplaats voor de nieuwe wereld / Workplace for the New World
1 May – 5 July 2015

What makes work worth the effort? How do our daily actions give meaning to our lives and to our physical environment?

Contemporary urban sentiment indicates a desire for a local, fairer, more sustainable, and more meaningful world: the beer-brewing hipster, the status symbol hand knitted sweater, and the hacker helping to build an open source project.
But what is the relationship between the craft-brewed beer and the self-driving car? Between craft revivals and the rapid development of advanced robotics and artificial intelligence? How aligned are these two developments with each other?

Workshop for the New World explores the past, present, and future of work; how work determines our physical and social environment. By looking at work's future, we investigate possibilities for a sustainable and inclusive world.
The exhibition consists of an installation that explores and stretches work's definition, reinterpreting the history of work and defining a new strategies for work's future, and features a bimonthly program where we test the New World and submit it to contemporary thinkers and doers.

Workplace for the New World is a project by Monnik, Office for New Romantic Politics, commiossend by Bureau Europa.

http://www.bureau-europa.nl





































Friday, 24 April 2015

Who Owns My City? / Studio Stad

Who owns my city?
24 April – 5 June 2015

Residents are often invited to participate in maintaining the quality of life of their city, while our retreating government has made us complicit in the financial burden of progress. At the same time livability has acquired commercial value, which is used as an assurance for the real estate market. While society participates, reorganizes and cuts, the longstanding fundamental right of ownership remains unaffected. Old property relations remain intact and the yield of public livability goes to private owners.

This exhibition questions the capitalization of public space. Urbanity is a product of its residents, but the value that accumulates from this affects mainly the private property of global corporations. However through infiltration, exposure and reclamation a search has begun to redefine the divide between privtate property and public interest.

Who owns my city is a result of the proposal that Studio Stad made for its nomination for the Prix de Rome Architecture 2014 and is accompanied with works by Jeremiah Day, Marine Delgado, Intrastructures, Bernard Mulliez, Martha Rosler and Hans Wilschut.

The exhibition is a collaboration between Studio Stad, Van Eyck and Bureau Europa.

Opening: 24 April - 5 June. The opening will take place 24 April, from 17:00 to 19:00.
The exhibition is open from Monday to Friday, 09: 00-18: 00 until June 5.
Location: Van Eyck, Academieplein 1

http://www.studiostad.eu 
http://www.janvaneyck.nl/home

Tuesday, 3 September 2013

PARKers at Frontenpark Maastricht

Lukas Kramer
From 31st of August until 8th of September you can (re)discover Frontenpark thanks to PARKers exhibition.

It is located so close to the historic city of Maastricht, however for many people including me a forgotten and unknown territory with a diverse scenery, cultural-historical, and nature. A lush ‘wild’ nature with traces of the industrial past and the remains of seventeenth-century fortifications.
In the near future, this area will be developed as the Frontenpark: a new city park on the north side of the city centre.
In the last forty years this place was quite neglected and forgotten and now it is in the starting point of transition to become a new urban landscape.
This is so exciting, it feels like Maastricht is growing up, literally growing.

Since this summer an extensive program of activities has started to take place in the Frontenpark. My first encounter with the Frontenpark happend last weekend at the opening of PARKers, curated by the Bart van den Boom and Ilona van den Brekel.
This is such a wonderful opportunity to get to know this new place and get inspired by nine temporary art installations.

PARKers presents nine temporary artworks/installations in public space by these artists: Jeroen van Bergen, Charbel-Joseph H. Boutros, Jens Brouwers, Stefan Cools, Paul Devens, Lucas Kramer, La Bolleur, Han Rameckers and Oscar Santillan.

PARKers is initiated by Huis voor de Kunsten Limburg, in collaboration with Bureau Europa and Van Eyck Academy.
www.frontenpark.nl
opening Saturday 31st August






Saturday, 23 June 2012

Opening of Maastricht Lab

Yesterday M'Lab was officially opened at the Ridderbrouwerij.
In connection with the opening of the exhibition 'Urban development in Maastricht 1960-2030'  the new Maastricht M'LAB concept was lauched. M'LAB stands for Maastricht LAB.
http://maastrichtlab.nl/


Here is an impression of the opening.


Monday, 28 May 2012

Sphinxpark is open!

image: Peter Visser
Sphinxpark, a brand new temporary park in Maastricht, just around the corner of my studio, was officially opened on May 26th. I love it! Too bad it is just temporary. In collaboration with NAiM/Bureau Europa and REcentre, platform for sustainable design in the Meuse-Rhine Euregion, Marres Projects realized a temporary park in the inner city of Maastricht in 2011 and 2012.

This temporary free haven for innovation aspires to be exemplary for the manner in which the Euregion might deal with the interim in times of population decline and economic crisis. The area is part of the so-called ‘Belvédère Plan’, a master plan for the redevelopment of a large part of Maastricht. In 1999, the architect Frits Palmboom presented the plans for a new residential area on the Sphinx terrain and their realization started in 2004. However, due to the economic crisis, many urban development projects have encountered delays and postponement. The Belvédère terrain in Maastricht is also facing these problems, with the consequence that various plans are either delayed or subject to a reassessment. Amongst others, this has led to a situation in which an already serviced plot will remain undeveloped for years to come. Behind the historic walls of this former industrial area, a desolate wilderness has emerged over the past two years, creating the ideal conditions to address the question of the park of the future. Centrally situated, enclosed and featuring a rugged beauty, this walled area presents the ideal environment for a temporary park; the Sphinxpark.

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