Anarchist architecture could help cities rebuild after COVID-19. Here’s how
Architecture and anarchy may not seem like the most obvious pairing. But since anarchism emerged as a distinct kind of politics in the second half of the 19th century, it has inspired countless alternative communities.
Christiania in Copenhagen, Slab City in the California desert, La ZAD in the French countryside, and Grow Heathrow in London all feature self-organized forms of building. On the one hand, this includes remodeling existing structures, usually abandoned buildings. On the other, it can mean building entirely new spaces to accommodate individual liberty and radical change in social organization.
At its heart, anarchism is a politics of thought and action. And it reflects the original meaning of the ancient Greek word anarkhi, meaning “the absence of government.” All forms of anarchism are founded on self-organization or government from below. Often stemming from a place of radical skepticism of unaccountable authorities, anarchism favors bottom-up self-organization over hierarchy. It is not about disorder, but rather a different order—based on the principles of autonomy, voluntary association, self-organization, mutual aid, and direct democracy.
For example, in Christiania, an intentional community and commune of about 850 to 1,000 people that was established in 1971, residents first squatted in abandoned military buildings and converted them into communal homes. In time, others built their own houses in an extraordinary diversity of styles and materials that survive to this day. Even temporary anarchist projects, such as the 1980s protest camps at Greenham Common in Berkshire, England, and the more recent Extinction Rebellion occupations in London, require the construction of makeshift shelters and basic infrastructure.
Seeds that can grow
In my new book, Architecture and Anarchism: Building Without Authority, I look at how anarchist building projects are often targeted by the authorities because they’re deemed illegal. And how as a result of this, there is a knock-on effect that casts people who self-build as somehow “exceptional”—driven by desires that are simply alien to the rest of us.
But that, I think, misses the point of anarchist politics that underlie such projects. And it also fails to recognize that these principles are grounded in values that are shared much more widely.
For example, the late British anarchist Colin Ward always argued the values behind anarchism in action were rooted in things we all do. He was particularly interested in how people seem to have an innate desire to share time and space without expecting any financial remuneration. As part of his work, he often embraced everyday subjects such as community allotments, children’s playgrounds, holiday camps, and housing cooperatives.
He had a strong and optimistic belief in anarchism as an always-present but often latent force in social life that simply needed nurturing to grow. Ward argued for a way of building that was focused on changing the role of citizens from recipients to participants “so that they too have an active part to play” in the building of towns and cities.
Some recent architectural practices—for example, Assemble in the U.K., Recetas Urbanas in Spain, and Raumlaborberlin in Germany—have developed ways of working that are almost entirely focused on such a model of participation. Indeed, in September 2019, Raumlaborberlin built a “Utopia Station” in Milton Keynes, in the U.K. This was a structure that combined steel scaffolding, metal staircases, striped awnings, and salvaged windows to create a three-story space.
Inside, visitors were asked to provide their own suggestions for future urban development, which were then made into models and exhibited. Such a playful—and joyful—approach to citizen participation stands in stark contrast to the often dour and depressing ways we’re generally asked to comment on buildings being planned.
Community spaces
Last year, the U.K. government published its post-COVID-19 recovery plan to “build back better.” With its emphasis on securing economic growth, the report completely fails to address the catastrophic environmental consequences of such an approach.
A different approach would involve radical reshaping of the values that hold up our politics. Here, anarchism has much to contribute. Its core values of mutual aid, self-organization, and voluntary association offer a much more holistic notion of what constitutes progress.
On a personal level, I have found urban allotments to be places where the contours of such an everyday revolution can be felt. These are areas of land set aside by local authorities for residents to grow food in exchange for a nominal annual rent.
Although I’ve never met anyone on my own allotment who identifies as an anarchist, the “seeds” are nevertheless there to see. Allotments are, in essence, common spaces within cities. Sites deliberately kept off the market and filled with more-or-less provisional structures, such as readymade or self-built sheds or greenhouses.
Although you’re not allowed to build a dwelling on an allotment (at least in the U.K.), it’s not difficult to transfer the underlying principles to other sites in cities. As I look out of my bedroom window to the allotments just beyond my home, I often wonder why it’s not possible to set aside land for other kinds of communal activities. Even for housing.
It’s in places like allotments that the otherwise radical nature of alternative possibilities is seen. Therein lies the hope of building an emancipatory, inclusive, ecological, and egalitarian future. This is building back better.
Paul Dobraszczyk is a lecturer in architecture at University College London.
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
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