Minor urban planning
Ida Sandström, in her doctoral thesis Toward a minor Urbanism: Thinking Community without Unity in Recent Makings of Public Space,[34] starts from the question of how to plan and design for the community in various urban situations, conceiving public space as a vehicle to foster openness towards differences, both in practice and in theory. In this work, he analyzes two public space projects: Superkilen in Copenhagen, Denmark, and Jubileumsparken in Gothenburg, Sweden, which together with theoretical conceptualizations referring to the minor and public space, aims to find answers or strategies on how to think and intervene in a community open to difference or diversities. Each place has its own quality and set of factors that identify it.
To develop the notion of a minor urbanism, it takes foundations from the work of Deleuze and Guattari on a minor literature, such as deterritorialization, politicization and collective enunciation, transferring these characteristics to the field of urbanism and citizen participation, with an emphasis on how transformative criticism can originate within planning institutions. In his work he highlights the importance of the participation of all the actors involved in a space or community because they are the ones who inhabit and know the potential of the place more than anyone else.
Carlos Moreno "Carlos Moreno (scientist)"), architect and urban planner, scientific director of the ETI chair, Entrepreneurial Spirit, Territory and Innovation at the Paris 1 Pantheon Sorbonne University, proposes a new development of cities, which is based on them allowing such movement of their inhabitants that in a quarter of an hour they can meet all their needs without the need for further travel. The aim is to change the paradigm of the modern city, and "it is about recreating a quality of life on a human scale in cities, leaving the anonymity of big cities, escaping from an always hurried life. Obtaining a quality of social life."[35].
By developing this approach to what could be defined as minor urbanism, we see how these processes are characterized by the urban reterritorialization of cities, based on concepts such as geographical proximity, family proximity, multicenters, proximity services, etc. By creating this quarter-hour urban planning, the aim is to create integrated cities based on their main actor: the citizen.[35].
This is how by organizing cities under proximity criteria, it is possible to undo the power that normally operates in modern cities, which has been concentrated in their "multicenters", such as shopping centers, forcing citizens in one way or another to have to carry out large displacement processes in order to access these services. Through the development of 15-minute cities, it is possible to create spaces of exceptions, in which the stereotypes of cities that create their multicenters under force and oppression are broken.[35].
This term was used for the first time in the Dictionary of Applied and Professional Geography, in which a type of urbanism began to be defined that takes as priority the relationship between time and space (space-time), in which the processes of decentralization and deregulation are evoked. Starting with Torsten Hägerstrand and his "geography of time", when he realized the variable nature of time and how it is used by people throughout the day, but especially in the unequal way in which individuals and communities use the same territory; underlining the importance of distance-time in the understanding of territories and societies. His three-dimensional graphics are recognized, still used today as a basis for understanding the relationship between short times and space.
In this same framework, the Swedish geographer Torsten Hägerstrand was a pioneer in the study of the geography of time. A key part of his work was the development of methods for visualizing world lines. He typically used three-dimensional diagrams, with a 2D plane showing position on the ground and time of the vertical axis. He called these visualizations space-time aquariums.
Mark Shepard, artist, architect and associate professor at the Studio of Architecture and Media at the University of Buffalo, in his article Notes on Minor Urbanism,[36] written for the 2012 Venice Biennale, explains his approach in a single channel of two videos: on the left Russian Climbing, an example of the new contemporary mobility of parkour; On the right, The Catalogue, produced by video artist Chris Oakley, a simulation from the perspective of a surveillance system in an undefined shopping center in northern England.[37].
Parkour helps develop spatial awareness of specific possibilities of urban structures. From the Flâneur of Walter Benjamin, to the dériviste of the situationists, the traceurs interpret the city not so much as a reflective representation, but as its transductional enactment: they demonstrate its socio-spatial relations. In this context, parkour becomes urban hacking, a way of appropriating architecture and its accessories for purposes that the original design did not sanction or anticipate.
At The Catalogue, shoppers are tagged, tracked and monitored as they go through their routines. All data collected will be redirected in favor of consumer logistics. Even food consumption at a sushi bar is used to report a health forecast: imagine this data sold to health insurance companies.
Combining these two ideas, the practice of minor urbanism involves transferring the practice of parkour to the space of The Catalogue. Like minor literature, minor urbanism involves speaking in a major language from a minor position. Unlike mainstream mainstream architecture and urban planning approaches, minor urbanism examines local and shared network approaches to formulate our own city experience and our choices in living it. The new technology applied to everyday urban life offers a set of geolocated data, through systems designed and programmed to remember, relate and anticipate our movements, transactions and desires. Minor urbanism is a conceptual vehicle to understand the complex assemblages of actors, practices and situations created by the ubicomp") of the real world.
In the role of this new urban actor, the traceur, Shepard questions how he could develop spatial awareness, in a hybrid environment of a material/immaterial city of induced information, the resources available in these virtual infrastructures and their intertwinements with everyday life. Parkour becomes a conceptual vehicle, potentially capable, in retrospect, of recirculating, reconfiguring and redirecting flows of people, goods and data.[38].