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Where to build the walls that protect us

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posted on 2025-08-01, 00:07 authored by SJ Hodge
Working at a tangent to Wrights & Sites' disrupted walking practices and the notion of the architect-walker, commissioned by Kaleider and funded by Arts Council England, Where to build the walls that protect us was an opportunity to imagine a future city. Originally focused on Exeter in 2013-14, the work was later reiterated for Leeds as part of Compass Festival 2016. Framed as an architectural charrette, participants experienced two distinct phases of activity: initially framed by a series of themed reconnaissance excursions; later followed by an iterative period of generating future-facing models of the city. Literal and poetic drift underpinned the work, for example, through the use of: • post-Situationist walking-art practices drawn from Wrights & Sites and others, e.g. Simon Pope's 'constrained drift', where geographical (or temporal) limits bound the scope of the journey; • strategic, location-specific encounters with 'experts' (whether professional, municipal or resident), as spurs to the imagination; • creative intervention into the process of city planning (Exeter was undertaking a consultation process about its new flood defence scheme at the time); • physical interruption of everyday city life, as unsuspecting members of the public suspended their A to B journeys and join in the reimagining of their city.

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© 2018, Taylor & Francis (Routledge). All rights reserved.

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This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Taylor & Francis (Routledge) via the DOI in this record.

Journal

Performance Research

Publisher

Taylor & Francis (Routledge)

Version

  • Accepted Manuscript

Language

en

FCD date

2019-03-14T16:51:23Z

FOA date

2020-07-30T23:00:00Z

Citation

Vol. 23(7), pp. 45 - 47 (3)

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