Description
How to Reprogram the City is a 40-page self-guided adaptive reuse workbook with insights, examples, and exercises to help people discover the untapped potential in their own city.
It is the result of a decade of work, research, and workshops I have conducted around the world to help people improve cities by using existing urban assets in new ways. This adaptive reuse workbook is the first time the Reprogramming the City methodology has been documented in workbook form.
The toolkit provides people with the tools to address a pressing problem: the new reality facing cities is one of limited resources. Whether financial, spatial, or material, the content of cities is finite. Yet the context of that content – how we use the assets we already have – is where the opportunity exists to respond to increasing urban needs using limited resources.
The dozens of lectures and workshops I have led in numerous cities have honed my abilities to get people to think outside the box – to move their thinking from “this is” to “this could” – and shown me the most effective way to provide them with the tools to improve life in their city using what they already have.
It has been, and continues to be, a tremendous privilege to work with groups of people from numerous cities on repurposing urban objects to do more with the structures, surfaces and systems in their city. I realized though that an adaptive reuse workbook and toolkit can reach far more people than I am able to. In short: it is time to open up the opportunities that urban resourcefulness can create.
This adaptive reuse workbook is meant to serve as a companion to the Reprogramming the City book. The book is a global overview of how the urban landscape’s untapped potential is being utilized to improve life in cities using what already exists in new ways.
Constance W. –
The toolkit provides incentives to perceive our cities and their manifold existing resources (which we tend to overlook in the everyday “use” of our cities) with a playful eye, focussing on the plenty opportunities (the “containers of possibilities”) we have at hand just by changing our perspectives and by using our creativity. In times of masterplans and large scale projects, I consider this extremely important (and refreshing). I’m sure that this toolkit is most helpful for urban planners working in participatory processes, but also for students and, in general, people interested in “deciphering” their urban surroundings. An absolute recommendation.