Sunday, February 27, 2011

PITCH





In KwaThema the main forms of spatial appropriation in open land include grazing cattle, planting mielies (corn), meeting churchgoers, car wash precincts, outdoor shebeens (drinking places), bashes (youth parties), wedding and funeral parties, and soccer. Lacking the resources to create permanence, emerging institutions are created in part from existing and appropriated space, in part from temporal infrastructures and in part from public cultures that rely on the intensity and memory of lived experiences.

My new research interest is soccer spaces. Working alongside three different soccer networks, I’ve developed a staged strategy to support the renewal of existing fields and opening up of new ones at a minimal cost. It begins with a visit from the Whitelineunit, volunteers from the Imvelo Youth Development brigade (part of the earlier KwaThema Project - see Design is a virus) who have skills and materials to establish a field anywhere, in the most fundamental manner using white paint onto earth and four goal markers, and the basics for field based meetings, in the form of a shade structure and a gas barbecue.

The second strategy involves locating fields and organizing their clean-up. In the process, there is a lot of discussion about the meaning and memories of place, and an energized imagining of what it could become. The third gesture involves the design and construction of a thickened edge to the fields, in the form of a paved strip, mobile shade structure and signs, using materials typical of temporary structures in the township. The final strategy is to allow the edge element to be added to by other actors, within and outside the township. These additional elements will be suspended or housed within its frame; coming both from within and outside of the local township economy they might include food stalls, signage, branding and VIP enclosures. The shade structure and field will act as a mediating filter between scales and networks around soccer, to illustrate ways to extend the space and program of soccer.

The social elements might include educational programs, political sloganeering, opportunities for business, networks of friends and transport arrangements all linked through minimal micro-technologies of temporary structures and services. The new proposals will engage with and propose a more multiple kind of pitch, in terms of its use. At an urban scale, the project can be multiplied using soccer pitches as a building block to enrich township public space.

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Design is a virus












KwaThema, after an election, into a recession.

It’s surprising.

Optimistic.

Saturday’s new visitors to KwaThema were Professor Bruno de Meulder from Leuven and Eindhoven and Randall Bird from Wits, with shared interests spanning architectural history, housing and urbanism. Like with all visitors to the site, we began by climbing up the beerhall to the gallery and looking over the park. It remains an exceptional space from which to take stock of the township.

The beerhall has been neglected, and the basket hoop and board stolen. Someone’s reinforced the street edge barriers to keep cars out, which is good, but there seems to be a near complete absence of ownership of the structure. Yet on either side, there are great signs of the park itself coming into its own as a public space.

The Imvelo Youth Development brigade which includes some of the Project volunteers were taking a break from gardening the west side of the park, which they’ve transformed with bollards, signs, flowers and two paved shortcuts. There’s no vandalism of their work.

 

We strolled over to Stan’s Place to find that he was out at his new venture, the Zanzibar Jazz Lounge, which he has opened in the old qota shop that backs onto the park. It’s a cool venue with artworks, a stoep at the front, and the obligatory citigolf-based sound system. Stan’s mates were enjoying their quartz and jazz.

It really struck me as I strolled back to the car how much this place had grown on me in just a few weeks. I felt simultaneously sad about the damaged court and thrilled by the unexpected contamination of design and build into the surrounding community space. Perhaps the beerhall, in all its emptiness, is destined to remain ours, as outsiders, or noone’s. But still a space for the imagination to fill.

We stopped at Anthony’s Chess Academy on the way out. The park has been given play equipment and was full of kids jostling to use the swings. And the Academy is doing great. On their way to the Nationals in Cape Town in December, in their new white T-Shirts. 


Friday, April 25, 2008

Games Room

The Castling

Kasia Kwiecinska and I created this short film for an architectural research project. It is about how a simple house can turn into a chess academy.

Special thanks to the KwaThema Chess Academy for all their help.

Saturday, October 13, 2007

The Corner Shebeen




#1 Job Maseko was abuz this Friday, with a re-enactment scene of the shebeen (pub) that Anthony Shoba used to run in the structure. The music was blaring, the fake drinks were flowing. A big thanks to our very good actors.
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Sunday, October 7, 2007

KwaThema Chess Tournament 2007

This film was taken in KwaThema, it is of a chess tournament organised by Anthony Shoba and the KwaThema Chess Academy. (Created by Kasia and I)

Wednesday, September 5, 2007

#1 Job Maseko Street - Eduardo




Select one of the images to see the higher quality versions.
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