Re-visioning New Orleans

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Re-visioning New Orleans – mapping ecologies of power and deprivation Stephen Read Alexander Vollebregt

Spacelab in New Orleans The increasing vulnerability of our man-made world in the face of environmental change was starkly revealed when Hurricane Katrina struck and devastated New Orleans in August 2005. Architecture and urban research has since then treated the city as a laboratory for the problem of living with environmental risk and has responded by coming up with many innovative solutions (as the exhibition in the US pavilion at the 2006 Venice Biennale demonstrated). But when Hurricane Katrina struck, it opened up a whole spectrum of sustainability concerns that went way beyond the purely environmental. These included concerns of social inequality, structural racism, and the presence of an underclass lacking the means and the power to flee the devastation Katrina provoked. New Orleans is just one racially divided city among many in the United States and its problems at this level are by no means unique. A massive social segregation has emerged historically in US cities along with the evolution of a metropolitan urban form that leaves big business downtown, often alongside poor and usually Black or Hispanic residential populations, while the more affluent disperse to a much wider suburban region which includes other business and commercial ‘edge-city’ type centers. This has been as much a spatial as a social event and has involved a wholesale reconfiguration of centrality and peripherality in American cities. Social divisions became associated with the peripheral and marginal spaces of these cities, and the issues of social and spatial division have become therefore a possible topic for research in urban form and urban design. Urban design on its own will not solve these problems of course, but what it can do is address the spatial ecologies involved as well as a dimension of intervisibility and ‘public sphere’ that is often overlooked in more mainstream social research. This is something that has come to the fore in recent French scholarship in relation to a mostly immigrant underclass hidden from view in les banlieues of many large French cities. Pierre Bourdieu called these immigrants atopos (out of place); New Orleans and the cameras of CNN presented us after Katrina with the even more startling and disturbing vision of a people out of place in the city of their birth. New Orleans had been shrinking and dissipating as a result of suburbanization processes since well before Katrina, and the focus of attention in our research would be on trying to understand its well-known vitality in its more central parts as well as its problematic social divisions and inequalities. We were looking to try to understand the complex social ecologies of this city and the way we might be able to use these understandings to imagine a place open to more enabling ways of life and a richer and less divided public. We wanted also to demonstrate the ways the urban design discipline could contribute to problems which in truth require a coordinated response from a broad range of political and professional actors. We felt though that the vital and constructive part that


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