Design Acupuncture, an Emerging Collaborative City

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design Acupuncture The Emerging Collaborative City

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The publication reflects only the point of view of its authors. “The Intellectual Property Code prohibits copies or reproductions intended for collective use. Any representation or reproduction in whole or in part made by any process whatsoever, without the consent of the author or his successors in title or assigns, is illegal and constitutes an infringement under Articles L.335-2 et seq. of the Intellectual Property Code�.

Edition : Strategic Design Scenarios Publishing ISBN 978-2-9601314-2-0 Legal Deposit: D/2020/14661/1 Date of Deposit : 10/2020 Creation of the layout and distribution of the book: Strategic Design Scenarios

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design Acupuncture The Emerging Collaborative City

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Maison POC Collaborative City’s team would like to thank all POC holders, designers and all their partners for their projects, their enthusiasm and their commitment to this adventure. It also would like to thank the DESIS Lab and DESIS International network for their contributions to the Post-Pandemic Design projects, the URBACT Network and URBACT Secretariat for their inspiring examples of collaborative European cities and the ESAD for their contribution to the scenography project. The Maison POC Collaborative City is an original production of Lille Metropole 2020 World Design Capital. It is hosted by the city of La Madeleine, in the heart of Lille Metropolis.

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Maison POC Collaborative City’s team François Jégou, Strategic Design Scenarios / Curator of the Maison POC Collaborative City; Dométhilde Majek, Rives Nord / general coordination, production manager and designer; Pascal Payeur, Expositif / scenographer; Jean-Denis Filliozat, Interfacedesign / electrical technician and designer; Bruno Souêtre / graphic designer; Fiora Noël, Christophe Gouache, Selam Mebrahtu, Jemima Kulumba, Elin Tobias – Strategic Design Scenarios / curatorial team; Charles Assier, Nicolas Croissant, Alice Dussart, Benjamin Poupel, Frederick Fruchart / assembly team; Clotilde Delsart, Julia Laurent, Coralie Macaret / interns.

Publication François Jégou, Fiora Noël, Elin Tobias / texts; Bruno Souêtre / graphic identity; Fiora Noël, François Jégou / layout.

Partners

Contributing partners

The texts: Editorial; Design acupuncture of the territory; The art of “living together” [as an asset]; [Open] meeting places; Talk [always] to your neighbors; Together and [or] connected; Dense [but fluid] city; [Re]making society; Facilitating collaboration [to reinvent the world]; Making the city with [all] the people; Connecting the existing [in the face of societal challenges]; The more we are... [the better we survive]; Relying on differences [to solve new problems]; Copying neighbours [to find solutions]; Producing [resilience] together; [More responsive] field design; Cultivating the territory [to ensure food continuity]; Making the city [differently]; Give [more] to your neighbour; Restore the commons [and sharing].

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editorial

How can design facilitate collaboration in the city and move towards more unified, sustainable and democratic lifestyles?

a mor E C O L L A B O R AT I V E cit y Within the context of Lille 2020, World Design Capital, the Maison POC Collaborative City explores more than a hundred local and global projects as a way of identifying emerging visions of sharing, mutual aid and cooperation. Modern lifestyles are focused solely on the individual, solutions are increasingly personalised, algorithms are becoming more and more targeted, mentalities tend to be individualistic, and today, socialisation is done at a distance‌ While the whole world is still in shock and trying to figure out how it can learn from the health crisis in order to rebuild itself, the design challenge of for collaborative cities is to restore the collective, regenerate common goods, find the community again, encourage mutual aid. This publication looks back on two years of research, dialogue and co-design work carried out by Maison POC Collaborative City’s curatorial team around a hundred projects of the territory, the public, private and citizen actors who have carried them out and the designers who attended them. It combines the territory’s POC with those of DESIS labs1 in

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editorial

design schools and universities around the world, with the design of doing and living together in the European cities of the URBACT networks2. It shows how the activation of a set of projects selected within the framework of Lille Metropole 2020, World Design Capital, constitute a form of acupuncture of the territory, of transformation of a complex system of interrelated actors through a multitude of design projects, from which emerge fifteen new types of collaboration and which constitute models to inspire the design of a more collaborative city. Finally, this research for projects, which started long before the lock-down, also explores how the health crisis is “redesigning” our world and how design will take an active part in it. Accordingly, each of the 15 emerging themes were partially rewritten. We chose to leave the original text and add corrections in the margins in order to highlight how collaboration in the city is changing. François Jégou

The DESIS network, Design for Social Innovation and Sustainability, aims to use the knowledge and experience of more than fifty design school and university labs around the world in order to co-create, with local, regional and international partners, scenarios and solutions for more sustainable, resilient and inclusive lifestyles.

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The mission of URBACT European networks is to enable cities to work together and to develop integrated solutions to common urban challenges through networking, learning from each other’s experiences, gaining insight and identifying good practices so as to improve urban policies. 2


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contents

25 14 16

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Acupuncture Meridians of a Collaborative City Acupuncture design of the territory

The art of “living together� [as an asset] 26

[Open] meeting spaces: how is spatial design able to encourage encounters, relationships and, ultimately, collaboration?

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Talk [always] to your neighbours: how design connect populations that cross paths, but often ignore each other?

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Together and [or] connected: how does design help to reshape services by listening to users?

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Dense [but fluid] city: how does design re-arrange flows in public space in order to reinvent socialisation?

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[Re]making society: how does design support third places while experimenting new ways of living in society?

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99 65 57

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facilitating collaboration [to reINVENT the world] 66

Making the city with [all] the people: how does design help reorganise stakeholders to co-produce the city?

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Connecting the existing [in the face of societal challenges]: how does design help to share material resources, the skills of some and the goodwill of others?

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The more we are...[the better we survive]: how does design establish a collective creativity, organise the pooling of every citizen’s contribution?

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Relying on differences [to solve new problems]: how does design enable the creation of atypical partnerships and new value creation models?

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Copying neighbours [to find solutions]: how does design facilitate exchange of inspiring cases, emulation and transfer between cities?

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contents

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Producing [resilience] together 108

[More responsive] field design: how can design schools and universities become city labs for social innovation?

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Cultivating the territory [to ensure food continuity]: how does design help encourage urban agriculture, urban-rural linkages and food sovereignty in cities?

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Making the city [differently]: how does design activate the complementarity between city making and governance?

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Give [more] to your neighbour: how does design help to develop a sharing economy and a new typology of collaborative services?

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Restore the commons [and sharing]: how does design activate social innovation, regenerate common goods and organise a solidarity-based city?

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a c u p u n c t u r e m e r i d i ans of a collaborative city

always

TALK TO Y NEIGHBOUR

3_producing together more responsive FIELD DESIGN

Open

more GIVE TO YOUR NEIGHBOUR

CULTIVATING THE TERRITORY

to ensure food continuity RESTORE THE COMMONS MAKING THE CITY

and sharing

differently

The Maison POC Collaborative City brings together about a hundred projects that stand out for showcasing values around cooperation, exchange and mutual aid. They constitute a form of acupuncture that transforms the territory through fifteen lines of force mapped here in order to inspire the design of a more collaborative, sustainable and resilient city.

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or

TOGETHER AND CONNECTED

1_the art of «living together» as an asset

but fluid

YOUR RS

DENSE CITY

MAKING SOCIETY

n MEETING PLACES

MAKING THE CITY WITH THE PEOPLE

all CONNECTING THE EXISTING

in the face of societal challenges

RELYING ON DIFFERENCES

to solve new problems

THE MORE WE ARE

the better we survive

COPYING NEIGHBOURS

to find solutions

2_facilitating collaboration to reinvent the world

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DESIGN Acupuncture OF THE TERRITOry François Jégou, Strategic Design Scenarios Curator of the Maison POC Collaborative City

Does everyone design? Over the last 10 years, the city’s main actors have gradually become familiar with the so-called design-driven approaches, that is, being guided by a design approach. Design thinking, despite its reductive representation1 of the design process, is widely disseminated as an innovation and management strategy within companies, but also within public authorities and civil society. Today, within a project’s process, it is almost common to talk about user-centred approaches, user expertise, co-creation with stakeholders, experimentation, mock-ups, testing or rapid prototyping: design jargon is an integral part of project’s process vocabulary, even if its related practices are not always well established.

1 Foucher J. 2017.Design Thinking : Dessein et Dessin, Place Publique www. communication-publique.fr/articles_pp/design-thinking-le-dessein-et-le-dessin/

2 INFU Innovation Futures www.sustainable-everyday-project.net/innovation-futures/

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In addition to its diffusion, the design approach often aims to actively involve stakeholders in the process. It tends to take on a more enabling position: design usually goes hand in hand with co-developing the project with the client, sharing tools and methods to co-construct together and taking ownership over the design process


so as to empower stakeholders in terms of innovation. This singular posture echoes both values of general interest, inclusion and empowerment valued by design, and more open, participative and diffuse vectors of innovative transformation2. Consequently, in an event like Lille Metropole 2020, World Design Capital, whose spirit is to widely disseminate design practices, in an inclusive manner rather than in a selective manner, the entire region becomes involved in design. As the event’s success is conditioned by the emergence of the greatest number of projects using design, we can deplore the fact that many of them label as design any approach that is somewhat different from classic project developments, using different creative techniques, involving users and experimenting. The economic actors’ appetite for design interventions generates a market and, at the same time, the spontaneous emergence of a host of providers: co-design facilitators, design thinking experts and trainers in design techniques, often without any of them having any real training or experience in design. This collateral phenomenon is reminiscent of the rebound effects observed when the Cité du Design in Saint-Etienne was created: the announcement of the construction of this new institution, devoting the city to design, led to the appearance of design Hairdressers, design Kebabs, etc. in the surrounding neighbourhood. Today, after twenty years of International Design Biennials and the Cité’s influence, design has penetrated deep into the territory and has become a new norm for local actors. In the same way, and beyond the impression that suddenly everyone is doing design or claims to do so, an event like Lille 2020, World Design Capital, accelerates the design impregnation in the area and within its actors. The way Lille Metropolis proposed its candidature already represents an original design, aimed above all at this im17


pregnation: unlike the World Design Organisation’s mechanism of labelling cities for their design achievements, Lille Metropolis proposed to use an a priori label as a lever to put design at the service of a territory in which it had not yet developed to the point of being recognised as a world capital in this field.

“an event like L ille 2 0 2 0 , W orld D esign C apital , accelerates t h e design impregnation in t h e area and wit h in its actors ” It is still far too early to assess the transformative effect of this strategy on the way local actors work – even more now with the huge pause ongoing projects have suffered due to the health crisis – but in view of the projects brought together in the Maison POC Collaborative City, it can be said that the participatory design methodologies characteristic of design approaches are becoming common practice within private actors as well as within local authorities and civil society. “Nothing for me without me” as the saying goes: nothing that concerns me should be carried out without my personal involvement! And this ongoing evolution, observed in the sample of around a hundred projects in the territory of the Maison POC Collaborative City, is a good sign and certainly guarantees better quality in a country like France, too often pinpointed for its top-down approaches, its hierarchical and excluding processes, cut off from stakeholders and disconnected from users!

“ participator y design met h odologies c h aracteristic of design approac h es are becoming common practice ”

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And what does design do? The 500+ project goals triggered by Lille 2020, World Design Capital, had to demonstrate a type of design approach to be recognised as such to. A 3-day design diagnosis was organised for private actors with no experience or means in the field. The setting up of a Design Lab within the administration of the European Metropolis of Lille provided design resources for MEL’s services and the territory’s local authorities. In view of these measures, what contributions and postures of design were triggered? About a hundred projects, out of the 500 initiatives, were selected to be included in the Maison POC Collaborative City, specifically for their cooperation, mutual aid, sharing, etc. qualities. They stand out either for their collaborative processes implemented throughout the project, or for their results, favouring doing and living together, or for both. They highlight the way in which design fits into a process involving multiple, often heterogeneous actors, and how stakeholders are put in synergy. These projects, therefore, do not represent a sample that isolates clearly what design is, which tends on the contrary to “merge” into a broader system of skills and interaction between actors. For us, this strong integration of design is a guarantee of quality and relevance, and it is from this point of view that we observe two opposing attitudes to design in the projects brought together in the Maison POC Collaborative City: on the one hand, design interventions seem to focus their efforts on listening to stakeholders, on the commitment of all players, the understanding of a complex situation or problem sometimes at the risk of getting lost or of fading in cyclical micro-adjustments, of simple improvements (low hanging fruits), of incremental innovations, easy to get accepted, but without ever succeeding in producing a qualitative leap, a significant discontinuity capable of making a difference in the face of the ecological, social and economic crises that cities face. 19


Another group of design interventions seem, almost in opposition to the first, to be rushing to formulate a radical solution, without precedent, a breakthrough innovation, promising in terms of margin for progress but representing a leap in the void, an innovation for the sake of innovation, at the risk of lacking relevance in the face of the complexity of the problem or the support of stakeholders.

“ design w h ic h tends on t h e contrar y to “ merge ” into a broader s y stem of skills and interaction between actors ”

Proofs of the future... Beyond this apparent polarisation between a design focused on project facilitation and a more radical design, the territorial design operation triggered by Lille 2020, World Design Capital seems to make sense when we consider it as a whole, without trying to assess it project by project. The multiple POC convened in the region are projects in experimentation. They anticipate possibilities and sketch out a future in the making in the territory. Creating a POC, a proof of concept, implies the materialisation of an idea into a scenario, a model or a prototype, in order to concretise it enough so that it becomes testable and it is possible to confront it with the reality of uses and users, while still leaving open enough the way in which it will take shape. This materialisation exists as a “concrete hypothesis”, as an “anticipation of its future potential” and once confirmed in a POC, it becomes an emerging “proof of the future”. Taken together, the POC initiated by Lille 2020, World 20


Design Capital, represent experiments of “developing visions “. They are what foresight calls weak signals of an emergent future. The POC from Lille Metropole resonate with the POC from abroad, coming from Europe and all the rest of the world, in order to highlight fifteen new emerging forms of collaboration that will be presented in detail in this publication and that constitute models to inspire the design of a more collaborative city.

“ t h e P O C represent e x periments of “ developing visions ” . T h e y are w h at foresig h t calls weak signals of an emergent future .”

Acupuncture of the territory Finally, the activation of a multitude of projects through the candidature for Lille 2020, World Design Capital, cannot go without evoking the concept of transforming a territory through an acupuncture of projects that were developed in 20103, 4 to discuss how design can act notably on transition issues on a larger scale than it usually operates. This design, as an acupuncture of the territory, seems to present a good framework for analysis. Let us recall that the metaphor of acupuncture has been used by urban planners and architects5 to represent very localised types of interventions in complex systems such as a city. In contrast to this interpretation, what we mean here is a systemic transformation that goes beyond the benefits associated with each localised project. The activation of a reduced number of very specific acupuncture points chosen according to the principles of traditional Chinese medicine allows to obtain a systemic benefit for the whole patient. By analogy, local projects activated in the territory of the Metropolis of Lille, if they have been judiciously chosen to enter into synergy, they are likely 21


to “make a system”, to enter into resonance with each other and to produce an effect that goes well beyond the sum of each one of the projects. This design of an acupuncture of the territory is likely to respond to the antagonism already mentioned between the low margins of progress of a type of design that facilitates incremental projects and the lack of operationality of a more radical design: the acupuncture strategy represents a combination of a series of more attainable incremental projects in order to obtain a much more significant margin of progress through a multiplied effect. It also responds to several major challenges. First of all, to obtain a systemic change on a territorial scale by operating only on a reduced number of localised projects and therefore through an economy of means that the current difficult economic situation calls for. Then, to constitute a dynamic of ascending transformations proceeding progressively through opportunities, trial and error, rather than betting on successive waves of large top-down development programs.

“ t h e acupuncture strateg y represents a combination of a series of more attainable incremental projects in order to obtain a muc h more significant margin of progress t h roug h a multiplied effect ”

If here, the vision for the territory is to encourage the emergence of a more collaborative city, the incubation of all types of projects activated by the World Design Capital has made it possible to observe a multitude of diversified initiatives, to identify those most likely to be the bearers of new cooperation patterns, enabling mutual aid 22


between actors who used to ignore each other, facilitating ways of living and doing together, etc. The work of the commission, seen as an operation of acupuncture design of the territory, sought to see each project as a potential acupuncture point, to extrapolate from these, meridians along which the vital energy described by Chinese medicine is supposed to circulate. It is these fifteen lines of force that we are here to discuss, all of which are principles for a more collaborative city, guidelines likely to inspire project leaders and designers in the definition of the best acupuncture points in the Lille metropolitan area, as well as in other territories.

3 Jégou, F., “Social innovations and regional acupuncture towards sustainability” in Zhuangshi, Beijing, 2010. http://www. strategicdesignscenarios.net/social-innovations-and-regional-acupuncture-towards-sustainability/

4 Jégou, F., Vincent, S. and Thévenet, R. 2010. "Sustainable transformation through an acupuncture of residences in Nord-Pasde-Calais periurban areas" in Design and Creation, Wuxi.http://www.strategicdesignscenarios.net/sustainable-transformation-through-residences/

5 Lerner, J. 2003, “Acupuntura Urbana”, Record, Brazil.

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The Collaborative City is a city wherein spaces, infrastructure, facilities‌ are all thought out to promote meetings between communities, stakeholders and entities that do not have the opportunity to meet each other normally. Collaboration only happens when people meet, gather together, become familiar and get to know each other‌

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1 the art of ÂŤliving togetherÂť

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LK TO YOUR IGHBOURS

Open MEETING PLACES

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DENSE CITY How is spatial design able to encourage copresence, encounters, relationships and, ultimately, collaboration?

In order to facilitate “living together” we need places where we can live together, where we can meet each other, opportunities to meet people we do not usually meet. In the region of Fives-Hellemmes-Mons there used to be plenty of cafés where people met each other. Today they are almost all

gone, so instead, you get Café Nomade every month. It works as a facilitator for meetings and conviviality: people who register do not know each other and they do not know where they will go. The mobile café, soon to be equipped with a counter on wheels, is an invitation to get surprised and to live a social experience.

MAKING 27


The Institute of Motor Education Dabbadie aims to create a unique meeting place between the disability world and the ordinary world. A co-working space, handifablab, artist residence, exhibition space, restaurant and seminar space: La grande maison, an old mansion that is part of the establishment, experiments with “universal” arrangements that encourage working together. The place’s design challenge is to facilitate the reception, meeting and collaboration between all the different audiences who will meet there, along with the 200 children with disabilities it supports. The Fabrique Saillysienne is a meeting place for the commune Sailly-Lez-lannoy’s citizens, a place where you can propose ideas and put them into action through co-construction with elected representatives, acting as facilitators. As time goes by, the results emerge in all communal fields and multiply: twinning, participative gardens, collective 28

Pause-café nomade dans votre quartier A Fives-Hellemmes-Mons les cafés ont disparu : le Café nomade est un café ambulant chez l’habitant .


Nomadic coffee break in your neighbourhood @Asso3cm In Fives-Hellemmes-Mons cafés have disappeared: #CaféNomade is a mobile café hosted in private homes.

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Temporary mobile furniture @VilleRenouvelÊe The street furniture #MOBMOB allows neighbourhood life to flourish while making urban areas safe during renovations. 

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composting, film-debates, book-box, zero waste workshops, short distance car-sharing projects. This village-lab is composed of contributors-actors in an open community willing to build the conditions for living harmoniously together. Usually, during transition periods, convivial places are no longer operational. Amid the renovation of 360 housing units in the city of Elocques in Hellemmes, HĂ´t-El appears as a hotel that serves citizens awaiting for their new housing, operating at the same time as an information office about the ongoing work, a place that recollects memories of the city since its construction in 1900 and a reception with 2 housings for the most vulnerable and insecure about moving out during the renovation. In Cluj in Romania, the programme Urban Living Rooms sets up domestic spaces in public places: living rooms, kitchens, bedrooms... in order to encourage encounters and conversations between 31


people, as if they found themselves in each other’s homes… In the eco-neighbourhood under construction of the Union between Roubaix and Tourcoing, the modular and temporary street furniture Mob-mob allows, in a flexible and economical way, to establish neighbourhood life while making the areas under construction safer. As part of the measures of social distancing in public spaces, the city of Milan and its Urban Lab are removing parking spaces and turning them into socialisation areas, accelerating the municipality’s “Open Places” programme, aimed at developing soft mobility and re-appropriating public spaces through the transformation of streets, crossroads, pavements… Barcelona’s “Superblocs”, wherein one out of every two streets is reserved to soft mobility, wishes to reconcile the vision of dense and diversified urban spaces in the post-pandemic 32


Like a big family home @LaGrandeMaison The #GrandeMaison of the Institut d’Éducation Motrice in Villeneuve d’Ascq: a unique meeting place between the disability world and the ordinary world

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Living Streets Lab @PolimiDesisLab #LivingStreetsLab: transforming existing parking areas into socialising spaces, beyond the pandemic

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new normal. The project Superilles+, in charge of developing superblocs’ social dimension, explores ways to reconcile density and fluidity, access to services and public transport reduction. The proximity offered by this dense urban-scape strengthens the social fabric and allows communities to gather and organise. The design of a more collaborative city needs to imagine new typologies of formal and informal, permanent and temporary places that encourage encounters between populations that cross paths everyday without really seeing each other, and the inclusion of vulnerable, marginalised and different crowds. It must re-accommodate socialisation beyond the conditions of physical health distancing.

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How can the design of collaborative neighbourhood services, neighbourhood concierges and local communities to connect populations that live side by side or cross paths, but often ignore each other?

For instance, how do you make a social housing unit that incorporates community entertainment and inclusion of the vulnerable, the ageing and the disabled? The system’s key lies in La Voisinerie and Maïté Malet’s design of a third place “café-canteen-concierge service”. It has everything conventional Public Housing could wish for: a “neighbourhood canteen” to grab a bite to eat in a family atmosphere, have a drink with neighbours and find 5 € meal deals fitting the needs of the community. It’s a multifunctional space on the building’s ground floor which hosts a monthly hairdressing salon, sewing workshops, community association events... The layout is made of modular furniture, designed without a specific target group in order to promote gatherings of people with diverse aspirations. Dishes are bought at Emmaüs, adding to the family atmosphere. A 36


always TALK TO YOUR NEIGHBOURS

Open

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smiling and dynamic concierge-animator who brings life to collaboration in the neighbourhood, small favours between neighbours, merchants and non-merchants doing handy-work, all to strengthen local employment. The idea of a “neighbourhood concierge” is under a 6-month experimentation in 4 different neighbourhoods of the Metropolis. Many households, including low-resource and energy poor households, do not receive the support to which they are entitled for eco-renovations. “Brico-concierge”, a local and ambulant concierge service, offers small home repairs and energy-saving system installations. These small services are just an excuse to establish trust and help families in need to request financing for high-quality constructions consistent with the household’s income. In Shanghai, the project Doorman Room 2.0 explores how concierge lodges, typically found at the entrance of gated communities, could become a resource for its residents. The project, stimulated the health crisis, explores how these concierges and the premises they occupy at virtually every street corner could be a resource for the 38


A highly Social Public Housing system @MaitéMalet #LaVoisinerie an interface on the ground floor between the social housing unit’s community and the neighbourhood’s citizens.

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The community’s doorman’s room @UniversitéTongji #Doorman’sRoom2.0, a research project initiated by Tongji University to enhance the value of street janitors in rebuilding communities.

neighbourhood’s residents, developing synergy between local businesses, charities, community services and social initiatives… Local communities are also developing around common interests, such as coordinated management of energy consumption. Households are starting to review their everyday practices in order to use the energy produced by solar panels when it is being produced, to avoid collective energy consumption peaks and make the most out of local production without overloading the grid. The research project GAC is piloting an app that helps households spread out the times of use of washing machines and other household appliances. 49 households in one of Wavre’s neighbourhoods have volunteered to 40


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participate in the experiment, thus forming an “energy efficiency community” within a flexible and active neighbourhood. The collaborative city’s development requires an increase in neighbourhood links, the (re) installation of actors in charge of establishing relationships and the creation of new socialisation catalysts. It aims to make visible the communities that frequent the same places, to use shared resources and to trigger collaboration, both because of and despite the pandemic.

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What is the energy today? @Greenwatch How can we use energy when it is available, avoid consumption peaks and take advantage of local production without overloading the network:  #GAC, Gestion Active des Consommations

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or

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TOGETHER AND CONNECTED

MAKING


G

How does design help to reshape local services by listening to users, developing with them the best way to meet their expectations and imagining digital as an enrichment of socialisation?

“At the University of Lille, they have developed a project on disability that is organised as an inclusive project since the beginning: their philosophy is that it is not the people who are disabled but it’s

the environment that is disabling! So it’s the researchers, students, disabled and non-disabled staff, working all together on some kind of big collective investigation.”

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Cooperating for a non-disabling environment @Université de Lille It is not the people who are disabled but the environment that is disabling: #GuliversCampus contributes to spatial justice.

“Yes I’ve heard about the camproject Gulivers pus! And apparently they are creating an app that serves everyone: for people with permanent disabilities, motor disabilities, visual disabilities, old people with limited mobility…” 46

“And that goes for everyone: if you’ve broken your leg or if you’re pregnant or even if you have to carry a heavy object... Everyone can contribute to the development of the map by pointing out holes in sidewalks, stairs that are way too steep... and tips and tricks: where to go to avoid obstacles, when to be careful…”

“In fact, the app kind of embodies the will of inclusion itself: everyone contributes and everyone benefits from it!”


“I also know of another somehow similar example, in the city of Gijón in Spain, where they have created Card4all, a single access card for all their public services: it allows citizens, tourists and businesses to have access to a whole range of services and resources in the city, and even for payments. Besides, it allows to establish user profiles, to better match citizens’ needs with public policies…”

“Mmmm... if we are sure that all this remains anonymous, then yes, it does allow for effective follow up and the continuous improvement of services…”

“In Villeneuve d’Ascq, you find CRÉAlab, which is the “INSPE’s pedagogical innovation lab” and it’s also a good example of integration between face-to-face and the digital : there is the MiniLab, the physical space, where teachers come to create mathematical games together, models to explain the sciences, geography models, story boxes…” 47


Reinventing teaching @INSPE VilleneuveD’Ascq The MiniLab experiments with activities of an educational object-creation lab and foreshadows the INSPE’s future #CRÉAlab in Villeneuve d’Ascq.

“And then there is the virtual space, to encourage meetings and exchanges, to provide tools, and to support projects for the creation and manufacture of educational objects…” 48

“Besides, I don’t know if you know this, but during the lock-down, CRÉAlab continued to work online, to guide the community of teachers to shift to distance learning, to create pedagogical challenges to be carried out at home, like this game about lock-down or how to make a model of a breathing device.”

”You can clearly see how a well balanced device can switch easily from offline to online. And, in the same way, a project like the Recovery CoLabs in Milan have been completely transformed with the limitations of the lockdown…”


The development of

“But originally it’s a set of services and institutions that work on mental health and collaborate to change their practices, so it all happens face-to-face, right?”

“Yes, but they redesigned all the online services to keep in touch with patients during the health crisis: online classes, virtual theatre, peer-to-peer support, video capsules, and so on. They experimented with a lot of ideas that would have generated a lot of resistance under normal circumstances. But now these online innovations are seen as an improvement of the faceto-face CoLabs and will continue to be…”

greater collaboration in the city benefits from the rapid digitalisation, driven by the constraints and the experience of confinement, as an opportunity to rethink the balance between face-to-face and distance meetings, to achieve something that is more sustainable, both socially and environmentally.

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How does design rethink public space, create itineraries throughout the city, re-arrange people flow and imagine «policies of time» in order to reinvent socialisation?

always

TALK TO YOUR NEIGHBOURS

The city of Udine has defined playing and having fun as basic principles for the development of its urban policies. From its municipal game library with outdoor activities to the Night of the Living Books or the Annual Energy Games Fair, all the city’s events try to have a playful tone…

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Playing, broadly defined, is a way to engage people on issues of health, sustainable energy development and public space improvement.

Open


but fluid DENSE CITY

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Playful paradigm @Ville d’Udine #Ville d’Udine: where playing serves as a driving force for participation, social inclusion and sustainable lifestyle transformation in the city.

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Anti-parking or anti-terrorist reinforced concrete barriers have invaded the city. These large blocks, being quite difficult to handle, stigmatise urban areas in reconstruction like hyper centers.In an attempt to make the most out of them, citizens occasionally turn them into benches or walls to bounce balls… The EcoNeighbourhood of the Union between the cities of Roubaix and Tourcoing is testing the idea of adding an aesthetic quality to these concrete barriers, attracting new uses and bringing people together... The concrete barriers are integrated into a vivid graphic reinterpreta-

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tion of the ground markings of sports fields, transforming them into targets for improvised ball games. Therefore, the area delimited between two barriers becomes a play area, an “Always Open” playground!

Would fun and colourful urban circuits motivate people to walk and do a little more exercise every day? Could this reduce stress and cognitive fatigue? The project Playful City seeks to explore exactly these questions. Two test circuits have been created on the campus of the University of Lille in an attempt to measure the pleasure produced during


Basic Layout Glossary @VilleRenouvelée Redesigning #GlissièresEnBétonArmé to attract new uses, generate socially useful practices and bringing people together.

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The city as a playground? @UniversitĂŠ de Lille #Playful City, would playful and colourful urban routes motivate people to walk and get a little more daily exercise?

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exercise. Students, staff, researchers, artists and designers worked together to create colourful and engaging paths, stimulating and easy to follow. Is it enough to rediscover the pleasure of doing the 30 daily minutes of moderate activity recommended by the World Health Organisation? How long before people become jaded with these surprising circuits? Do “playful cities” change behaviour or do they just add noise to the urban environment? The rest of the Playful City research program will with no doubt answer these questions. Today, the question of people flow in public spaces takes on an additional colour with the health crisis.

of a dense city while reducing its drawbacks. In the collaborative city, design rethinks the antagonism between urban density

In Beijing, the project Life Circles explores the idea of collecting anonymously real-time data on the movement of people in public space, along with information about the accessibility to nearby shops and services. As some kind of “Pedestrian Waze”, the map “15 minutes around the corner” allows, beyond temporary constraints of physical distance, to avoid crowds and queues, make walking around the city more fluid and preserve the benefits

and quality of life, stressed by the pandemic. It imagines and establishes a new fluidity that combines distributed proximity, encounters without overcrowding, spontaneous and organised mutual aid.

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MAKING SOCIETY

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How does design support third places of working together and the emulation between its different users, while experimenting new ways of living in society?

Third places are spaces to be invented, tested and lived collectively. They enable people to share a space, work differently, create an activity, develop ideas, experiment with services, test uses... and to make their desires for an ecological and societal transition a reality. La Compagnie des Tiers-Lieux establishes links between the territory’s third places through a route map that lets you discover all these unique and complementary places. For example, how do you build a more humane, lively city, in collaboration and complimentary to major urban renewal programs, such as the 15-year transformation of the old Mons in Barouel to a new Mons? This is where MONSFABRICA comes in, a mutual aid and action community, initiated by citizens and entrepreneurs. A first transitional space, prefiguring a space for local co-projects 59


Building the living city @MonsFabrica #MONSFABRICA transforms itself as it makes the city: with small means multiplied by a lot of collaborative design...

that welcomes entrepreneurs, teleworkers, job seekers, young activity creators. Repair café, entrepreneurial aperitifs, second-hand market, zero waste workshop, etc.: MONSFABRICA is an overflowing profusion of initiatives displayed every year in an outdoor event in order to captivate new enthusiasts as it transforms itself and builds the city by reusing what already exists, with a healthy dose of humanity, collective intelligence and small means, multiplied by a lot of collaborative design.

There are big and small third places. Some of them are kind of rough, whereas others are more institutional... La Station in St Omer is a workspace that stimulates collaborative approaches and entrepreneurship on the territory. La Station was first prototyped in June 2016 and has stayed ever since a pavilion in the station’s forecourt. This pavilion has welcomed more than 15,000 visitors and has permitted to experiment the service offer, partnerships, new prospects. Since its opening in 2019, St Omer’s train station and La Station offer an ecosystem wherein, every single day, meet and collaborate freelanc60


ers, students, teleworkers who come to occupy coworking spaces, entrepreneurs, professional or personal project leaders who come to the FabLab to learn, test and prototype, companies, associations, teams with projects who benefit from the “outdoor� workspaces. Third places are spaces to be invented, tested and lived collectively. They are defined by what users do with them. Creation and innovation are the crux of the matter for companies and yet management training courses are generally impervious to anything related to artistic creation!

A new creative hangArt mixes both worlds at Lille’s Catholic University. Music, dancing, corporate pitches, theatre, gardening, collaborative workshops: the third places hosts all sort of activities in order to intersect creation processes and explore collaborations between art and entrepreneurship. The design of an open and colourful hangar is a step aside to change the university, animate

Workstation @StationStOmer The #Station, a working and creative space that stimulates collaborative approaches between actors of the territory.

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a community of users, develop sensitive intelligence and awaken curiosity to better understand complexity... Third places are subjective, they change from one person to another. They all explore atypical and unique configurations. The Fabrique de Gonesse, in the north of Paris, uses digital manufacturing technologies as an empowerment tool to fight school dropouts, particularly in disadvantaged neighbourhoods. It combines flexible teaching with peer-to-peer methods, achieving a 90% remobilisation rate. 70% of trainees return to the education system and 20% access their first job opportunity within 6 months following the end of the programme. Third places experiment doing things differently, more sustainably, resiliently and inclusively. In Milan, the Neighbourhood School is a four-year programme that stimulates social innovation practices in some of the city’s most disadvantaged neighbourhoods. Rather than being a conventional incubation programme, the Neighbourhood School aims to empower citizens to set up and manage initiatives that bring quality to neighbourhoods. During the pandemic, the Neighbourhood School became a great initiative for supporting, guiding and encouraging projects responding to the needs related to the city’s living conditions, such as new models of aggregation, cultural production, food-related services, alternative forms of care, etc. As the science fiction author Alain Damasio recently wrote, third places are “ZAG: self-governing zones. ZAGs […] experiment other types of collective lifestyles. They already exists in the shape of ZADs, communities, third places, collective farms, self-managed wastelands, rural eco-neighbourhoods”.

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A digital social fablab @Fabrique NumĂŠrique de Gonesse The #Fabrique NumĂŠrique de Gonesse: a social fablab fighting against school dropout.

Design identifies new forms of interaction, exchange and collaboration that emerge within the city. It seeks to understand them better in order to absorb them and to try to transpose them to different contexts and urban scales, along with assessing their resilience in the face of the new normality that is being established after the health crisis.

The school of neighbourhoods @PolimiDesisLab #LaScuolaDeiQuartieri: providing citizens with the skills and tools to turn their innovative ideas into prototypes and action

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In the Collaborative City, practices, processes and methods help to combine, cross-fertilise and promote synergy within society. Collaboration is not straightforward, it requires systematising meetings, equipping exchanges and facilitating interactions.

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facilitating collaboration

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MAKING THE CITY WITH THE PEOPLE

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How does design stimulate citizen engagement, facilitate collaboration between inhabitants and public authorities, help reorganise stakeholders to co-produce the city?

THE MORE WE ARE

In the city of La Madeleine, the consultation “Coeur de Ville” invited citizens to project themselves, to imagine their ideal city centre. Participation mechanisms were designed to involve the greatest number of people: a guided tour of the square to rediscover what’s always been there, a “tell me a memory” session during a market day, “cards on the table” so that everyone can try their hand at being an urban planner-architect, the game “if I had magic powers, what would I change in the square?”, participatory workshops

the better we survive

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Better collaboration between citizens and administrations @VILCO “Local dynamics� #VILCO : citizen initiatives and public authorities engaged in 3 years of participatory action research to learn how to better collaborate together.

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Citizens design the heart of the city @LaMadeleine #Cœur de Ville: inviting La Madeleine’s citizens to project themselves, imagine their ideal city centre, a future place for meetings and exchanges open to all.

with merchants and users, models of the square built by schoolchildren, 3 scenarios developed from the collected material and submitted to a vote, etc. Altogether, more than 2,000 citizens have collaborated together to create a small part of their city. Beyond citizen participation, how do you establish effective collaboration between the city and its citizens? Amersfoort, in the Netherlands, can be taken as an example of how social innovation is activated in the city, among URBACT II Networks’ 500 other cities. Parc Elisabeth’s restructuring plan is entrusted to a collective of citizens, the City Council acts as a café, allowing more time for discussion between residents and elected officials,

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citizens invited administration agents to a conference on good collaboration, joint trainings were created between citizens, agents and elected officials, a 1000 people panel was drawn at random in order to imagine the city’s future and an open citizen blog in presented on the homepage of the city’s website. The town of Amersfoort experiments and challenges its governance. Inspired by Amersfoort, the project VILCO, standing for “Ville Collaborative” (Collaborative City), experiments, within Brussels-Capital Region, how to combine an array of citizen initiatives and collectives committed to improving life quality, mobility, living together. VILCO is also: municipalities and regional administra-


tions also working towards sustainable development, through new policies and diverse actions, cross-visits between citizen groups and administrations, often in opposition without really knowing each other, open forums for pooling resources and single-use service of public buildings, participatory budget and boosting of subsidies, administrative simplification of citizen projects, etc. A total of 16 POC are tested in full-scale, analysed and shared through a collaborative toolbox! URBACT’s ActiveCitizens Network explores citizen’s role between representative and participatory democracy. The city of Santa Maria da Feira in Portugal has designed a platform that connects volunteers with organisations looking for vol-

unteers. The system ensures volunteers’ registration, a sociologist discusses their motivations, the platform ensures linking supply and demand and volunteers sign a contract with the municipality to ensure, among other things, that they are covered by insurance. Volunteers’ massive involvement during the health crisis in the city of Wuxi, in China, anticipates the questions urged by greater citizen participation. The project Volun!ty, developed in cooperation with the government, resident communities, the Red Cross and a voluntary charitable foundation, uses a WeChat mini-program to register volunteers, their location and skills, register and find actions for better collective synergy, provide access to build-

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Volunteering, a successful collaborative platform @Santa Maria da Feira #Imaginarius Participa : collaborative platform to match supply and demand for volunteers in the city of Santa Maria da Fiera.

ings, security instructions, quick trainings and coordinate meal distribution, display resting, reception and assistance facilities. Beyond the pandemic, Volun!ty is a platform that will continue to provide services and assistance to volunteers, while supporting their growth. Design helps people collaborate. Through its tools of inquiry, interaction, mediation, etc., it facilitates interaction between people who usually ignore each other, stimulates mutual curiosity and the desire to understand each other better. Especially in times of crisis, it improves the ability to cooperate.

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How does design help to link what is already there, to incorporate material resources and available services, the skills of some and the goodwill of others, into platforms providing practical and effective solutions?

“In our society there are often a lot of things that already exist but what is missing is something to connect them. For instance, it’s not easy for small businesses in the city, there’s a lot of competition from large retailers and e-commerce. The idea of an app like Sheefoo is that it combines the advantages of both: the easiness of searching online without having to wait for delivery because what you buy is just around the corner!”

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MAK WIT

CONNECTING THE EXISTING

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“You can see at a glance everything that’s on sale in your neighbourhood through your phone, then you book it online and pick it up right away. So you don’t go out for nothing anymore. And no need to drive miles when what you’re looking for is just around the corner…”

“It puts forward the street’s shops, craftsmen’s skills and good advice.”

“Small local shops, bargains and discounts become visible throughout the neighbourhood.”

“It’s kind of a platform, actually. And platforms aren’t just about connecting businesses and customers, they’re also about connecting ideas with people who can implement them, for example. Like the city of Turin, which has set up Innova.TO, a platform for projects. Because the 10,000 people who work in the city administration might be potential innovators, but the idea of one might not reach the ear of the person who could actually implement it.”

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Online and around the corner @Sheefoo #Sheefoo: the easiness of searching online without having to wait for delivery because what you buy is just around the corner!

“In fact 111 employees participated, 71 projects were submitted, and 10 proposals are currently being implemented.”

“And it ranges from improving transparency and participation of citizens’ initiatives in local projects to new models for smart purchasing, to sensors that regulate lighting in public buildings.”

“Platforms can also take a physical form, like the HUB in Suez for example, a third place that brings together local authorities, start-ups, researchers, engineers, students, local entrepreneurs…”

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“The idea is that it’s an incubator, an accelerator, a place where all these people meet and so it gives very diverse results! Like an app that allows households to control better their water consumption, or a mediation team for families who have difficulties in paying their water bills, or a program of water fountains set up in cities and public places…”

“A platform like the HUB allows us to better understand the needs of a territory in regards to drinking water, industrial water, waste recovery, sanitation, digital technology and the future of the city…”

Bring water stakeholders to a boil! @Hub by Suez #Hub by Suez: a company historically oriented towards technology which moves towards a culture of co-construction of services.

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“The emergency during the sanitary crisis has made it even more essential to connect and coordinate existing resources. For example, a problem that nobody really paid attention to: what happens to the pets of old people in quarantine or those being taken to the hospital? Well in Wuxi, China, the project Pet’s Voice describes a platform that provide services to pet owners who are hospitalised.”

“It’s a system that coordinates occasional volunteers for simple assistance, such as feeding an animal every day... and more experienced volunteers or professionals, for more difficult tasks, emergencies or long-distance transport.”

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“After the pandemic, Pet’s Voice will still remain useful, to organise peer-to-peer services around pets that might not have seen the light of day had it not been for the constraint of the emergency…”

“In Changsha, the University of Hunan has developed the app “Jiwubang”, to meet the daily needs of the citizens. It’s an app that allows people to list and locate available products and supplies, and people can search for help or offer it… and sharing information on the location of resources helps to reduce the imbalance between supply and demand…”

“If there is a will to collaborate among people that develops, whether it’s in times of crisis or in normal times... then a platform like “Jiwubang” might be the way to make it both efficient and easy to access.”

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Light up your community map @School of Design of Hunan University #Jiwubang, a mini welfare WeChat programme that balances supply and demand for services in times of crisis.

The potential for collaboration within cities is huge. Design does not necessarily reinvent new solutions, but connects existing elements, identifies opportunities for synergies, articulates heterogeneous resources. In times of crisis, it connects residual, under-exploited potential for new collaborations.

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THE MORE WE ARE

the better we survive

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How does design establish a collective creativity, arrange collaboration between large numbers of anonymous people and organise the pooling of every citizen’s contribution?

“Cart’ier is a map of the Fives and Hellemmes neighbourhoods. It was made by the citizens themselves. It’s kind of a tourist map that talks about the heritage of these neighbourhoods as seen by those who live there…”

“Sure, but what I find most interesting is the process itself, making a map together... In difficult neighbourhoods, it’s a good way to make people talk to each other and make social ties…”

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Residents a la carte! @Association Interphaz #Cart’ier is the first tourist and heritage map of the Fives and Hellemmes neighbourhoods, co-constructed with and for its citizens.

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“Yeah, exactly... see, this first map, it was made in 2016, and now they’re going to conduct new workshops, so it’s going to involve new citizens. Besides, in the project, they want the map to exist as different signs in the neighbourhood to involve even more people…”

“There are a lot of mapping projects like this one in other cities and neighbourhoods.”

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“Here, at La Madeleine, in a workshop to make a participatory mapping of the Berkem neighbourhood, a woman revealed the pictures she had been taking every day during the demolition of an old factory found just across the street. Telling past stories is a way to make them your own and understand better the changes taking place.”

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“In Lille, the project Insolille transforms participatory mapping into an interactive treasure hunt: the citizens identify on an application some of the city’s unusual places. It allows citizens and tourists to have a different and offbeat view of the city.”


Telling memories to build the future... @Raconte-moi Berkem #Participatory Cartography of Berkem: a contributory tool that prompts self-expression around industrial heritage!

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Hydrological communities in the city @Brusseau #Brusseau: a collective mapping of the city’s water management in order to build a common language between citizens, scientists and public authorities.

“The participatory mapping process, it also allows people to collaborate together. In Brussels, the project Brusseau builds a collaborative water management in the city. It is not a trivial subject: citizens, scientists and city services using the map enable the precise reconstruction of watercourses that have been covered by urbanisation but also, for example, to create a “watershed solidarity” between the citizens of the neighbourhoods located high up where overly impermeable soils cause flooding among the citizens living downstream.”

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“Citizens contribute as scientists. In the project Biodimètre, people participate in measuring the biodiversity of the neighbourhood Rives de la HauteDeûle. The sensor’s design allows everyone to make their own, put it in their garden or on their balcony, and maintain it the same way they water their plants.”

“It gives the dimension of “citizen-scientist”, it is addressed to each one of us, of you to defend the cultural heritage or to monitor air quality, environmental preservation.”

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“The pandemic has also sparked a lot of mobilisation and “crowd sourcing”, like the University of Design in Boston, that has launched since March a call for Design for Emergency projects in USA, Brazil, Peru, Italy, France, Corea…8 different countries as of now, they have launched a collaborative problem diagnosis and from there they constitute an open source “project repository”.”

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Design for Emergency @Centre de design, CAMD, Université du Nord-Est, Boston #Design for Emergency, an open platform for design projects that aims to face the pandemic’s effects.

Design imagines and establishes latent collaboration modalities by default, as a “background task”, to which citizens contribute naturally, as they use them, without any particular effort, and from which every citizen in the city can benefit from without necessarily actively contributing. In the face of emerging problems, it seeks to make the most of human resources, the only resources our cities have in abundance.

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s How does design facilitate collaboration, the creation of atypical partnerships, the generation of new value creation models?

Why organise workshops with the neighbourhood population to design things that will be dismantled after three months? The ephemeral installations called “Les Beaux Endroits” are a pretext to trigger collaboration between stakeholders who normally ignore each other and to start new projects between them. Campus Gare, for example, is an underexploited square at the crossroads between the university, the station, shops and the neighbourhood. Campus Gare, for example, is an underexploited square at the crossroads between the university, the station, shops and the neighbourhood. In a logic of “doing together”, workshops 92


in the face of societal challenges

RELYING ON DIFFERENCES

to solve new problems

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Ephemeral installation for long-term projects... @Les Beaux Endroits #Les Beaux Endroits, ephemeral installations that trigger collaboration and projects between actors who usually ignore each other.

are organised with residents, passers-by, shopkeepers and students. In the end, modules of meeting, taking a break, gardening and large-format portraits warm up this cold and empty place. Beyond this temporary upturn, actors who did not know each other met and started working together. The University of Lille, SIA Habitat, SEM Ville Renouvelée, La Condition Publique, SNCF, CROUS and the City of Roubaix are working to make the university more aware of third places, to create artistic offers for the people living around, to use the square for a neighbourhood ball. If “Les Beaux Endroits “ is not made to last, it is nevertheless a light icebreaker tool and a great way to trigger collaboration between stakeholders. 94


The network URBACT REFILL has designed a speed dating process that brings together stakeholders who don’t usually work together. The city of Cluj in Romania has had it tested by building collaboration scenarios between city administration and citizen groups. Activists architects and the Department of Cultural Projects have made citizen consultation installations in the city’s squares. In Poznan, Poland, the Department of Education and Culture and a group of Makers organised out of school classes for children. The town of Ghent in Belgium organised a large “collaboration market” in order to encourage more than 200 local associations to join forces and create a giant socio-cultural incubator in the former unoccupied Central Library building. 95


On a larger scale, the project LIFE, Lille Food Experience, aims to bring together an ecosystem of heterogeneous actors around food and well-being in the city. A collaborative design process has enabled to construct a “confluence” approach between: Euralimentaire’s research and development centre, the Lomme National Wholesale Interest Market, the development of an urban farm on the outskirts of Ennetières en Weppes’ fort and the development of a Gourmet Hall in the Englos shopping centre. The aim is to form a platform for food excellence that brings together stakeholders in research, development, production, distribution and consumer sales in a single location, to facilitate 96


Urban Living Room @MASS collective of architects #Urban Living Rooms: domestic spaces in public spaces that generate social conversation between citizens of the city of Cluj.

collaboration and encourage innovation. On an even larger scale, co-development within a network of stakeholders is a way of tackling issues such as the massive eco-renovation of more than 1,500 schools at the scale of Lille-Kortrijk-Tournai Eurometropolis. In 50 years, the neighbourhood’s school has hardly changed. Often deteriorated, the buildings by no means embody the changes needed to address the climate challenge. The design of the experimental platform “Ecorenov rev3 Schools of Tomorrow” takes inspiration from the 182 schools renovated by the Flemish Region in Belgium and the research-creation process of the LAB-Ecole in Quebec, Canada. In particular, it comprises a “quality room”, which will bring together public decision-makers, project managers, 97


One million masks @CEDTec In Bellorizonte, Brazil, favela seamstresses, fashion professionals, associations and even the army, collaborate together to produce #un million de masques

user representatives, construction professionals and local industrial network in order to create new methods, tools and processes, with an exemplary ecological, educational and architectural logic. Faced with the health crisis, the University of Design of the city of Bellorizonte in Brazil, triggered a general mobilisation to produce “1 Million Masks� by recycling fabric coming from small companies in the fashion industry, providing work for seamstresses in the city’s favelas and mobilising as far as the army for transportation in the north of the country. 98


Design takes advantage of the city’s socio-diversity to imagine atypical collaborations, bring together converging interests that usually ignore each other, make antagonistic parties compatible, re-shape the fabric of actors in order to imagine more complex and resilient solutions. Faced with unprecedented crisis situations, it strengthens the capacity for improvisation and experimentation within the existing set of actors.

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the better we survive

COPYING NEIGHBOURS

to find solutions

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How does design facilitate collaboration between territories, collection of inspiring cases, translation of cultural practices, emulation and transfer between cities?

At a regional scale, the Fabrique tions,

des

Transi-

the “Transition Factory” is an initiative of the towns of Loos-enGohelle, Mené, Malaunay and Grande Sainte These four cities compared each other’s experiences about

transition. They discovered that, beyond some contextual differences, they shared common principles for the democratic management of transitions. Within the Fabrique des Transitions, they have mutualised their experiences 101


Cities inspiring each other @Urbact Territorial Cooperation Programme #URBACT: making European cities work together to tackle urban challenges.

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and reflections and put them at the service of the territories that want to engage in a global transition process. Today, around thirty regional authorities, civil society organisations, companies, resource centres, research and training centres, state agencies and structures collaborate within an alliance that is widely open to all. This alliance has a Charter setting out the objectives, values and work agenda, along with a promotion board ensuring a sustained collective dynamic. On a cross-border scale, the project DESIGN IN is based on the collaboration and exchange of practices between the cities of Mons, Tournai, Kortrijk and Lille Metropole. Its aim is to strengthen and stimulate the development and attractiveness of its city centres through the integration of design. DESIGN IN is part of the European INTERREG programmes. The project promotes exchange between cities, sharing of experiences among merchants, different ways of using

design as a development factor and territory attractiveness. Three forms of action are explored and experimented in the four cities: DESIGN IN SHOP encourages collaboration between merchants and design professionals in order to enhance business competitiveness. POP IN STORE deals with the provision, for artisans-designers, of temporary retail spaces alternating between the four cities, in order to test their activity. DESIGN IN TOWN aims to enhance urban spaces by responding to issues previously identified by users.

cities have three years to organise cross-visits, mobilise local stakeholders, design tools to exchange their practices, imagine transfer processes, capitalise and implement the lessons they have learnt. Design organises collaboration between cities. Beyond territorial marketing, it identifies common problems, facilitates mediation between urban cultures, develops modalities and tools for reinterpretation and transmission. In the face of social, ecological

At the European level, collaboration between cities promotes sustainable and integrated urban development. The URBACT programme enables cities to work together and develop inclusive and sustainable solutions to common urban challenges by networking, learning from each other’s experiences, drawing lessons from the past and identifying good practices to improve urban policies. Networks made out of about ten

or health crises, it accelerates exchange and adoption of inspiring practices.

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In the Collaborative City, products, services and public policies are collectively designed, elaborated and developed. Collaboration ensures greater efficiency and integration, it rebuilds social connections, promotes inclusion.

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3 producing together

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more responsive FIELD DESIGN

LTIVATING 108


How can design schools and universities become in-situ laboratories for social innovation at the service of urban transition?

more GIVE TO YOUR NEIGHBOUR In Tournais, the project RE_ACTextile aims to reactivate the historical identity of the city’s textile industry. The Academy of Fine Arts’ Textile Design section is exploring pedagogical work as a tool for the reconstruction of the territory. Students and teachers want to get out of the academy’s buildings.

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School “beyond walls” @Act Tournai #ADN Textile, textile workshops open to citizens in unused commercial spaces in Tournai’s city-centre.

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They are occupying empty shops in order to be closer to the population, setting up old weaving looms lent by local museums, inviting workers to work on these looms. And experimenting with textile co-creation workshops in the city, open to inhabitants. Together, they are reweaving social ties through the transmission of textile know-how.

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In Milan, the project “Off Campus Nolo” is a campus of the Politecnico that is located in the covered market of the Nolo neighbourhood. In this in situ design lab, students work with local actors to reactivate the neighbourhood. They follow teaching modules open to citizens. Together, they organise workshops, exhibitions, etc. They learn to listen to users, investigate the neighbourhood, work on field immersion and conversely, students bring their design skills to develop micro-projects with the neighbourhood.

Sharing ideas in a real market @Polimi DESIS Lab #Off campus Nolo: a “living lab” in Milan’s Design University at the service of the Nolo neighbourhood’s citizens.

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Innovative, creative and entrepreneurial neighbourhood @Université de Tongji #NICE 2035 Living Line: an ecosystem of innovation and entrepreneurship, part of Shanghai‘s Design University, located in a small and popular street in the neighbourhood Siping.

In Shanghai, the University of Tonji is developing the same principle. In the popular Siping neighbourhood, there is an entire street, a “prototype street”called NICE 2035 LIVING LINE, harbouring university premises but also private actors who work with the surrounding population to co-develop, prototype and test new products and services. The international DESIS Network leads this trend with more than fifty design schools and universities around the world that constitute design labs for social innovation and sustainable city development. Design education and action-training are re-

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sources that work together with other stakeholders in the city in order to engage the population’s participation, empower actors to develop projects, stimulate behavioural change, install more sustainable and inclusive lifestyles that are able to withstand emerging crises.

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How does design help develop local production, encourage urban agriculture, promote urban-rural linkages, support food sovereignty in cities?

More and more cities want to increase greenery in public places and encourage citizen initiatives that reintroduce biodiversity in the city. Campus ZEN, as in “Zero Net Emission� of carbon, has the ambition to make of its environment a reference for questions relating to the living environment, mobility and in116


CULTIVATING THE TERRITORY

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MAKING THE CITY

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tegration of the University in the city. The improvement of the living environment of the Campus and the neighbourhood starts by introducing more nature into the city, greening façades, street planting, greening roofs, creating vegetable gardens. The city of Villeneuve d’Ascq is looking to identify public spaces that could possibly be used by volunteers to cultivate vegetable gardens. In turn, it wishes to encourage citizens to request the city’s help to occupy abandoned spaces, unbuilt vacant areas, building basements in order to cultivate in these areas. Two shared gardens have been set up in the heart of the neighbourhood, integrating permaculture’s principles, preserving and even increasing biodiversity. Through large landscapes left to agriculture and cultivated interstitial spaces in the heart of neighbourhoods, Villeneuve d’Ascq ensures landscape and ecological continuity throughout the territory and turns nature into the lever for a Nourishing City. 118


Nourishing city @City of Villeneuve d’Ascq Shared gardens and redefinition of agricultural leases: Villeneuve d’Ascq designs a #Ville Nourricière for its citizens.

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Insertion through market gardening @Association Interval #Culture au jardin: in Haubourdin, nearly 3 hectares are intended for market gardening and giving support to job seekers.

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In Haubourdin, right in the middle of the rue des Carrières-de-ciment surrounded by companies, nearly three hectares are dedicated to vegetable farming and mutual support. Since has 1998, Interval been helping jobseekers reintegrate the professional world by growing vegetables. Since spring 2019, the town of Haubourdin has offered Interval the possibility to cultivate a second plot of land near the Bocquiau farm. The association partly supplies Haubourdin’s central kitchen and works in partnership with the organic chain of store, Bon Gourmand. Most recently the town has contributed to the creation of “Producers of the Future”, a covered market set up in a space that remained vacant in the city centre after the closure of a supermarket in 2017. On the French Riviera, between Grace and Antibes, the small town of Mouans-Sartoux serves everyday 1,000 meals, 100% organic and local, in its three primary school canteens. Its secret: a meticulous design of 121


sustainable canteens at each step of the process: 7 hectares of preserved land in the city centre where a certified organic farm is located, a municipal farm where three municipal farmer-agents produce most of the fruit and vegetables for the canteen, the participation of children, teachers and kitchen teams to achieve near-zero food waste : results, organic-local meals at the same price as industrial catering and Mouans-Sartoux, leader of a network for the transfer of its good practice to ten cities in France and six cities in Europe. The Food Laboratory in the city of Nonthaburi, near Bangkok, serves acts as a prototype for foodhealthy schools, as part of a food policy design project: a common menu for 10 to 15 schools, sustainable production carried out by a farm found less than 20 km away, educational gardens for students, monthly green markets in schoolyards representing an excellent opportunity to forge links with parents and different neighbourhoods, a local 122


Sustainable school meals for healthy local food systems @Biocanteens #Mouans-Sartoux: a municipal farm of 7 hectares in the city-centre and 1000 meals per day, 100% organic and local, for the city’s canteens.

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Food Lab Bangkok @Institut des arts Arsom Silp The city of #Nonthaburi, Thailand: 15 schools and one hospital are supplied by a system made of traditional and local small producers.

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food network linking the community of farmers, schools and hospitals towards more efficient and resilient food citizenship, during the pandemic but also during normal times. Design facilitates the convergence and synergy of food actors towards a transformation of food behaviours, the reintroduction of healthy and sustainable food, the implementation of a rural-urban production continuum, the activation of urban agriculture as a vector of socialisation and cooperation in the city and the establishment of food democracy.

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to ensure food continuity MAKING THE CITY

differently

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RESTORE THE How does design activate the COMMONS complementarity between

and sharing

bottom-up approaches of city making and top-down approaches of cities and large organisations?

The local association Berkem Label, in collaboration with the city of La Madeleine started to revive the former Huet Establishments’ wasteland long before the idea of turning it into a theatre. First by designing remarkable citizen action: raising awareness about La Madeleine’s industrial heritage; rallies, slideshows, guided tours for visitors and residents; workshops in local cafés with former weavers. 127


Starting before opening! @City of la Madeleine Cultural entertainment brought by the association Berkem Label in order to anticipate the trasnformation of the former #Chaufferie Huet into an auditorium.

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When the Chaufferie and its chimney were threatened with demolition, locals became concerned, Berkem Label filed an appeal. Chaufferie Huet is part of the city’s inventory of architectural and landscape heritage! Then, by starting the show well before inaugurating the venue: Façad’Art within the street art festival Les Fenêtres qui parlent, Beffrois du travail to bring awareness to the common heritage, Fantastik, Ducasse de Berkem for Lille3000, Atome@Berkem, planting vegetables on site during the heritage days, Lille3000 Renaissance on the banks of the Deûle river, etc. Berkem Label’s design actions are emblematic of the temporary occupation strategy which starts before the opening and aims to establish its practices well before the facilities. The construction of new housing involves all the inhabitants: in the neighbourhood of Lille Fives, on Friche Brunel’s site, for example, a local collective and a real estate operator look at how to collaborate in every stage of the project. Drafting the specification, choosing a social landlord, picking an architect and landscape designer: everybody has had their say in the choice of green roofs and bicycle shelters, in the consideration on services and shared spaces. The inhabitants ask for collective resources such as association premises, shared gardens. The real estate operator wants to ensure they commit, in the long term, to using and managing these shared resources. A collage made of giant portraits of the inhabitants, located on the facade of the industri129


The community at the heart of real estate projects @3F Nord-Artois Choosing the architect and landscape designer, reflecting on shared spaces, etc.: citizens get involved in the renovation of the #Friche Brunel.

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al wasteland, supports the approach. A series of workshops on landscape design with locals prefigures what the shared gardens will look like. Real estate operators draw inspiration from the social innovation and attempt to expand it. Within the new residence Montalembert in Villeneuve D’Ascq, for example, the SOGEPROM-PROJECTIM property developer wants to develop, with the residents’ help, a car-sharing system. For him, mobility services should be an integral part of new housing programs. Together they seek to design a tool, in paper or digital format, that allows residents to communicate their daily mobility needs and identify shared transport services such as bicycles, cars, etc... thus establishing social links between neighbours in the residence.

On a larger scale, the cities of the European network URBACT Sustainable Food in Urban Communities are designing, each in their own way, synergies between citizen initiatives relating to sustainable food and public authority action. The city of Bristol, for example, designed a consultative Food City Council that brings together different urban agriculture projects in order to promote healthy and sustainable food in the city. Citizens’ involvement in making the city only increases in times of crisis. The project Temporary Local Address seeks to help homeless people get access to financial 131


Brooklyn Public Libraries @Parsons Desis Lab Using #Brooklyn‘s Public Libraries as a temporary local address for homeless people during the health crisis.

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assistance during the pandemic. Parsons’ students in New York City are working with homeless people and with Brooklyn’s Public Libraries to design a temporary local address service giving access to personal mailboxes, notifying homeless people whenever they get mail, alleviating emergency situations without creating insecurity. Social innovation design, design of public services and policies and the design implemented by companies converge to make civil society, public authorities and economic actors collaborate,

put citizen initiatives and city

governance in synergy and balance private interests and general interests in times of crisis, as well as in normal times.

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more responsive

How does design help to develop a sharing economy and organise a new typology of collaborative services in which the beneficiary users are the co-producers?

FIELD DESIGN

TIVATING TERRITORY

Oke Charge, for example, is a refill service for electric

vehicles, based on the sharing economy model: whoever sets up an exterior electrical outlet to charge their vehicle can make it available to other users. The Oke Charge box and application allow any subscriber to connect their vehicle and recharge it, automatically paying the service and the electricity it consumes to the private individu-

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to ensure food continuity


more GIVE TO YOUR NEIGHBOUR

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al...advancing the potential deployment of thousands of charging points so that nobody ever runs out of fuel again! The design of shared services allows to make the most of underutilised individual resources. In Wattignies, south of Lille, the project Design Paysagé explores the hypothesis of joining garden backyards in order to create a harmonious landscape and secure the continuity of the green grid. Connecting the gardens of a same allotment together creates an open passage from one plot to another, resulting in a common garden. Each family keeps part of their garden private that opens-up onto a larger space of nature. A pathway, going from the bottom of one garden to another, offers the neighbourhood’s inhabitants a continuity of green space, favourable to biodiversity.

Unbounded mobility @Les Acrobates #Oke Charge : recharge your electric vehicle anywhere thanks to a system of “public domestic” plugs.

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Let’s create our landscape together @Groupe pUr #Design paysagé: in Wattignies, south of Lille, how do you ensure the continuity of the green grid by connecting gardens of the same housing plot?

The design of shared services facilitates more sustainable practices. Selling a second-hand coat or coffee maker in one click is easy but then you have to pack the package, ship it and often pay more than you sold it for. The project ConsignO’Relais aims to facilitate second-hand product exchange between private individuals. In France, more than 500 000 parcels are shipped every year at less than 15 km from the original shipping place. With the service ConsignO’Relais, sellers and buyers get to choose a Point Relais that is easy to access for both of them. The seller deposits its parcel there and the buyer picks it up when it best suits him. Just like a typical shipping, the transaction takes place on Mondial Relay’ site at a low price, requiring no packaging and usually done through soft mobility for the shorter distances or maybe while running other errands for longer distances. 137


Cities are looking to redesign collaborative public services. Helsinki, for example, grants its citizens access to public buildings when not in use. A platform allows any citizen to book a public library meeting rooms in the evenings or a school gym on the weekend! Users receive an access code for the space via a digital lock and take responsibility for the space for the booked time. Design imagines solutions for sharing available resources, ways of intensifying the use of facilities and new models of exchange between citizens. In times of crisis, it seeks more equitable and inclusive processes of mutualisation and regulation.

Second hand at hand @Mondial Relay #ConsignOrelais: consignment or exchange of parcels from one individual to another living in the same neighbourhood.

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No unused public space! @Helsinki #Flexi Space: Kalasatama, the “smart city� neighbourhood of Helsinki, is experimenting with an online service for booking temporarily unused public and private spaces.

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RESTORE THE COMMONS

and sharing

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How does design activate social innovation, facilitate peer support, regenerate common goods and organise a solidarity-based city?

For instance, turning market gardening into a catalyst for integration and a revealer of skills? This is one of Interval’s Integration Workshops, a gateway structure to return to professional life. 3 hectares of a former quarry in Haubourdin produce certified organic vegetables.

Around 30 re-integrations, every year, of job seekers through market gardening and an interval for the long-term unemployed in order to rebuild confidence, acquire skills, follow training courses and find a job. Interval’s social innovation design progressively builds an integrat141


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ed, systemic and resilient solution for employment reintegration: partially supplying the kitchens of locals canteens, opening a covered market in a former supermarket, collaborating with schools, with the Nursing Home for Dependent Elderly Persons, with the neighbourhood’s residents. “Producers of the future says the technical manager, because we produce vegetables, of course, but also because we create integration”.

In the neighbourhoods of Fives and Hellemmes, the project Cuisine Commune has been developed for its residents to gather, cook and eat together, exchange recipes, discuss food and participate in a neighbourhood renovation project. The association Sens du Goût has built an ephemeral kitchen, open to all and available for free. Avant-Goût of the Cuisine Commune has already welcomed a large number of

partners and users during events for the general public and consultation workshops. This preliminary phase enabled participants to take ownership of the place and get involved in the project. The association and its participants have reflected together about the activities, facilities and operating rules to be implemented in the final Cuisine Commune. In the neighbourhood of Grajaú in Rio de Janeiro, the Design University has

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Cooking and eating together in Fives @Association Les Sens Du Goรปt #Cuisine Commune: involving the citizens of the Fives and Hellemmes neighbourhoods in an urban renewal project.

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Real connections within the virtual world @Rio Desis Lab #GrajaĂş Collab: an online map of available volunteers and services during the pandemic in the neighbourhood GrajaĂš in Brazil.

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initiated “My Neighbourhood Project”, with the aim of building solid relationship with people, encouraging citizens to become active agents of change within their community. During the pandemic, a participatory mapping exercise, Collab Grajaú, was conducted, identifying the neighbourhood’s small businesses and volunteers in order to stimulate mutual aid and personal connections between residents/workers.

After the pandemic, the Collab Grajaú mapping will become available online, as a reliable source of services, promoting the local economy and putting forward local small businesses.

Designing a more collaborative city activates the pleasure of doing things together. Facing the increase of complex problems and rebound effects cities have to face, it re-territorialises relationships, revives the feeling of multi-membership, reactivates the value of the common and re-invigorates collaboration.

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p h o t o / project credits

Pages 28 and 29: POC Café Nomade à Five / Project holder: Marie-France Thevrey & Elodie Vancanneyt - Association 3cm; stakeholders: citizens, cultural structures, artists’ workshops, associations, emerging places; photo credits: Marie-France Thevrey & Elodie Vancanneyt - Association 3cm Pages 30 and 31: POC Mob-Mob / Project holder: SEM Ville Renouvelée; designers: VraimentVraiment; stakeholders: RM Mobilier, ETnisi; photo credits: SEM Ville Renouvelée. Pages 32 and 33: POC La Grande Maison / Project holder: JIEM Dabbadie; designers: Agence M La Constellation; photo credits: Agence M La Constellation. Pages 34 and 35: POC Living Streets Lab / Project holder: Polimi DESIS Lab. - Politecnico di Milano - Department of Design; designers: Davide Fassi, Anna Meroni, Francesco Vergani, Martina Mazzarello, Ambra Borin; stakeholders: Commune of Milan, AMAT – Officina Urbana; photo credits: Polimi DESIS Lab. - Politecnico di Milano - Department of Design. Pages 38 and 39: POC La Voisinerie / Project holder: Malet Maïté; designers: Bertin Damien - NEMUS; stakeholders: city of Lille, son CCAS, Sia Habitat, APF France Handicap, l’ASRL, l’APES, Laurent Courouble; photo credits: Strategic Design Scenarios. Pages 40 and 41: POC Doorman’s Room 2.0 / Project holder: Tongji DESIS Lab, College of Design and Innovation - Tongji University; designers: supervisors Ni Minqing, Tiziano Cattaneo & 18 Master students; stakeholders: Siping sub-district, Yangpu district; photo credits: Tongji DESIS Lab, College of Design and Innovation - Tongji University. Pages 42 and 43: POC GAC - Gestion Active des Consommations / Project holder: Green-

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watch; designers: Strategic Design Scenarios; stakeholders: AREWAL, CETIC, Haulogy, Institut de Gestion de l’Environnement et de l’Aménagement du Territoire de l’Université Libre de Bruxelles; photo credits: Strategic Design Scenarios.

Pages 52 and 53: POC Playful Paradigme / Project holder: Udine (IT); stakeholders: This case comes from the Playful Paradigme network co-financed by the European Union through the URBACT programme; photo credits: Udine (IT).

Page 46: POC Gulivers campus / Project holder: Laboratoire TVES, Université de Lille, Franck Bodin, Marie-Lavande Laidebeur; designers: Tiphaine Dejonge, MAALAI; stakeholders: Association Handifac, FIRAH, CCAH, Villeneuve d’Ascq, Région Hauts de France, SATT, Université de Laval - Québec; photo credits: Laboratoire TVES, Université de Lille, Franck Bodin, Marie-Lavande Laidebeur.

Pages 54 and 55: POC Glissière en Béton Armé / Project holder: Ville Renouvelée - Plaine Images; designers: Atelier Bien-vu; stakeholders: Groupe A - Coopérative culturelle; photo credits: Atelier Bien-vu.

Page 47: POC Card4all / Project holder: city of Gijón; stakeholders: This case comes from the Card4all network co-financed by the European Union through the URBACT programme; photo credits: city of Gijón. Pages 47 and 48: POC CRÉAlab / Project holder: INSPE, Institut national supérieur du professorat et de l’éducation de Villeneuve d’Ascq; designers: CRÉAlab; stakeholders: Lycée Professionnel Dynah Derycke, Villeneuve d’Ascq; photo credits: : CRÉAlab. Page 49: POC Recovery.Net / Project holder: Polimi DESIS Lab, Dipartimento Design - Politecnico di Milano; designers: Dr. Daniela Sangiorgi, Marta Carrera; stakeholders: Department of Mental Health of ASST Spedali Civili di Brescia, ASST Mantova, Università degli Studi di Milano - Bicocca, Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, La Rondine Società Cooperativa Sociale Onlus, Teatro 19, associazione O.N.L.U.S. Il Chiaro del Bosco, Società Cooperativa Sociale Sol.Co Mantova, associazione ALBA, Associazione Oltre La Siepe; photo credits: : Polimi DESIS Lab, Dipartimento Design - Politecnico di Milano.

Page 56: POC Playful City / Project holder: Yvonne N. Delevoye; designers: Adamantia Batistou, Capucine Diancourt; stakeholders: Neotrope, Le Studio LeBleu, La Condition Publique de Roubaix, Université de Lille, Métropole Européenne de Lille; photo credits: : Adamantia Batistou, Capucine Diancourt. Page 57: POC Radius Zone / Project holder: Zhao Meng, Songling Gao, Si Yu; designers: Academy of Arts & Design - Tsinghua University; photo credits: Zhao Meng, Songling Gao, Si Yu. Pages 60 and 61: POC Monsfabrica / Project holder: Association de préfiguration Mons Fabrica: Emeric Debrauwer, Charlotte Filbien; designers: Marie-Julie Rock, Positives innovations; stakeholders: City of Mons en Baroeul, ANIS, Mouvement des entrepreneurs sociaux (MoUVes); photo credits: Association de préfiguration Mons Fabrica: Emeric Debrauwer, Charlotte Filbien. POC La Station / Project holder: Association La Station; designers: Aurélien Brietz; stakeholders: Communauté d’Agglomération du Pays de SaintOmer, the network of stations; photo credits: Aurélien Brietz. Pages 58 and 59: POC La Fabrique Numérique de Gonesse / Project holder: Roissy Pays de France Agglomeration; stakeholders: This case comes from the REFILL network co-financed by the European Un-


p h o t o / project credits

ion through the URBACT programme ; photo credits: Roissy Pays de France Agglomeration. POC La Scuola dei Quartieri / Project holder: Polimi DESIS Lab, Dipartimento Design - Politecnico di Milano, Commune di Milano & co-financed by the European Union : National Operational Programme Metropolitan Cities 20142020 (PON METRO); designers: Marta Corubolo, Chiara Galeazzi, Anna Meroni, Martina Rossi, Daniela Selloni avec Chiara Pacchiarotti & Andrea Taverna; stakeholders: Avanzi, Comunità del Giambellino, Dynamoscopio, Fondazione Politecnico di Milano, Gruppo Cooperativo Cgm, Kilowatt, Make aCube3, PerMicro, Spazio Aperto Servizi; photo credits: Polimi DESIS Lab. Pages 68, 69, 71 and 73: POC VILCO / Project holder: Brulocalis, 21Solutions, Bruxelles Environnement, Strategic Design Scenarios, Fondation pour les Générations Futures; designers: Strategic Design Scenarios; stakeholders: Programme de recherche-action CO-CREATE, INNOVIRIS, Région Bruxelles-Capitale, City of Bruxelles, Communes d’Uccle, d’Etterbeek et de Watermael-Boitsfort & the citizen’s collectives BXL en Transition, OxyDurable, Uccle En Transition, Quartier Durable St Job, Etterbeek en Transition, Coin du Balai, Logis Floréal; photo credits: Strategic Design Scenarios. Page 70: POC Cœur de Ville / Project holder: City of La Madeleine; designers: Extracité, MA atelier; stakeholders: / La Madeleine’s associations, schools, merchants, Flanders College, citizens; photo credits: City of La Madeleine. Page 72: POC Volunteering Local Bank & Imaginarius Participa / Project holder: city of Santa Maria da Feira; stakeholders: This case comes from the ActiveCitizens network co-financed by the European Union through the URBACT programme; photo credits: city of Santa Maria da Feira. Pages 76 and 77:

POC Sheefoo / Project holder: Maximilien Lejeune, David Ryon, Philippe Leba (SASU Wizpay); designers: SASU Wizpay; stakeholders: YRYCOM & See You Cloud, GAEL, La Cloche Association, Euratechnologies, Réseau Entreprendre, myFédé; photo credits: SASU Wizpay. Pages 78 and 79: POC Hub by Suez / Project holder: Suez Environnement; designers: We Think Design; photo credits: Suez Environnement. Pages 80 et 81: POC Jiwubang / Project holder: Data Intelligence and Service Collaboration Lab - School of Design of Hunan University; designers: Yidi Zhao, Hanhui Deng, He Xu, Anyu Gang, Weike Du ; photo credits: Data Intelligence and Service Collaboration Lab - School of Design of Hunan University. Pages 84 and 85: POC Cart’ier / Project holder: Association Interphaz; designers: Les Gens Géniaux; photo credits: Association Interphaz. Pages 86 and 87: POC Raconte-moi Berkem La Madeleine / Project holder: VivaCitéS Hauts-de-France; designers: Dométhilde Majek, Rives Nord; stakeholders: association Berkem Label, Acoljaq, école Rostand, city of La Madeleine, residents and users of the Berkem neighbourhood. Pages 88 and 89: POC Brusseau / Project holder: Brusseau; stakeholders: This action-reseach is financed within the call for projects COCREATE from INNOVIRIS, the Brussels Institute for Research and Innovation; photo credits: Brusseau. Pages 90 and 91: POC Design for Emergency / Project holder: CAMD - Northeastern’s College of Arts, Media and Design; designers: : Sara Colombo, Paolo Ciuccarelli & Danilo DiCuia, Marco Guerini, Lucia Marengo, Piero Molino, Sara Perozzi, Sara Tonelli, Lucy Yan; stake-

holders: Universidad de La Laguna, Universidade de São Paulo, Hanyang University, UAL DESIS Lab - University of the Arts London, Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana - Unidad Xochimilco, Universidad Peruana de Ciencias Aplicadas, Universidad de Lima, Universidad Técnica de Ambato, Fondazione Bruno Kessler, Berkeley Innovation Group, Domus Academy; photo credits: CAMD - Northeastern’s College of Arts, Media and Design. Pages 94 and 95: POC Les Beaux Endroits / Project holder: La Condition Publique; designers: Dométhilde Majek - Rives Nord, Matthieu Marty, Julien Pitinome; stakeholders: Université de Lille, SIA Habitat, la SEM Ville Renouvelée, SNCF, CROUS, City of Roubaix, Astuces & Jardin de traverse; photo credits: Nicolas Lee. Pages 96 and 97 : POC Urban Living Room / Project holder: MASS collectif d’architectes; designers: MASS collectif d’architectes; stakeholders: This case comes from the REFILL network co-financed by the European Union through the URBACT programme; photo credits: MASS collectif d’architectes. Pages 98 and 99: POC One million masks / Project holder: Escola Técnica CEDTec, UEMG - Universidade do Estado de Minas Gerais; designers: Rita Engler, Letícia Guimarães, Gabriela Marcondes, Mariana Laktim, Aline Fonseca; stakeholders: the fashion industry, armed forces, NGOs, health professionals; photo credits: Escola Técnica CEDTec, UEMG - Universidade do Estado de Minas Gerais. Pages 102, 103 and 104: POC URBACT networks / Project holder: Secrétariat URBACT; stakeholders: The URBACT programme is co-financed by the European Union; photo credits: URBACT Secretariat.

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Pages 110 and 111: POC ADN Textile / Project holder: ESA, Académie des Beaux-Arts de Tournai; designers: students and pedagogical team of the Textile Design section; stakeholders: AEQUO Edition, Musée de la Rubanerie, Comines (Belgique), ESAAT Roubaix, Office du Tourisme de Tournai (Belgique); photo credits: ESA, Académie des Beaux-Arts de Tournai et Strategic Design Scenarios.

photo credits: Sylvie Jusserand - INTERVAL.

Pages 112 and 113: POC Off-Campus / Project holder: Polimi DESIS Lab, Dipartimento Design - Politecnico di Milano; designers: Davide Fassi, Francesco Vergani, Anna Meroni, Laura Galluzzo, Virginia Tassinari, Annalinda De Rosa; stakeholders: Comune di Milano (Assessorato Politiche del lavoro, Attività produttive, Commercio e Risorse umane), Radio Nolo APS; photo credits: Polimi DESIS Lab.

Pages 124 and 125: POC Food Citizenship: Post-pandemic Food Resilience Policy Design / Project holder: Arsom Silp Institute of the Arts, DESIS Labs, INI Innovation Network International; designers: Yingyong Poonnapatham, Wallapa van Willenswaard; stakeholders: Lek Komes, Young Smart Farmer, Nonthaburi, Young Food, the nodes of healthy schools, green hospitals, producers-outlets, urban citizens, Thai Health Promotion Foundation, Food Policy Design project team ; photo credits: Arsom Silp Institute of the Arts, DESIS Labs, INI Innovation Network International.

Pages 114 and 115: POC NICE 2035 Living Line / Project holder: Tongji DESIS Lab, College of Design and Innovation - Tongji University; designers: Yongqi Lou, AdloCibic; stakeholders: local administrative authorities in the Siping community, Angel+ Creative Lab, Aston Martin Lagonda Creative Lab, Creater Working-Space Lab, Design Harvests Rural Lab, Fablab O Maker Workshop, Haier Food Lab, Neuni Material Lab, Tongji-DadawaSound*Lab, 021-NICE Incubator; photo credits: Tongji DESIS Lab, College of Design and Innovation - Tongji University.

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Pages 122 and 123: POC URBACT Biocanteens Transfer Network / Project holder: City of Mouans-Sartoux; stakeholders: This case comes from the Biocanteens network co-financed by the European Union through the URBACT programme; photo credits: Gille Perole.

Page 128: POC La Chaufferie Huet / Project holder: Nathalie Moniot, Hélène Moreau (City of la Madeleine); designers: Christophe François; stakeholders: Architecture NTK : Nathalie Tkint, Harmonie municipale, Centre de Culture et d’Animation «le Millénaire», Association Berkem Label, DRAC; photo credits: Nathalie Moniot, Hélène Moreau (City of la Madeleine).

Pages 118 and 119: POC Ville Nourricière / Project holder: City of Villeneuve d’Ascq; designers: Kartier Libre, les services de la ; stakeholders: Villeneuve d’Ascq’s citizens, farmers (current or future), MEL; photo credits: City of Villeneuve d’Ascq.

Page 130: POC Friche Brunel / Project holder: 3F Nord-Artois; stakeholders: City of Lille, JTB agencies and Sempervirens, Kartier Libre, coopérative Bien fait pour ta Com’, l’association les AJOnc, Marc Mounier-Kuhn; photo credits: 3F Nord-Artois.

Pages 120 and 121: POC Cultures au jardin / Project holder: Sylvie Jusserand - INTERVAL; designers: Chloé Adelheim; stakeholders: city of Haubourdin, organic shops, Bon Gourmand, schools, Nursing Home for the Dependent Elderly;

Page 132: POC Public libraries as a temporary local address for people experiencing homelessness / Project holder: Parsons DESIS Lab, Civic Service Design Graduate Minor - Parsons School of Design; designers: Maanasa

Sivashankar, Callan Hajosy, Courtney Sprigg, Nicole Karsch; stakeholders: Brooklyn Public Library (BPL); photo credits: Parsons DESIS Lab, Civic Service Design Graduate Minor - Parsons School of Design. Page 136: POC Ok Charge / Project holder: Les Acrobates, Marc Bony, Lionel Doyen, Aymar de la Mettrie; designers: Les Acrobates, Marc Bony, Lionel Doyen; stakeholders: HDFID (Hauts-de-France Innovation développement), WLD Consulting, Fablab Lille, Euratechnologie Lille; photo credits: Les Acrobates, Marc Bony, Lionel Doyen. Page 137: POC Design Paysagé / Project holder: Louis-Marie Dumon, Olivier VanPoucke, Louis-Philippe Blervacque - Groupe PuR; designers: Christophe François; stakeholders: Joël Vene, Blandine Fraissé, Martial Damarey, Chloé Schmidt, Thierry Lefebvre, Alain Bizeul, Claude Lenglet, Yves Hocquet, Pierre Durand, Anne Duriez, Kevin Carneau, Johan Martin, Charlotte Vouters, Alexis Dumon, Jean-Pierre Beghin; photo credits: Groupe PuR. Page 138: POC Consign’o Relais / Project holder: Mondial Relay; photo credits: Mondial Relay. Page 139: POC Flexi Space / Project holder: City of Helsinki; stakeholders: This case comes from the REFILL network co-financed by the European Union through the URBACT programme; photo credits: City of Helsinki. Page 142: POC Cultures au jardin / Project holder: Sylvie Jusserand - INTERVAL; designers: Chloé Adelheim; stakeholders: city of Haubourdin, organic shops, Bon Gourmand, schools, Nursing Home for the Dependent Elderly; photo credits: Sylvie Jusserand - INTERVAL. Page 143 and 144: POC Cuisine Commune / Project holder: CCAS de Lille et l’association « Les


p h o t o / project credits

Sens Du Goût »; stakeholders: City of Lille, Secours Populaire Français, Association La Cloche, La Sauvegarde du Nord, l’ISA, Récréations Urbaines, Les Potes en Ciel, Ma Cuisine Enthousiaste, Cuisthome, Superquinquin, l’Accorderie, Filofil; photo credits: CCAS de Lille et l’association « Les Sens Du Goût ». Page 146 and 147: POC Grajaú Colla / Project holder: Rio DESIS Lab, Beatriz Lopes; designers: Carla Cipolla; stakeholders: UFRJ, Casa Anitcha ; photo credits: Rio DESIS Lab, Beatriz Lopes.

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P O C o f t h e collaborative city

POC Café Nomade à Five / Project holder: Marie-France Thevrey & Elodie Vancanneyt - Association 3cm; stakeholders: citizens, cultural structures, artists’ workshops, associations, emerging places. POC La Grande Maison / Project holder: JIEM Dabbadie ; designers: Agence M La Constellation. POC La Fabrique Saillysienne / Project holder: voluntary elected officials, referent citizens for each project; designers: Mourad Oural & Vincent Dupont Rougier; stakeholders: the Microstop association, local residents who contributed intermittently. POC Hôt-El / Project holder: SEM Ville Renouvelée; designers: VraimentVraiment; stakeholders: Eiffage Construction Nord Pas de Calais, HER, SLAP, les habitants. POC Mob-Mob / Project holder: SEM Ville Renouvelée; designers: VraimentVraiment; stakeholders: RM Mobilier, ETnisi. POC La Voisinerie / Project holder: Malet Maïté; designers: Bertin Damien - NEMUS; stakeholders: La City of Lille, son CCAS, Sia Habitat, APF France Handicap, l’ASRL, l’APES, Laurent Courouble. POC Brico-conciergerie / Project holder: Direction Habitat de la Métropole Européenne de Lille; designers: La 27ème Région; stakeholders: La Vitrocylette, La Fabrique de l’emploi, CCAS d’Armentières. POC GAC - Gestion Active des Consommations / Project holder: Greenwatch; designers: Strategic Design Scenarios; stakeholders: AREWAL, CETIC, Haulogy, Institut de Gestion de l’Environnement et de l’Aménagement du Territoire de l’Université Libre de Bruxelles. POC L’électricité dessine mon quartier / Project holder: Enedis; stakeholders:Croix, Halluin, La Madeleine, Hem, Mons en Baroeul, Leers, Tourcoing, Wambrechies.

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POC Espace culturel Tisserands Lomme / Project holder: Mairie de Lomme; designers: Audrey Alonso, Soumaya Nader - Pôle d’Observation Urbaine aux Langages Pluridisciplinaires; stakeholders: L’Danse, Les Accordéonistes, Impro Academy, La Jeunesse du Marais, OSML Pétanque, La Mi Lomme, la Prolétarienne, le Théâtre Octobre, Zumbi dos Palmares. POC Gulivers campus / Project holder: Laboratoire TVES, Université de Lille, Franck Bodin, Marie-Lavande Laidebeur; designers: Tiphaine Dejonge, MAALAI; stakeholders: Association Handifac, FIRAH, CCAH, Villeneuve d’Ascq, Région Hauts de France, SATT, Université de Laval - Québec. POC CRÉAlab / Project holder: INSPE, Institut national supérieur du professorat et de l’éducation de Villeneuve d’Ascq; designers: CRÉAlab; stakeholders: Lycée Professionnel Dynah Derycke, Villeneuve d’Ascq. POC Ephemer / Project holder: Thierry Sobanski, Nicolas Vaillant, Anthony Piermattéo; designers: Emilie Lebrun; stakeholders: ICL, EDHEC, IESEG. POC Borne d’Apport Volontaire / Project holder: Suez; designers: Suez. POC Playful City / Project holder: Yvonne N. Delevoye; designers: Adamantia Batistou, Capucine Diancourt; stakeholders: Neotrope, Le Studio LeBleu, La Condition Publique de Roubaix, Université de Lille, Métropole Européenne de Lille. POC La mémoire par le code / Project holder: Université de Lille; designers: étudiants du Master Culture et Communication de l’Université de Lille. POC Glissière en Béton Armé / Project holder: Ville Renouvelée - Plaine Images; designers: Atelier Bien-vu; stakeholders: Groupe A - Coopérative culturelle; photo credits: Atelier Bien-vu. POC Parking Roubaix / Project holder: SEM Ville renouvelée; designers: collectif Graphites, Surface Studio.

POC Hangar Créatif / Project holder: Université Catholique de Lille. POC La Station / Project holder: Association La Station; designers: Aurélien Brietz; stakeholders: Communauté d’Agglomération du Pays de SaintOmer, le réseau des stations. POC Bazaar St-So / Project holder: Initiatives et Cité, coopérative Smart; designers: Atelier Rusch ; stakeholders: users of the Bazaar (staff, residents, visitors). POC Le Kappla / Project holder:Laura Bodénez, Lucie Colin; designers: Laura Bodénez, Lucie Colin. POC Tiers-Lieu LA LOCO / Project holder: SCI Lille driven by SAS ETIC Foncièrement Responsable, co-holders; designers: Atelier 204, co-holders; stakeholders: more than 375 people and structures have contributed since 2015. POC Monsfabrica / Project holder: Association de préfiguration Mons Fabrica: Emeric Debrauwer, Charlotte Filbien; designers: Marie-Julie Rock, Positives innovations; stakeholders: City of Mons en Baroeul, ANIS, Mouvement des entrepreneurs sociaux (MoUVes). POC Wellice / Project holder: Ceetrus France, Projectim (accompanies Ceetrus as Delegated Project Manager); stakeholders: Ville de Villeneuve d’Ascq, Agence Paindavoine Parmentier. POC Garage / Project holder: Christophe Levyfve - GARAGE. POC Cœur de Ville / Project holder: City of La Madeleine; designers: Extracité, MA atelier; stakeholders: / La Madeleine’s associations, schools, merchants, Flanders College, citizens; photo credits: City of La Madeleine. POC Bords de Deûle / Project holder: Métropole Européenne de Lille; designers: Atypie, Attitudes Urbaines, Giboulée; stakeholders: mayors and municipal councillors of the munici-


P O C o f t h e collaborative city

palities of Marquette lez Lille, La Madeleine and Saint André lez Lille, the youth council of the city of Saint André, municipal officials, players in the associative world, local residents’ collectives, players in property development, players in the economic world, thematic experts from public administrations and public development companies. POC VILCO / Project holder: Brulocalis, 21Solutions, Bruxelles Environnement, Strategic Design Scenarios, Fondation pour les Générations Futures; designers: Strategic Design Scenarios; stakeholders: Programme de recherche-action CO-CREATE, INNOVIRIS, Région Bruxelles-Capitale, City of Bruxelles, Communes d’Uccle, d’Etterbeek et de Watermael-Boitsfort & the citizen’s collectives BXL en Transition, OxyDurable, Uccle En Transition, Quartier Durable St Job, Etterbeek en Transition, Coin du Balai, Logis Floréal. POC Allée Saint Georges / Project holder: Métropole Européenne de Lille; designers: BLAU Architectes; stakeholders: SLAP, Ville de Armentières. POC Passages à la co-construction / Project holder: Ville de Béthune (service Smart City & Innovation); designers: Pierre-Mathieu Degruel & Mathilde François, Espaces Compris; stakeholders: commerçants des deux rues, passants, Office de tourisme, services de la Communauté d’Agglomération, services de la Ville de Béthune. POC Verdi Ingénierie / Project holder: VERDI; designers: Berkem Label, association Non-Lieu; stakeholders: Ville de la Madeleine, T’Kint (architecte). POC La Compagnie des Tiers-Lieux / Project holder: Compagnie des TiersLieux; designers: L’Atelier Bien-Vu; stakeholders: Lille 2020 - Capitale Mondiale du Design, Work Lys, La Loco, la CoFabrik, Metalu, La Condition Publique, UCL, La Coroutine, Le Forum Départemental des Sciences, Coopérative Baraka, la MEL, le Bazar St So, plateau fertile, l’Université de Lille, La Chaufferie, le Polder, la bri-

cole, le fabricarium, Techshop. POC Hub by Suez / Project holder: Suez Environnement; designers: We Think Design. POC Sheefoo / Project holder: Maximilien Lejeune, David Ryon, Philippe Leba (SASU Wizpay); designers: SASU Wizpay; stakeholders: YRYCOM & See You Cloud, GAEL, La Cloche Association, Euratechnologies, Réseau Entreprendre, myFédé. POC MEL Accession Abordable / Project holder: Métropole Européenne de Lille; designers: Strategic Design Scenarios, Rives Nord; stakeholders: Association Départementale d’Information sur le Logement Nord-Pas-DeCalais, Fédération des Promoteurs Immobiliers Hauts de France, Centre Études de la Conjoncture Immobilière, Union Régionale pour l’Habitat Hauts de France, Action Logement, Procivis, Vilogia Premium, Ville de Lille, Notre Logis, Partenord Habitat, Escaut habitat, BPCE, POP Immobilier. POC LCD - Local Computational Design / Project holder: Emilieu Studio & Les briqueteries du nord; designers: Paul Emilieu (Emilieu Studio), Samy (Design by data), Adrien Rigobello (Thr34d5), Paul Carneau (Thr34d5 & Design by data), Nadja Gaudillière (Thr34d5). POC Cartographie Participative des Cheminées / Project holder: VivaCitéS Hauts-de-France, Interphaz; designers: Denis Plancque, l’Assemblée des Noues, Collectif Graphites; stakeholders: Le Non-Lieu & le service patrimoine de Tourcoing, l’ADULM, la MEL, Art connexion, la Médiathèque de Marcq-en-Barœul, Berkem Label, La Chaufferie Huet. POC Raconte-moi Berkem La Madeleine / Project holder: VivaCitéS Hauts-de-France; designers: Dométhilde Majek, Rives Nord; stakeholders: association Berkem Label, Acoljaq, école Rostand, city of La Madeleine, residents and users of the Berkem neighbourhood

POC Cart’ier / Project holder: Association Interphaz; designers: Les Gens Géniaux. POC Insolille / Project holder: Noémie Gronowski, Fiona Lebre, Arthur Clemens; designers: Noémie Gronowski, Fiona Lebre, Arthur Clemens, Urvi Shrimani, Corentin Mouton; stakeholders: Métropole Européenne de Lille, les habitants et touristes. POC Biodimètre / Project holder: INRIA, SORELI; designers: Christophe Guérin, Natalia Baudoin, Florent Caron. POC Trinum Lilliad – Université de Lille / Project holder: LILLIAD Learning center Innovation (University of Lille) & the city of Lomme as part of the prefiguration of the future Trinum (digital arts and cultures hub); designers: Christophe Guérin; stakeholders: the research institute on software and hardware components for advanced information and communication (Ircica, CNRS/University of Lille). POC Le service public municipal comme un trait d’union / Project holder: Armentières; designers: Juliette Cheval, Sébastien Nicot, Polygraphic; stakeholders: Métropole Européenne de Lille, Departmental council. POC PRéLUDE / Project holder: Université Catholique de Lille; stakeholders: les Ateliers d’Humanicité et de St Antoine, Labs (Fablab, Learning Lab & MediaLab), HEMISF4IRE Design School de l’Université Catholique de Lille, YnCrea. POC Ecorenov rev3 Écoles de demain / Project holder: ECT Eurométropole Lille-Kortrijk-Tournai; designers: Joachim Savin; stakeholders: SCIC Alliance Sens & Economie, CAUE du Nord. POC Lille Food Experience - LiFE / Project holder: Ceetrus France; designers: piKs design; stakeholders: Métropole Européenne de Lille, SOGEMIN, Euralimentaire, Auchan, Ceetrus. POC Les Beaux Endroits / Project

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P O C o f t h e collaborative city

holder: La Condition Publique; designers: Dométhilde Majek - Rives Nord, Matthieu Marty, Julien Pitinome; stakeholders: Université de Lille, SIA Habitat, la SEM Ville Renouvelée, SNCF, CROUS, City of Roubaix, Astuces & Jardin de traverse. POC Métamorphoses Silencieuses / Project holder: EDF; designers: integrated designers; stakeholders: l’École Nationale Supérieure des Arts Décoratifs POC Design In / Project holder: IDETA, Maison du Design, CCI Grand Lille, ille – design, Designregio Kortrijk; designers: designers of Wallonia, Flanders & Hauts-de-France; stakeholders: INTERREG V - IDETA, Maison du Design, CCI Grand Lille, lille – design, Designregio Kortrijk. POC La gare de demain / Project holder: Fer de France; designers: Shaker, Regine Charvet Pello; stakeholders: Alstom, AREP, In Oui, Société du Grand Paris, SNCF Gare & Connexions. POC ADN Textile / Project holder: ESA, Académie des Beaux-Arts de Tournai; designers: students and pedagogical team of the Textile Design section; stakeholders: AEQUO Edition, Musée de la Rubanerie, Comines (Belgique), ESAAT Roubaix, Office du Tourisme de Tournai (Belgique). POC En plein centre / Project holder: Ville de Tourcoing, La fabrique des quartiers MEL-SPLA; designers: Ecole Supérieure d’Arts Appliqués et Textile - ESAAT, Le Fresnoy, Studio national des arts contemporains, Collectif Triii (plasticien en arts numériques / digital artist), Studio Corpus ; stakeholders: La fabrique des quartiers, Ville de Tourcoing, Union des commerçants, EPF Nord-Pas de Calais, Arkéa banque. POC Passage de la Soie / Project holder: SERGIC; designers: Pierre-Mathieu Degruel, l’Ecole Supérieure des Arts Appliqués et du Textile de Roubaix ; stakeholders:Ville de Tourcoing. POC Repenser l’enseignement de la

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marque / Project holder: ISCOM; designers: ISCOM. POC Ville Nourricière / Project holder: City of Villeneuve d’Ascq; designers: Kartier Libre, les services de la ; stakeholders: Villeneuve d’Ascq’s citizens, farmers (current or future), MEL. POC Rues végétalisées / Project holder: Université Catholique de Lille; stakeholders: Association de la rue Camille Desmoulins, collectives of citizens of the neighbourhood Vauban-Esquermes. POC Jardins Familiaux / Project holder: Quartier Faubourg de Béthune - Ville de Lille; designers: Bravo !; stakeholders: Lille Sud Insertion, habitants de Verharen. POC Friche Brunel / Project holder: 3F Nord-Artois; stakeholders: City of Lille, agences JTB et Sempervirens, Kartier Libre, coopérative Bien fait pour ta Com’, l’association les AJOnc, Marc Mounier-Kuhn. POC Covoiturage Projectim / Project holder: SOGEPROM - PROJECTIM; designer: Quentin Voleau; stakeholders: l’Université Catholique de Lille, l’Association Droit au Vélo. POC La Chaufferie Huet / Project holder: Nathalie Moniot, Hélène Moreau (City of la Madeleine); designers: Christophe François; stakeholders: Architecture NTK : Nathalie Tkint, Harmonie municipale, Centre de Culture et d’Animation «le Millénaire», Association Berkem Label, DRAC. POC Quartier Saint-Pierre / Project holder: Ville de Croix; designer: collectif Graphites; stakeholders: habitants et le conseil citoyen du quartier SaintPierre de Croix. POC Renature-Lieu de culture / Project holder: Berkem Label; designers: Les Gens Géniaux; acteurs: habitants, riverains, élus. POC Consign’o Relais / Project holder: Mondial Relay.

POC Ok Charge / Project holder: Les Acrobates, Marc Bony, Lionel Doyen, Aymar de la Mettrie; designers: Les Acrobates, Marc Bony, Lionel Doyen; stakeholders: HDFID (Hauts-de-France Innovation développement), WLD Consulting, Fablab Lille, Euratechnologie Lille. POC Design Paysagé / Project holder: Louis-Marie Dumon, Olivier VanPoucke, Louis-Philippe Blervacque - Groupe PuR; designers: Christophe François; stakeholders: Joël Vene, Blandine Fraissé, Martial Damarey, Chloé Schmidt, Thierry Lefebvre, Alain Bizeul, Claude Lenglet, Yves Hocquet, Pierre Durand, Anne Duriez, Kevin Carneau, Johan Martin, Charlotte Vouters, Alexis Dumon, Jean-Pierre Beghin. POC Innover la Propreté Urbaine / Project holder: Suez Environnement; designers: Étudiants de Master ENSAV La Cambre; stakeholders: Strategic Design Scenarios. POC Cuisine Commune / Project holder: CCAS de Lille et l’association « Les Sens Du Goût »; stakeholders: City of Lille, Secours Populaire Français, Association La Cloche, La Sauvegarde du Nord, l’ISA, Récréations Urbaines, Les Potes en Ciel, Ma Cuisine Enthousiaste, Cuisthome, Superquinquin, l’Accorderie, Filofil. POC Cultures au jardin / Project holder: Sylvie Jusserand - INTERVAL; designers: Chloé Adelheim; stakeholders: Ville d’Haubourdin, magasins Bio, Bon Gourmand, écoles, l’Établissement d’Hébergement pour Personnes Âgées Dépendantes. POC CycLab / Project holder: Unistudio; designers: Adrien Ciejak, Pierre Feyrit, Antoine Leclercq, Pierre Masset, Paul-Etienne Méligne, Emeline Surgé; stakeholders: Double cycles. POC La Lisière des cachettes et aventures / Project holder: Collectif des Saprophytes, collectif Faubourg 132; designers: Centre d’Accueil et de Loisirs Chaplin, Ville de Villeneuve d’Ascq.


P O C from abroad

The projects from the territory of the European Metropolis of Lille are invited to dialogue with POC from other European cities and all around the world. Post-pandemic design

17 labs within DESIS (Design for Social Innovation and Sustainability) international’s network of worldwide design schools and universities question, through their projects, the territory’s POC in terms of the pandemic, in order to mobilise resources in emergencies, rethink public space and social life while distancing, creating new combinations between face-to-face and online meetings, and so on. POC DESIS / Project holder: DESIS labs; designers: DESIS Labs in 55 design schools and universities worldwide. POC Superilles+ / Project holder: ELISAVA DESIS Lab ; designers: ELISAVA professors and students; stakeholders: Barcelona City Council. POC Living Streets Lab / Project holder: Polimi DESIS Lab. - Politecnico di Milano - Department of Design; designers: Davide Fassi, Anna Meroni, Francesco Vergani, Martina Maz-

POC IPSI / Project holder: ELISAVA DESIS Lab, ELISAVA Research, MEATS (Master’s degree in Ephemeral Architecture and Temporary Spaces); designers: Roger Paez, Toni Montes, Manuela Valtchanova, Curro Claret & MEATS students; stakeholders: Kn60Lab, Barcelona City Council (Ciutat Vella District – Pla de Barris), Fundació La Caixa, Fundació Tot Raval.

to Design - Politecnico di Milano, Commune di Milano & cofinancé par the European Union : National Operational Programme Metropolitan Cities 20142020 (PON METRO); designers: Marta Corubolo, Chiara Galeazzi, Anna Meroni, Martina Rossi, Daniela Selloni avec Chiara Pacchiarotti & Andrea Taverna; stakeholders: Avanzi, Comunità del Giambellino, Dynamoscopio, Fondazione Politecnico di Milano, Gruppo Cooperativo Cgm, Kilowatt, Make aCube3, PerMicro, Spazio Aperto Servizi; crédits photo: Polimi DESIS Lab.

POC Returning to campus / Project holder: Academy of Arts & Design - Tsinghua University ; designers: huoqi Jia, Gjieying Zhuang (Angela Chong), Xingyu Lai, Lan Liu.

POC Volun!ty / Project holder: NU-Desis-Lab, School of Design - Jiangnan University; designers: Hang Zhao, Jiaqi Xiao, Yujie Chen, Jiayu Lin; stakeholders: DESIS China.

POC Doorman’s Room 2.0 / Project holder: Tongji DESIS Lab, College of Design and Innovation - Tongji University; designers: supervisors Ni Minqing, Tiziano Cattaneo & 18 MA students of Narrative Environment & Placemaking; stakeholders: Siping sub-district, Yangpu district.

POC Love of community care / Project holder: NU-Desis-Lab, School of Design - Jiangnan University; designers: Longhao Liang, Xinyang Zhao, Mengjiao Pan, Xuehan Luo; stakeholders: DESIS China.

zarello, Ambra Borin; stakeholders: Commune de Milan, AMAT – Officina Urbana.

POC Attention Currency System / Project holder: The Hong Kong Polytechnic University - School of Design; designers: Jen Yoohyun Lee, Marty Miller. POC Recovery.Net / Project holder: Polimi DESIS Lab, Dipartimento Design - Politecnico di Milano; designers: Dr. Daniela Sangiorgi, Marta Carrera; stakeholders: Mental Health Department of ASST Spedali Civili di Brescia, ASST Mantova, Università degli Studi di Milano - Bicocca, Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, La Rondine Società Cooperativa Sociale Onlus, Teatro 19, associazione O.N.L.U.S. Il Chiaro del Bosco, Società Cooperativa Sociale Sol.Co Mantova, associazione ALBA, Associazione Oltre La Siepe. POC Radius Zone / Project holder: Zhao Meng, Songling Gao, Si Yu; designers: Academy of Arts & Design Tsinghua University. POC La Scuola dei Quartieri / Project holder: Polimi DESIS Lab, Dipartimen-

POC The Pets’ Voice / Project holder: NU-Desis-Lab, School of Design - Jiangnan University; designers: Jiaqian Mao, Tiny Shi, Xinru Zheng, Ying Yuan; stakeholders: DESIS China. POC Sankofa / Project holder: DESIS Knust Lab, Department of Communication Design - KNUST (Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology), FoA, CABE ; designers: Ralitsa Diana Debrah, Edward Appiah, Eric Francis Eshu; stakeholders: faculty members of KNUST, Cape Peninsula University of Technology, Grabouw Youth Team, Animation Afrika, Kobbyshots Studios, JOKelli Studios, DesignGhana, GhiGha and TEK TV. POC Design for Emergency / Project holder: CAMD - Northeastern’s College of Arts, Media and Design; designers: : Sara Colombo, Paolo Ciuccarelli & Danilo DiCuia, Marco Guerini, Lucia Marengo, Piero Molino, Sara Perozzi, Sara Tonelli, Lucy Yan; stakeholders: Universidad de La Laguna, Universidade de São Paulo, Hanyang University, UAL DESIS Lab - University of the Arts London, Universidad Autónoma

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P O C from abroad

Metropolitana - Unidad Xochimilco, Universidad Peruana de Ciencias Aplicadas, Universidad de Lima, Universidad Técnica de Ambato, Fondazione Bruno Kessler, Berkeley Innovation Group, Domus Academy. POC One million masks / Project holder: Escola Técnica CEDTec, UEMG - Universidade do Estado de Minas Gerais; designers: Rita Engler, Letícia Guimarães, Gabriela Marcondes, Mariana Laktim, Aline Fonseca; stakeholders: the fashion industry, armed forces, NGOs, health professionals. POC Nurturing cultures of resilience / Project holder: Institute for sustainable city development (ISU), Malmö University DESIS Lab; designers: Anders Emilson, Anna Seravalli; stakeholders: the municipality, independent cultural actors, community centres and associations. POC Jiwubang / Project holder: Data Intelligence and Service Collaboration Lab - School of Design of Hunan University; designers: Yidi Zhao, Hanhui Deng, He Xu, Anyu Gang, Weike Du. POC SOAP/ Project holder: ELISAVA DESIS Lab, MEATS (Master’s degree in Ephemeral Architecture and Temporary Spaces); designers: Roger Paez, Toni Montes, Manuela Valtchanova, Curro Claret & MEATS students. POC Off-Campus / Project holder: Polimi DESIS Lab, Dipartimento Design - Politecnico di Milano; designers: Davide Fassi, Francesco Vergani, Anna Meroni, Laura Galluzzo, Virginia Tassinari, Annalinda De Rosa; stakeholders: Comune di Milano (Assessorato Politiche del lavoro, Attività produttive, Commercio e Risorse umane), Radio Nolo APS. POC NICE 2035 Living Line / Project holder: Tongji DESIS Lab, College of Design and Innovation - Tongji University; designers: Yongqi Lou, AdloCibic; stakeholders: local administrative authorities in the Siping community, Angel+ Creative Lab, Aston Martin Lagonda Creative Lab, Creater Working-Space Lab, Design Harvests Rural

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Lab, Fablab O Maker Workshop, Haier Food Lab, Neuni Material Lab, Tongji-DadawaSound*Lab, 021-NICE Incubator.

of Design; designers: Maanasa Sivashankar, Callan Hajosy, Courtney Sprigg, Nicole Karsch; stakeholders: Brooklyn Public Library (BPL).

POC design for SDGs 3d / Project holder: Yonsei University DESIS Lab ; designers: étudiant et professeurs du DESIS Lab, Yonsei University.

POC LTC Radio / Project holder: Health Design Lab (HDL), Emily Carr DESIS Lab, Department of Design Emily Carr University of Art + Design ; designers: Lisa Boulton, Morgan Martino, Vannysha Chang, Ajra Doobenen, Garmia Sood; stakeholders: Vancouver Coastal Health (VCH), people living in VCH LTC, their family and community.

POC Collective Food Collaboration / Project holder: Hong Kong Polytechnic University School of Design, FOF - Future of Farming (start-up agrotechnique / agri-tech start-up); designers: Susan Evans, Toby Overmaat, Chris Ou; stakeholders: Royal Kep Farm Cambodia, The Royal Agricultural University Phnom Penh, Department of Agricultural Land Resources Management - General Directorate of Agriculture, and many other local business representatives. POC Food Citizenship: Post-pandemic Food Resilience Policy Design / Project holder: Arsom Silp Institute of the Arts, DESIS Labs, INI Innovation Network International; designers: Yingyong Poonnapatham, Wallapa van Willenswaard; stakeholders: Lek Komes, Young Smart Farmer, Nonthaburi, Young Food, the nodes of healthy schools, green hospitals, producers-outlets, urban citizens, Thai Health Promotion Foundation, Food Policy Design project team . POC Art of Green Mind / Project holder: NID Desis Lab, Department of Lifestyle Accessory Design (LAD) - National Institute of Design ; designers: Amresh Panigrahi & LAD batch 2016 (Rakhi Menon, Rohit Kumar, Souvik Bhattacharya, Anuja Thanawala, Ayushi Rastogi, Azba Khan, Shaili Shah, Paran Phukan, Pranavi KM, Sreeraj S, Ankita Raj, Ayushi Johari, Kavita Varier); stakeholders: Gandhinagar Municipal Corporation, Gujarat Rajya Khadi Gramodyog Board, Swachh Bharat Mission. POC Public libraries as a temporary local address for people experiencing homelessness / Project holder: Parsons DESIS Lab, Civic Service Design Graduate Minor - Parsons School

POC Grajaú Colla / Project holder: Rio DESIS Lab, Beatriz Lopes; designers: Carla Cipolla; stakeholders: UFRJ, Casa Anitcha.


P O C from abroad

Pairing cities

A selection of initiatives that work around making and living together in the European cities participating in URBACT’s networks echo the POC of the territory of Lille Metropolis. POC URBACT networks / Project holder: Secrétariat URBACT; stakeholders: / This case comes from the Biocanteens network co-financed by the European Union through the URBACT programme. POC Urban Living Room / Project holder: MASS collectif d’architectes; designers: MASS collectif d’architectes; stakeholders: This case comes from the REFILL network co-financed by the European Union through the URBACT programme. POC Neighbourhood Manager / Project holder: ville de Gand; stakeholders: This case comes from the REFILL network co-financed by the European Union through the URBACT programme. POC Card4all / Project holder:ville de Gijón; stakeholders: This case comes from the Card4all network co-financed by the European Union through the URBACT programme. POC Playful Paradigme / Project holder: Udine (IT); stakeholders: This case comes from the Playful Paradigme network co-financed by the European Union through the URBACT programme. POC La Fabrique Numérique de Gonesse / Project holder: Roissy Pays de France Agglomeration; stakeholders: This case comes from the REFILL network co-financed by the European Union through the URBACT programme. POC URBACT Social Innovation in Cities / Project holder: Ville de La

Madeleine; designers: Secrétariat URBACT; stakeholders: co-financed by the European Union through the URBACT programme. POC Volunteering Local Bank & Imaginarius Participa / Project holder: ville de Santa Maria da Feira; stakeholders: This case comes from the ActiveCitizens network co-financed by the European Union through the URBACT programme.

through the URBACT programme. POC Lost & Found / Project holder: ville de Naples; stakeholders: This case comes from the CiviceState network co-financed by the European Union through the URBACT.

POC Innova.TO / Project holder: ville de Torino; stakeholders: This case comes from the InnovatOr network co-financed by the European Union through the URBACT programme. POC Brusseau / Project holder: Brusseau; stakeholders: This action-reseach is financed within the call for projects COCREATE from INNOVIRIS, the Brussels Institute for Research and Innovation. POC REFILL Match Making / Project holder: REFILL The City network; stakeholders: This case comes from the REFILL The City network co-financed by the European Union through the URBACT programme. POC La Fabrique des Transitions / Project holder: La Fabrique des Transitions; stakeholders: The URBACT programme is co-financed by the European Union. POC URBACT Biocanteens Transfer Network / Project holder: Ville de Mouans-Sartoux; stakeholders: This case comes from the Biocanteens network co-financed by the European Union through the URBACT programme. POC Bristol Food Policy Council / Project holder: ville de Bristol; stakeholders: This case comes from the Sustainable Food in Urban Communities network co-financed by the European Union through the URBACT programme. POC Flexi Space / Project holder: Ville de Helsinki; stakeholders: This case comes from the REFILL network co-financed by the European Union

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09.09 — 15.11 La Chaufferie Huet, La Madeleine

How can design facilitate collaboration in the city so as to create supportive, sustainable and democratic lifestyles?

This publication looks back on two years of investigative work carried out by the curatorial team around the territory’s projects, the public, private and citizen actors who have carried them out and the designers who attended them. It combines these projects with those of DESIS labs in design schools and universities around the world, with the design of doing and living together in the European cities of the URBACT networks, and shows how the activation of a set of selected projects acts as a form of acupuncture for the territory and a transformation of a complex system of interrelated actors through a multitude of design projects, from which emerge fifteen new types of collaboration and which constitute models to inspire the design of a more collaborative city.

© Berkem Label

Within the context of Lille 2020, World Design Capital, the Maison POC Collaborative City explores more than a hundred local and global projects as a way of identifying emerging visions of sharing, mutual aid and cooperation.

Download for free the publication “Acupuncture design, the Emerging Collaborative City”. English version: sustainable-everyday-project.net/ ville-collaborative/fr/?p=4033

Edition : Strategic Design Scenarios Publishing ISBN 978-2-9601314-2-0

Une production originale de Lille Métropole 2020, Capitale Mondiale du Design Accueillie par la Ville de La Madeleine

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EXPOSITIONS ATELIERS CONFÉRENCES TABLES RONDES EXPOSITIO 158


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