Doris Kleilein on Changing Definitions of Urban Architecture
Publisher |
Thomas Mann House
Media Type |
audio
Categories Via RSS |
Arts
Books
Society & Culture
Publication Date |
Sep 22, 2022
Episode Duration |
00:35:51

What makes a city a home for people with different backgrounds? How has the pandemic impacted city planning and urban architecture? In this episode, the 2022 Thomas Mann Fellow, architect and author Doris Kleilein looks at the benefits of L.A.’s ‘laissez-faire urbanism’ compared to more regulated approaches in Europe. She argues that “the built visibility of a culture or minority is key to becoming part of society.” Kleilein’s research focuses on how city planning can propose new forms of living together in a changing heterogenous societies. Kleilein heads the architectural book publishing house JOVIS in Berlin, and co-edited the book “Post-Pandemic Urbanism” in 2021. 

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