Placing Urban Writings

Narrative Technology and Possible Futures for the European City

Journal Article (2023)
Author(s)

Jorge Mejia Hernandez (TU Delft - Situated Architecture)

Onorina Botezat (Dimitrie Cantemir Christian University in Bucharest )

Research Group
Situated Architecture
Copyright
© 2023 J.A. Mejia Hernandez, Onorina Botezat
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.7480/writingplace.8-9.7249
More Info
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Publication Year
2023
Language
English
Copyright
© 2023 J.A. Mejia Hernandez, Onorina Botezat
Research Group
Situated Architecture
Issue number
8-9
Pages (from-to)
13-33
Reuse Rights

Other than for strictly personal use, it is not permitted to download, forward or distribute the text or part of it, without the consent of the author(s) and/or copyright holder(s), unless the work is under an open content license such as Creative Commons.

Abstract

The essay departs from the question: How can stories be used for the development of cities?

In response, a theoretical framework is delineated that recognizes the built environment as a model that is both telic (a vision of a possible future) and technical (the means required to attain that future). By adopting this framework, the essay approaches the city at the scale of everyday, ordinary planning, rather than at the scale of ‘cosmic crisis’.

In line with that approach, the essay shows how stories can be useful to develop cities given their ability to encourage and foster sympatry, understood as the quality of environments where different (even adversarial) species coexist. Different individuals simultaneously use and offer different resources to the environment they share, and some of these resources fall within the category of ‘understanding’. This final category is captured in a series of micro-narratives about the city, which are then evaluated in relation to three distinct technologies that can be seen as common to buildings and stories, namely: sense, sequence and proportion.