Other Spaces of Quarantine

M. Lozanovska, A. Pieris, F. Haghighi, W. M. Taylor, J. Hou, J. Smitheram, L. Chee
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

This forum came about following conversations about the impact of the pandemic on architecture which brought attention to architectural histories related to hygiene, disease, and quarantine. The emptying of public spaces – railway stations, libraries, streets – and the closure of retail, cafes, and restaurants presented a reversal of the histories of public and private architectures. With the lockdown, hybrid use of domestic architecture was profiled. The dominant detached house with its outdoor spaces was revealed as a forgiving architectural typology during periods of restricted movement; at the same time, its endemic privatisation also served to hide domestic violence further. In contrast, public housing may have become the rare architectural typology of a pandemic “publicness” as underprivileged and migrant residents sought to maintain social distance within narrow shared corridors, inadequate or faulty elevators, and manually operable doorways. This was exemplified in the Victorian government’s two-week complete lockdown a public housing estate in North Melbourne raising community concerns about the racialised management of multicultural and vulnerable communities. Much closer analysis and detail of the inequalities are needed to trace the shocking images of this example of policeenforced lockdown. Neglect was also at the centre of the rising death toll in agedcare homes revealing the consequences of mismanagement and private institutionalised programmes of quasi-medical domesticity, in which elderly residents were trapped. We considered that one way to respond quickly to this present time of lockdown was to collect and collate a series of short position pieces. I invited Anoma Pieris to frame the forum in response to the pandemic, and to address how the Covid-19 crisis might cause us to reassess the meanings and functions of architecture. Anoma responded by reflecting on island quarantine and inviting several other colleagues to
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其他隔离空间
这个论坛是在关于疫情对建筑的影响的对话之后举行的,这些对话引起了人们对与卫生、疾病和隔离有关的建筑历史的关注。公共空间——火车站、图书馆、街道——的清空以及零售、咖啡馆和餐馆的关闭,使公共和私人建筑的历史发生了逆转。随着封锁,住宅建筑的混合使用被描述出来。占主导地位的独立式住宅及其户外空间在运动受限时期被揭示为一种宽容的建筑类型;与此同时,其普遍的私有化也进一步掩盖了家庭暴力。相比之下,公共住房可能已经成为疫情“公共性”的罕见建筑类型,因为贫困和移民居民试图在狭窄的共享走廊、不足或有故障的电梯和手动门内保持社交距离。维多利亚州政府对北墨尔本的一个公共住宅区实施了为期两周的全面封锁,这引发了社区对多元文化和弱势社区种族化管理的担忧。需要对不平等现象进行更深入的分析和细节,以追踪这一警察强制封锁的令人震惊的画面。忽视也是养老院死亡人数不断上升的核心,这揭示了管理不善和私人机构化的准医疗家庭生活计划的后果,老年居民被困在这些计划中。我们认为,对目前的封锁做出快速反应的一种方法是收集和整理一系列空头头寸。我邀请Anoma Pieris为应对疫情搭建论坛,并讨论新冠肺炎危机可能导致我们重新评估建筑的意义和功能。Anoma的回应是反思岛屿隔离,并邀请其他几位同事
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.50
自引率
25.00%
发文量
26
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