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Contributory economies, design activism and the DIY urbanism of Renew Newcastle

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journal contribution
posted on 2025-05-11, 12:24 authored by Cathy D. Smith, Michael Chapman
This paper will deploy French philosopher Bernard Stiegler's neo-Marxist notion of the contributory economy to explore conceptions and practices of 'DIY (Do It Yourself) urbanism', with a specific focus on disused interior spaces. Reference will be made to contemporary design and architectural discourses on DIY urbanism and design activism, particularly in relation to the Renew Newcastle scheme in Newcastle, Australia. Although Renew is now a recognised model for urban regeneration, it began in 2008 as a socially-oriented experiment within the unoccupied shopfronts and tenancies of this rapidly transforming post-industrial city. Its DIY urbanism occurs alongside established institutional and commercial entities and as such, it could be superficially understood as an extension of, rather than an alternative to, mainstream project procurement models. Here, Stiegler's invocations of contributory economies, driven by an ethic of care or cura, suggest a way of understanding Renew Newcastle's urbanism as a participatory economy coexistent with the same capitalistic economy that prompted the urban decline it addresses.

History

Journal title

IDEA Journal

Volume

2014 Design Activism

Pagination

66-79

Publisher

Interior Design/Interior Architecture Educator’s Association

Language

  • en, English

College/Research Centre

Faculty of Engineering and Built Environment

School

School of Architecture and Built Environment

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