Abstract

This article explores the rise of a new generation of practices combining architecture, design, and art, trying to answer the transition issues faced by society. It develops original operating procedures, including public participation. In doing so, those so-called “specialised” professions expand their sphere of operation and incorporate more immaterial dimensions and resources. The main objective of the article is an attempt to clarify how participation is embodied in specific intervention methods, within those experimental practices. The article will take as a case study a participatory project taking place in a retirement home and aimed at building a mobile third place that brought together various professionals coming from those experimental practices. The study of the participatory project will outline three devices and methods supporting the participation work, as follows: the use of permanence, the use of the prototype and self-construction, and the conception of ephemeral production. The article suggests that based on their analysis, we can understand what architects and designers “manufacture” through the agency of participation. Or more accurately, what participation “manufactures” in those experimental practices. The main result of the article is that the participatory project is more concerned with the motives and aspirations of the design activity, its methods and processes, its context and socialisation than it is with what would be classically considered as the outcome or result (the work, the realisation, the production, the built).

Highlights

  • Towards a New Generation of Practices Merging Architecture and Design?There is a growing number of experimental experiences in design, architecture and art

  • The designers suggested involving the community of interest of the future third place as early as the construction phase of the work to foster their involvement, in order to create a self-managed situation

  • This article demonstrated that experimental design practices offer a choice of situations that define themselves at the intersection of architecture, design, and art

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Summary

Introduction

There is a growing number of experimental experiences in design, architecture and art They address transition issues raised by society, whether they are of an environmental, social, or sanitary nature. Their spread allows residents, professionals, and elected officials to take into their own hands those questions, locally and on a daily basis, through the shared design of projects related to public spaces, housing, facilities, and “infinite places” [1].

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