Artigo Revisado por pares

A Robust Square: Planning, Youth Work, and the Making of Public Space in Post‐Unification Berlin

2008; Wiley; Volume: 20; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1111/j.1548-744x.2008.00019.x

ISSN

1548-744X

Autores

Gisa Weszkalnys,

Tópico(s)

Communism, Protests, Social Movements

Resumo

Abstract Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork in post‐unification Berlin, this article examines the re‐articulation of the problematic of “the social” in city planning. It juxtaposes the contrasting visions of city planners and youth workers for Alexanderplatz, a controversial square in Berlin's eastern centre. I argue that the notion of “robustness” is helpful in understanding an important contemporary shift in thinking about planning and the social. In a sense, both planners and youth workers accused each other of taking insufficient notice of “the social.” While planners spoke of robustness as a technical, economic and aesthetic quality to which public space needs to aspire, the youth workers' vision for Alexanderplatz was a proposal for a kind of “social” robustness where the social is, quite literally, built into the urban design. These ethnographic observations need to be understood in a context where city planning has been one of the most critical domains in which the tensions provoked by German unification are played out. Taking such socio‐cultural specificities into account will lead to a more nuanced understanding of forms of neoliberal city planning.

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