This tutorial was the first time for many that met Davor and in his introduction he described his philosophy as "there is no point of designing a building which does not function". We all introduced ourselves and explained what we think of "inter-cultural community's".
My interpretation of this tutorial group was to learn about others cultural identity within the group and how it relates to Brisbane to create a foundation of knowledge about Brisbane's culture... well the students culture. I find the quickest way to learn about culture is through interaction, observation and participation and this tutorial explores all of these aspects.
We further separated into groups of four to delve into the sites functionality and the idea of inter-culturalism. These are our findings.
First we looked at the current uses and how that may impact on the design concept with the constraints.
Current Uses:
- Bike Path (connecting the city, newstead and valley together)
- Heritage (bomb shelters)
- Ferry Terminal
- Hardstand storage (Industrial uses)
- Views (Tourism)
- Connection of the River, Cliff and bridge.
- Dock.
- Place + Culture = Space?
- Public Space
- Transitional spaces
My understanding is that even if we create a blank space for a sole purpose, it can still embrace inter-culturalism due to its capability of being blank and able to adapt to different cultures. By creating a space dedicated to a certain culture will work as well due to people feeling out of place, removed of the social position and share the experience of culture. By creating a space for all cultures, this will result in not enough depth into the design and is rather ignorant to our own identity.
Our next approach was to identify certain functions that remove all cultural barriers and we understood that the following proved effective:
- Food
- Leisure
- Sport
- Music
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