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Recording Permanence and Ephemerality in the North Quarter of Brussels: Drawing at the Intersection of Time, Space, and People

Tijdschriftbijdrage - Tijdschriftartikel

Lying in the Senne River Valley, the North Quarter of Brussels is a physical record of spatial transformations unevenly distributed over time. Waves of developments and unfinished plans colonized its original landscape structure, erasing, writing,and re-writing it with large-scale metropolitan projects and transportation systems, around which an industrial and urbanfabric developed. Accumulated expansions left an assemblage of incomplete infrastructures in which a multi-faceted andhighly identifiable quarter lies punctuated by weakly defined morphological mismatches. At the center of this diverse andmutilated fabric, Maximilien Park stands as pars pro toto. From a combination of research methods that includes ethnographic fieldwork and interpretative mapping, three drawings are overlaid with the moving dimensions of space, time,and people, and assembled in a reinterpreted triptych to investigate the production of that public space. The first panel“Traces” overlaps lost urban logics and remaining traces on the urban tissue. The second panel “Cycles” traces the unevendeconstruction of the North Quarter during the last century, identifying scars of its past. The third panel “Resignifications”focuses on recent events in the area, examining how people have appropriated and transformed the park since 2015. Withthis triptych, the article aims to re-interpret the palimpsest of the North Quarter, represent the area’s transforming character, and unravel a spatial reading of the lived experiences of the place through time.
Tijdschrift: Urban Planning
ISSN: 2183-7635
Issue: 2
Volume: 5
Pagina's: 249 - 261
Jaar van publicatie:2020
Toegankelijkheid:Open