Political architecture in Medellín
Research project
2012—16

PhD Research at The Bartlett, UCL
Supervisors: Prof. Sophia Psarra and Prof. Alan Penn

Awarded Scholarship from CAPES Foundation

Shortlisted for the RIBA President's Awards For Research 2017 Category: 'Cities and Communities'

The Library-Parks of Medellín are pivotal in this city’s project of ‘urban and social upgrading’. They consist of a combination of cultural programmes and generous surrounding and indoor spaces for public use, built with the intention to produce a new sense of community and citizenship by means of architecture and its appropriation. This fact opens a series of questions regarding the instrumental use of architecture for strengthening political awareness and addressing social inequalities. This research looks at both the propaganda of social change brought by these buildings’ mediatic monumentality, and at how public libraries frame social relationships through their architecture, thus materialising specific ideologies of politics and culture.

Firstly, it describes these libraries’ spatial layout and their spatial organisation of programme. Secondly, it shows how the libraries are used through detailed mapping of users’ co-presence, which exposes patterns that are further associated with the spatial and programmatic arrangements. Based on these analyses, it formulates types of spatial cultures in public libraries and exposes the role of space in influencing the emergence and/or constraint of particular patterns of social awareness that the traditional notion of the programme cannot capture. Finally, it associates these types of spatial cultures with Medellín’s political agenda of social change.It is found that depending on how public libraries control public use (spatially and programmatically), they can support the emergence of informal activities or work as educational institutions only. In addition, depending on how their educational role is manifested in space as spatial practices, they can serve as places that facilitate the exercise of institutional-bureaucratic power to normalise visitors’ behaviours, or places that stimulate public participation and negotiation. The findings emphasise how public libraries work as accessible civic environments, promoting visitors’ political and social awareness and potentially strengthening the collective engagement of the surrounding communities.

Publication associated with this research:
Space and Planned Informality (2014), in AZ ITU Journal of Architecture

Disciplined Informality (2016), in Journal of Space Syntax

Spatial Cultures of Public Libraries, UCL PhD Thesis (2016)

A Comprehensive Approach To Urban Upgrading (2017), in SSS11

Arquitetura como dispositivo político (2017), in Revista Prumo

Political interiors: the case of public libraries (2017), in Space and Culture Journal

Architecture for politics (2017), in RIBA President's Awards for Research

Political theatres in the urban periphery (2018), in Bitácora Urbano Territorial