{"id":484,"date":"2023-04-26T22:05:18","date_gmt":"2023-04-26T22:05:18","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/dornsife.usc.edu\/stpl\/?page_id=484"},"modified":"2025-03-28T20:51:45","modified_gmt":"2025-03-28T20:51:45","slug":"observatory-on-urban-futures","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/dornsife.usc.edu\/stpl\/observatory-on-urban-futures\/","title":{"rendered":"Observatory on Urban Futures"},"content":{"rendered":"\n\n\n\n\n  \n    \n\n\n\n\n\n\n<div\n  class=\"cc--component-container cc--scrolling-text-with-image \"\n\n  \n  \n  \n  \n  \n  \n  >\n  <div class=\"c--component c--scrolling-text-with-image\"\n    \n      >\n\n    \n  <div class=\"text-image-container\">\n\n          \n      <div class=\"image-container\">\n            \n<div class=\"f--field f--image\">\n\n    \n    \n    \n    \n    \n    \n              \n      <img decoding=\"async\"\n                            src=\"https:\/\/dornsife.usc.edu\/stpl\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/132\/2023\/04\/USC-Observatory-website-image-1.jpg\"\n                    sizes=\"(min-width:1024px) 50vw, (min-width:768px) 100vw, 100vw\"\n        \n                  alt=\"Black and white photograph of a paper sphere with a star system on it.\"\n        \n        \n                                      \/>\n\n    \n    \n  \n  \n\n<\/div>\n      <\/div>\n      \n    <div class=\"text-container\">\n  \n        \n                  \n<div class=\"f--field f--section-title\">\n\n    \n  <h2>\n          Directed by Peter Ekman\n      <\/h2>\n\n\n<\/div>\n        \n                  \n<div class=\"f--field f--description\">\n\n    \n  <p>During the 2023\u201324 academic year, the Center will sponsor a series of lectures, panel discussions, and other public events under the auspices of an Observatory on Urban Futures.<\/p>\n<p>The series has three interlocking themes. First, it is interested in the history, theory, and practice of urban comparison, and in the circuits of reference through which knowledge about cities has passed and taken form. One of its overarching goals is to embed Los Angeles, so often discussed in exceptionalist terms, in a set of comparative and relational analyses that involve other cities entirely and often span national boundaries. Much scholarship and most popular discourse presumes that the place is unique, an \u201cisland on the land\u201d and, for better or worse, a deviation from the inherited rules of urban development. The Observatory presumes that to theorize Los Angeles, and \u201cthe\u201d city by way of Los Angeles, we must be willing to grapple with its most ordinary, unexceptional qualities.<\/p>\n<p>Second, the series will address the temporality of the urban future, reflecting \u2014 often with novel technologies of visualization at its center \u2014 on the forms of prediction, projection, prophecy, modeling, simulation, planning, and mapping that have been enrolled to produce urban knowledge in an anticipatory key. What does it mean to imagine an \u201curban future\u201d? What kind of object is that future? What kinds of knowledge or expertise lay claim to it? How to design and govern cities that do not yet exist? And how are these questions, subtexts to the entire history of city and regional planning, being posed at new spatial and temporal scales, along the horizons of planetary climate crisis? The Observatory will make a critical investigation into the temporal underpinnings of design and planning as forms of foresight. It will also make the case for historical inquiry as a necessary ingredient in any complex inferences made today about the \u201ccities of tomorrow.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Third, the series will experiment with the observatory as an organizational and epistemological form, both indebted to and immanently critical of that term\u2019s valences within the history of urban research and the natural sciences. Through richly interdisciplinary conversations, it will debate the possibilities and limitations that attend any collective attempt to think processes unfolding at planetary scale by way of a single site.<\/p>\n<p>For more information on any aspect of the project, check this page as it evolves or contact <a href=\"https:\/\/arch.usc.edu\/people\/peter-ekman\">Peter Ekman<\/a> at <a href=\"mailto:pekman@usc.edu\">pekman@usc.edu<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n<\/div>\n      \n          <\/div>\n\n  <\/div>\n\n\n\n  <\/div><\/div>\n\n\n  \n    \n\n\n\n\n\n\n<div\n  class=\"cc--component-container cc--spacer \"\n\n  \n  \n  \n  \n  \n  \n  >\n  <div class=\"c--component c--spacer\"\n    \n      >\n\n    \n\n  <\/div><\/div>\n\n\n\n        \n          \n  \n  \n    \n\n\n\n\n\n\n<div\n  class=\"cc--component-container cc--editorial-cards \"\n\n  \n  \n  \n  \n  \n  \n  >\n  <div class=\"c--component c--editorial-cards\"\n    \n      >\n\n    \n      <div class=\"header-container\">\n\n                  \n<div class=\"f--field f--section-title\">\n\n    \n  <h2>\n          Spring 2025 Events\n      <\/h2>\n\n\n<\/div>\n                <\/div>\n  \n      <div class=\"cards-container\">\n      \n        <div class=\"card\">\n\n          \n                                      \n                \n<div class=\"f--field f--image\">\n\n    \n        <a href=\"https:\/\/forms.gle\/9CkgLVGt8ksnjEgw6\" target=\"_blank\" aria-label=\"Read more about Samuel Zipp, Professor of American Studies and Urban Studies, Brown University.\">\n  \n    \n    \n    \n    \n              \n      <img\n                            data-src=\"https:\/\/dornsife.usc.edu\/stpl\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/132\/2025\/01\/Screenshot-2025-01-10-at-9.47.10\u202fAM-500x700.png\"\n          data-srcset=\"https:\/\/dornsife.usc.edu\/stpl\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/132\/2025\/01\/Screenshot-2025-01-10-at-9.47.10\u202fAM-500x700.png 500w\"          data-sizes=\"(min-width:1024px) 50vw, (min-width:768px) 100vw, 100vw\"          class=\"lazyload\"\n        \n                  alt=\"Portrait of a man\"\n        \n        \n                                      \/>\n\n    \n    \n  \n      <\/a>\n  \n\n<\/div>\n          \n          <div class=\"text-container\">\n                              \n<div class=\"f--field f--eyebrow\">\n\n    \n  <span>Tuesday, February 11th, 2025<\/span>\n\n\n<\/div>\n            \n                            <h3>\n                                      <a href=\"https:\/\/forms.gle\/9CkgLVGt8ksnjEgw6\" target=\"_blank\">\n                  \n                    Samuel Zipp, Professor of American Studies and Urban Studies, Brown University.\n\n                                      <\/a>\n                                  <\/h3>\n            \n                              \n<div class=\"f--field f--description\">\n\n    \n  <p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">250 Social Sciences Building (S0S) <\/span><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"><br \/>\n<\/span><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">12:00-2:00pm<\/span><\/p>\n<p><b>&#8220;The Social Organization of Property: The Homeownership System, Managed Hierarchy, and the Challenge of Social Selfhood in the Early-Twentieth-Century United States\u201d<\/b><\/p>\n<p><i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">\u2028<\/span><\/i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">This article investigates the intellectual history of homeownership in the United States. Focused on the work of the economist Richard T. Ely, it argues that this history should move beyond Ely\u2019s intellectual influence on the real-estate industry in the 1910s and 1920s to incorporate his critique of laissez-faire economics, his ideas about \u201csocial property,\u201d and his visions of managed hierarchy, all of which originated in the late nineteenth century. The essay tracks Ely\u2019s connections to Progressives such as John Dewey \u2014 with their visions of a coming social self that would displace possessive individualism \u2014 and his influence on Herbert Hoover\u2019s 1931 National Conference on Home Building and Homeownership, which prefigured the New Deal\u2019s housing policy. Following Ely\u2019s work reveals how homeownership institutionalized what Dewey called \u201csocial values,\u201d but did so by naturalizing a persistent rhetoric of autonomy and individualism that relied on divisions of race, class, and gender for its power.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">It forms part of a book project, <\/span><i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">The City and the Self<\/span><\/i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">, that explores the shifting relationship between metropolitan form and subjectivity across the twentieth-century United States.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">\u00a0This event is dedicated to the discussion of a pre-circulated paper. RSVP is required: <\/span><a href=\"https:\/\/forms.gle\/9CkgLVGt8ksnjEgw6\"><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">https:\/\/forms.gle\/9CkgLVGt8ksnjEgw6<\/span><\/a><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">This event is co-sponsored by the USC Dornsife Center on Science, Technology, and Public Life, and the USC Dornsife Department of History.<\/span><\/p>\n\n\n\n<\/div>\n                      <\/div>\n\n\n        <\/div>\n      \n        <div class=\"card\">\n\n          \n                                      \n                \n<div class=\"f--field f--image\">\n\n    \n        <a href=\"https:\/\/calendar.usc.edu\/event\/unfield-notes-for-a-global-climate-crisis\" target=\"_blank\" aria-label=\"Read more about Observatory on Urban Futures: Kian Goh (Urban Planning, UCLA)\">\n  \n    \n    \n    \n    \n              \n      <img\n                            data-src=\"https:\/\/dornsife.usc.edu\/stpl\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/132\/2025\/03\/Screenshot-2025-03-28-at-1.45.54\u202fPM.png\"\n                    data-sizes=\"(min-width:1024px) 50vw, (min-width:768px) 100vw, 100vw\"          class=\"lazyload\"\n        \n                  alt=\"Portrait of a woman\"\n        \n        \n                                      \/>\n\n    \n    \n  \n      <\/a>\n  \n\n<\/div>\n          \n          <div class=\"text-container\">\n                              \n<div class=\"f--field f--eyebrow\">\n\n    \n  <span>Thursday, April 10th, 2025 <\/span>\n\n\n<\/div>\n            \n                            <h3>\n                                      <a href=\"https:\/\/calendar.usc.edu\/event\/unfield-notes-for-a-global-climate-crisis\" target=\"_blank\">\n                  \n                    Observatory on Urban Futures: Kian Goh (Urban Planning, UCLA)\n\n                                      <\/a>\n                                  <\/h3>\n            \n                              \n<div class=\"f--field f--description\">\n\n    \n  <p>\u201c(Un)Field Notes for a Global Climate Crisis\u201d<\/p>\n<p>What do we do when we have learned to learn in grounded ways in a context where knowledge might be found in the flows and in the multiplicities? This talk probes the problems of fieldwork in a time of globalized climate impacts, and information and capital flows, and globally networked institutions of governance and action. Climate change is understood, on the one hand, to be a global problem, understood through standardized planetary measures, and, on the other, a problem with disparate causes and impacts on the ground. But the problem of climate change challenges core ideas about knowledge. Sheila Jasanoff, notably, states that climate change \u201ctends to separate the epistemic from the normative, divorcing is from ought.&#8221; Much productive knowledge has come not only from planetary climate science but also from critical investigations involving grounded, embodied, place-based experiences. This is especially important for the field of planning, with its normative outlook. What, then, of critical knowledge beyond the grounded and place-based, particularly for planning thought and practice? I explore both the epistemological as well as the pragmatic problems of taking on this research, especially when the methods and knowledge frameworks we\u2019ve been trained in are insufficient or not possible. Revisiting my own research fieldwork in sites in Rotterdam, Jakarta, New York, and the Inland Empire, I inquire into what is understood through such grounded, participatory experiences, and what is conceptualized in the in-between or beyond. I discuss the issues of grounded research when you can\u2019t be on the ground; the relationship between global data and embodied experience; the activities of abstract theory making and multiscalar research; and, in particular, the imperative to know the global and planetary for those who have built a capacity for knowledge production in very grounded ways. I end the talk with a set of propositions for multiscalar climate knowledge \u2013 beyond place.<\/p>\n<p>kian goh<\/p>\n\n\n\n<\/div>\n                      <\/div>\n\n\n        <\/div>\n          <\/div>\n  \n\n  <\/div><\/div>\n\n\n\n        \n          \n  \n  \n    \n\n\n\n\n\n\n<div\n  class=\"cc--component-container cc--editorial-cards \"\n\n  \n  \n  \n  \n  \n  \n  >\n  <div class=\"c--component c--editorial-cards\"\n    \n      >\n\n    \n      <div class=\"header-container\">\n\n                  \n<div class=\"f--field f--section-title\">\n\n    \n  <h2>\n          Spring 2024 Events\n      <\/h2>\n\n\n<\/div>\n                <\/div>\n  \n      <div class=\"cards-container\">\n      \n        <div class=\"card\">\n\n          \n                                      \n                \n<div class=\"f--field f--image\">\n\n    \n        <a href=\"https:\/\/arch.usc.edu\/events\/jane-mah-hutton\"  aria-label=\"Read more about Jane Mah Hutton, Associate Professor, University of Waterloo School of Architecture\">\n  \n    \n    \n    \n    \n              \n      <img\n                            data-src=\"https:\/\/dornsife.usc.edu\/stpl\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/132\/2024\/01\/Jane-Mah-Hutton-768x432.jpeg\"\n          data-srcset=\"https:\/\/dornsife.usc.edu\/stpl\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/132\/2024\/01\/Jane-Mah-Hutton-1280x720.jpeg 1280w,https:\/\/dornsife.usc.edu\/stpl\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/132\/2024\/01\/Jane-Mah-Hutton-768x432.jpeg 768w\"          data-sizes=\"(min-width:1024px) 23vw, (min-width:768px) 39vw, 83vw\"          class=\"lazyload\"\n        \n                  alt=\"Black and white composite image of two different outdoor scenes\"\n        \n        \n                                      \/>\n\n    \n    \n  \n      <\/a>\n  \n\n<\/div>\n          \n          <div class=\"text-container\">\n                              \n<div class=\"f--field f--eyebrow\">\n\n    \n  <span>Friday, February 2, 2024<\/span>\n\n\n<\/div>\n            \n                            <h3>\n                                      <a href=\"https:\/\/arch.usc.edu\/events\/jane-mah-hutton\" >\n                  \n                    Jane Mah Hutton, Associate Professor, University of Waterloo School of Architecture\n\n                                      <\/a>\n                                  <\/h3>\n            \n                              \n<div class=\"f--field f--description\">\n\n    \n  <p>Gin D. Wong, FAIA Conference Center<br \/>\nHarris Hall 101<br \/>\n12:00pm PST<\/p>\n<p><strong>&#8220;Material Diasporas&#8221;<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Along the north shore of Lake Ontario is an urban megaregion of concrete, steel, and wood, built<i>\u00a0on\u00a0<\/i>but also<i>\u00a0out of<\/i>\u00a0the deciduous mixed-wood plains and limestone-bedrock lowland territories of Anishinaabe, Neutral, Wendat, and Haudenosaunee peoples. This densely inhabited ecosystem was transformed over three centuries as British and Canadian colonization took, fragmented, and commoditized it as materials to be distributed both locally and afar. Some of this ecosystem became the construction materials that enabled subsequent phases of urban development in the region; some was exported to the U.S. and Europe, persisting in faraway places. This lecture contributes to a narrative history of material flows, examining Southern Ontario\u2019s ecological fragmentation and a set of distributed commodities, and asking,\u00a0<i>where did this ecosystem go<\/i>? It explores episodes in the commodification and dispersal of living beings and matter: 1) from beaver-managed waterways, pelts financed the empire; 2) from mixed-pine forests, timbers supplied the British Navy; 3) from shale beds came brick that built the city; 4) gravel deposits composed the highway system that now connects urban regions; and 5) demolition material from all of these projects became landfill and foundation for even more structure. The aim of this project is to account for, give presence to, and understand the ongoing material cultures of an ecosystem that was transformed and reorganized, not erased.<\/p>\n<p><em>This event is co-sponsored by the USC Center on Science, Technology, and Public Life and the USC School of Architecture. This event is part of the <a href=\"https:\/\/arch.usc.edu\/news\/architecture-engaged-spring-2024-lecture-line-up\">Architecture Engaged<\/a> lecture series at the USC School of Architecture.<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<\/div>\n                      <\/div>\n\n\n        <\/div>\n      \n        <div class=\"card\">\n\n          \n                                      \n                \n<div class=\"f--field f--image\">\n\n    \n    \n    \n    \n    \n    \n              \n      <img\n                            data-src=\"https:\/\/dornsife.usc.edu\/stpl\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/132\/2024\/01\/Shannon-Mattern-768x432.png\"\n          data-srcset=\"https:\/\/dornsife.usc.edu\/stpl\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/132\/2024\/01\/Shannon-Mattern-768x432.png 768w\"          data-sizes=\"(min-width:1024px) 23vw, (min-width:768px) 39vw, 83vw\"          class=\"lazyload\"\n        \n                  alt=\"Shannon Mattern\"\n        \n        \n                                      \/>\n\n    \n    \n  \n  \n\n<\/div>\n          \n          <div class=\"text-container\">\n                              \n<div class=\"f--field f--eyebrow\">\n\n    \n  <span>Tuesday, March 5, 2024<\/span>\n\n\n<\/div>\n            \n                            <h3>\n                  \n                    Shannon Mattern, Presidential Compact Professor of Media Studies and the History of Art, University of Pennsylvania\n\n                                  <\/h3>\n            \n                              \n<div class=\"f--field f--description\">\n\n    \n  <p>Taper Hall (THH) 309K<br \/>\n2:00-4:00pm<\/p>\n<p><strong>&#8220;From Sentinels to Sneakernets: Local Media for Urban Observation and Transformation&#8221;<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><em>\u2028Beacon, Sentinel, Herald, Observer<\/em>: many municipal newspapers of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries adopted appellations promising both scrutiny of and foresight on civic affairs. Yet as big tech and hedge funds extinguish these local lodestars and replace them (if they offer any proxies at all!) with astroturf journalism and extractive \u201cintelligence\u201d platforms, cities and towns lose vital sources of local news and embedded wisdom. Building on themes central to USC\u2019s Observatory on Urban Futures and my own decades of research and teaching on public knowledge, this talk addresses how the study of local media ecosystems, including Los Angeles\u2019s, allows for comparative urban study, the imagining of alternative urban futures, and an interrogation of the \u201cobservatory\u201d itself as an epistemological tool. We\u2019ll also think beyond the empirical illumination afforded by these historical sentinels and heralds, as well as the networked urban dashboards proliferating today. What might be gained if we conceive of \u201clocal media\u201d more generously \u2014 to include public digital infrastructures, community broadcasts, permacomputing, ambient data, and more \u2014 and imagine how they might be redesigned to better serve our communities, our broader society, and our planet?<\/p>\n<p><em>This event is co-sponsored by the Center on Science, Technology, and Public Life and the Ethnography Studio.<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<\/div>\n                      <\/div>\n\n\n        <\/div>\n          <\/div>\n  \n\n  <\/div><\/div>\n\n\n  \n    \n\n\n\n\n\n\n<div\n  class=\"cc--component-container cc--spacer \"\n\n  \n  \n  \n  \n  \n  \n  >\n  <div class=\"c--component c--spacer\"\n    \n      >\n\n    \n\n  <\/div><\/div>\n\n\n\n        \n          \n          \n  \n  \n    \n\n\n\n\n\n\n<div\n  class=\"cc--component-container cc--editorial-cards \"\n\n  \n  \n  \n  \n  \n  \n  >\n  <div class=\"c--component c--editorial-cards\"\n    \n      >\n\n    \n      <div class=\"header-container\">\n\n                  \n<div class=\"f--field f--section-title\">\n\n    \n  <h2>\n          Fall 2023 Events\n      <\/h2>\n\n\n<\/div>\n                <\/div>\n  \n      <div class=\"cards-container\">\n      \n        <div class=\"card\">\n\n          \n                                      \n                \n<div class=\"f--field f--image\">\n\n    \n        <a href=\"https:\/\/calendar.usc.edu\/event\/observatory_on_urban_futures\"  aria-label=\"Read more about Jan Nijman, Director, Urban Studies Institute; Distinguished University Professor, Geosciences, Georgia State University\">\n  \n    \n    \n    \n    \n              \n      <img\n                            data-src=\"https:\/\/dornsife.usc.edu\/stpl\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/132\/2023\/09\/Jan-Nijman-768x432.jpeg\"\n          data-srcset=\"https:\/\/dornsife.usc.edu\/stpl\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/132\/2023\/09\/Jan-Nijman-768x432.jpeg 768w\"          data-sizes=\"(min-width:1024px) 23vw, (min-width:768px) 39vw, 83vw\"          class=\"lazyload\"\n        \n                  alt=\"Jan Nijman\"\n        \n        \n                                      \/>\n\n    \n    \n  \n      <\/a>\n  \n\n<\/div>\n          \n          <div class=\"text-container\">\n                              \n<div class=\"f--field f--eyebrow\">\n\n    \n  <span>Tuesday, September 19, 2023<\/span>\n\n\n<\/div>\n            \n                            <h3>\n                                      <a href=\"https:\/\/calendar.usc.edu\/event\/observatory_on_urban_futures\" >\n                  \n                    Jan Nijman, Director, Urban Studies Institute; Distinguished University Professor, Geosciences, Georgia State University\n\n                                      <\/a>\n                                  <\/h3>\n            \n                              \n<div class=\"f--field f--description\">\n\n    \n  <p>Doheny Memorial Library (DML) 240<br \/>\n2:00-4:00pm<\/p>\n<p><strong>&#8220;Spectral Urbanism&#8221;<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>This lecture, the first in a year-long series organized by STPL under the auspices of an Observatory on Urban Futures, develops the concept of spectral urbanism, a comparative formulation antithetical to urban theorists who would assume a single, uniform meaning for \u201cthe urban\u201d as an object of knowledge and target of intervention. The theory of spectral urbanism explores the interdependence of multiple, variegated, yet intersecting processes and forms within a given urban system. Spectral urbanism is particularly salient in postcolonial societies, in which the contested dynamics of globalization seem to have unleashed a spectrum of novel forces and forms of urbanization. The lecture will reflect on the epistemology of urban comparison, and its arguments will center on a detailed analysis of both historical and contemporary trends in India, its evidentiary scope ranging from the densest megacities to transitional landscapes poised between rural and urban.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<\/div>\n                      <\/div>\n\n\n        <\/div>\n      \n        <div class=\"card\">\n\n          \n                                      \n                \n<div class=\"f--field f--image\">\n\n    \n        <a href=\"https:\/\/calendar.usc.edu\/event\/observatory_on_urban_futures_9310\"  aria-label=\"Read more about Kelema Lee Moses, Assistant Professor, Urban Studies and Planning, University of California, San Diego\">\n  \n    \n    \n    \n    \n              \n      <img\n                            data-src=\"https:\/\/dornsife.usc.edu\/stpl\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/132\/2023\/08\/Kelema-Lee-Moses-768x432.jpeg\"\n          data-srcset=\"https:\/\/dornsife.usc.edu\/stpl\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/132\/2023\/08\/Kelema-Lee-Moses-1280x720.jpeg 1280w,https:\/\/dornsife.usc.edu\/stpl\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/132\/2023\/08\/Kelema-Lee-Moses-768x432.jpeg 768w\"          data-sizes=\"(min-width:1024px) 23vw, (min-width:768px) 39vw, 83vw\"          class=\"lazyload\"\n        \n                  alt=\"Kelema Lee Moses\"\n        \n        \n                                      \/>\n\n    \n    \n  \n      <\/a>\n  \n\n<\/div>\n          \n          <div class=\"text-container\">\n                              \n<div class=\"f--field f--eyebrow\">\n\n    \n  <span>Tuesday, October 24, 2023<\/span>\n\n\n<\/div>\n            \n                            <h3>\n                                      <a href=\"https:\/\/calendar.usc.edu\/event\/observatory_on_urban_futures_9310\" >\n                  \n                    Kelema Lee Moses, Assistant Professor, Urban Studies and Planning, University of California, San Diego\n\n                                      <\/a>\n                                  <\/h3>\n            \n                              \n<div class=\"f--field f--description\">\n\n    \n  <p>Taper Hall (THH) 309K<br \/>\n2:00-4:00pm<\/p>\n<p><b>&#8220;Envisioning Affordable Housing and Climate Architectures Across the Pacific&#8221;<\/b><\/p>\n<p><b>Discussant:<br \/>\nGinger Nolan<\/b>, Assistant Professor of Architecture, USC<\/p>\n<p>Second only to California, Hawai\u2018i has the most expensive housing market in the United States. Real-estate developers in both states point to aging infrastructure, the scarcity of available land, and complicated zoning and permitting restrictions as contributors to a full-scale housing crisis. That crisis is marked by high costs, low inventory, homelessness, and adverse environmental impacts ranging from sea-level rise and coastal erosion to increased susceptibility to wildfire. Since the 1980s, in continued attempts to mitigate the crisis, the Hawai\u2018i state government has codified a set of housing technologies among K\u0101naka Maoli (Native Hawaiians) and locals, developing model villages of tiny homes and \u2018ohana dwellings (a typology specific to Hawai\u2018i). This lecture explores how community stakeholders work in, around, and through the islands\u2019 housing histories to envision an urban future that accounts for Hawai\u2018i\u2019s racial and ethnic diversity, aging population, and multigenerational families. Engaging novel spatial and temporal epistemologies, architects, community organizations, and K\u0101naka artists offer possibilities for abundant urban futures that promise to transform the practice of architecture and planning in Hawai\u2018i pae \u2018\u0101ina and beyond.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<\/div>\n                      <\/div>\n\n\n        <\/div>\n      \n        <div class=\"card\">\n\n          \n                                      \n                \n<div class=\"f--field f--image\">\n\n    \n        <a href=\"https:\/\/calendar.usc.edu\/event\/observatory_on_urban_futures_4874\"  aria-label=\"Read more about Panel on the New Translation of Anton Wagner's Los Angeles (1935)\">\n  \n    \n    \n    \n    \n              \n      <img\n                            data-src=\"https:\/\/dornsife.usc.edu\/stpl\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/132\/2023\/08\/Anton-Wagner-Los-Angeles-700x432.jpg\"\n                    data-sizes=\"(min-width:1024px) 23vw, (min-width:768px) 39vw, 83vw\"          class=\"lazyload\"\n        \n                  alt=\"Book cover: Los Angeles\"\n        \n        \n                                      \/>\n\n    \n    \n  \n      <\/a>\n  \n\n<\/div>\n          \n          <div class=\"text-container\">\n                              \n<div class=\"f--field f--eyebrow\">\n\n    \n  <span>Tuesday, November 14, 2023<\/span>\n\n\n<\/div>\n            \n                            <h3>\n                                      <a href=\"https:\/\/calendar.usc.edu\/event\/observatory_on_urban_futures_4874\" >\n                  \n                    Panel on the New Translation of Anton Wagner&#8217;s Los Angeles (1935)\n\n                                      <\/a>\n                                  <\/h3>\n            \n                              \n<div class=\"f--field f--description\">\n\n    \n  <p>Doheny Memorial Library (DML) 240<br \/>\n2:00-4:00pm<\/p>\n<p><b>Panelists:<br \/>\nEdward Dimendberg<\/b>, Editor of Anton Wagner&#8217;s <i>Los Angeles<\/i>, Professor, School of the Humanities, University of California, Irvine<br \/>\n<b>Vanessa Schwartz<\/b>, Professor of Art History and History, Director of the Visual Studies Research Institute, University of Southern California<br \/>\n<b>Alex Ross<\/b>, Music critic and writer, <i>The New Yorker<br \/>\n<\/i><b>Meredith Drake Reitan<\/b>,\u00a0Associate Dean, Graduate School; Adjunct Associate Professor, Price School of Public Policy and the School of Architecture, University of Southern California<i><br \/>\n<\/i><\/p>\n<p>In 1935, the German geographer Anton Wagner published\u00a0<i>Los Angeles: The Development, Life, and Structure of the City of Two Million in Southern California<\/i>. This extensively illustrated book was among the first systematic explorations of L.A.\u2019s rapid growth into a dominant urban region, bolstered by agriculture, real estate, adept marketing campaigns, tourism, the oil and automobile industries, and film production. Although widely reviewed upon its initial publication, Wagner\u2019s study was largely forgotten until reintroduced by architectural historian Reyner Banham in his 1971\u00a0classic\u00a0<i>Los Angeles: The Architecture of Four Ecologies.\u00a0<\/i>The work remained untranslated for another fifty years. In 2022, the first English translation of Wagner\u2019s book was published by the Getty Research Institute. This panel discussion will consider its contemporary legacy, its place in the intellectual histories of geography and urban social science, its complex accounting of race and ethnicity, its use of mapping and photography (and arguments about the role of images in city-making), and its pioneering analyses of urban form as glimpsed from the window of a moving automobile.<\/p>\n<p>This event is co-sponsored by the USC Center on Science, Technology, and Public Life and the Visual Studies Research Institute.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<\/div>\n                      <\/div>\n\n\n        <\/div>\n          <\/div>\n  \n\n  <\/div><\/div>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"","protected":false},"author":179,"featured_media":0,"parent":0,"menu_order":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","template":"","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"footnotes":""},"class_list":["post-484","page","type-page","status-publish","hentry"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.1.1 - 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