Md Iftekhar Rashid Rafat
student
Ahsanullah University of Science and Technology
Bangladesh
Urban Design and Landscape
The world's natural resources are on the brink of extinction today. Gradually our rivers are drying up, the green areas around the river are disappearing and… more
Rene Peralta
advisor
https://www.aaschool.ac.uk
Mexcian - American
René’s work in recent years explores the contemporary and future forms of the urban… more
Md Iftekhar Rashid Rafat
Congratulations on your research and project. Its focus is on the urban and ecological issues we are exposed to in academic institutions. Data seems to be the impetus of your project, as is the community input. For that I congratulate you.
My conceptual critique relies on the human element. Are we still designing for humans to develop their economy as we have since the industrial revolution? We have seen that being part of a neoliberal economy has not produced a more equitable society. I have only questions. How does your project reflect an "other" reality, a different perspective of the world that starts to speak of a posthuman idea? When I mean posthuman ideology, I think of man as more than a consumer and a worker of the system. We must rethink humanism since, in architecture, it has carried to some kind of universal assumption. How can we examine a future for a non_humanist perspective in our work? I speak of humanism because there is a universal man and a eurocentric ideal of knowledge. I know it's complex, but there are lines of thought in architecture dealing with post-colonial themes that can guide us toward a scientific process in design and a more complicated relationship with the user, in this case, your community.
I can only suggest conceptual interventions because your work is well done. How does your project fit into a planetary condition, or how do your proposed ecosystems are part of the global production apparatus. Many questions, and I think exceptional projects like yours bring forward critical discussion within our discipline.